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Abstract
This paper addresses sampling and PVT modeling of liquid-rich fluids produced from ultra-tight formations – “liquid-rich
shale” (LRS) reservoirs.1 Proper PVT treatment in these unconventional reservoirs is important to provide improved short- and
long-term oil and gas production forecasts, and define the initial oil and gas in place.
We give recommended practices for sampling, laboratory PVT tests, developing PVT (EOS and black-oil) models, and
estimating the in-situ reservoir fluid system (composition, saturation, and initial gas-oil ratio). Fluid systems studied include a
wide range from lean gas condensates to volatile oils, typical of what is found in the Eagle Ford, Avalon, and other liquid-rich
shale plays in North America – with producing oil-gas ratios ranging from 10-1,000 STB/MMscf.
LRS producing wellstreams, usually expressed in this paper as a producing oil-gas ratio (OGR) or “liquid yield” 2, are
always much leaner than what would be produced from a conventional, higher-permeability reservoir containing the same
initial reservoir fluid system. Conventional reservoirs typically produce an initial mixture (for months or years) that is quite
similar to the in-situ initial reservoir fluid. The anomalously-low producing OGR of LRS wells is due to very low
permeabilities that lead to large drawdowns and fluid flow with localized and large gas-to-oil mobility ratio gradients near the
fractures. We show that the loss in oil is a staggering factor of 2 to 50! The liquid yield will be approximately constant from
the early days of initial testing throughout the well’s entire life.
The degree of oil recovery in LRS wells is associated mainly with two issues. First and foremost, whether the reservoir is
initially saturated with oil (Soi=1-Swc) or gas (Soi=0). For example, with the in-situ solution OGR of ~350 STB/MMscf (initial
GOR of ~3,000 scf/STB), the producing OGR might be 100 STB/MMscf for an oil reservoir (Soi=1-Swc), while it might be less
than 10 STB/MMscf for a gas reservoir (Soi=0). Second, for oil LRS reservoirs, oil recovery loss is greatest for near-saturated
initial conditions, with oil recoveries increasing as the oil reservoir becomes more undersaturated; degree of undersaturation
does not have an impact on the large oil recovery losses seen in all LRS gas reservoirs.
Another important result from our study is showing how liquid yield (OGR) evolves with time for LRS wells. It is shown
for planar “slab” fracture geometries that the expected infinite-acting behavior is a constant OGR that may last many years or
decades. A less-constant intermediate-to-long-term OGR development is found in naturally- or induced-fracture “networks”
consisting of a collection of matrix blocks surrounded by fractures. OGR variation depends on network fracture “block” size.
The paper shows that it is necessary to combine single-well, finely-gridded numerical modeling of LRS wells to properly
develop valid PVT models and in-situ fluid description. Conventional “PVT” sampling and initialization procedures are alone
inadequate for liquid-rich shale systems, but additionally require proper treatment of near-well reservoir flow and phase
behavior to properly link the significant contrast in producing wellstreams and in-situ fluids.
Finally, we propose a special PVT laboratory test for LRS systems.
Problem Statement
What you produce at the surface is not what you have in the reservoir. This is the general problem for liquid-rich shales
producing with large drawdowns. The typical LRS oil rate is much less than a conventional reservoir would produce at the
same drawdown.
1
We do not differentiate between shale and other ultra-tight rock types, as we find no evidence that key PVT and fluid issues differ substantially because of
the rock itself. Our terminology “liquid-rich shale” (LRS) applies to any reservoir system with permeability in the range 10-1,000 nD (1E-5 to 0.001 md), and
where more than ~25% of revenues derive from the sale of oil or condensate.
2
Liquid yield as a term for producing OGR is a bit misleading for ultra-tight oil reservoirs because it conventionally implies STO (liquid) condenses
exclusively from flowing reservoir gas. Liquid production in LRS oil reservoirs will include significant amounts of free-flowing reservoir oil.
2 SPE 155499
An LRS oil reservoir initially saturated with oil (Soi=1-Swc) will produce substantially less oil than a conventional reservoir
would produce with the same drawdown. The fraction of oil produced, compared with conventional oil reservoirs, is typically
a factor of 0.5 to 0.05, mainly depending on initial solution GOR and degree of undersaturation.
An LRS gas condensate reservoir initially saturated with gas (Soi=0), no matter how rich, will mainly produce only solution
condensate being carried by the flowing reservoir gas (at bottomhole flowing pressure). Practically all oil forming by
condensation in the reservoir will remain unproduced. Resulting condensate yields are typically in the range 1-10 STB/MMscf
throughout the well’s life, the producing OGR value being mostly dependent on reservoir temperature and flowing bottomhole
pressure.
An important consequence of these observations is that an LRS field with continuously-varying areal composition (in-situ
GOR) variation will show an abrupt change in producing oil-gas ratios – from very low (in the gas condensate province) to
rapidly increasing as one crosses into the oil province. This contrast will be greatest for highly-undersaturated fields such as
Eagle Ford.
Example. Consider three wells, all having the same initial pressure, temperature, and in-situ fluid with a solution OGR of
350 STB/MMscf (initial solution GOR of 2857 scf/STB). All three wells produce a first-week gas rate of 10 MMscf/D with
the same drawdown (e.g. pwf=1000 psia). Well A produces from a thin 10-md reservoir with a first-week oil rate of 3500
STB/D. Wells B and C are one-mile long horizontal wells with 100 nd permeability and 25 fractures. Well B produces from an
oil-saturated reservoir at a first-week oil rate of 1000 STB/D. Well C produces from a gas-saturated reservoir at a first-week
oil rate of only 200 STB/D. At $3/Mscf and $100/bbl prices, the three wells have first-week daily revenues of (A)
$380,000/day, (B) $130,000/day, and (C) $50,000/day. For a dry-gas shale well, the daily revenue would be $30,000/day.
black-oil PVT properties. The oil-phase black-oil PVT are oil formation volume factor (Bo) and solution gas-oil ratio (Rs); the
gas phase black-oil PVT are (“dry”) gas formation volume factor (Bgd) and solution oil-gas ratio (rs).
It is particularly difficult to calculate consistent, accurate gas PVT properties Bgd(p) and rs(p) directly from conventional
CCE/DL/CVD/SEP tests, and thus the need for an EOS. The EOS-to-black-oil procedure (Whitson and Torp 1983) includes
defining: (1) the EOS parameters; (2) a reservoir fluid composition; (3) the method of depletion (CCE/DL/CVD); and (4) the
surface separation process (e.g. number of stages and conditions of each stage). Many reservoirs require extrapolation of
saturated properties beyond the saturation pressure of collected samples.
3
We see that the more-correct flow geometry yields an ever-increasing produced OGR, but unfortunately this has little impact on bottom-line oil revenues
because gas rates are relatively low.
4
200 Mscf/D is approximately the minimum rate to lift liquids from the vertical wellbore.
4 SPE 155499
were collected soon after the fracture treatment when the well was producing through casing with a relatively high water cut
and low drawdowns. Early, low-drawdown sampling is possible and should be considered – even if operationally difficult.
Fig. 7 shows the variation in produced stock-tank oil API gravity for LRS oil and gas condensate wells. In green we see
that STO API of an LRS oil well tracks closely to the API gravity of equilibrium oils in a standard PVT depletion test, despite
large variations in the oil well’s producing oil-gas ratio from 250 to 20 STB/MMscf. For the gas condensate LRS well,
produced stock-tank condensate API tracks closely to the STO gravity evolving from depleting equilibrium gases in a standard
PVT depletion test, as seen (in red) in Fig. 7.
