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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
AAPG Special Volumes
Abstract
Plates referenced in text are in PDF.
Reservoir
Permeability, Modeling, and Simulation Studies) Chapter 14:
Modeling Permeability Structure and Simulating Fluid Flow in a
Reservoir
Analog: Ferron
Sandstone, Ivie Creek Area, East-Central Utah
from:Reservoir
Modeling: The Ferron Sandstone of Utah
Reservoir
Permeability, Modeling, and
Simulation Studies
Chapter 14:
Modeling Permeability Structure and Simulating Fluid Flow in a Reservoir
Analog:
Ferron Sandstone, Ivie Creek Area, East-Central Utah
Craig B. Forster1, Stephen H. Snelgrove2,
and Joseph V. Koebbe3
1Department of Geology & Geophysics, University of Utah, Salt Lake
City, Utah
2Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering, University of Utah, Salt
Lake City, Utah
3Mathematics and Statistics Department, Utah State University, Logan, Utah
Meal time at C. T. Lupton's
U.S. Geological Survey
field
camp, circa 1910. Photograph courtesy of the family of
C. T. Lupton.
End_Page 358------------------------
ABSTRACT
simulations
illustrate the sensitivity of total oil production and the timing of water breakthrough to
the nature of the thin, interclinoform, shaley bounding layers. Permeability upscaling
experiments indicate that common averaging approaches (computing arithmetic, harmonic, or
geometric means) are inadequate to upscaling permeability in this fluvial-deltaic setting.
An upscaling technique based on perturbation analysis yields 2-D simulation results
similar to those obtained with detailed permeability models. Detailed permeability
structures are upscaled and assigned in more coarsely gridded 3-D models (grid blocks are
20 ft by 20 ft in plan and 4 ft thick) by defining permeability facies that encompass
portions of adjacent clinoform bodies. Results of a series of 3-D numerical waterflood
simulations
with 5-spot and 9-spot production well patterns illustrate the significant
impact that the upscaled permeability facies geometry exerts on oil production. Comparing
2-D and 3-D simulation results confirms that it can be misleading to use 2-D simulation
results to predict oil recovery and water cut in a
reservoir
with the internal 3-D
geometry inferred at the Ivie Creek site.
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