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Multiphase Flow Simulation—

Optimizing Field Productivity

Intan Azian Binti Abd Aziz As oil and gas well construction and field development become more complex, the
Petronus Carigali Sdn Bhd
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia need for more sophisticated flow simulation methods increases. New generations of
multiphase flow simulation tools are helping operators construct wells, pipelines and
Ivar Brandt
Oslo, Norway processing facilities safely and efficiently and optimize long-term field production at

Dayal Gunasekera minimal risk and maximal profit.


Abingdon, England

Bjarte Hatveit
Kjetil Havre
Gjermund Weisz
Increasingly sophisticated flow simulation mod- and how to complete each well to ensure optimal
Zheng Gang Xu
Kjeller, Norway els have been developed to meet the needs of long-term production from the field.
operators as they open new frontiers. These mod- Multiphase simulations predict flow behavior
Steve Nas els are vital for helping drilling engineers over- at all stages in the life of a well and field, from
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia come well design challenges and production and drilling to downhole production to network to pro-
facilities engineers to understand and anticipate cessing facilities.1 For example, simulations may
Knut Erik Spilling flow conditions as they seek to extract hydrocar- guide well control design and engineering deci-
Sandvika, Norway bons from deeper, more remote and geologically sions by helping understand the effects of gas
complex reservoirs. influx in HP/HT wells.2 Another area is planning
Ryosuke Yokote Flow simulation is a well-established means for reservoir sections prone to lost circulation or
Eni Australia
by which engineers approximate the multiphase kick events where managed pressure drilling
Perth, Western Australia, Australia
flow behavior in a well, production system or (MPD) may be the best option for development.3
Shanhong Song pipeline. Using mathematical models built into Flow simulation is also a useful tool in devel-
Chevron Project Resources Company specialized software programs, flow simulations oping contingency plans in case of well blowouts,
Beijing, China yield representations of the steady-state and during which reservoir fluids flow into the well-
transient flow of oil, gas and water that might be bore in an uncontrolled manner and may reach
Oilfield Review 27, no. 1 (May 2015).
Copyright © 2015 Schlumberger. encountered in a real-world network of wells, the surface. Well control companies and opera-
For help in preparation of this article, thanks to Bjørn-Tore flowlines, pipelines and process equipment. The tors have used flow simulations to understand the
Anfinsen and Lars Magnus Nordeide, Bergen, Norway;
Dag Biberg, Kevin Andre Hermansen, Norbert Hoyer,
output of these simulations guides operators’ expected flow rates during a blowout, informa-
Bin Hu and Hans Marius With, Oslo, Norway; Rajesh Puri, field development decisions in determining the tion that is then used to calculate the volumes
London, England; and Mack Shippen and Steve Smith,
Houston, Texas, USA.
number of wells to drill, the location of such wells and densities of well kill fluids as well as the
Drillbench, OLGA, OVIP and PIPESIM are marks of
1. Edwards DA, Gunasekera D, Morris J, Shaw G, Shaw K, 3. Managed pressure drilling uses flow control devices to
Schlumberger.
Walsh D, Fjerstad PA, Kikani J, Franco J, Hoang V and precisely control the annular pressure profile throughout
Quettier L: “Reservoir Simulation: Keeping Pace with the wellbore. Managed pressure drilling techniques are
Oilfield Complexity,” Oilfield Review 23, no. 4 commonly used to maintain wellbore control during
(Winter 2011/2012): 4–15. drilling by managing kicks or preventing an ingress of
2. For more on lost circulation events: Cook J, Growcock F, drilling fluids into the reservoir.
Guo Q, Hodder M and van Oort E: “Stabilizing the
Wellbore to Prevent Lost Circulation,” Oilfield Review 23,
no. 4 (Winter 2011/2012): 26–35.

26 Oilfield Review
May 2015 27
Tubing pressure gauge pumping rates required to bring the well back
Ptbg = BHP – waterhead + P 1.
under control (left). In addition, capping opera-
Annular pressure gauge tions can be reviewed because the flow simulation
Pann = BHP – P hyd + P 1.
No control, includes realistic pressures and temperatures for
waterhead pressure = 0 situations in which a capping stack is used to
control a blowout.4
Flow simulations help engineers optimize the
design and operation of producing wells. Models
provide insight into well completion designs,
Relief well Blowout well
including choices about inflow control methods,
well trajectory design, sand control and artificial
lift.5 Production engineers use flow simulations to
estimate how producing layers of the reservoir
contribute to the total well production. They can
then use this information to determine how to
Drillstring
operate the wells for optimal recovery.
Simulation models are also used to optimize
operations across an entire oil and gas field.
Design engineers use flow simulations during the
concept, front-end engineering and design and
detailed design phases to guide decisions on siz-
ing and materials selection for piping, valves, ves-
sels and processing facilities. Models, which can
also estimate the risks of hydrate and wax forma-
tion in the production system, guide the selection
of optimal chemical inhibition methods as well as
thermal control systems in the forms of insula-
tion, bundling and heating. Flow simulations pro-
vide insight that systems designers use to counter
corrosion and erosion in pipeline transmission
and processing systems.
Production engineers implement flow simula-
tion models to establish procedures for opera-
BHP = waterhead pressure + tional events such as pipeline startup, shut down
Phyd + P 1. and blowdown, production rate changes, optimal
Fracture pressure
process equipment usage, pipeline pigging and
network debottlenecking. Model output guides
normal operational procedures for these events
Reservoir
and highlights safe operating limits, which can
pressure be used to develop emergency procedures and
contingency plans.
> Flow simulation for well control. To regain control of a blowout, operators Flow simulations may play a role in operator
often use a dynamic kill operation. Well control specialists kill the well using a training programs. Simulation models help oper-
fluid density that will contain the well but not fracture the formation. While ations personnel become familiar with initial
keeping the annulus and the drillstring of the relief well filled with fluid, the startup procedures and flow assurance consider-
BHP—monitored through annular and tubing pressure gauges—is controlled
ations for new production systems. Simulations
through the fluid flow rate into the relief well. Flowing frictional pressure
supplements the hydrostatic pressure of the kill fluid injected through the relief also give less experienced personnel a means of
well (red arrows) and up the blowout well (blue arrows). Because these practicing safe processing equipment operation
operations include produced fluids and kill fluids, they can be modeled with and to run numerous “what-if” scenarios prior to
multiphase flow simulators. The Pann is annular pressure, Phyd is the
hydrostatic pressure created by the kill fluid, P 1 is the frictional pressure drop working in real-world operations.
caused by flow in the annulus of the blowout well, Ptbg is the tubing pressure This article describes the evolution of flow
in the relief well drillstring and waterhead pressure is the pressure exerted by simulation methodologies with emphasis on
the weight of a column of water from surface to the relief point. advances in the simulation of upstream and mid-
stream transient multiphase flow in wells and
pipeline networks. A brief history details how
flow simulators evolved from those that modeled