PVT Data. At a minimum, one should have available production PVT data mentioned earlier – yspi, rp, γAPI, and TR. With
these data we propose a method to develop a detailed EOS model and estimate the wellstream composition. EOS model
reliability can be improved by collecting additional PVT data for model tuning. Below is a list of additional PVT data, sorted
from low-to-high cost:
1. Stock-tank oil extended composition, density, and molecular weight.
2. Collect traditional separator gas (20-liter container) and separator oil (~ 600-cc container) samples, with mathematical
recombination to obtain the wellstream composition for an appropriate GOR.
3. Physical recombination of separator samples at an appropriate GOR.
4. CCE at reservoir temperature, measuring saturation pressure, single-phase densities, and two-phase volumes below the
saturation pressure.
5. CVD test.
6. Recommended LRS Multi-Mixture CCE test.
Detailed analysis of the stock-tank oil will supplement API gravity which is often prone to error when measured in the
field. Accurate description of the C7+ heavy components is important to EOS calculations. With extended compositional
analysis, the assumption of exponential molar distribution is unnecessary. The Soreide characterization factor Cf is also better
defined with direct measure of STO density and molecular weight.
Collection of separator samples does not carry a significant cost, and the resulting compositions can be used to eliminate
uncertainty in wellstream composition using mathematical recombination at the produced GOR when sampled.5 Separator oil
composition usually includes extended C7+ analysis, making it is unnecessary with separate stock-tank oil extended analysis.
Physical recombination of separator samples at the (average) producing GOR in a visual PVT cell allows estimation of the
saturation pressure, saturation type (bubblepoint or dewpoint), single-phase densities, and two-phase relative volumes below
the saturation pressure. Tuning the EOS to CCE data makes the model more reliable.
Conducting a constant volume depletion test on a wellstream sample is much less useful in LRS wells than conventional
gas condensate wells (where the removed CVD gases closely approximate producing wellstreams). We do not recommend the
CVD test for LRS wells, but instead recommend the four-mixture CCE test described below.
Multi-Mixture CCE Test. The recommended PVT test for liquid-rich shales is a multi-mixture CCE test. This procedure is
designed to (1) be experimentally simple, (2) be cost effective, (3) cover the range of relevant mixtures from producing
wellstream to possible in-situ reservoir fluids, and (4) provide PVT data that guarantees the EOS ability to predict phase and
volumetric behavior for all relevant flowing reservoir compositions.
Let rsp= qosp/qgsp1 represent separator oil-gas ratio, expressed as separator oil volume qosp measured at separator pressure
and temperature (psp,Tsp) per standard volume of primary-stage separator gas qgsp1. Let rsps be the observed separator gas-oil
ratio at the time of test sampling. Let rspmin be the minimum observed separator OGR at any time the well has been producing
under stable conditions (probably with high drawdown). Let rspmax be the historical maximum observed separator OGR
(probably with low drawdown) where gas and oil rates were high enough to be metered accurately – e.g. immediately after
stimulation treatment during early cleanup.
We recommend CCE tests with at least four mixtures that are sequentially recombined using the collected separator
samples. The first CCE test uses the producing wellstream having the highest separator OGR rspmax. The final CCE test uses
the leanest wellstream mixture having separator OGR rspmin. The four separator lab recombination GOR values are: rsp1=rspmax,
rsp2=rspmin+0.67(rspmax-rspmin), rsp3=rspmin+0.33(rspmax-rspmin), and rsp4=rspmin. The laboratory charges a visual PVT cell with
separator oil only once, then adds appropriate amounts of separator gas four times. After each incremental addition of
separator gas, the laboratory conducts a standard visual-cell CCE test, providing saturation pressure, single-phase densities,
and two-phase volume fractions (Vro=Vo/Vt and Vrt=Vt/Vs). If more than four mixtures (Nmix>4) are desired then the mixing
factors to achieve evenly-spaced rsp recombination values are given by rspn=rspmin+[(Nmix-n)/(Nmix-1)](rspmax-rspmin).
Example Four-Mixture CCE Test. As an example, consider our base-case LRS oil well that has a stabilized producing
separator OGR of ~60 sep-bbl/MMscf after one month of production (Fig. 1). Separator samples are collected at the end of the
first month’s production, with a gas test rate of 1 MMscf/D and a separator-oil rate of 60 sep-bbl/D. During the first week a
maximum separator OGR of rspmax=275 sep-bbl/MMscf was observed before the decline to rspmin=60 at one month. The
laboratory is given four recombination OGRs with which to conduct the four CCE tests: rsp1=275 sep-bbl/MMscf,
rsp2=60+0.67(275-60)=204 sep-bbl/MMscf, rsp3=60+0.33(275-60)=132 sep-bbl/MMscf, and rsp4=rspmin=60 sep-bbl/MMscf.
Laboratories typically request recombination GORs (Rsp=1/rsp) to be specified, in which case the four values would be
5
If GOR is erratic during sampling, an average GOR can be used for the wellstream composition, e.g. total gas volumes divided by total oil volumes
produced during the hours prior to and hours after sampling.
SPE 155499 5
6
If sufficient equilibrium oil sample is not available for viscosity measurement, we recommend measuring oil viscosity on the separator oil directly, but at
reservoir temperature and pressures in the range of 500 to 2000 psia, typical of near-fracture flowing pressures.
7
Because a measured saturation pressure and type (dewpoint or bubblepoint) are not available from production test PVT data, it is not recommended to adjust
C1-C7+ BIPs. We may allow some modification of the default C1-C7+ BIPs to satisfy a constraint that saturation pressure not exceed initial reservoir pressure,
this being based on our observation from compositional well modeling studies that the condition (psw≤pRi) is usually met.
6 SPE 155499
known for a particular separator. This approximate surface process is simple and consistent, and makes it possible to convert
any new wellstream to an approximate oil-gas ratio equivalent without using an EOS-based PVT program.
Extrapolating Black-Oil Tables. We strongly recommend extrapolating the saturated gas and oil black-oil PVT properties
to a maximum saturation pressure (psmax) where gas and oil properties approach each other. At this critical point, Rs=1/rs and
Bo= Bgd/rs. The best way to extrapolate saturated properties for LRS systems is to add increments of the incipient phase from
each new elevated saturation pressure, starting with the incipient phase of zBO at its saturation pressure of (ps(zBO)).
An extrapolated critical mixture is needed to ensure that single-phase initialization can be achieved for any initial solution
OGR (ri). Without extrapolation to a critical point, a range of initial fluids compositions (ri) would exist where the fluid system
must be initialized as a saturated two-phase gas-oil system; namely, in the range rs(ps(zBO))<ri<1/Rs(ps(zBO)) where rs(ps(zBO)) and
1/Rs(ps(zBO)) are solution oil-gas ratios of zBO and its incipient phase.
The ability to initialize a black-oil model with any solution OGR for undersaturated reservoirs (such as Eagle Ford) is
important when history matching production performance (rp(t)) using the initial solution OGR ri as a history-matching
variable.
Example EOS Model from Production PVT Data. An example is given to illustrate how simple, basic production PVT
data can be used to generate an EOS model. Tables 1 and 2 give data yspi, rp, and γAPI with their origin in a publication8 by an
Eagle Ford operator (Orangi et al. 2011) describing “approximate” Eagle Ford PVT data. Our proposed method described
above was used to generate an EOS model (Table 4) with components through C26+.
This EOS should provide a reasonable model for predicting Eagle Ford PVT properties, in lieu of developing a more-
rigorous EOS model using actual production (and special) PVT data from many wells in the Eagle Ford field. Table 5 gives a
range of compositions from leaner gas condensate to lower-GOR oils, based on our EOS model and assumptions that (a) C6-
component distribution is the same as generated for our base-case wellstream mixture in Tables 1 and 2, and (b) a simple
empirical relation exists between stock-tank oil API and in-situ OGR (ri=rs or 1/Rs): γAPI=-7.5log (ri)+62.5.
