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An Efficient Numerical Hybrid Model for Multiphase Flow in Deformable Fractured-Shale Reservoirs

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TLDR
In this paper, an adaptive hybrid model is proposed to simulate hydromechanical coupling processes in such fractured-shale reservoirs during the production period (i.e., the hydraulic-fracturing process is not considered and cannot be simulated).
Abstract
\n After hydraulic fracturing, a shale reservoir usually has multiscale fractures and becomes more stress-sensitive. In this work, an adaptive hybrid model is proposed to simulate hydromechanical coupling processes in such fractured-shale reservoirs during the production period (i.e., the hydraulic-fracturing process is not considered and cannot be simulated). In our hybrid model, the single-porosity model is applied in the region outside the stimulated reservoir volume (SRV), and the matrix and natural/induced fractures in the SRV region are modeled using a double-porosity model that can accurately simulate the matrix/fracture fluid exchange during the entire transient period. Meanwhile, the fluid flow in hydraulic fractures is modeled explicitly with the embedded-discrete-fracture model (EDFM), and a stabilized extended-finite-element-method (XFEM) formulation using the polynomial-pressure-projection (PPP) technique is applied to simulate mechanical processes. The developed stabilized XFEM formulation can avoid the displacement oscillation on hydraulic-fracture interfaces. Then a modified fixed-stress sequential-implicit method is applied to solve the hybrid model, in which mixed-space discretization [i.e., finite-volume method (FVM) for flow process and stabilized XFEM for geomechanics] is used. The robustness of the proposed model is demonstrated through several numerical examples. In conclusion, several key factors for gas exploitation are investigated, such as adsorption, Klinkenberg effect, capillary pressure, and fracture deformation. In this study, all the numerical examples are 2D, and the gravity effect is neglected in these simulations. In addition, we assume there is no oil phase in the shale reservoirs, thus the gas/water two-phase model is used to simulate the flow in these reservoirs.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

History Matching of Naturally Fractured Reservoirs Using a Deep Sparse Autoencoder

TL;DR: A new characterization method for the multiscale fracture network, and a powerful dimensionality-reduction method by means of an autoencoder for model parameters are proposed that could simplify the fractures, preserve the distribution of fractures during the update, and improve the quality of history matching naturally fractured reservoirs.
Journal ArticleDOI

Numerical simulation of hydro-mechanical coupling in fractured vuggy porous media using the equivalent continuum model and embedded discrete fracture model

TL;DR: In this paper, an efficient numerical model is proposed to simulate the hydro-mechanical coupling in the fractured vuggy porous media containing multi-scale fractures and vugs.
Journal ArticleDOI

On the preferential flow patterns induced by transverse isotropy and non-Darcy flow in double porosity media

TL;DR: In this article, a hydromechanical model for materials with two porosity scales that accommodates both transverse isotropy at the larger scale and non-Darcy flow at the smaller scale is presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fluid flow through anisotropic and deformable double porosity media with ultra-low matrix permeability: A continuum framework

TL;DR: In this framework, fluid flow in the micro-fracture network is modeled with the generalized Darcy's law, in which the equivalent fracture permeability is upscaled from the detailed geological characterizations.
Journal ArticleDOI

An Efficient Hybrid Model for 3D Complex Fractured Vuggy Reservoir Simulation

TL;DR: A novel and efficient hybrid model, consisting of a modified embedded discrete fracture model (EDFM) and a vug model, is proposed to simulate multiphase flow in 3D complex fractured vuggy reservoirs.
References
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