28 Oilfield Review
two-phase fluid systems under steady-state Solving this set of equations requires develop- Momentum

on

Flo
conditions to those able to model multiphase ment of closure laws, which are necessary rela- Equation

ati

w
orm

inf
systems in which fluid and flow properties tions that must be added to the conservation

o
in f

rm
w

a ti
F lo
change over time. The article also discusses the equations to allow their calculation (right). One

Pressure information

on
derivation of mathematical models that repre- basic closure law is the equation of state of the
sent a real-world flow system and includes a fluid, which is a thermodynamic equation that Mass Energy
Equation Equation
review of the numerical methods used to solve provides a mathematical relationship between

on
M
these models in a simulator. fluid properties, such as density and viscosity, to

ati
as
si

rm
Case studies highlight how the OLGA dynamic two or more state functions; state functions

nfo

nfo
rm

yi
multiphase flow simulator has helped optimize include temperature, pressure, volume or inter-

ati

erg
Equation

on

En
well construction and production processes for nal energy associated with the fluid. of State
operators working off the coasts of West Africa, This relationship can be obtained by consult-
> The flow of information between single-phase
the Middle East and Southeast Asia. An example ing precalculated tables of fluid properties as flow equations. In the case of single-phase flow
of hydraulic well control simulation of an explo- functions of pressure and temperature, assuming in a pipe, the conservation of momentum equation
ration well offshore Malaysia is also included. a constant total chemical composition at each solves for the flow or velocity of fluid in the section
pipe location and at each point in time.9 of pipe under study. This flow information is then
used as input to the conservation of mass and
A Brief History Functional relationships are also afforded energy equations to update the mass and energy
The vast majority of produced fluids do not through the study of black oil formulations, in contents at that section. The new mass and energy
come to the surface in a steady, single-phase which uniform fluid properties are used, or information is then used as input into the equation
stream. Rather, production is a complex and through full compositional analysis of reservoir of state to update pressure distribution. This new
pressure information as well as the updated fluid
ever-changing combination of hydrocarbon fluids fluid samples, in which individual fluid properties density and energy information are then used to
and gases, water and solids flowing together at are used for each hydrocarbon component. update the momentum equation for the next
nonuniform rates. Another set of basic closure laws includes laws or section of pipe, and so on. This general relationship
The basis for multiphase flow design and equations that relate the friction factors to veloc- between flow equations exists for every fluid
phase present in a multiphase flow system.
operation is fluid dynamics.6 The driving force ities, pipe geometry and physical properties of
behind the earliest oil industry simulation tools the fluid.
was multiphase flow system designers’ need for The first simulations were performed in This missing time element prompted the
accurate estimates of the pressure, temperature steady-state models in which fluid properties development of dynamic multiphase flow simula-
and liquid fractions in wells and along pipelines. such as flow rate, density, temperature and com- tions, which allow users to model the time-vary-
One fundamental approach to modeling flow position were assumed to remain constant over ing behavior of a system; as a result, predicting
behavior in oil and gas systems is the two-fluid time at a given point in the system. Steady-state multiphase flow variations that occur regularly
model, in which designers assume only two fluid models thus perform a mass, energy and momen- during normal oilfield operations is possible. As
phases—typically a liquid and a gas—are pres- tum balance of a stationary process—one that is in steady-state simulations, dynamic simulations
ent.7 Other models extend this treatment to in a local equilibrium state. While flow param- comprise equations for conservation of mass,
include fluids that coexist in more than two eters may change upstream or downstream of the momentum and energy. However, the local vari-
phases such as a gas, oil and water phase. particular point in the system, that point remains ables, including inlet and outlet conditions of the
Separate phases can flow in a pipeline in three in a state of local equilibrium if the fluid always
4. A capping stack is used to control, divert flow and shut in
stratified, continuous layers—a gas layer on top, has the same properties, regardless of time. a well during containment operations. It is not part of the
an oil layer in the middle and a water layer at the Since their introduction into the oil and gas standard drilling configuration and is deployed only as
necessary.
bottom of a pipeline. A phase can flow in each of industry nearly 30 years ago, steady-state simula- 5. Artificial lift refers to any system that adds energy to the
the three layers. For example, some of the gas is tors have evolved significantly. For example, the fluid column in a wellbore; the objective is to initiate or
improve production from the well. As wells mature and
transported through the pipeline in the upper gas PIPESIM steady-state multiphase flow simulator their natural reservoir pressure declines, most will need
layer, while the rest is transported as gas bubbles allows engineers to predict a range of flow chal- to use some form of artificial lift. For more on artificial lift:
Fleshman R and Lekic O: “Artificial Lift for High-Volume
dispersed in the oil and water layers. lenges that hinder production optimization, from Production,” Oilfield Review 11, no. 1 (Spring 1999): 49–63.
The multifluid model consists of mass, the occurrence or formation of asphaltenes, wax 6. Brandt I: “Multiphase Flow,” Euroil (March/April 1991):
momentum and energy conservation equations.8 and hydrates to carbon dioxide [CO2] -induced 62–63.
7. Ayala LF and Adewumi MA: “Low-Liquid Loading
Often, mass conservation equations are written corrosion and flow-induced erosion. Multiphase Flow in Natural Gas Pipelines,” Journal of
for each phase. Momentum conservation equa- Steady-state simulations provide systems Energy Resources and Technology 125, no. 4
(December 2003): 284–293.
tions are written for each of the continuous designers a method for quickly estimating flow
8. Li C, Liu E-b and Yang Y-q: “The Simulation of Steady Flow
layers, whereas energy equations can be writ- results at a specific set of conditions and yield in Condensate Gas Pipeline,” in Najafi M and Ma B (eds):
ten for the total fluid mixture or for each of near-immediate insight into how changes in sys- ICPTT 2009: Advances and Experiences with Pipelines
and Trenchless Technology for Water, Sewer, Gas, and
the layers. In the case of a two-phase, two-layer tem conditions will impact production. However, Oil Applications. Reston, Virginia, USA, American Society
flow model, a total of six differential equations because they operate on the fundamental princi- of Civil Engineers, 733–743.
9. A compositional tracking model may also be used to
are written. ple that flow parameters do not vary with time, provide more accurate compositions for transient flow,
steady-state simulators are not applicable for particularly for networks that have different fluids
and time-variable flow rates and thus time-dependent
transient flow phenomena simulation. local compositions.

