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- W4236031972 abstract "Successful Field Evaluation of the Efficiency of a Gas Gravity Drainage Process by Applying Recent Developments in Sponge Coring Technique in a Major Oil Field Marc Durandeau; Marc Durandeau ADMA-OPCO Search for other works by this author on: This Site Google Scholar Medhat El-Emam; Medhat El-Emam ADMA-OPCO Search for other works by this author on: This Site Google Scholar Abdel-Hamid Anis; Abdel-Hamid Anis Security DBS Search for other works by this author on: This Site Google Scholar Gianni Fanti Gianni Fanti Security DBS Search for other works by this author on: This Site Google Scholar Paper presented at the Middle East Oil Show, Bahrain, March 1995. Paper Number: SPE-29809-MS https://doi.org/10.2118/29809-MS Published: March 11 1995 Cite View This Citation Add to Citation Manager Share Icon Share Twitter LinkedIn Get Permissions Search Site Citation Durandeau, Marc, El-Emam, Medhat, Anis, Abdel-Hamid, and Gianni Fanti. Successful Field Evaluation of the Efficiency of a Gas Gravity Drainage Process by Applying Recent Developments in Sponge Coring Technique in a Major Oil Field. Paper presented at the Middle East Oil Show, Bahrain, March 1995. doi: https://doi.org/10.2118/29809-MS Download citation file: Ris (Zotero) Reference Manager EasyBib Bookends Mendeley Papers EndNote RefWorks BibTex Search Dropdown Menu toolbar search search input Search input auto suggest filter your search All ContentAll ProceedingsSociety of Petroleum Engineers (SPE)SPE Middle East Oil and Gas Show and Conference Search Advanced Search AbstractThis paper describes the application and integration of new technologies and recent developments in Sponge coring and presents the methodology used to carry out successfully the various phases of well designed Sponge coring project, including the coring phase, the on-site measurements and the full evaluation of the Sponge core samples. A field case is presented where a Sponge coring project was accomplished to obtain accurate fluids distribution and evaluate the gas gravity drainage efficiency in one of the Arab D sub-reservoirs of a major oil field offshore Abu Dhabi.A Sponge coring technology team was created to optimize the methodology used during Sponge coring and minimize the uncertainties which persisted on some of the previous operations. The effectiveness of the technique is discussed, with comparison to open hole logs and SCAL data.Realistic petrophysical parameters were obtained from non-invaded, native-state core samples. The effective oil saturation obtained from the Sponge core analysis results showed that the gravity segregation mechanism has been very active and efficient to recover the oil in the reservoir.IntroductionThe use of Advanced Reservoir Management techniques right from the start of field development and exploitation provides information that is vitally important for engineering and controlling future EOR processes. It is fundamental to obtain data representative of in-situ reservoir rock properties. The time and money spent to provide the high quality information needed, after all, is certainly cheaper than an EOR project failure.The selection of efficient techniques for determining ROS is based on the formation and wellbore conditions of the well to be tested. There are a variety of reasons why computation of oil or water saturation from logs is sometimes extremely difficult. Formation parameters (porosity, cementation factor, saturation exponent, etc.) influence the accuracy of logs for ROS determination.Data from cores represent the only direct measurements of reservoir rock properties. All other information and data are indirect evaluations of these properties. The best starting point is a truly representative core sample.To evaluate the gas gravity drainage efficiency in one of the Arab D sub-reservoirs, some logging techniques were previously investigated and tested to have access to the effective value of the residual oil saturation after gas displacement. RFT and TDT logging techniques showed some evidence for gas influx into the area with corresponding flushing of the oil originally present before production started, but the TDT results could not be regarded as reliable due to the numerous assumptions required to carry out the interpretation.The in-situ measurements from openhole logs indicated that a gas effect made it impossible to accurately quantity the residual oil saturation.P. 367 Keywords: application, spe 29809, evaluation, invasion, successful field evaluation, core sample, residual oil saturation, plug sample, saturation, gas effect Subjects: Drilling Operations, Formation Evaluation & Management, Coring, fishing This content is only available via PDF. 1995. Society of Petroleum Engineers You can access this article if you purchase or spend a download." @default.
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- W4236031972 title "Successful Field Evaluation of the Efficiency of a Gas Gravity Drainage Process by Applying Recent Developments in Sponge Coring Technique in a Major Oil Field " @default.
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