Cristin-resultat-ID: 1274701
Sist endret: 24. september 2015, 22:17
Resultat
Vitenskapelig foredrag
2008

Multiscale mixed finite-element simulation of vuggy and naturally fractured reservoirs

Bidragsytere:
  • Knut-Andreas Lie
  • Astrid Fossum Gulbransen og
  • Vera Louise Hauge

Presentasjon

Navn på arrangementet: PDE Seminar
Sted: Center of Mathematics for Applications, University of Oslo
Dato fra: 27. november 2008
Dato til: 27. november 2008

Om resultatet

Vitenskapelig foredrag
Publiseringsår: 2008

Importkilder

SINTEF AS-ID: S8869

Beskrivelse Beskrivelse

Tittel

Multiscale mixed finite-element simulation of vuggy and naturally fractured reservoirs

Sammendrag

Vugs, caves, and fractures can significantly alter the effective permeability of carbonate reservoirs and should be accurately accounted for in a geomodel. Accurate modeling of the interaction between free-flow and porous regions is essential for flow simulation and detailed production engineering calculations. However, flow simulation of such reservoirs is very challenging because of the co-existence of porous and free-flow regions on multiple scales that need to be coupled. Multiscale methods are in concept well-suited for this type of modeling, as they allow varying resolution and provide a systematic procedure for coarsening and refining, though to date they have not been widely applied for problems with both free-flow and porous regions. Our work is a first step to make a uniform multiscale framework, where we develop a multiscale mixed finite-element (MsMFE) method for detailed modeling of vuggy and naturally-fractured reservoirs. The MsMFE method uses a standard Darcy model to approximate pressure and fluxes on a coarse grid, but captures fine-scale effects through basis functions determined from numerical solutions of local Stokes Brinkman flow problems on the underlying fine-scale geocellular grid. The Stokes-Brinkman equations give a unified approach to simulating free-flow and porous regions using a single system of equations, avoid explicit interface modeling, and reduce to Darcy or Stokes flow by appropriate choice of parameters.   The local flow problems are set up in a way that forces a unit flow a cross the interface between two coarse blocks, meaning that the corresponding basis functions reduce to the lowest-order Raviart-Thomas basis functions for the special case of Darcy flow in a homogeneous medium. In the general case, the basis functions account for local variations of flow velocity due to subgrid heterogeneities in the porous regions, increased flow velocities resulting from free-flow regions on the subgrid scale, and geometrical effects in t

Bidragsytere

Aktiv cristin-person

Knut-Andreas Lie

  • Tilknyttet:
    Forfatter
    ved Mathematics and Cybernetics ved SINTEF AS

Astrid Fossum Gulbransen

  • Tilknyttet:
    Forfatter
    ved Mathematics and Cybernetics ved SINTEF AS

Vera Louise Hauge

  • Tilknyttet:
    Forfatter
    ved Mathematics and Cybernetics ved SINTEF AS
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