Adaobi Nwosi-Anele
Rivers State University, Nigeria

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Evaluation of the use of Water Alternated Gas Injection for Enhanced Oil Recovery Bright Kinate; Adaobi Nwosi-Anele; Ifeanyi Nwankwo
Journal of Earth Energy Engineering Vol. 11 No. 1 (2022)
Publisher : Universitas Islam Riau (UIR) Press

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.25299/jeee.2022.7410

Abstract

Hydrocarbon can be naturally produced from underneath fractured sandstone when pressure can no longer force fluids to the surface facilities. A satisfactory recovery factor for this production was conducted through the cost-effective enhanced oil recovery (EOR) method. Water alternated gas (WAG) injection is a promising EOR technique that combines the advantages of waterflooding and gas injection to achieve better mobility control, improved sweep efficiency, and overall recovery from the given reservoir. Therefore, this study aims to investigate the relationship of a miscible WAG to a core flood model using numerical simulation techniques (Eclipse Reservoir Simulator – Black Oil Model Option). In this case, reservoir X consisting of three wells drilled 15 years after the initial forecast showed that production cannot be sustained by natural depletion. Furthermore, the optimal WAG ratio was selected with different simulation scenarios using oil recovery factors to perform 12 simulation runs and study the influence of the WAG cycle period. The most effective WAG cycle scenario was 90W-30G with an oil recovery factor of 0.54684 (54.68 %) and cumulative production of 14.987MMSTB. The 30W-90G produced the lowest oil recovery factor and cumulative production of 0.47468 (47.47%) and 12.996 MMSTB, respectively. Therefore, a higher water cycling period is required for better oil recovery. The recovery is also enhanced by lowering the rate of water to gas injection. The results showed that despite the predicted higher recovery factor, a lower WAG ratio indicated a potential of relatively low-pressure maintenance which can affect future recovery from the reservoir.