May 2015 29
Offshore Development Subsea Tieback Onshore Processing Facilities

> Models for the life of a project. The OLGA simulator models transient multiphase flow throughout a project life cycle. The software has become the
industry standard for all multiphase field development, from drilling the first wells for an offshore field to developing subsea tiebacks to modeling flow into
onshore processing facilities.

system being modeled—such as flow rates, inlet Early attempts at modeling two-phase flow in The transient simulation from the OLGA sim-
pressure and local gas volume fractions—are single pipes used separate empirical correlations ulator also accounts for the flow regime within
allowed to vary with time to more closely reflect for volumetric gas fraction, pressure drop and the modeled section of borehole or pipe.19 For
real-world changes that occur in hydrocarbon flow regimes even though these entities are phys- two-phase gas-liquid flow, the structure of multi-
production systems.10 ically interrelated.17 In the OLGA simulator, flow phase flow falls into four basic flow regimes:
Dynamic fluid models are used in a wide regimes were treated as an integral part of the • stratified flow, consisting of two separate and
range of applications in the simulation of multi- two-fluid system. In the late 1990s, the OLGA continuous fluid streams: a liquid stream flow-
phase flow systems, including aircraft design, simulator was extended to model three-phase ing at the bottom of the pipe and a gas stream
prediction of weather patterns and the analysis flow regimes, including the tracking of three- (usually with entrained liquid droplets) flow-
of steam and water flow in the core of nuclear phase slugs, during which the flow stream is ing above the lower stream
reactors.11 In the early 1980s, fluid dynamics divided into intermittent segments of oil or water • annular flow, consisting of a regime in which a
experts began to use such models to simulate oil, that are separated by gas pockets. thin liquid film adheres to the pipe wall and a
gas and water flow in pipelines. gas stream containing entrained liquid drop-
Mathematical Models in the OLGA Simulator lets flows internal to this film
Development of a Dynamic Flow Simulator A mathematical model within the dynamic flow • dispersed bubble flow, consisting of a continu-
One of the earliest such attempts began in 1980 simulation space is a digital representation of a ous liquid flow with entrained gas bubbles
as a joint research project between the Norway real-world phenomenon. Mathematical models • hydrodynamic slug flow, consisting of stratified
state oil company, Statoil, and the Institutt for tend to provide a macroscopic view of fluid flow flow punctuated by intermittent slugs of highly
energiteknikk (IFE), or Institute for Energy in pipelines. This approach may simplify the flow turbulent liquid (next page).20
Technology.12 The first version of the simulation regimes by assuming fluid composition within Initial testing of the mathematical model
tool, known as the OLGA dynamic multiphase small sections of the pipeline are uniform, veloc- using data supplied by SINTEF showed that the
flow simulator, was released in 1983 out of this ity fields at the inlet and exit surfaces are normal simulator did an adequate job of describing bub-
research project. to these surfaces and that fluid properties such ble and slug regimes but was less accurate in pre-
The OLGA simulator models slow transients— as density and pressure are uniform across the dicting stratified and annular flows. In vertical
time spans of flow fluctuations ranging from a few entrance and exit cross sections. annular flow, the simulator predicted pressure
minutes to a few weeks—associated with mass The first mathematical models within the drops that were as much as 50% too high, whereas
transport in oil and gas systems.13 Production OLGA simulator were based on data from low- in horizontal flow, the predicted liquid holdups
engineers use the simulator to model flow in net- pressure air and water and steam-water flows in were too high by a factor of two in some cases.21
works of wells, flowlines, pipelines and process pipes with an inside diameter range between Scientists refined the model to account for the
equipment (above).14 2.5 and 20 cm [1 and 8 in.]. The data from the presence of a droplet field moving at approxi-
Starting in 1984, a joint research program SINTEF laboratory, which included the addition mately the same velocity as the gas phase, which
between IFE and SINTEF further advanced the of hydrocarbon liquids flowing in 20-cm diameter describes the flow regime in stratified or annular
simulator.15 The program was supported by com- pipes at a pressure of 20 to 90 bar [2 to 9 MPa; mist flow. Mathematical models within the
panies operating on the Norwegian Continental 290 to 1,300 psi]. Scientists used the data to dynamic multiphase flow simulator also include
Shelf, including Statoil, Conoco Norway, Esso make several modifications to the first version of continuity equations for three fluid phases: a gas
Norge, Mobil Exploration Norway, Norsk Hydro the OLGA simulator. Further iterations of the phase; a liquid phase consisting of oil, condensate
A/S, Petro Canada, Saga Petroleum and Texaco simulator have included field data from pipe sys- or water; and a liquid droplet phase consisting
Exploration Norway. This research program aimed tems of up to 76 cm [30 in.] in diameter, which of hydrocarbon liquid—oil or condensate—
to extend the empirical basis of the model and to expanded the tool’s extrapolation capabilities.18 dispersed in water. These continuity equations
introduce new applications.16