Fig. 9 shows a p-T phase diagram for our estimated wellstream mixture, with predicted bubblepoint of 4754 psia at 250oF,
and a critical point of 4182 psia at 380 oF. Incipient gas from this oil’s bubblepoint was added in sufficient amount to increase
the saturation pressure to a critical condition at 250oF, with the resulting composition given in Table 2. Without this critical-
point extrapolation, initial OGRs that could be used to initialize a single-phase model would be limited to oils with rsi≥250
STB/MMscf (of the wellstream oil) and gas condensates with rsi≤90 STB/MMscf (of the incipient gas). Any in-situ OGR in
the range 90<ri<250 STB/MMscf would have to be initialized as a two-phase saturated gas-oil reservoir. Such a saturated gas-
oil initialization would be physically inconsistent for Eagle Ford which is highly undersaturated.
Figs. 10-13 show black-oil PVT properties that have been generated from our EOS model. A CCE test was simulated with
the extrapolated critical mixture, where equilibrium gases and equilibrium oils were independently passed through a two-stage
separator process: Tsp1=150oF, psp1=100 psia and Tsp2=60oF, psp2=14.7 psia (according to the Whitson-Torp method).
The solution OGR chart (Fig. 12) defines how solution GOR of the oil phase varies with bubblepoint pressure, 1/Rs(pb),
and how solution OGR of the gas phase varies with dewpoint pressure, rs(pd). This curve is, in reality, a pressure-composition
phase diagram where composition is represented by solution OGR (expressed as z5- or z6+) and pressure is saturation pressure
(dewpoint or bubblepoint); see lower part of Fig. 12.
8
The EOS developed in our paper for Eagle Ford is based only on (a) the production PVT taken from the Orangi paper, and (b) a separator gas composition
created from that paper’s EOS model. We do not use in any way either of the two EOS models given in that paper, as we do not believe it is natural or
necessary to have a separate EOS model for oil and gas condensate regions of a field.
SPE 155499 7
Fractures are also gridded, with sufficiently high permeability to yield the desired pressure drop within fractures (fracture
conductivity is 1000 md-ft in this study). The fracture pore volume is based on 25% porosity and a fracture width of ~0.01 ft
or 3 mm. The numerical fracture width may be 0.1 or even 1 ft without having any real impact on results, as long as actual
fracture conductivity and volume are honored.
We assume traditional rock relative permeabilities are applicable to shales and ultra-tight rocks. Examples in the paper use
saturation exponents of 2.5. Concepts of critical gas and residual oil saturations are also assumed to be valid. We are unaware
of experimental two-phase gas-oil flow tests in ultra-tight rocks that contradict the use of traditional relative permeability
curves. Furthermore, the most important LRS flow region is near fractures where some micro-fracturing may exist after
hydraulic fracturing, and relative permeabilities may be somewhat improved (lower saturation exponents) compared with pure-
rock curves.
We ignore desorption because it is unclear whether liquid-rich systems have more or less sorption than dry gas reservoirs,
and because models for desorption of components heavier than methane are limited. Some literature suggests that heavier
components reduce sorption, relative to methane-rich systems. If one considers sorption in LRS wells, a consistent model is
needed to describe the sorption parameters of each component, and component-component sorption interaction.
Table 1 summarizes the minimum data needed to build a single-well model. The black-oil PVT table is an important model
input, together with the definition of initial fluid system (initial oil-gas ratio or initial oil-gas saturation).
Fracture Geometries. As sketched in Fig. 14, two fundamental well geometries have been considered in our study, with
the horizontal well always being in the x-direction. We model only one side of the wellbore because of symmetry. Each
fracture behaves independently, also due to symmetry, so only one fracture needs to be modeled and well rate equals twice the
half-model rate time the total number of fractures (Nf).
Fractures emanate from single “points” along the wellbore into one of two fracture geometries: (1) planar fractures:
singular fractures that penetrate the entire formation height (h) and extend a distance9 Lf away from the wellbore,
symmetrically away from each side of the wellbore; and (2) network fracture: square parallelepipeds of height h and fracture-
block size Lb equal in both x- and y-directions. A fracture does not run along the entire wellbore, so well connections are used
only at cells where perpendicular fractures intersect the wellbore. The network fracture is defined by a half-fracture surface
area Af and matrix block size Lb. If the specified half-fracture area does not exactly create a whole number of blocks, "fingers"
grow outward in the y-direction from the last row of blocks; these fingers make up for the fracture area not covered by the
whole blocks.
For planar fractures, we use two types of models in this work: (1) a simplified 1D model that ignores any volume beyond
the tip of the fracture, resulting in one-dimensional flow in the x-direction. For early-time infinite-acting study of production
performance, the 1D assumption is useful, as it allows grid refinement to a numerically-converged solution. The second planar
model is 2D (x-y), taking into account the contribution from volumes beyond the fracture tip (y-direction).
Fracture Area Definitions. Half-fracture area is usually defined as Af=hLf where Lf is the total “walked” length of the
half-fracture. In reality, Af is only ¼ of the full-fracture inflow area (Aff=4Af). A planar fracture has total fracture extent of 2Lf
(both sides of the wellbore), and flow enters from both sides of the fracture, so Aff=4hLf. During the extended infinite-acting
life of most LRS wells, fracture size (expressed as Aff, Af or Lf) and rock permeability k are the first-order parameters that
determine well performance10, with fracture geometry playing a secondary role; flow is essentially one-dimensional,
perpendicular to all fracture faces.
Much of the literature is ambiguous about reported well fracture areas, whether they use Afw=2NfAf or 2NfAff. We use well
fracture area Afw=2NfAf.
9
By convention the term xf is used to represent fracture half-length for a planar fracture. Because our grid is oriented with x-direction along the wellbore and
y-direction along which the planar fracture grows, we use Lf to represent what is normally called xf. The term Lf is also our term for any fracture geometry
“walked length”.
10
Infinite-acting performance is actually controlled by the number of fractures and the fracture “productivity” term Af√k or Lf√k.
11
Note that total grids in the x-direction, Nx, are for both sides of the fracture, and because of symmetry the actual number of grids for a given case is in fact
(Nx-1)/2, e.g. 15 grids are needed away from the fracture for Nx=31.
8 SPE 155499
Fig. 16 shows the difference in production performance for 1D and 2D planar fracture models. After about one month the
2D solution shows slowly-increasing OGR, compared with the constant-OGR 1D solution. The difference becomes significant
by 1000 days (2D: 32 STB/MMscf vs 1D: 19 STB/MMscf). The same Nx=151 gridding was used in both 1D and 2D models,
with Ny=36 for the 2D case.
Fracture Geometry. Fig. 17 shows production performance for the 1D and 2D planar fracture models, now comparing
with two network fracture models: NF50, a single Lb=50-ft block, and NF30, two Lb=30-ft blocks along the wellbore. The
network fracture models both show very-early-time rp(t) behavior that is somewhat higher than the two planar fracture models.
This suggests insufficient gridding within the matrix blocks. When considering this slight shift in early-time rp(t) behavior we
conclude for this example that the 2D planar and network fracture models have similar rp(t) behavior. The network fracture
OGR increases more rapidly than the 2D planar model, as depletion effects are more significant. As matrix blocks become
smaller the difference in rp(t) will become more significant. Achieving sufficient gridding to obtain a converged numerical
solution becomes difficult for more and smaller matrix blocks in the network fracture model, particularly for LRS wells with
complex two-phase gas-oil flow.
