E-Book Overview
This a pack of book and CD. This is one of the best tools that the reservoir engineer has at his disposal, allowing the engineer and geologist to create the most efficient and cost effective plan possible for drilling and production. If your simulation is faulty, too general or inaccurate in any way, this can affect the production, cost and time spent at the site, which affects the bottom line. Any of these problems can happen when a simulation is generated from a program that is outdated, an unproven method or even a set of equations that use too much guesswork. This book offers a practical, real-world approach to solving reservoir simulation problems. As a reference for the engineer in the field, it offers a new approach using more mathematical models for the engineer to devise his or her own approach to a particular problem.
E-Book Content
Petroleum Reservoir Simulation A Basic A p p r o a c h Jamal H. Abou-Kassem Professor of Petroleum Engineering United Arab Emirates University AI-Ain, The United Arab Emirates S. M. Farouq Ali Petroleum Engineering Consultant PERL Canada Ltd. Edmonton, Alberta, Canada M. Rafiq Islam Professor and Killam Chair in Oil and Gas Dalhousie University Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada @ Petroleum Reservoir Simulation: A Basic Approach Copyright © 2006 by Gulf Publishing Company, Houston, Texas. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form without the prior written permission of the publisher. HOUSTON, TX: Gulf Publishing Company 2 Greenway Plaza, Suite 1020 Houston, T X 77046 AUSTIN, TX: 427 Sterzing St., Suite 104 Austin, T X 78704 1098765432 I Library of CongressCataloging-in-PublicationData Petroleum Reservoir Simulation: A Basic Approach/ Jamal H. Abou-Kassem ... [et al.]. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 0-9765113-6-3 (alk. paper) I. Petroleum--Simulation methods, manuals, etc. 2. Petroleum--Mathematical models, manuals, etc. 3. Hydrocarbon reservoirs--Simulation methods, manuals, etc. 4. Hydrocarbon reservoirs--Mathematical models, manuals, etc. 5. Petroleum engineering--Mathematics, manuals, etc. I. Abou-Kassem~ 3amal H. (lama1 Hussein) TN870.57.R47 2006 553.2'8015118--dc22 2005O29674 Printed in the United States of America Printed on acid-free paper, oo Text design and composition by TIPS Technical Publishing, Inc. We dedicate this book to our parents. Preface The "Information Age" promises infinite transparency, unlimited productivity, and true access to knowledge. Knowledge, quite distinct and apart from "know-how," requires a process of thinking, or imagination--the attribute that sets human beings apart. Imagination is necessary for anyone wishing to make decisions based on science. Imagination always begins with visualization--actually, another term for simulation. Under normal conditions, we simulate a situation prior to making any decision, i.e., we abstract absence and start to fill in the gaps. Reservoir simulation is no exception. The two most important points that must not be overlooked in simulation are science and multiplicity of solutions. Science is the essence of knowledge, and acceptance of the multiplicity of solutions is the essence of science. Science, not restricted by the notion of a single solution to every problem, must follow imagination. Multiplicity of solutions has been promoted as an expression of uncertainty. This leads not to science or to new authentic knowledge, but rather to creating numerous models that generate "unique" solutions that fit a predetermined agenda of the decision-makers. This book reestablishes the essential features of simulation and applies them to reservoir engineering problems. This approach, which reconnects with the o l d - - o r in other words, time-tested--concept of k