30 Oilfield Review
are coupled through interfacial friction, interfa- Separated
cial mass transfer and dispersions such as oil in
water. Modelers track dispersions by means of a
slip relation, which is the dimensionless ratio of Stratified flow
the velocity of the gas phase to the velocity of the
liquid phase.22
The conservation of mass equations can be
Annular flow
written to account for several components and
fluid types, including full chemical composition Distributed
tracking, the presence of scale and corrosion
inhibitors, drilling fluids, wax, isotopic tracers
and solid particles. A model capable of simulat- Dispersed bubble flow
ing flow in particle beds was introduced in the
2014 release of the OLGA simulator.23
The OLGA simulator also expresses the con-
Hydrodynamic slug flow
servation of momentum for three continuous lay-
> Flow regimes as categorized by multiphase flow simulators. Separated flow
ers, yielding separate momentum equations for
regimes are broadly categorized as stratified or annular (top), whereas
the gas layer, which may contain liquid droplets, distributed flow regimes are either dispersed bubble flow or hydrodynamic
and for oil and water layers. One conservation of slug flow (bottom). These categories can be further divided based on whether
energy equation in this model treats the energy the fluid stream is two phase or three phase and whether the pipe sections
of the system in terms of the combined mixture of are horizontal, vertical, straight or bent.
the fluid phases and assumes that each phase is
at the same temperature. An equation of state,
one for each fluid layer, provides the functional
relationship between the fluid volume and its conservation equations for each cell begins by tial equations and algebraic equations that rep-
pressure, temperature and composition. rewriting continuous equations into discrete resent the model. However, since the equations
The simulator selects the particular flow counterparts by applying discretization concepts may exhibit strong nonlinearity and have to be
regime for the model based on the minimum slip such as upwind weighting, which uses fluid prop- constrained—the total fluid volume must be
criterion.24 For given superficial velocities, the erties of the upstream cells in flow calculations. equal to the pipe volume—the solution methods
simulator selects the flow regime that gives the This process results in a set of ordinary differen- must be designed carefully.
lowest difference, or minimum slip, between the
10. In a production pipeline, time-dependent phenomena 20. Danielson TJ, Brown LD and Bansal KM: “Flow
gas and liquid linear velocities. In the 2000s, the include changes to flow dynamics caused by pipeline Management: Steady-State and Transient Multiphase
OLGA High Definition (HD) model was developed topography such as terrain-induced slugging, pipeline Pipeline Simulation,” paper OTC 11965, presented
startup and shut-in, variable production rates of gas at the Offshore Technology Conference, Houston,
by starting with 3D models for frictional forces for versus liquids and pigging. May 1–4, 2000.
stratified water, oil and gas flow in a circular pipe 11. Bendiksen KH, Malnes D, Moe R and Nuland S: 21. Liquid holdup refers to a condition in two-phase pipeline
“The Dynamic Two-Fluid Model OLGA: Theory and flow in which the gas flows at a greater linear velocity
and deriving 1D wall friction models as well as 1D Application,” SPE Production Engineering 6, no. 2 than the liquid. The slower moving liquid collects at
interfacial friction models that have 3D accuracy.25 (May 1991): 171–180. low-lying areas of a pipe section.
These mathematical models, applied together, 12. Institutt for energiteknikk (IFE) is a Norway-based 22. In homogeneous models of two-phase flow, the slip
independent research foundation for energy and relation is 1, because the gas and liquid phases are
account for the real-world complexities of multi- nuclear technology. assumed to be traveling at the same velocity. In many
phase flow in production systems that may include 13. Bendiksen et al, reference 11. real-world situations, the velocities of the two phases
can be significantly different, depending on the flow
multilateral wells, pipelines, artificial lift systems, 14. Flow in the reservoir itself is modeled by a number of
regime of the system under study.
reservoir simulators, which consider the flow of multiple
processing facilities and flow control equipment components in a reservoir divided into a large number of 23. Brandt I: “Some Aspects of Particle Flow Modeling
3D components known as grid cells. For more on Within a Commercial, Transient, Multiphase Flow
such as chokes and sand control devices. Simulator,” presented at the Geoff Hewitt Celebration
reservoir simulation: Edwards et al, reference 1.
Analysts use mathematical models to compute 15. Stiftelsen for industriell og teknisk forskning (SINTEF), or
Conference, Multiphase Flow, London, July 23–25, 2014.
solutions using numerical methods or algorithms. the Foundation for Scientifica nd Industrial Research, is 24. Bendiksen et al, reference 11.
an independent, noncommercial research organization 25. Biberg D, Holmås H, Staff G, Sira T, Nossen J,
These methods take advantage of advances in based in Scandinavia. Andersson P, Lawrence C, Hu B and Holmås K:
computer processing power and speed to create 16. SINTEF had been running an experimental program at “Basic Flow Modelling for Long Distance Transport of
the large-scale Tiller Laboratories in Trondheim, Norway, Wellstream Fluids,” presented at the 14th International
digital solutions that simulate real-world flow Conference on Multiphase Production Technology,
since 1980. The funding is provided by the same
phenomena at a fine level of detail. companies that supported the IFE/SINTEF joint research Cannes, France, June 17–19, 2009.
Numerical methods begin by dividing the program in 1984. Output from the extended OLGA 26. The number of cells defined for a given pipeline is
simulator was tested against the datasets acquired from limited only by complexity of the particular pipeline
overall fluid stream in the pipe into small, dis- this initial work. being modeled. Additional cells can be defined around
crete grids or cells. Each cell has its own values 17. Bendiksen et al, reference 11. areas of the pipeline requiring greater simulation
scrutiny, such as around valves or inflow control
of pressure, temperatures, fluid compositions, 18. Brandt, reference 6.
devices. The optimal number of cells for a given pipeline
19. Flow regime refers to the large-scale variation in the is often a compromise between the processing time and
densities, flow rates and fluxes.26 Solving the physical distribution of the gas and liquid phases in a accuracy required from the numerical simulation.
flow conduit.

