Multi-Scale Fluid Flow in DYNamically FRACtured Porous Reservoir

Summary

The unconventional recovery processes of oil and gas reservoirs raise significant costs and risks to the surrounding environment (including contamination of ground water, risks to air quality etc.) around the world and threatens to pose greater challenges in the future to meet the rising energy demand. The oil-gas industry is meeting this threat with developing diverse technologies that work by different mechanisms but share a common goal: to reduce risks for the surrounding environment and to increase the recovery factor of reservoirs.

The aim of this project would be to develop a new fully coupled framework as an extension of research INTERSECT simulator in which we can model dynamic crack propagation with the injection of high velocity fluid flow as observed in the hydraulic fracturing ("fracking") of unconventional reservoirs.

INTERSECT is the next generation simulator for high performance computing for oil industry developed at Schlumberger. Schlumberger is the world.s leading supplier of technology, integrated project management and information solutions to customers working in the oil and gas industry worldwide. Employing approximately 123,000 people representing over 140 nationalities and working in more than 85 countries, Schlumberger provides the industry.s widest range of products and services from exploration through production. The current commercial INTERSECT code have obvious limitations in the modelling of multiscale fluid flow in dynamically fractured reservoirs.

Current frameworks on crack origination and propagation in high velocity fluid flow regimes are very limited in terms of physical and geometrical description of the phenomena. In the current workflows there are typically very simple assumptions on the geometry of the crack, the criteria for the crack origination, dynamics of the crack propagation and fluid flow inside the crack. In addition the workflows require the sequential usage of different simulation tools which are loosely coupled. Clearly this is an inefficient workflow and can lead to incorrect physical description of the phenomena.

We propose to implement a meshless discretization scheme to solve the underlying governing partial differential equations (PDEs) which will be formulated using the fundamental principles of irreversible thermodynamics. The meshless discretization scheme has been extensively used to simulate crack origination and propagation in solid mechanics. In addition it has been used to simulate fluid mechanics. It has no complexity with respect to mesh generation/adaptation, handling different meshes, and reconstruction of meshes both for solid and fluid mechanics. The conventional mesh dependent simulator would require reconstruction of the mesh and a variable transformation between meshes in a case of modelling dynamic cracks propagation. Clearly, this is computational intensive and less accurate.

The new framework would be implemented in INTERSECT in order to take the advantage of the existing framework and field management functionality. One application of this development would be hydraulic fracturing of shale gas layers. This new framework will allow for more physical simulation of crack origination and propagation which will give more reliable estimates on the environmental impact of shale gas exploration.

This project has received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie grant agreement No. 642987.


                                    

Contact information: Kees Vuik

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