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Tutorial 2 Question

This document contains 7 questions related to reservoir engineering calculations. Question 1 asks to calculate the density of a natural gas with a given specific gravity and formation volume factor. Question 2 asks to calculate the density of a hydrocarbon gas system using Sutton's methodology, with and without adjusting pseudo-critical properties. Question 3 asks to calculate oil density, bubble point oil density, and oil formation volume factor given initial reservoir pressure, bubble point pressure, and oil properties.

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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
432 views

Tutorial 2 Question

This document contains 7 questions related to reservoir engineering calculations. Question 1 asks to calculate the density of a natural gas with a given specific gravity and formation volume factor. Question 2 asks to calculate the density of a hydrocarbon gas system using Sutton's methodology, with and without adjusting pseudo-critical properties. Question 3 asks to calculate oil density, bubble point oil density, and oil formation volume factor given initial reservoir pressure, bubble point pressure, and oil properties.

Uploaded by

derianzachary
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Tutorial 2 Reservoir Engineering (EG501L)

Question 1

A natural gas with a specific gravity of 0.75 has a gas formation volume factor of
0.00529 ft3/scf at the prevailing reservoir pressure and temperature. Calculate the
density of the gas.

Question 2

A hydrocarbon gas system has the following composition:

Component Mole Fraction


C1 0.83
C2 0.06
C3 0.03
n-C4 0.02
n-C5 0.02
C6 0.01
C7+ 0.03

The heptanes-plus fraction is characterized by a molecular weight and specific gravity of


161 and 0.81, respectively.

a. Using Suttons methodology, calculate the density of the gas 2000 psia and 150F.

b. Recalculate the gas density without adjusting the pseudo-critical properties.

Question 3

A crude oil system exists at an initial reservoir pressure of 4500 psia and 85F. The
bubble-point pressure is estimated at 2109 psia. The oil properties at the bubble-point
pressure are as follows:

Bob =1.406 bbl/STB Rsb=692 scf/STB

g =0.876 API=41.9

Calculate:

a. Oil density at the bubble-point pressure


b. Oil density at 4,500 psia
c. Bo at 4500 psia
Tutorial 2 Reservoir Engineering (EG501L)

Question 4
The following is a list of the compositional analysis of different hydrocarbon systems.
The compositions are expressed in the terms of mol%.

Component System#1 System#2 System#3 System#4


C1 68 25.07 60 12.15
C2 9.68 11.67 8.15 3.1
C3 5.34 9.36 4.85 2.51
C4 3.48 6 3.12 2.61
C5 1.78 3.98 1.41 2.78
C6 1.73 3.26 2.47 4.85
C7+ 9.99 40.66 20 72

Classify these hydrocarbon systems.

Question 5

A dry gas reservoir exists with initial pressure of 2000 psia and temperature of 95 C.
The gas mixture is sweet with an apparent molecular weight of 21. Calculate gas
compressibility factor using Hall-Yarborough method.

Question 6

You are producing a 35API crude oil from a reservoir at 5,000 psia and 140F. The
bubble-point pressure of the reservoir liquids is 4,000 psia at 140F. Gas with a gravity
of 0.7 is produced with the oil at a rate of 900 scf/STB. Calculate:

a) Density of the oil at 5,000 psia and 140F


b) Total formation volume factor at 5,000 psia and 140F

Question 7

Derive a below equation:

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