May 2015 31
The entire equation set is then grouped into itly at the time step. The equations are solved Principles in Action
subsets according to the characteristics or proper- numerically using iterative techniques until con- When applied to field operations, dynamic multi-
ties of the equations. The subsets are solved in vergence is reached for the entire system. These phase flow simulation plays an important role in
stages, one stage followed by the next at the same methods can be applied to study flow in both scientists’ understanding the likelihood and sever-
time step. The stages are coupled together explic- steady-state and dynamic conditions (below).27 ity of generating fluid-related by-products such as
hydrates, wax, scale and emulsions in a produc-
tion system. Design engineers use such simula-
tions to predict the occurrence of these species in
Start Start the actual field system and then test various
design alternatives that are aimed at minimizing
their impact. Ideally, such simulations are per-
Divide the pipeline into grids Input parameters formed before the production system is built, thus
allowing the operator to design and construct a
production system—from the wellbore to the sur-
Set grid section number: N = 0 Mesh length and time into grids
face processing equipment—that will keep these
flow assurance challenges to a minimum.
Input boundary conditions for Get steady-state solutions
Chevron used dynamic multiphase flow simu-
P, T, νg and νL at initial point of lation to help manage flow assurance and opera-
pipeline (N = 0) tional risks in its Lobito-Tomboco subsea field
t = t + Δt. in Block 14, offshore Angola (next page).28 The
development comprises three subsea centers
Calculate the thermophysical
parameters at N section tied back to the Benguela Belize (BB) compliant
Designate boundary conditions tower.29 Both the Lobito and Tomboco reservoirs
contain light (31 to 32 degree API), low-sulfur and
Calculate the liquid holdup low-acid crude that has little asphaltene and
at N section Calculate physical parameters naphtha content.
Chevron engineers were challenged to design
a robust production system for this field that
Solve conservation of mass, Solve conservation of mass,
would economically transport the produced fluids
momentum and energy equations momentum and energy equations
to calculate P, T, νg and νL to calculate P, T, νg and νL from subsea wells to topside while sufficiently
at N + 1 section at time t + Δt mitigating anticipated operational and flow assur-
ance risks. To maximize production from each
subsea center, water injection would be required
Save results Calculate the water holdup to sweep and provide pressure support to each
well. In addition, as water cut increased, the oper-
ator would have to implement gas lift. Additional
N = N + 1. Save the solutions
challenges were expected in the form of flow
assurance risks that included the formation of
hydrates, scale, wax and corrosion by-products as
No No
Is N = Nmax? Is t ≥ tmax? well as the occurrence of sanding and slugging.
The operator first assessed its exposure to
Yes Yes flow assurance risks by collecting and analyzing
Output the results Output the solutions
oil and water samples from the reservoirs. This
analysis included fluid pressure-volume-temper-
ature characterizations and a comprehensive
End End assessment of the fluid compositions from each
reservoir.30 Using the OLGA flow simulator, mod-
> Steps for solving two-phase flow models for stratified flow in a condensate-gas pipeline. Steady-state elers employed the resulting output of this analy-
models (left) begin by dividing the pipe section into smaller sections (N) and inputting the boundary sis to develop various thermohydraulic models,
conditions for pressure (P ), temperature (T ), liquid velocity (νL) and gas velocity (νg) at the initial point
of the pipeline. The model uses these initial conditions to solve the continuity equations in the first which study hydraulic flow in thermal systems.
section (N = 0) and to calculate values for pressure, temperature and fluid velocities in that section. The operator produced the following thermohy-
These values are used as inputs into the next section (N + 1), and the process repeats until the final draulic models: individual wellbore and flowline,
section —the other end of the pipeline, Nmax —is reached. A similar process is followed in the dynamic
production system of each subsea center and of
model (right), but an additional iterative step accounts for changes to fluid properties and flow
parameters and boundary conditions with time (t). Because the flow equations are nonlinear, the entire integrated production system with the
performing iterations to reach a solution with acceptable accuracy is usually necessary. wells and flowlines.

32 Oilfield Review
Simulations were run under steady-state
conditions, which the operator defined as any
condition in which produced fluids were flowing
in a fairly uniform and uninterrupted manner
through the wellbore, flowlines and surface pro-
cessing lines. A number of transient simulations
were also run to determine how the produc-
tion stream would react to dynamic situations
that included system commissioning, startup,
shutdown (planned-versus-unplanned and short-
versus-long), initial well ramp up, pigging, dead-
oil circulation and slugging. BB compliant tower
This extensive modeling effort allowed
Chevron to make informed decisions that lowered
the company’s initial capital expenditures for the
project while ensuring more reliable production
with a low risk of upsets or unplanned shut-
downs.31 For hydrate mitigation, the operator was
able to design the optimal thermal insulation
thickness for subsea flowlines and irregularly
shaped components such as connectors and pipe-
Center C
line end terminations. The simulations also
guided the optimal use and injection rate of treat- Center B
ment chemicals such as methanol for hydrate Center A
inhibition, corrosion inhibitor, biocide and oxygen
scavenger to mitigate corrosive attacks.
To mitigate sanding risk, the simulation out-
> Chevron subsea field. In the Lobito-Tomboco subsea field, three subsea centers (A, B and C) are
put guided the operator’s decision to complete all
located in approximately 396 to 550 m [1,300 to 1,800 ft] of water and are tied back to the Benguela
producing wells with robust gravel packs and limit Belize (BB) compliant tower, which is in approximately 390 m [1,280 ft] of water. Each center is
maximum drawdown across the completion, connected to the tower via one 10-in. flowline (green), which carries production from the wells to
which also minimized the risk of fines migration. the tower, and via one 8-in. test line (red). The subsea system capacity is 115,000 bbl/d [18,300 m3/d].
This volume fills the Lobito-Tomboco production module on the BB platform and the available
The dynamic flow simulations suggested a slug- 80,000-bbl/d [12,700-m3/d] light oil production train on the BB platform. The subsea system capacity
ging risk mitigation strategy that included proper also allows for production from future subsea centers in the nearby development areas. (Adapted
well ramp up and ramp down procedures, mini- from Song, reference 28.)
mum flow rates in each flowline to keep flow out-
side the slugging regime and ideal topside choke
settings to control slugging during pigging and
dead-oil circulation. Once the system was built and production state flowing pressures calculated using the
To further mitigate flow assurance and opera- started flowing from the three subsea centers, OLGA simulator were within 90% of the field
tional risks at the Lobito-Tomboco field, the oper- the field data were compared with the simulated pressures, while the calculated temperatures
ator used OLGA simulator training to help field results obtained from the OLGA simulator. The were within 95% of those measured in the field.
personnel gain familiarity with how the subsea actual and simulated datasets correlated in each The actual and simulated tree and manifold cool
production system would interact with the top- instance, indicating that the thermohydraulic down times also matched well. The systems were
side processing system under various production models used to develop the operations proce- robust for operations and not over- or underde-
conditions. The dynamic flow simulator was also dures for the field were accurate. The steady- signed for maintaining effective flow assurance.
implemented as part of the operator’s pipeline
27. Changjun L, Wenlong J and Xia W: “Modeling and minimize forces caused by ocean waves. A deck sits
management system to model the real-time Simulation for Steady State and Transient Pipe Flow atop the legs to accommodate drilling and production
behavior of the multiphase flow in the subsea of Condensate Gas,” in Moreno-Piraján JC (ed): operations.
Thermodynamics—Kinetics of Dynamic Systems. 30. A pressure-volume-temperature characterization is a
production system. The management system can Rijeka, Croatia: Intech Books (2011): 65–84. means of characterizing reservoir fluid systems through
be used in three different modes: an online real- 28. For more on this field development: Song S: “Managing laboratory experiments and equation of state modeling.
Flow Assurance and Operation Risks in Subsea Tie-Back The resulting fluid parameters are then used as input for
time application to monitor the current state of System,” paper OTC 19139, presented at the Offshore various reservoir, pipeline and process simulations.
the production system, an online look-ahead Technology Conference, Houston, May 5–8, 2008. 31. An upset in a produced fluid stream occurs when
application to predict future operation based on 29. A compliant tower is a fixed-rig structure used for physical conditions such as pressure, temperature or
deepwater oil and gas production. The tower consists of flow rates in the flow stream give rise to the formation
planned changes to the production system and an flexible (compliant) legs that reduce resonance and of precipitates or emulsions.
offline what-if application for planning and engi-
neering studies.

