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Collocation Techniques for Modeling Compositional Flows in Oil Reservoirs

English · Paperback / Softback

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This investigation is an outgrowth of my doctoral dissertation at Princeton University. I am particularly grateful to Professors George F. Pinder and William G. Gray of Princeton for their advice during both my research and my writing. I believe that finite-element collocation holds promise as a numer ical scheme for modeling complicated flows in porous media. However, there seems to be a "conventional wisdom" maintaining that collocation is hopelessly beset by oscillations and is, in some way, fundamentally inappropriate for multiphase flows. I hope to dispel these objections, realizing that others will remain for further work. The U. S. National Science Foundation funded much of this study through grant number NSF-CEE-8111240. TABLE OF CONTENTS ABSTRACT ;; FOREWORD ;; ; CHAPTER ONE. THE PHYSICAL SYSTEM. 1.1 Introduction. 1 1.2 The reservoir and its contents. 5 1.3 Reservoir mechanics. 9 1.4 Supplementary constraints. 18 1.5 Governing equations. 26 CHAPTER TWO. REPRESENTING FLUID-PHASE BEHAVIOR. 39 2.1 Thermodynamics of the fluid system. 40 2.2 Standard equation-of-state methods. 45 2.3 Maxwell-set interpolation.

List of contents

One. The Physical System.- 1.1 Introduction.- 1.2 The reservoir and its contents.- 1.3 Reservoir mechanics.- 1.4 Supplementary constraints.- 1.5 Governing equations.- Two. Representing Fluid-Phase Behavior.- 2.1 Thermodynamics of the fluid system.- 2.2 Standard equation-of-state methods.- 2.3 Maxwell-set interpolation.- Three. Solving Transport Equations by Collocation.- 3.1 Orthogonal collocation on finite elements.- 3.2 The convection-dispersion equation.- 3.3 Upstream collocation.- 3.4 The Buckley-Leverett problem.- 3.5 A gas-flow problem.- Four. Modeling Compositional Flows.- 4.1 Formulation of the model.- 4.2 Connections to other compositional models.- 4.3 Examples of compositional flows.- Five. Conclusions.- Appendix A. Summary of Mathematical Notation.- Appendix B. Thermodynamics of Reservoir Fluids from a Gradient-Dynamic Viewpoint.- Appendix C. The Correspondence Between Orthogonal Collocation and Galerkin's Method.

Product details

Authors Myron Allen, Myron B III Allen, Myron B. Allen, Myron B. III. Allen
Publisher Springer, Berlin
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 15.10.2013
 
EAN 9783540130963
ISBN 978-3-540-13096-3
No. of pages 211
Weight 387 g
Illustrations VI, 211 p.
Series Lecture Notes in Engineering
Lecture Notes in Engineering
Subject Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > Physics, astronomy > Mechanics, acoustics

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