Diffusive Mass Transfer and Gaussian Pressure Transient Solutions for Porous Media
This study revisits the mathematical equations for diffusive mass transport in 1D, 2D and 3D space and highlights a widespread misconception about the meaning of the regular and cumulative probability of random-walk solutions for diffusive mass transport. Next, the regular probability solution for m...
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Formato: | article |
Lenguaje: | EN |
Publicado: |
MDPI AG
2021
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://doaj.org/article/4d1b5a2a39924578bafa70744a5970ec |
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Sumario: | This study revisits the mathematical equations for diffusive mass transport in 1D, 2D and 3D space and highlights a widespread misconception about the meaning of the regular and cumulative probability of random-walk solutions for diffusive mass transport. Next, the regular probability solution for molecular diffusion is applied to pressure diffusion in porous media. The pressure drop (by fluid extraction) or increase (by fluid injection) due to the production system may start with a simple pressure step function. The pressure perturbation imposed by the step function (representing the engineering intervention) will instantaneously diffuse into the reservoir at a rate that is controlled by the hydraulic diffusivity. Traditionally, the advance of the pressure transient in porous media such as geological reservoirs is modeled by two distinct approaches: (1) scalar equations for well performance testing that do not attempt to solve for the spatial change or the position of the pressure transient without reference to a well rate; (2) advanced reservoir models based on numerical solution methods. The Gaussian pressure transient solution method presented in this study can compute the spatial pressure depletion in the reservoir at arbitrary times and is based on analytical expressions that give spatial resolution without gridding-meaning solutions that have infinite resolution. The Gaussian solution is efficient for quantifying the advance of the pressure transient and associated pressure depletion around single wells, multiple wells and hydraulic fractures. This work lays the basis for the development of advanced reservoir simulations based on the superposition of analytical pressure transient solutions. |
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