May 2015 33
simulation results help the operator detect leaks,
EUROPE calculate hydrate risks, understand the likeli-
ASIA
hood of pipeline slugging and track the progress
of pigs during pigging operations (next page, top).
The dynamic online simulator can also be run
in a mode that allows it to forecast future produc-
AFRICA
tion or potential flow assurance problems. For
example, an operator can simulate five hours into
the future at regular intervals to gain an early
warning of situations that might generate a shut-
down alarm. The simulator may also be used in a
planning mode, which allows the operator to
understand the impact of any planned design
changes to the operation of the pipeline and pro-
0 100 200 km cessing facility.
Ras Laffan
0 75 150 mi For the Dolphin Gas Project, the pipeline
QATAR management system generated models for the
Sharjah two 85-km [53-mi] long, 91-cm diameter multi-
Doha Dubai Fujairah
phase pipelines. It also modeled the operation of
Production platform Jebel Ali several offshore systems, including two platforms
Processing plant containing 15 production wells and pig launch-
Previously existing pipelines Taweelah ers, and the injection and tracking of a hydrate
Dolphin constructed pipelines
Abu Dhabi inhibitor and a scale inhibitor. Onshore, the sys-
OMAN
Maqta tem provided real-time model updates on the
Al Ain
SAUDI operation of pig receivers and slug catchers.
ARABIA The system has been used in daily pipeline
UNITED ARAB EMIRATES
operations since it was installed at the project at
the end of 2007. Through continuous monitoring
> Dolphin Energy in Qatar and the UAE. Dolphin Energy is involved in every stage of the gas value chain,
from production of raw natural gas at its two offshore platforms to processing at its onshore Ras Laffan
of the risk of hydrate formation, pipeline manage-
plant to transmission of natural gas by export pipeline to the UAE. The company also distributes the ment has helped ensure optimal injection of
gas to customers across the UAE and to Oman. hydrate inhibitor. The system is used for active
liquid inventory management and tracking of pig-
ging operations. Dolphin Energy pipeline integ-
rity experts have also used the management
Dynamic Production Management of a Gas restarts. Additionally, accurately predicting flow system to track the use of corrosion inhibitor,
Condensate Field regimes and the onset of slugging in gas conden- providing input to calculate the viable operating
Today, it is common for operators to implement sate fields is difficult; hydrate mitigation requires life of the pipelines.
production management systems that incorpo- the operator to select the optimal type and thick-
rate dynamic flow simulation tools to optimize ness of insulation for subsea flowlines and the Well Cleanup and Startup in the Kitan Field
their field operations. Dolphin Energy used such proper type and dosage of hydrate inhibitor to be Dynamic simulations are also applied to well
a system on its Dolphin Gas Project, which com- deployed during production. cleanup and startup operations.32 Eni Australia
prises two offshore production platforms 80 km A pipeline management system was installed used multiphase, numerical transient simulation
[50 mi] off the coast of Qatar (above). These plat- on the project to address these flow assurance to guide decisions on well cleanup on the Kitan
forms produce wet natural gas from the Khuff concerns. The system included the OLGA Online oil field (next page, bottom).33 Located approxi-
Formation; production flows to an onshore pro- dynamic production support system, which is an mately 200 km [124 mi] off the southern coast of
cessing plant through two 91-cm [36-in.] subsea online simulator that generates real-time models
32. Well cleanup is a period of controlled production,
flowlines. The processing plant separates the designed to match field conditions and supports typically following a stimulation treatment, during which
hydrocarbon liquids—condensate and liquefied the reliable operation of the multiphase pipe- time the treatment fluids return from the formation and
are produced to the surface. The duration of the cleanup
petroleum gas—for sale and processes the lines from the wellhead to the onshore receiving generally depends on the complexity of the stimulation
remaining natural gas for compression and trans- and processing plant. treatment; operations such as gravel packing and
hydraulic fracturing require slower and more careful
portation by pipeline to the UAE. The online simulator incorporates data from cleanup to avoid jeopardizing the long-term efficiency of
To meet the challenge of managing liquids in-field monitoring and sensor systems, which the treatment.
33. For more on this cleanup operation: Yokote R,
production in a gas condensate field such as the measure fluid pressure, temperature, flow rate Donagemma V and Mantecon JC: “Dynamic Simulation
Dolphin Gas Project, designers must properly and liquid holdup in the pipeline. The simulator Applications to Support Challenging Offshore
Operations: A Kitan Oil Field Offshore East Timor Case
size pipelines during the project planning phase. then runs real-time models to provide informa- Study,” paper SPE 156146, presented at the SPE Annual
During operations, challenges include managing tion that supports or adds to what is available Technical Conference and Exhibition, San Antonio,
Texas, USA, October 8–10, 2012.
rate changes, pigging operations, shut-ins and from the existing control system. Such real-time