Oil LRS Wells. Fig. 18 shows production performance for the base-case oil LRS well with different degrees of
undersaturation (using a 1D planar model). In all cases rp(t) is constant throughout the first 1000 days. As mentioned earlier,
this behavior appears fundamental for 1D constant-FBHP conditions.12 Higher oil rates result for oil reservoirs that are more
undersaturated because reservoir pressure is higher, and because producing OGR is higher.
Fig. 19 shows rp(t) for a 1D planar-fracture LRS well initialized with different oils (Ri) and varying degree of
undersaturation. The dimensionless producing OGR rpD at 1000 days ranges from 0.02-0.6 for a wide range of initially-
saturated oil systems; from 0.1-0.9 for undersaturated oils with pRi=6,000 psia; and from 0.6 to ~1 for highly-undersaturated
oils with pRi=10,000 psia.
Gas Condensate LRS Wells. Fig. 20 shows production performance for two gas condensate LRS wells using a 1D planar
model: a near-critical fluid with ri=155 STB/MMscf and a lean gas condensate with ri=50 STB/MMscf. The rate performance
is very similar. The leaner gas condensate has slightly higher gas rates than the richer system, presumably because of relative
permeability (“blockage”) effects. The producing OGRs are almost identical for the two systems, with rp≈rs(pwf)=3
STB/MMscf. Because gas rate is higher for the leaner gas condensate well, the oil rate is also higher for the leaner fluid.
Summary OGR Behavior of LRS Wells. To summarize the observations made above for oil and gas condensate LRS
wells, a large number of simulations with constant FBHP of 1000 psia were made for many fluid systems at varying degrees of
undersaturation. We used the 1D planar model, but similar results are found for 2D planar models (albeit somewhat higher
producing OGRs at later times). Fig. 21 shows the dimensionless producing OGR (“oil recovery efficiency”) at 1000 days as a
function of initial fluid OGR (ri).
For oil systems, the oil recovery efficiency rpD varies from values lower than 0.05, approaching 0.5-1 for highly
undersaturated and/or low-GOR (high solution OGR) oil LRS wells. As the system approaches a critical mixture with ~150
STB/MMscf solution OGR, the oil recovery efficiency is at its lowest level, and significant undersaturation is required to
achieve higher oil production performance.
For all gas condensate LRS wells simulated, independent of how undersaturated13, the oil recovery efficiency rpD was low,
and fell on the trend defined by the blue line in Fig. 21 representing the ratio rpD=rs(pwf)/ri. Because rs(pwf)=3.3 STB/MMscf at
pwf=1000 psia for this fluid system, the blue-curve rpD variation is exclusively caused by variation in initial OGR ri.
Effect of Constant FBHP. Fig. 22 shows model runs where the wells were produced against a constant FBHP using the
1D planar geometry. Values of constant FBHP ranged from 500 to 4000 psia. Fig. 23 plots infinite-acting producing OGR at
1000 days for a wide range of fluid systems. All gas condensate LRS wells produced with the same behavior, rp=rs(pwf). Oil
LRS wells producing with FBHPs greater than 2500 psia have OGRs somewhat greater than the initial solution OGR (rpD>1).
As the constraining FBHP drops below about 2500 psia we see all oil systems producing with lower OGRs than in solution
(rpD<1).
Constant Gas Rate Performance. We now consider constant gas rate control for ~1 year, until minimum FBHP of 1000
psia is reached. This leads to a gradual reduction in FBHP that has a pronounced effect on producing OGR. Fig. 24 shows
production performance behavior for three LRS wells: an oil, a near-critical fluid, and a gas-condensate. Fig. 25 translates the
results into a plot of producing OGR versus FBHP. Gas condensate LRS wells and the near-critical system follow the relation
rp=rs(pwf). The signature of rp(pwf) is quite different for oil LRS wells.
Producing OGR Trend Diagnostic. The rp(pwf) trend of an LRS well helps classify the reservoir as a gas condensate when
rp≈rs(pwf), and as an oil when rp>rs(pwf). This should be a reliable diagnostic for an undersaturated reservoir. For near-saturated
systems, it may not be possible to identify if a well produces from an oil or a gas condensate reservoir because it might also
initially be a saturated two-phase gas+oil system.
12
Bøe et al. give an analytical solution for infinite-acting constant GOR behavior for constant rate boundary conditions of a radial vertical well. That solution
clearly does not apply to LRS wells, as shown by many examples in this paper. However, it does appear that the constant producing OGR is the analytical
solution for constant-pressure oil and gas condensate LRS wells using a 1D planar geometry.
13
Fig. 23 shows an unusual example of a highy undersaturated gas condensate system producing with cyclic gas and oil rates and producing OGR that has
periodic surges. This was verified to be a numerically-converged solution, even as the number of grids becomes very large.
SPE 155499 9
Saturated Two-Phase Performance. It may be plausible that some reservoirs are initially saturated two-phase gas-oil
systems. We have found that the production performance of a two-phase initialization can be similar to a slightly-
undersaturated oil or gas condensate reservoir. Fig. 26 shows stabilized producing OGR behavior versus initial gas saturation
for a well producing against constant FBHP. This figure indicates that performance is similar for a single-phase saturated gas
condensate and saturated two-phase systems with initial saturations Sgi>0.4 (Soi<0.4). This suggests that oil mobility is too low
to impact producing OGR when Soi<0.4. For higher initial oil saturations, the producing OGR increases gradually towards an
oil-only system.
Fig. 27 shows production performance for various saturated two-phase initializations producing with a constant gas rate of
1 MMscf/D until FBHP of 1000 psia is reached. Fig. 28 summarizes similar results in terms of the diagnostic plot rp(pwf),
showing trends for two-phase initializations (with Soi>0.4) that are similar to those seen in Fig. 22 for oil reservoirs.
Conclusions
The results summarized below are based on the use of high-resolution (~numerically-converged), finite-difference, single-well
models using black-oil and EOS PVT Formulations. A wide range of in-situ fluid systems are considered, from low-yield gas
condensates to moderate-GOR oils; two-phase gas-oil saturated in-situ systems are also considered. Two fracture geometries
are considered: planar fractures modeled in 1D (no reservoir volume beyond the fracture tip) and 2D x-y (draining volumes
between fractures and wells); and network fracture systems with multiple matrix blocks surrounded by fractures. Single-layer
models are used under the assumption that fractures fully penetrate the reservoir thickness.
1. Sampling in-situ fluids from liquid-rich shale (LRS) wells is very difficult. The best in-situ sampling strategy is to collect
separator samples early, with low drawdowns. This strategy is seldom possible and may be operationally unacceptable. Our
only recourse is to combine advanced PVT modeling (EOS and black-oil) with single-well reservoir simulation to match
production performance (producing OGRs) using fluid initialization parameters (undersaturated solution GOR or saturated
gas/oil saturation) as key history-matching variables.
2. A laboratory PVT test is proposed specifically for LRS wells. Four mixtures are recombined from separator samples using
equally-spaced oil-gas recombination ratios, ranging from the well’s historically highest-to-lowest producing oil-gas ratios. A
standard visual-cell constant composition expansion (CCE) test is conducted on each of the four mixtures.
3. An equation of state (EOS) model is needed to generate reliable and consistent black-oil PVT tables, estimate in-situ
reservoir fluid composition, and design multi-well surface process optimization.
14
Though most black-oil reservoir simulators allow initialization by specifying the initial saturation pressure and type, this approach is not recommended for
a number of reasons. When initializing with saturation pressure and type, the model must translate this into an initial solution OGR or GOR. Specification of
rsi (Rsi) is more direct and less susceptible to unwanted initializations.
