In this paper the study results for gas and/or water injection into sour fields located in the South Oman Salt Basin (SOSB) is presented. The hydrocarbons in the fields are contained in carbonate "stringer" reservoirs, which are slabs of carbonates floating within salt. The fields in this area are typically high pressure, high temperature sour (H2S and CO2) reservoirs.The typical development concept for these type of fields in general follows a staged approach: (1) An appraisal phase, (2) An early production phase from primary depletion, followed by (3) a miscible gas flood (or a water flood), and ultimately (4) a gas blow down phase. The objective of this phasing is to allow for optimal learning and economies of scale. This paper presents a part of the work done in preparation of the third development phase with a specific focus on quantifying the interaction of an injectant with the reservoir rock. In other words due to geochemical reactions of the injected gas (or water) with the host rock or formation water, mineral dissolution or precipitation can occur. As a result, the reservoir properties in the reservoir are altered that could potentially result in well injectivity and/or productivity issues (either through pore plugging or fine migration).The development of reactive flow simulation tools that are capable of modeling the relevant process (e.g. fluid flow, geochemistry, rock behavior) is currently an active research topic in industry. In this paper we will present a modeling workflow to improve our fundamental understanding taking into account some of the current limitations of the modeling tools. The workflow will be described through presenting several modeling examples using different simulation tools (e.g. geochemical modeling tools, PVT modeling tools).
For a number of gas supply projects feeding LNG export schemes, there exists a challenge that key gas reservoirs have associated underlying oil rims. Without due consideration to these oil rims regulator approvals to move ahead with the gas projects may be delayed and can erode project value.
In this paper the study results for gas and/or water injection into sour fields located in the South Oman Salt Basin (SOSB) is presented. The hydrocarbons in the fields are contained in carbonate "stringer" reservoirs, which are slabs of carbonates floating within salt. The fields in this area are typically high pressure, high temperature sour (H2S and CO2) reservoirs.The typical development concept for these type of fields in general follows a staged approach: (1) An appraisal phase, (2) An early production phase from primary depletion, followed by (3) a miscible gas flood (or a water flood), and ultimately (4) a gas blow down phase. The objective of this phasing is to allow for optimal learning and economies of scale. This paper presents a part of the work done in preparation of the third development phase with a specific focus on quantifying the interaction of an injectant with the reservoir rock. In other words due to geochemical reactions of the injected gas (or water) with the host rock or formation water, mineral dissolution or precipitation can occur. As a result, the reservoir properties in the reservoir are altered that could potentially result in well injectivity and/or productivity issues (either through pore plugging or fine migration).The development of reactive flow simulation tools that are capable of modeling the relevant process (e.g. fluid flow, geochemistry, rock behavior) is currently an active research topic in industry. In this paper we will present a modeling workflow to improve our fundamental understanding taking into account some of the current limitations of the modeling tools. The workflow will be described through presenting several modeling examples using different simulation tools (e.g. geochemical modeling tools, PVT modeling tools).
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2025 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.