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PSEUDO REDUCED PRESSURE ‘ 2 3 4 5 s 1 5 ae a9] e os} eAee | “J wort a - t =| - Z 6 2 FI Hh zs oe » . | g a Ost “3 aN sie as 4 i & \-; 3 J Z| 3 | u Se is - o re he |~ g ecee chee : "| - : i HU Be: 4 e 7 o 9 1 w 2 3 14 PSEUDO REDUCED PRESSURE . Compressibility factors for natural gates. (After Standing and Katz, Trans, "4 Gas-Gondensate Reservoirs Initial gas in place = 0,951(1326) = 1261 MCFlac-ft oh __ 1261010) Initial oll in place = +> gig 4 agg 7 948 STBlac-ft Because the gas production is 95.1% of the total moles produced, the total daily gas-condensate production in MCF is ‘The total daily reservoir voidage by the gas law is AV = 3,386,000 Ny) 19.450 cu day ‘The gas deviation factor of the total wel Said f scscrvois temperate and pressure can also be calculated from its composition. The composition of the total well fui calculated from the analyses of the produced gees) and liquid by recombining them in the ratio in which they are produced. When campontion of the mock tenk Eee! Known, a tai ofthis bid must Be combined with the proper amounts of gas(es) from the separator(s) and the stock tank, each of which has its own composition. When the compositions of the gas and Liquid in the first or high-pressure separator are known, the shrinkage the separator liquid undergoes in passing to the stock tank must be measured or calculated in order to know the proper proportions in which the separator gas and liquid must be combined. For example, if the volume factor of the separator liquid is 1.20 separator bbl per stock tank barrel and the measured gas-oil ratio is 20,000 SCF of high-pressure gas per bbl of stock tank liquid, then the separator gas and liquid samples should be recombined in the proportions of 20,000 SCF of gas to 1.20 bbl of separator liquid, since 1.20 bbl of separator liquid shrinks to 1.00 bbl in the stock tank. Example 4.2 shows the calculation of initial gas and oil in place for a g88-condensate reservoir from the analyses of the high pressure gas and liquid, assuming the weil fluid to be the same as the reservoir fluid. The calculation is the same as that shown in Ex. 4.1 except that the gas deviation factor of the reservoir fluid is found from the pseudoreduced temperature and pressure, 2. Caloulation of Initial Gas and Oil 115 MOLECULAR wELONT Fig. 4.3. Corrclation charts for estimation of the pecudocritical temperature and pres sure of hs ius fractions from molecular weight and specific gravity. (A Mathews, Roland, and Katt Proc NOAA) vei which are determined from the composition of the total well fluid rather than from its specific gravity. Figure 4.3 presents charts for estimating the pseudo-

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