10 SPE 155499
4. A procedure is proposed for generating an approximate-yet-reliable EOS model and estimates of in-situ reservoir fluid
compositions. The approach is based on standard production-test PVT data available for any LRS well – separator gas
composition, stock-tank API gravity, and producing oil-gas ratio.
5. Using PVT data from the multi-mixture CCE test for one or more samples in an LRS field should provide adequate basis for
building a reliable field-wide (or regional) EOS model that can be used for many wells that can vary from low-yield
condensate to moderate-GOR oil wells. As an example, we provide a single EOS with general characteristics of oil and gas
condensate fluids in the Eagle Ford field.
6. Black-oil reservoir simulation can be used to reliably model single-well LRS production performance. The black-oil PVT
tables should be generated from an EOS. The black-oil tables should include extrapolated saturated properties out to a critical
condition, allowing flexible and consistent estimation of the in-situ reservoir fluid system for a given LRS well.
7. Black-oil tables should be generated from an EOS model using a fixed surface process that allows consistent treatment of
surface gas and oil production amongst multiple LRS wells in a field. Black-oil tables may vary from well to well, but they
should be derived from a common EOS model using a common surface process.
Producing oil-gas ratio (OGR), rp, or “liquid yield” of LRS wells is the most important performance parameter affected
directly by PVT description – mainly solution oil-gas ratio (rs) of the reservoir gas phase, and oil phase properties (μo, Bo, and
Rs). Below we summarize the most important characteristics of producing OGR behavior in LRS wells. Note that we
differentiate between LRS oil wells which are initially saturated with oil (Soi=1-Swc); LRS gas condensate wells which are
initially saturated only with gas (Sgi=1-Swc); and LRS two-phase saturated wells which are initially saturated uniformly with
both oil and gas (Soi>0, Sgi>0).
8. Liquid yield (rp) remains ~constant for extended periods of time (months or years) for all LRS wells if flowing BHP is
approximately constant. This behavior appears to be the analytical characteristic of LRS flow at infinite-acting conditions
when flow is essentially 1D linear and both gas and oil rates vary as √t.
9. Liquid yield for gas condensate reservoirs equals the solution OGR evaluated at current flowing BHP, rp≈rs(pwf).
Correspondingly, a very-low condensate recovery will result, relative to gas recovery. This behavior exists no matter how rich
the in-situ fluid, and for any degree of initial undersaturation. Given the strong oil-to-gas price differential, an economic-
optimal drawdown may exist for gas condensate LRS wells.
10. Producing oil-gas ratios for oil reservoirs will lie somewhere between rp≈rs(pwf) and some smaller fraction of the initial
solution OGR given by ri=1/Rsi (the inverse of initial solution GOR). The ratio rpD=rp/ri=Rsi/Rp for LRS oil wells will typically
lie between 0.05 and 0.5, where conventional reservoirs have an expected value of rpD≈1 (prior to significant reservoir
depletion effects). Low rpD values translate into low oil recovery factors for LRS oil wells. rpD values increase as initial
solution GOR decreases and degree of undersaturation increases.
11. The producing OGR variation rp(t) of LRS oil wells is a function of flowing BHP, fracture geometry (planar vs network),
gas and oil PVT properties, and gas-oil relative permeability curves.
12. The liquid yield variation rp(t) of LRS gas condensate wells is only as a function of flowing BHP, fracture geometry, and
gas PVT rs(p). Relative permeability and oil PVT properties have little-to-no effect on liquid yield of LRS gas condensate
wells.
Nomenclature
Af = half-fracture area, ft2.
Aff = half-fracture flow area (both sides of fracture), ft2.
Afw = well fracture area, ft2.
b = EOS constant
Bgd = “dry” gas formation volume factor, ft3/scf or RB/Mscf.
Bo = oil formation volume factor, RB/STB.
c = EOS constant
Cog = conversion from surface oil to surface gas, scf/STB or MMscf/STB
fgw = gas mole fraction in wellstream.
ḟgw = estimate of gas mole fraction in wellstream.
Foo = fraction of oil phase becoming surface oil.
k = rock permeability, md or nd
SPE 155499 11
kf = fracture permeability, md
Lb = length of square matrix block, ft
Lf = fracture length, ft
Mo = oil molecular weight.
M7+ = C7+ molecular weight.
Nb = number of matrix blocks per fracture.
Nf = number of fractures per well.
Nmix = number of CCE test mixtures.
Nx = number of grid cells in x-direction.
Ny = number of grid cells in y-direction.
p = pressure, psia.
pb = bubblepoint pressure, psia.
pd = dewpoint pressure, psia.
pR = reservoir pressure, psia.
pRi = initial reservoir pressure, psia.
psp = separator pressure (FBHP), psia.
pwf = flowing bottomhole pressure (FBHP), psia.
qg = surface gas rate, scf/D
qgsp = (primary-stage) separator gas rate, scf/D
qo = surface oil rate, STB/D
qosp = separator oil rate, sep-bbl/D
ri = initial in-situ oil-gas ratio, STB/MMscf.
rp = producing oil-gas ratio or liquid yield, STB/MMscf.
rpD = dimensionless producing oil-gas ratio or oil recovery efficiency, rp/ri=rpRi=Ri/Rp.
rsi = initial solution oil-gas ratio, STB/MMscf.
rsp = separator oil-gas ratio, STB/scf
rsps = separator oil-gas ratio at time of sampling, STB/scf
rspn = separator recombination oil-gas ratio for mixture n, STB/scf
Ri = initial in-situ gas-oil ratio (GOR), scf/STB.
Rp = producing gas-oil ratio (OGR), scf/STB.
Rs = solution gas-oil ratio (GOR), scf/STB.
Rsi = initial solution gas-oil ratio, scf/STB.
s = dimensionless volume shift parameter in EOS (=c/b)
Swc = connate water saturation.
Sgi = initial reservoir gas saturation.
Soi = initial reservoir oil saturation.
t = time, days
T = temperature, oF
Tb = normal boiling temperature, oR
Tc = critical temperature, oR
TR = reservoir temperature, oF
Tsp = separator temperature, oF
Vo = oil volume, ft3
Vro = oil relative volume, Vo/Vt
Vt = total volume, ft3
xspi = (primary-stage) separator oil composition, mol-%.
yspi = (primary-stage) separator gas composition, mol-%.
Zc = component critical factor used in Lorenz-Bray-Clark viscosity calculations.
zBO = composition used to create black-oil tables, mol-%.
zRi = in-situ reservoir composition, mol-%.
zwi = wellstream composition, mol-%.
żwi = estimate of wellstream composition, mol-%.
References
Coats Engineering 2012. www.coatsenginering.com (SENSOR).
Bøe, A., Skjæveland, S., and Whitson, C.H. 1989. Two Phase Pressure Test Analysis, SPEFE (Dec.), 604-610.
Cragoe, C.S. 1929. Thermodynamic Properties of Petroleum Products, U.S. Dept. of Commerce, Washington, DC (1929) 97.
Lohrenz, J., Bray, B.G., and Clark, C.R. 1964. Calculating Viscosities of Reservoir Fluids From Their Compositions. JPT (October)1171;
Trans., AIME, 231.
Orangi, A., Nagarajan, N.R., Honarpour, M.M., and Rosenzweig, J. 2011. Unconventional Shale Oil and Gas-Condensate Reservoir
Production, Impact of Rock, Fluid, and Hydraulic Fractures. Paper 14053 presented at the SPE Hydraulic Fracturing Technology
Conference and Exhibition, The Woodlands, 24-26 January.