34 Oilfield Review
> Pig Tracking Advisor in OLGA Online. In the Pig Tracking Advisor module of OLGA Online, the operator is able to see a display of a subsea production loop
and the subsea template (top, yellow). The connection to the topside processing facility includes the pig launcher receiver. When a pig is launched into one
of the legs of the production loop, its location is marked by an icon visible along the production loop. Operators are also able to monitor pipeline profiles
(bottom left), including liquid holdups, elevation profiles and calculated variables (bottom right) such as estimated arrival time at the receiver and current
location and velocity of the pig.

EAST TIMOR

Kitan field

AUSTRALIA

0 2,000 4,000 km
0 1,000 2,000 mi

> Kitan field. The Kitan field (left) is located about 200 km [124 mi] southeast of East Timor and 500 km [310 mi] northwest of Australia. Oil and gas flow from
Kitan subsea Wells 5 and 3 and Well 2–sidetrack 1 to a floating production, storage and offloading (FPSO) vessel (right). Oil and gas flow from the seafloor
to the FPSO (top right) via flexible production lines (black, bottom), whereas gas-lift gas is delivered through separate flowlines (red) from the FPSO to the
wellheads (black). The control unit (yellow) distributes commands from the FPSO to the well centers via a main umbilical cable (yellow and black).

May 2015 35
East Timor, the Kitan field consists of three sub- base oil and brine during well cleanup and to use achieved at all downhole gauges with a maximum
sea intelligent wells, subsea flowlines, risers and these estimates as a guide for the actual cleanup difference of less than 1% (below left). Matching,
one floating production, storage and offloading program in the field.34 In addition, sensitivities to which was also achieved upstream of the choke
(FPSO) vessel. Three wells were completed and reservoir parameters such as permeability, pres- manifold, had a maximum 1% error during the
cleaned up prior to the FPSO arrival on location. sure and temperature were simulated to estimate commingled flow period.
Intelligent completions were installed at sim- the effect on pressure, temperature and flow rate The validated well models were subsequently
ilar depths in three wells to control flow from an at the downhole gauges and upstream of the integrated with the operator’s flowline models,
upper and lower zone. The upper zone for each choke manifold. These simulations provided the which were run to provide information to the
well was perforated at a measured depth of rig engineers with the information they needed field startup team. The team used the dynamic
between 3,344 and 3,367 m [10,971 and 11,047 ft]; to predict flow conditions in the wells before con- flowline simulation results to estimate the opti-
the lower zone was perforated between 3,384 and ducting the cleanup operations and bringing the mal position of the downhole flow control valves
3,394 m [11,102 and 11,135 ft]. Downhole flow wells onto production. without exceeding the system’s production limi-
control valves with eight choke positions— The simulations defined well cleanup as com- tations. These simulations also helped the opera-
fully opened, fully closed and six intermediate— plete when the amount of brine and base oil in the tor set the proposed ramp up schedule, estimate
control flow from each zone. Downhole gauges produced reservoir oil, measured at the surface, pressure and temperature at various places in
were deployed to monitor pressure and tempera- was less than 1% by mass. The optimal oil flow rate the flowline and FPSO and estimate the produc-
ture for each zone. was estimated to be 7,000 bbl/d [1,100 m3/d], tion fluids arrival time at the FPSO. The produc-
Because of the remoteness of the field loca- and the estimated flowing wellhead pressure tion system model was validated with actual
tion, the operator needed assurances that the and temperature were 1,200 to 1,400 psi [8.3 to production data.
cleaned up wells would perform as required prior 9.7 MPa] and 43°C [109°F]. Pressure and tem-
to deploying the FPSO. The dynamic flow simula- perature were also predicted dynamically at loca- Drilling a Narrow-Margin Well Offshore
tor was used to model the intelligent completion tions of interest such as the downhole gauges and Malaysia
and several preselected well cleanup scenarios in upstream of the choke manifold. Dynamic modeling methodologies also prove use-
which cleanup time, pressure and temperature at The operator used the values from the simula- ful during drilling operations, particularly when
various points of interest and flow rates were tions as guideposts for the actual well cleanup an operator plans a drilling program in narrow-
altered to determine their impact on cleanup. and well test operations. A comparison of the margin offshore wells. Petronas Carigali Sdn Bhd
The objectives of the study were to estimate the model data with the actual well data after faced such a situation ahead of drilling an explora-
required flow rate and duration to unload the cleanup and testing found that matching was tion well in the SB field, located in the PM block on
the west side of the Malay basin, Malaysia.35 This
4,800 basin is characterized by interbedded sand, coal
and shale formations. These conditions, coupled
4,790
with a high-pressure, high-temperature (HPHT)
4,780 environment and a steeply rising pressure ramp
presented numerous drilling challenges, including
4,770 reduced kick tolerances, narrow drilling windows
between the pore pressure and fracture gradient,
4,760
high drilling fluid densities and equivalent circu-
Pressure, psi

