SLIDE 1 Impact of Geothermic Well Temperatures and Residence Time on the In-situ Production of Hydrocarbon Gases from Green River Formation Oil Shale
1
Mark White*, Larry Chick, Gary McVay
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory mark.white@pnl.gov
Colorado School of Mines, Colorado Energy Research Institute, 30th Oil Shale Symposium 7.1 In Situ Process Modeling
SLIDE 2 Environmental Stewardship
- Radionuclide migration and remediation
- Nuclear waste tank leakage
- Vegetated surface barrier design
- Freeze-wall technology
Environmental Remediation
- Carbon tetrachloride in deep vadose zone environment
- Trichloroethylene in arid climate
- Petrol-processing waste in shallow water table environment
Geologic CO2 Sequestration
- Deep sedimentary saline formations
- Deep basaltic saline formations
- Methane hydrate formations with co-production
Hydrocarbon Production
- Alaska Northslope gas hydrate accumulations
- Suboceanic gas hydrate accumulations
- Piceance Basin oil shale
- Enhanced oil recovery technologies
Subsurface Simulation PNNL
SLIDE 3 Subsurface Transport Over Multiple Phases
Operational Modes
- STOMP-W, -WA, WAE -- Water-Air-Energy Operational Modes
- STOMP-WO, -WOA, WOAE -- Water-Oil-Air-Energy Operational Modes
- STOMP-WS, -WSA, WSAE -- Water-Salt-Air-Energy Operational Modes
- STOMP-WCS, -WCSE -- Water-CO2-Salt-Energy Operational Modes
- STOMP-WCMSE -- Water-CO2-CH4-Salt-Energy Operational Modes
Implementations
- Sequential (Fortran 90)
- Scalable (Fortran 90/Global Arrays/PETSc)
Licensing and Quality Assurance
- Academic, U.S. Gov., Foreign Gov., Industrial
- Documentation (Guides, Website, Publications)
- Short Courses (University Sponsored)
- DOE Order 414.1C (System Safety Software)
Future
- Geologic CO2 sequestration
- Hydrocarbon production
- Petascale computing and beyond
STOMP Overview
SLIDE 4
- 500-ft kerogen-rich interval
above the water table
- Fischer-Assay of 19 gal/ton
- Geothermic well temperatures of
450˚, 550˚, and 650˚ C
- Geothermic well power density of
2 kW/m
- Hexagonal pattern spacings of
45 ft, 10 m, and 5 m.
- Intrinsic porosity 0.22
- Intrinsic permeability 1 darcy
- Induced fracture density 0.05
- Matrix compressibility 1.e-9 Pa-1
- Maximum induced fracture
porosity 0.10
Problem Description
SLIDE 5
- Conservation equations
- Thermal energy (temperature)
- Heavy oil (HO volu. molar density)
- Light oil (LO volu. molar density)
- Hydrocarbon gas (CHx volu. molar density)
- Methane (CH4 volu. molar density)
- Phases
- Nonaqueous phase liquid (mobile-compositional)
- Gas (mobile-compositional)
- Kerogen (immobile-single component)
- Coke (immobile-single component)
- Char (immobile-single component)
- Constitutive equations
- Physical properties
- Chemical reactions
- Phase equilibrium
- Transport properties
- Fracture model
Newton-Raphson Iteration Molar Density Equilibrium to Eliminate Primary Variable Switching (system pressure)
Mathematical Model
SLIDE 6
- Heat transport by advection, gaseous diffusion/dispersion, phase
transformations, component appearance and disappearance, heat of kerogen dissociation, but ignoring oil cracking heat of reaction.