Peng, D.Y. and Robinson, D.B. 1976. A New-Constant Equation of State, Ind. & Eng. Chem. 15, No. 1, 59.
Soave, G. 1972. Equilibrium Constants from a Modified Redlich-Kwong Equation of State, Chem. Eng. Sci. 27, No. 6, 1197.
Whitson, C.H. and Torp, S.B. 1983. Evaluating Constant Volume Depletion Data, JPT (March), 610 620.
Whitson, C.H. and Brulé, M.R. 2000. Phase Behavior, Monograph Series, Society of Petroleum Engineers.
Zick Technologies 2012. www.zicktech.com (PhazeComp).
SPE 155499 13
Reservoir Data Well Data
Depth to top of formation 10000 ft Horizontal length 6000 ft
Reservoir thickness 250 ft Well spacing 82.6 acre
Initial reservoir pressure 4500 psia Number of fractures 20
Reservoir temperature 250 F Fracture half length (*) 150 ft
Rock porosity (*) 0.04 Tubing outer diameter 2.375 inch
Rock permeability (*) 1.00E‐04 md (100 nd) Casing inner diameter (vertical) 4.5 inch
Relative Permability Exponent (*) 2.5 Wellbore diameter (horizontal) 5 inch
Production Test PVT Data PVT Model Data
Separator pressure 400 psia Equation of State (EOS).
Separator temperature 100 F Wellstream composition.
Prmary separator gas specific gravity 0.7 air=1 Extrapolated (critical) composition.
o
Stock‐tank oil gravity 48 API Separator Process defining black‐oil PVT properties.
Producing oil‐gas ratio 250 STB/MMscf Black‐Oil PVT tables.
(*) Probable history‐matching variables (parameters with significant uncertainty and considerable impact on performance).
TABLE 2 – WELLSTREAM ESTIMATION FROM PRODUCTION PVT DATA. TABLE 3 – MULTI-MIXTURE CCE TEST EXAMPLE CALCULATIONS.
Tc pc Tb BIPS
Component M (°R) (psia) ω s=c/b (°R) LBC Zc H2S N2 CO2
H2S 34.08 672.1 1300.0 0.0900 0.1015 382.4 0.283
N2 28.01 227.2 492.8 0.0370 -0.0009 139.4 0.292
CO2 44.01 547.4 1069.5 0.2250 0.2175 333.3 0.274
C1 16.04 343.0 667.0 0.0110 -0.0025 201.6 0.286 0.08 0.02 0.12
C2 30.07 549.6 706.6 0.0990 0.0589 332.7 0.279 0.07 0.06 0.12
C3 44.10 665.7 616.1 0.1520 0.0908 416.2 0.276 0.07 0.08 0.12
I-C4 58.12 734.1 527.9 0.1860 0.1095 471.1 0.282 0.06 0.08 0.12
N-C4 58.12 765.2 550.6 0.2000 0.1103 491.1 0.274 0.06 0.08 0.12
I-C5 72.15 828.7 490.4 0.2290 0.0977 542.4 0.272 0.06 0.08 0.12
N-C5 72.15 845.5 488.8 0.2520 0.1195 557.0 0.268 0.06 0.08 0.12
C6 82.42 924.0 490.0 0.2383 0.1342 606.4 0.703 0.249 0.05 0.08 0.12
C7 96.05 990.6 454.2 0.2741 0.1436 661.0 0.737 0.278 0.03 0.08 0.10
C8 108.89 1043.4 421.4 0.3105 0.1526 707.5 0.758 0.271 0.03 0.08 0.10
C9 122.04 1093.5 388.5 0.3513 0.1701 754.1 0.775 0.264 0.03 0.08 0.10
C10 134.96 1138.0 360.3 0.3913 0.1866 797.0 0.788 0.258 0.03 0.08 0.10
C11 147.80 1178.2 335.6 0.4309 0.2023 836.9 0.800 0.253 0.03 0.08 0.10
C12 160.55 1214.9 314.0 0.4700 0.2170 874.4 0.809 0.249 0.03 0.08 0.10
C13 173.19 1248.7 294.9 0.5084 0.2308 909.6 0.818 0.245 0.03 0.08 0.10
C14 185.74 1279.8 278.1 0.5462 0.2436 942.7 0.826 0.242 0.03 0.08 0.10
C15 198.18 1308.7 263.2 0.5833 0.2555 974.0 0.833 0.238 0.03 0.08 0.10
C16 210.51 1335.5 249.9 0.6197 0.2665 1003.5 0.839 0.236 0.03 0.08 0.10
C17 222.73 1360.6 238.0 0.6555 0.2766 1031.5 0.845 0.233 0.03 0.08 0.10
C18 234.83 1384.1 227.2 0.6905 0.2859 1058.0 0.850 0.231 0.03 0.08 0.10
C19 246.83 1406.2 217.6 0.7249 0.2944 1083.2 0.855 0.229 0.03 0.08 0.10
C20 258.71 1427.0 208.8 0.7587 0.3022 1107.1 0.860 0.227 0.03 0.08 0.10
C21 270.48 1446.7 200.9 0.7917 0.3094 1129.9 0.865 0.226 0.03 0.08 0.10
C22 282.14 1465.3 193.6 0.8241 0.3159 1151.6 0.869 0.224 0.03 0.08 0.10
C23 293.69 1483.0 187.0 0.8559 0.3219 1172.4 0.873 0.223 0.03 0.08 0.10
C24 305.13 1499.8 180.9 0.8870 0.3274 1192.2 0.877 0.222 0.03 0.08 0.10
C25 316.47 1515.8 175.3 0.9176 0.3323 1211.2 0.880 0.221 0.03 0.08 0.10
C26+ 412.23 1631.4 140.8 1.1619 0.3605 1349.7 0.906 0.217 0.03 0.08 0.10
SPE 155499 15
Temperature, F
Saturation Pressure, psia 250 3119 (D) 3759 (D) 4233 (D) 4490 (D) 4729 (B) 4754 (B) 4573 (B) 4217 (B) 3265 (B) 2261 (B)
270 3031 (D) 3720 (D) 4225 (D) 4500 (D) 4762 (D) 4810 (B) 4637 (B) 4288 (B) 3334 (B) 2316 (B)
290 2920 (D) 3660 (D) 4197 (D) 4492 (D) 4778 (D) 4849 (B) 4688 (B) 4346 (B) 3393 (B) 2365 (B)
310 2786 (D) 3580 (D) 4150 (D) 4465 (D) 4776 (D) 4874 (B) 4725 (B) 4391 (B) 3443 (B) 2407 (B)
330 2628 (D) 3480 (D) 4086 (D) 4421 (D) 4757 (D) 4883 (B) 4748 (B) 4425 (B) 3484 (B) 2443 (B)
Two stage separation. First stage conditions reported; second stage is standard conditions.
Solution GOR, scf/STB 100 psi, 150 F 33333 20000 13333 10000 6667 4000 2857 2000 1000 500
100 psi, 150 F 30 50 75 100 150 250 350 500 1000 2000
Solution OGR, STB/MMscf
750 psi, 100 F 62 82 107 133 184 285 386 537 1037 2027
100 psi, 150 F 51.4 49.8 48.4 47.5 46.2 44.5 43.4 42.3 40 37.7
STO API
750 psi, 100 F 60.7 57.5 54.7 52.8 50.2 47.1 45.3 43.6 40.5 37.8
C7+ MW 123 132 138 145 153 164 171 178 195 216
C7+ mol-% 3.47 4.51 4.23 7.08 9.48 13.78 17.59 22.59 34.88 49.49
TABLE 6 – GRIDDING EXAMPLE FOR NX=11 AND NY=22 (11 ALONG FRACTURE, 11 BEYOND FRAC TIP).