4,750 lating density (ECD) effects of the fluids.36


An initial exploratory well was drilled in the
4,740 area, and although the operator used MPD tech-
niques, an influx of reservoir fluids into the well-
4,730
bore exceeded kick tolerances and the fracture
Measured Simulated
4,720 gradient of the reservoir, resulting in complete
fluid losses and loss of the well. As a result, the
4,710 drilling operation failed.
The operator planned a second exploratory
4,700
0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 22 24 well just 50 m [160 ft] from the first well, but
Time, h with a more rigorous approach to wellbore pres-
> History matching of pressure. The actual measured pressures recorded at the lower downhole gauge sure management that included the use of the
in one of the Kitan field wells (green) are in reasonable agreement with the pressures obtained by the Drillbench dynamic drilling simulator software
OLGA simulation (red); the largest difference measured between them is 1%. (next page). This simulator uses a modeling
methodology similar to that used by the OLGA
34. A base oil is the continuous phase in oil-base drilling Narrow Margin HPHT Exploration Well in Malaysia,” flow simulator but focuses on predicting dynamic
fluids. In the case of well cleanup at Kitan, the base oil paper IADC/SPE 155580, presented at the IADC/SPE Asia
was pumped downhole to displace the brine that had Pacific Drilling Technology Conference and Exhibition, downhole conditions that pertain to maintaining
been used during the well completions operation. Tianjin, China, July 9–11, 2012. well control while drilling. The Drillbench simu-
35. For more on dynamic modeling: Nordin NAB, Umar L, 36. For more on drilling windows, pore pressure and
Aziz IABA, Nas S and Woo WK: “Dynamic Modeling of fracture gradients: Cook et al, reference 2.
lator provides profile plots simulating pressure
Wellbore Pressures Allows Successful Drilling of a

36 Oilfield Review
3,500 The OVIP OLGA verification and improve-
ment project, for example, began in 1996 as a
3,700 three-year study designed to verify the simula-
tor’s output against field data provided by oil
company participants, which included Statoil,
3,900
Saga, Norsk Hydro, BP, Elf, Total, Agip, Exxon,
Conoco and Chevron. The success of this initial
4,100 project, which included fine-tuning the models to
more closely match field realities, led to a series
Depth, m

4,300
of subsequent OVIP project JIPs. The project has
run continuously since its inception. The 2013 to
2015 OVIP members include BG Group, BP,
4,500 ExxonMobil, Gassco, Eni, Repsol, Saudi Aramco,
Shell, Statoil, Total, Woodside and PEMEX.
4,700 The OVIP project main objective is to serve
as a platform for sharing knowledge about how
OLGA simulator predictions compare with field
4,900
and laboratory data. The project also serves
as a means of sharing flow assurance expertise
5,100 between its member oil companies. Members
1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 1.8 1.9 2.0 2.1 2.2 provide, from their OLGA Online systems, field-
Equivalent circulating density, specific gravity wide operational data that has been collected
> Pore pressure–fracture pressure drilling window. The Drillbench simulator over long time spans. Last year, one member
provides profile plots showing pressure conditions, including the pore supplied the OVIP project group with detailed
pressure (blue line) and fracture pressure (green line) for the entire wellbore measurements from eight onshore and offshore
at any time. Understanding the entire system ensures that the wellbore pipelines. At present, another member is plan-
equivalent circulating density (ECD, red line) stays within the operational
window defined by the formation pressure and strength. Maximum and
ning experiments covering the entire operational
minimum values (dotted lines) are updated and stored during the simulation, range of a 34-in. [86-cm] diameter offshore gas
providing a useful tool for examining the downhole boundaries to ensure that condensate pipeline.
no zone of the well is in danger of being fractured by the proposed ECD. Another JIP, known as HORIZON I, started in
2004 with industry participants including IFE,
Chevron, Eni, ExxonMobil, Statoil and Shell. The
conditions for the entire wellbore at any time and for each hole section; the dynamic simulations project develops models to better simulate flow
has a particular focus on identifying potential produced estimates of the impact of fluid circula- conditions in greater reservoir and water depths,
weak zones in the formation and intervals of nar- tion rates on the kick margin in the well. longer flowlines and more challenging tempera-
row drilling margins. The operator can then The simulations allowed the driller to drill ture and pressure environments. This project
adjust the drilling program to minimize the risk each section of the well using appropriate drill- was followed by the HORIZON II JIP, which ran
of a kick or other well control event prior to string running and tripping speeds, mud circula- from 2008 to 2012. The original JIP participants
reaching potential trouble zones. tion rates and surface back pressures to prevent were joined by Total and ConocoPhillips in
Engineers began planning the second well by well control events. Using these dynamic flow Horizon II. HORIZON II was aimed at expand-
gathering offset data from the first well, which simulations and MPD techniques, the operator ing the modeling capacity of the OLGA simulator
they used to validate data input to the simulator. drilled the exploratory well within the narrow for long distance gas condensate transport and
Data inputs included the planned well geometry, drilling margin to its target depth of 2,800 m long distance transport of oilwell streams. These
pore and fracture pressure predictions, casing [9,200 ft]. Petronas plans to use the workflow projects resulted in new software modules that
setting depths, predicted bottomhole-to-well- established by this hydraulic well control simula- have expanded features for the OLGA simulator;
head temperature profile, drilling mud weight tion effort as the blueprint for future appraisal these modules are in use today for longer and
and rheology parameters at various sections of and development wells in the region. deeper pipelines and processing systems around
the well. the world.
Dynamic drilling simulations were then run Future Directions in Flow Simulation Future developments promise to extend the
for each hole section to determine ECDs for vari- To meet operator demands for models with reach of multiphase flow simulators even further
ous mud flow rates and weights. Tripping simula- greater accuracy and finer details, multiphase by tying them into reservoir modeling, drilling
tions were performed to investigate the effects of flow simulators must continually evolve. To that and production optimization software systems.
changing wellbore temperatures and potential end, Schlumberger has gained experience The ultimate objective of this work is to provide
surge and swab pressure concerns, particularly through several joint industry projects (JIPs) operators with a seamless, start-to-finish view of
in deeper sections of the well where the pore that focused on extending the simulator’s physi- their production systems for better control of
pressure–fracture pressure window was narrow. cal and numerical models. long-term field development costs and produc-
Kick tolerance calculations were also completed tion potential. —RvF/TM

May 2015 37

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