- Darcian advection
- Fickian advection
Algebraic form
Conservation of Energy
SLIDE 7
- Model #1
- Thermal energy, Oil, H2, CO, CO2, CH4, C2Hx, C3Hx
- Campbell et al. (1980a, 1980b) reaction network
- Kerogen pyrolysis only, no oil cracking reactions
- Simulations yielded high residual NAPL saturations
- Model #2
- Thermal energy, C50Hx, C30Hx, C18Hx, C12Hx, C8Hx, C3Hx, CH4, H2, CO2
- Fan et al. (2009) reaction network
- Simulations yielded oil production lower than consistent for Green
River Formation oil shales with Type 1 kerogens
- Model #3
- Thermal energy, Heavy Oil, Light Oil, Hydrocarbon Gas, Methane
- Modified Braun and Burnham (1993) reaction network
- Kerogen pyrolysis and oil cracking reactions
- Producing coke and char
- Oil production consistent with Type 1 kerogens
Model Development
SLIDE 8
- Peng-Robinson cubic equation of state
- Modified version of Michelsen’s (1985) flash procedure
- No binary interaction terms
- Temperature dependent pure component parameters
- Fugacity coefficients functions of phase composition, pressure
and temperature
- Michelsen’s scheme requires solution of three independent
variables:
- Modified scheme yielded increased stability and more rapid
convergence by adding two equations:
Phase Equilibria
SLIDE 9
- Matrix Permeability
- Induced Fracture Permeability
- Dual-Continuum Permeability
Rock Permeability
SLIDE 10
- Gas Relative Permeability
- Nonaqueous Phase Liquid Relative Permeability
Phase Relative Permeability
SLIDE 11
- Linear combination of Arrhenius reaction rate equations
Chemical Reaction Model
SLIDE 12
- Chemical Reactions and Component Species
- 7 chemical species, 4 reactions (13 species, 10 reactions)
- No H2O, H2, CO2, CO
- Water vaporization ignored
- Geomechanics
- Empirical model that allowed fracture aperture to increase with
pore pressure
- Fracture permeability dependent on fracture aperture, absolute
fracture roughness, and fracture density
- Hydrologic Properties
- Empirical model of matrix permeability as a function of kerogen,
char, and coke saturations
- Matrix and fracture moisture retention characteristics
- Symmetry and Boundary Effects
- Two-dimensional horizontal domain ignores end effects
- Symmetry assumption requires active adjacent hexaagons
Approximations and Assumptions
SLIDE 13
45-ft Hex 650˚C Geothermic Well
SLIDE 14
45-ft Hex 650˚C Geothermic Well
SLIDE 15
45-ft Hex 550˚C Geothermic Well
SLIDE 16
45-ft Hex 450˚C Geothermic Well
SLIDE 17
10-m Hex 650˚C Geothermic Well
SLIDE 18
10-m Hex 650˚C Geothermic Well
SLIDE 19
10-m Hex 550˚C Geothermic Well
SLIDE 20
10-m Hex 450˚C Geothermic Well
SLIDE 21
1 year 2 years 3 years 4 years 5 years 6 years
Temperature, color scaled from 40˚ to 440˚C
10-m Hex 450˚C Geothermic Well
SLIDE 22
1 year 2 years 3 years 4 years 5 years 6 years
Kerogen saturation, colored scaled from 0.0 to 1.0
10-m Hex 450˚C Geothermic Well
SLIDE 23
1 year 2 years 3 years 4 years 5 years 6 years
Liquid oil saturation, color scaled from 0.0 to 1.0
10-m Hex 450˚C Geothermic Well
SLIDE 24
1 year 2 years 3 years 4 years 5 years 6 years
Coke saturation, color scaled from 0.0 to 1.0
10-m Hex 450˚C Geothermic Well
SLIDE 25
5-m Hex 450˚C Geothermic Well
SLIDE 26
5-m Hex 450˚C Geothermic Well
SLIDE 27
Geothermic Well Power
SLIDE 28
- Reaction networks that only consider the primary
kerogen decomposition process will yield residual liquid
- il in the formation, which is not consistent with
laboratory or field observations.
- Char and coke formation are important pore filling
processes that are required for accurate calculation of pore pressure and fluid expulsion.
- Oil and gas recovery predictions are strongly dependent
- n the accuracy and appropriateness of the chemical
reaction network, stoichiometry, and kinetics.
Conclusions Reaction Networks
SLIDE 29
- Oil production in terms of percent of Fischer Assay is
strongly related to formation temperatures and residence time; where higher temperatures and longer residence times lower oil production, but favor gas production.
- The production period is strongly related to geothermic
well spacing, where larger spacings yield longer production periods.
- Temperature limits on the geothermic wells cause the
power required for these wells to decline during production.
Conclusions Numerical Simulations
SLIDE 30
- Maximum heater well temperature of 450˚C
- 16 electric heaters in concentric patterns
- Outer hexagon spacing of 19.5 ft
- Intermediate hexagon spacing of 14.0 ft (rotated 90˚)
- Inner diamond spacing of 8.5 ft
- 113-ft heated interval between 280 to 393 ft bgs
- 540-day experimental period
- 1806 barrels of liquid oil recovered
- 861 additional BOE of gas recovered
- 2 simulations with STOMP-OS
- 20 gal/ton Fischer Assay oil shale
- 12 gal/ton Fischer Assay oil shale
- Modified Braun and Burnham (1993) reaction network
Shell Oil Field Experiment MDP[s]
SLIDE 31
Temperature, color scaled from 40˚ to 440˚C
MDP[s] Calibration Study (12 gal/ton FA)
SLIDE 32
Kerogen saturation, color scaled from 0.0 to 1.0
MDP[s] Calibration Study (12 gal/ton FA)
SLIDE 33
Liquid-oil saturation, color scaled from 0.0 to 1.0
MDP[s] Calibration Study (12 gal/ton FA)
SLIDE 34
Coke saturation, color scaled from 0.0 to 1.0
MDP[s] Calibration Study (12 gal/ton FA)
SLIDE 35
Shell Oil MDP[s] Calibration Study