500 5000
Constant Gas Rate = 1 MMscf/D
Minimum FBHP = 1000 psia
200 2000
pwf (BO≈EOS)
100 1000
qo (BO≈EOS)
0 0
0.1 1 10 100 1000
Time, days
Fig. 1 – Production performance for a well producing with constant gas rate of 1 MMscf/D until FBHP of 1000 psia is reached, using a 1D planar
fracture geometry with EOS and black-oil PVT formulations, base case model (pRi=4500 psia, Ri=4000 scf/STB, ri=250 STB/MMscf).
100000 25
EOS
Gas Rate (Mscf/D) & Oil Rate (STB/D)
rp
10000 20
1000 15
qg (BO≈EOS)
100 10
qo (EOS)
10 5
Constant FBHP = 1000 psia qo (BO)
1D Planar Fracture
1 0
0.1 1 10 100 1000
Time, days
Fig. 2 – Production performance for a well producing against a constant FBHP of 1000 psia, using a 1D planar fracture geometry with EOS and black-
oil PVT formulations, base case model (pRi=4500 psia, Ri=4000 scf/STB, ri=250 STB/MMscf).
100000 50
qg (BO≈EOS)
Gas Rate (Mscf/D) & Oil Rate (STB/D)
10000 40
Producing OGR, rp, STB/MMscf
1000 30
EOS
rp
BO
100 20
qo (EOS)
10 10
qo (BO)
Constant FBHP = 1000 psia
2D Planar Fracture
1 0
0.1 1 10 100 1000
Time, days
Fig. 3 – Production performance for a well producing against a constant FBHP of 1000 psia, using a 2D planar fracture geometry with EOS and black-
oil PVT formulations, base case model (pRi=4500 psia, Ri=4000 scf/STB, ri=250 STB/MMscf).
SPE 155499 17
5000 500
pd pb
pb 450
4000 400
pd
350
pwf 250
2000 200
Producing OGR
(STB/MMscf)
150
1000 100
50
0 0
0.1 1 10 100 1000
Time (days)
5000 500
pd pb pd
450
pb
4000 400
pd
350
Gas Rate (Mscf/D)
pwf
Pressure (psia)
3000 300
250
2000 200
Producing OGR
(STB/MMscf)
150
1000 100
50
0 0
0 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 900 1000
Time (days)
Fig. 4 – Simulated production performance using compositional 1D planar fracture model with gas rate changes: (a) 30 days at 1 MMscf/D, (b) 30-365
days at 200 Mscf/D, (c) 365-730 days pwf=1000 psia, (d) 730-760 days shut-in, (e) 760-1000 days pwf=1000 psia.
5000 1000
Flowing BHP (psia)
Gas Rate (Mscf/D)
4000 OGRi=100
2000
OGRi=500
1000 10
OGRi=500
0
Dimensionless Producing
-2000
OGRi=250
-3000 0.1
OGRi=155
-4000
OGRi=100
-5000 0.01
0 10 20 30 40 50 60
Time, days
Fig. 5 – Production performance of wells producing for 30 days against a constant FBHP of 1000 psia, then rate is reduced to 200 Mscf/D for 30 days,
studying the impact of producing OGR change after rate reduction with increasing FBHPs.
18 SPE 155499
5000 1000
3000 100
2000
1000 10
0
Constant Gas Rate of 1 MMscf/D until
Dimensionless Producing
-1000 abrupt rate reduction to 200 Mscf/D. 1
OGR, rpD=rp/ri
-2000
-3000 0.1
-4000
-5000 0.01
0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350
Time, days
Fig. 6 – Production performance of wells producing with constant gas rate of 1 MMscf/D until rate is reduced to 200 Mscf/D, studying the impact of
producing OGR change after rate reduction with increasing FBHPs.
55
CCE Equilibrium Gases
54 CCE Equilibrium Oils
Wellstream Samples from Oil Reservoirs
53 Wellstream Samples from Gas Reservoir
Stock Tank Oil Gravities, API
52
51
50
49
48
47
46
45
0 500 1000 1500 2000 2500 3000 3500 4000 4500
CCE or Flowing BH Pressure, psia
Fig. 7 – Stock-tank oil gravity variation for equilibrium phases (lines) of a CCE test processed through same surface process (black-oil tables); and
producing STO versus flowing bottomhole pressure (symbols) for wells producing with 1 MMscf/D initial gas rate using EOS-based well model: (a) several
undersaturated and saturated oil reservoir examples and (b) saturated gas condensate reservoir with pRi=3500 psia.
100
In-Situ Reservoir Fluid
90
Oil Relative Volume, Vro=Vo/Vt, %
80
70 CCE Mix 1
CCE Mix 2
60
50
40
CCE Mix 3
30
20
CCE Mix 4
10
0
0 1000 2000 3000 4000 5000
Pressure, psia
Fig. 8 – Example application of Multi-Mixture CCE test using separator samples collected after one month when OGR decreased from initial value of
250 to ~60 STB/MMscf: the four CCE mixtures have recombination OGRs of 270, 200, 130, and 60 sep-bbl/MMscf, with richest sample giving a similar
liquid dropout curve to the in-situ reservoir fluid.
SPE 155499 19
5000
Extrapolated Critical Mixture
4500 at Reservoir Temperature
4000
Critical
2000
1500
1000
500
0
0 100 200 300 400 500 600 700
Temperature, F
Fig. 9 – Pressure-temperature phase diagram of produced wellstream and extrapolated critical mixture (created by adding incipient gas from
bubblepoint of sampled fluid).
7 0.7
6 0.6
Bo (RB/STB) & Rs (Mscf/STB)
5 0.5
Oil Viscosity, cp
4 0.4
3 0.3
2 0.2
1 0.1
0 0
0 2000 4000 6000 8000 10000
Pressure, psia
Fig. 10 – Black-oil PVT properties for oil phase from simulated CCE test for the sampled wellstream with OGR of 250 STB/MMscf and 4250 psia
bubblepoint, including extrapolation to a critical pressure of 4475 psia by adding incipient gas from bubblepoint of sampled fluid.
10000
Oil FVF, Bo or Bgd/rs, RB/STB
1000
100
Gas Phase
Oil Phase
10
1
0 1000 2000 3000 4000 5000
Pressure, psia
Fig. 11 – Saturated oil phase properties, showing how Bo and Rs are near-linear functions even at near-critical conditions where pressure dependence is
highly non-linear, from simulated CCE test for the sampled wellstream with OGR of 250 STB/MMscf and 4250 psia bubblepoint, including extrapolation to
a critical pressure of 4475 psia by adding incipient gas from bubblepoint of sampled fluid.
20 SPE 155499
100000
1000
100
10
1
0 1000 2000 3000 4000 5000
Pressure, psia
5000
Oil Phase: Bubblepoints
Gas Phase: Dewpoints
4000
Saturation Pressure, psia
3000
2000
1000
0
0 20 40 60 80 100
Reservoir Fluid "Gas" (C5-) mol-%
Based on Conversion from Solution OGR to mol-% using C og =800 scf/STB
Fig. 12 – (top) Solution oil-gas ratio for gas phase (rs) and oil phase (1/Rs) from simulated CCE test for the sampled wellstream with OGR of 250
STB/MMscf and 4250 psia bubblepoint, including extrapolation to a critical pressure of 4475 psia by adding incipient gas from bubblepoint of sampled
fluid; (bottom) p-z phase diagram using solution OGRs translated into mol-% surface gas in mixture using relation z6+≈(1+CogOGR)-1.
