Cold Heavy Oil Production with Sand (CHOPS) is a non-thermal heavy oil recovery technique used primarily in the heavy oil belt in eastern Alberta and western Saskatchewan. Under CHOPS, typical recovery factors are between 5 and 15% with the average being under 10%. This leaves approximately 90% of the oil in the ground after the process becomes uneconomic, making CHOPS wells and fields, prime candidates for EOR and field optimization. CHOPS wells show an enhancement in production rates compared to conventional primary production, which is explained by the formation of high permeability channels known as wormholes. The formation of wormholes has been shown to exist in laboratory experiments as well as field experiments conducted with fluorescein dyes. The major mechanisms for CHOPS production are foamy oil flow, sand failure and sand production. Foamy oil flow aids in mobilizing sand and reservoir fluids leading to the formation of wormholes. Foamy oil behaviour cannot be effectively modeled by conventional PVT behaviour, leading to the use of a kinetic model, which can be easily implemented with the kinetic reaction features in CMG STARS. The sand is mobilized due to sand failure, determined by a minimum fluidization velocity. The individual wormholes will be modeled in CMG STARS using existing wellbore features. The ability to grow a wellbore dynamically is not built into STARS, leading to the creation of a Dynamic Wellbore Module. The module continuously restarts the STARS simulation runs and determines the growth criteria for wormhole growth. If the criterion is met, the wormhole is grown in the appropriate direction; otherwise the simulation is run again until the criterion is met. The proposed model incorporates the major factors in CHOPS production and shows an adequate to fit to model general production trends of typical CHOPS well. The model demonstrates there is a criterion for which wormhole growth occurs as wells as limits its extent of growth in a reservoir. The model can then be used for follow-up EOR processes such as cycle solvent injection as well as field optimization.
Cold Heavy Oil Production with Sand (CHOPS) is a non-thermal heavy oil recovery technique used primarily in the heavy oil belt in western Alberta and eastern Saskatchewan. Under CHOPS, typical recovery factors are between 5 and 15% with average ~10%. This leaves ~90% of the oil in the ground after the process becomes uneconomic. CHOPS exhibits an enhancement in production rates compared to conventional primary production, which is explained by formation of high permeability channels known as wormholes. The formation of wormholes has been demonstrated to occur in both laboratory experiments and field tracer studies. The ability to model growth of wormholes does not currently exist in commercial reservoir simulators. Here, wormholes are modelled as multi-lateral wells, which grow dynamically in the reservoir, using existing wellbore features. A module was coupled to CMG STARS TM to dynamically grow wormholes in the reservoir taking foamy oil flow, sand failure, and sand production into account. Here, we present on the results of history matches against field data to tune model parameters. The history-matched model reasonably predicts production trends of field CHOPS operations. The results provide a methodology to model CHOPS and predict under uncertainty where the wormholes will tend to grow into the reservoir. This provides a tool for placing new wells in the reservoir that will most likely not be in direct contact with existing wormholes. Multiple realizations of the reservoir can be used to mark the region of the reservoir that undergoes wormhole formation. The model can then be used for follow-up EOR processes such as cycle solvent injection as well as field scale optimization.
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