Principle of Petroleum Engineering: Reservoir Rock and Fluid Properties
Principle of Petroleum Engineering: Reservoir Rock and Fluid Properties
School of Engineering
Principle of petroleum engineering
• Phase:
The term phase defines any homogeneous and physically distinct
part of a system which is separated from other parts of the system
by definite bounding surfaces.
Phase
./ Solid
./ Liquid
./ G as
Phases
./ Pressure and molecular attraction tend to confine the molecules and pull
them together.
./ Temperatureand molecularrepulsiontend toseparatethemolecules.
Phase diagrams:
Or
• A phase diagram lets you work out exactly what phases are present atany
given temperature and pressure.
Phase Diagram for Pure Substances
• This is the phase diagram for a typical pure substance
Pure Substance
Triple point:
the point on a phase diagram at
which the three states of matter:
gas, liquid, and solid coexist.
Critical point:
the point on a phase diagram
at which the substance is
indistinguishable between
liquid and gaseous states.
Or,
• Dew Point:
As pressure is decreased below the bubble-point pressure, additional gas
appears. Finally, only a minute amount of liquid remains. This is the dew
point. The pressure at this point is known as the dew-point pressure, Pd.
Or
The dew point is the point at which the first drop of a gaseous mixture begins
to condense.
Multicomponent system
• Figure 1-1 shows a typical pressure-temperature diagram of a
multicomponent system with a specific overall composition.
• Although a different hydrocarbon system would have a different phase
diagram, the general configuration is similar.
Multicomponent system
Cricondentherm (Tct):
Cricondenbar(pcb):
Quality lines:
Bubble-pointcurve:
The bubble-point curve (line AC) is
defined as the line separating the liquid-
phase region from the two-phase region.
Or
represents the line of saturated liquid (100
% liquid with an infinitesimal amount of
vapor)
Dew-point curve:
The dew-point curve (line BC) is defined
as the line separating the vapor-phase
region from the two-phase region.
Or
represents the line of saturated vapor (100
% vapor with an infinitesimal amount of
liquid).
These multicomponent pressure-temperature diagrams are essentially
used to:
• Classify reservoirs
• Classify the naturally occurring hydrocarbon systems
• Describe the phase behavior of the reservoir fluid
Multicomponent system
• These hydrocarbon accumulations may occur in the gaseous state, the liquid
state, the solid state, or in various combinations of gas, liquid, and solid.
Multicomponent system
of reservoir rock that determine the relative ease with which gas and
• Frequently, petroleum engineers have the task to study the behavior and
• Accordingly, reservoirs can be classified into basically two types. These are:
• Oil reservoirs:
If the reservoir temperature T is less than the critical temperature Tc of the
reservoir fluid, the reservoir is classified as an oil reservoir.
• Gas reservoirs:
If the reservoir temperature is greater than the critical temperature of the
hydrocarbon fluid, the reservoir is considered a gas reservoir.
Oil Reservoirs
Depending upon initial reservoir pressure pi, oil reservoirs can be sub
classified into the following categories:
3. Gas-cap reservoir.
Oil Reservoirs
3) Gas-cap reservoir.
• If the initial reservoir pressure is below the bubblepoint pressure of the
reservoir fluid, the reservoir is termed a gas-cap or two-phase reservoir, in
which the gas or vapor phase is underlain by an oil phase.
• The appropriate quality line gives the ratio of the gas-cap volume to reservoir
oil volume.
Oil Reservoirs
• Crude oils cover a wide range in physical properties and chemical compositions, and
it is often important to be able to group them into broad categories of related oils.
• In general, crude oils are commonly classified into the following types:
The above classifications are essentially based upon the properties exhibited by
the crude oil, including physical properties, composition, gas-oil ratio, appearance,
and pressure-temperature phase diagrams.
Oil Reservoirs
• The liquid shrinkage curve approximates a straight line except at very low
pressures.
• When produced, ordinary black oils usually yield gas-oil ratios between
When oil is brought to surface conditions it is usual for some natural gas to come out of
solution. The gas/oil ratio (GOR) is the ratio of the volume of gas that comes out of
solution, to the volume of oil at standard conditions.
Oil Reservoirs
2. Low-shrinkage oil
The diagram is characterized by quality lines that are closely spaced near the dew-point
curve
Oil Reservoirs
The liquid-shrinkage curve, as given in Figure 1-5, shows the
shrinkage characteristics of this category of crude oils.
Oil Reservoirs
G on Figure 1-6
• Retrograde gas-condensate
• Near-critical gas-condensate
• Wet gas
• Dry gas
Gas Reservoirs
Retrograde gas-condensate reservoir.
If the reservoir temperature T lies between the critical temperature (Tc) and
cricondentherm (Tct) of the reservoir fluid, the reservoir is classified as a retrograde gas-
condensate reservoir.
Gas Reservoirs
D The associated physical characteristics of this category are:
• Gas-oil ratios between 8,000 to 70,000 scf/STB. Generally, the gas-oil ratio for a
condensate system increases with time due to the liquid dropout and the loss of
•Separator conditions, i.e., separator pressure and temperature, lie within the two-phase
region
Gas Reservoirs
Dry-gas reservoir.
The hydrocarbon mixture exists as a gas both in the reservoir and in
the surface facilities. The only liquid associated with the gas from a
dry-gas reservoir is water.