1
Oil Phase
Gas Phase
Saturated Viscosity, cp
0.1
0.01
0 1000 2000 3000 4000 5000
Pressure, psia
Fig. 13 – Saturated phase viscosities from simulated CCE test for the sampled wellstream with OGR of 250 STB/MMscf and 4250 psia bubblepoint,
including extrapolation to a critical pressure of 4475 psia by adding incipient gas from bubblepoint of sampled fluid.
Fracture
Network
Segment
Planar
Fracture
Well
Full Model
Boundary
Top view
Fig. 14 – Sketches of LRS well models and schematic geometric gridding for planar and network fracture geometries.
SPE 155499 21
140 31
NX=11
NX=21
120 NX=31 29
80 25
60 23
40 21
20 19
Detail
0 17
0.1 1 10 100 1000
Time, days
Fig. 15 – Producing OGR (liquid yield) performance for a well producing against a constant FBHP of 1000 psia, using a 1D planar fracture geometry
with varying numbers of geometrically-spaced grids (NX). Black-oil base case model (pRi=4500 psia, Ri=4000 scf/STB, ri=250 STB/MMscf).
100000 50
Both 1D gas and oil rates have near-exact 1/2 slopes.
Gas Rate (Mscf/D) & Oil Rate (STB/D)
10000 40
1000 30
2D
rp
100 1D 20
qo (2D)
10 10
Constant FBHP = 1000 psia
Planar Fractures qo (1D)
1 0
0.1 1 10 100 1000
Time, days
Fig. 16 – Production performance for a well producing against a constant FBHP of 1000 psia, comparing 1D and 2D planar fracture geometries for
black-oil PVT formulation, base case model (pRi=4500 psia, Ri=4000 scf/STB, ri=250 STB/MMscf).
100000 50
Gas Rate (Mscf/D) & Oil Rate (STB/D)
P1D≈P2D NF30
10000 40
Producing OGR, rp, STB/MMscf
NF50
1000 30
P2D
NF50
10 10
NF30
Constant FBHP = 1000 psia P1D
1 0
0.1 1 10 100 1000
Time, days
Fig. 17 – Production performance with constant total fracture area, showing effect of facture geometry: (a) planar fracture without drainage beyond tip
of fracture (P1D), (b) planar fracture with drainage beyond tip of fracture (P2D), (c) network fracture with one 50-ft square matrix block (NF50), (d) and
network fracture with two 30-ft square matrix blocks (NF30).
22 SPE 155499
100000 700
Constant FBHP = 1000 psia
Planar Fractures
1000 500
pRi=8000
100 400
pRi=8000
pRi=6000
10 300
pRi=4500
Producing OGR
(STB/MMscf)
pRi=6000 psia
0 100
pRi=4500 psia
0 0
0.1 1 10 100 1000
Time, days
Fig. 18 – Production performance of base-case LRS oil well modeled with 1D planar fracture against a constant FBHP of 1000 psia, showing impact of
the degree of undersaturation on producing OGR and oil rates.
1.2
2000 (500)
Producing OGR, rpD=rp/ri
2500 (400)
0.8 3125 (320)
4000 (250)
3125 (210)
5250 (190)
0.6 5710 (175)
0.4
Initial
Saturated Oils
0.2 pRi=pb
0.0
0 2000 4000 6000 8000 10000 12000
Initial Reservoir Pressure, psia
Fig. 19 – Dimensionless infinite-acting producing OGR (at 1000 days) for a planar fracture with FBHP=1000 psia, for oil systems with wide range of
initial gas-oil ratios and degrees of undersaturation.
100000 35
OGRi=50 STB/MMscf
Gas Rate (Mscf/D)
Oil Rate (STB/D)
10000 30
OGRi=155 STB/MMscf
1000 25
100 20
OGRi=50 STB/MMscf
10 15
OGRi=155 STB/MMscf
1 10
Producing OGR
(STB/MMscf)
0 5
Constant FBHP = 1000 psia Planar Fractures
0 0
0.1 1 10 100 1000
Time, days
Fig. 20 – Production performance of LRS gas condensate wells producing against a constant FBHP of 1000 psia, showing the lack of sensitivity of
produced OGR (liquid yield) to the richness of in-situ reservoir fluid, with a range from near-critical to lean gas condensates.
SPE 155499 23
1.0
Gas Reservoir Oil Reservoir pRi=10,000 psia
0.9 Soi=0 Soi=1-Swc pRi=8,000 psia
pRi=6,000 psia
0.8 pRi=5,000 psia
pRi=4,500 psia
Infinite-Acting Dimensionless
(near-saturated)
0.6
0.3
0.1
0.0
10 100 1000 10000
Initial Solution OGRi, STB/MMscf
Fig. 21 – Dimensionless infinite-acting producing OGR (at 1000 days) for a planar fracture with FBHP=1000 psia, for oil and gas fluid systems with
wide range of initial gas-oil ratios and degrees of undersaturation.
800
Initial GOR (OGR )
scf/STB (STB/MMscf)
Producing OGR at 1000 days, STB/MMscf
700
1500 (666)
600
Stabilized Infinite-Acting
400
3000 (333)
300 4000 (250)
Producing Wellstream
"Gas Condensate"
appears to be a
10000 10000000
1000 1000000
100 100000
10 10000
Initial OGR = 100 STB/MMscf | pRi = 10,000 psia
1 1000
Producing OGR,
STB/MMscf
0.1 100
0.01 10
0.001 1
0.1 1 10 100 1000
Time, days
Fig. 23 – Extremely undersaturated gas condensate well performance showing converged numerical solution with cyclic gas and oil rate performance,
showing periodic surges of high producing oil-gas ratios.
24 SPE 155499
1000 1000000
GORi=4,000 scf/STB
1 1000
0.1 1 10 100 1000
Time, days
Fig. 24 – Production performance for constant-gas rate of 1 MMscf/D until minimum BHP of 1000 psia is reached, for a range of reservoir fluids from
low-yield gas condensate to critical to high-GOR oil.
300
GORi=4,000 scf/STB (250 STB/MMscf) Oil
GORi=6,500 scf/STB (155 STB/MMscf) Critical
Producing Oil-Gas Ratio, STB/MMscf
150
100
50
0
0 1000 2000 3000 4000 5000 6000
Flowing Bottomhole Pressure, psia
Fig. 25 – Producing OGR versus flowing BHP for constant-gas rate of 1 MMscf/D until minimum BHP of 1000 psia is reached, for a range of reservoir
fluids from low-yield gas condensate to critical to high-GOR oil.
0.30
Dimensionless Producing OGR, rpD=rp/ri
0.20
0.15
0.05
0.00
0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9
Sgi
Fig. 26 – Dimensionless producing OGR for a saturated one- and two-phase LRS well producing against a constant FBHP of 1000 psia with a 1D
planar fracture model, showing the impact of stabilized infinite-acting OGR variation with the initial gas saturation in the reservoir.
SPE 155499 25
1000 1000000
Sgi=0% Sgi=0%
Sgi=60%
10 10000
Sgi=0%
1 1000
0.1 1 10 100 1000
Time, days
Fig. 27 – Production performance for a well producing with 1 MMscf/D until pwf=1000 psia is reached. Reservoir fluid systems are studied for pRi=3500
psia, for saturated oil (Sgi =0) and a range of two-phase saturated systems with varying Sgi.
500
Sgi=0% Initial OGRi=460 (Sgi=0%)
450
Producing Oil-Gas Ratio, STB/MMscf
400 Sgi=10%
Fig. 28 – Producing OGR versus flowing BHP for constant-gas rate of 1 MMscf/D until minimum BHP of 1000 psia is reached, for a range of saturated
reservoir fluid systems at 3500 psia initial reservoir pressure and varying amounts of initial gas saturation.