For oil sand reservoirs,
the steam-assisted gravity drainage (SAGD)
technique is one of the most efficient thermal recovery technologies.
However, the high oil viscosity and the severe heat loss seriously
affect the production effect of SAGD in developing thin oil sand reservoirs
by the traditional SAGD technology. Therefore, it is essential to
improve the SAGD technology to enhance the recovery of the thin oil
sand reservoir. In this paper, SAGD with a combination of vertical
and horizontal well (VH-SAGD) technology was adopted, and the influence
of different well spacings (horizontal distance between vertical steam
injection wells and horizontal production wells) on the development
of steam chambers was investigated. By the similarity criterion, the
experimental parameters were obtained. After that, an improved 2D
visualization physical model was designed with 9 × 9 high-precision
thermocouples installed inside the device to monitor the real-time
temperature. This experimental physical model can not only accurately
capture the temperature distribution but also display the continuous
change process of the chamber inside the model by the visible window.
Finally, different well spacing cases (10, 15, and 20 cm) were tested
to observe the development of the steam chamber and analyze the production
data. Both the temperature distribution and visual window showed that
the steam chamber has four obvious stages, and reasonable well spacing
can promote the development of the steam chamber. When the well spacing
is relatively small, the unswept area of the cold oil on both sides
is large, and the area of the steam chamber overlaps more. When the
well spacing is relatively moderate, the steam chamber is the most
complete and the recovery factor is the highest. When the well spacing
is relatively large, although the unswept area of the cold oil on
both sides is small, the middle cold oil area is larger than the previous
two groups. Therefore, the best well spacing for oil sand reservoirs
of about 15 m thickness is 15–20 m, where the VH-SAGD method
has a better displacement effect and higher oil recovery. The experimental
conclusions can provide theoretical support for the production of
thin oil sand reservoirs.
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