Reservoir Engineering Equipment - The Determination of the Water-Injection Program for the Delhi Field by Means of the Automatic Multi-Pool Analyzer

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
O. L. Patterson Granville Dutton H. E. Ellis
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
7
File Size:
597 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1957

Abstract

A large-scale water-injection program for the Holt Bryant reservoir of the Delhi field has been established by means of the new automatic multi-pool analyzer. The objectives of this program were to increase reservoir pressure and eliminate a cross-dip gradient of 200 psi. Pressure increases during the first 15 months of operation have allowed for increased oil production rates of 2,600 BID or 25 per cent. To determine the required water injection it was necessary to predict natural water influx ram. Elimination of the pressure gradients required the water-injection program to account for the fluid migration and pressure interaction between segments of the reservoir. An integral part of the ana1ysis included the determination of in-place volumes of oil and gas. The operation of the automatic multi-pool analyzer in determining the water-injection program is described. New features of the analyzer inc1ude an automatic maferial balance analog and a leart-squares computer for determination of unknown reservoir properties. Operational procedures are sufficiently simple to allow direct use by reservoir engineers on a routine basis. The rapidity and accuracy with which problems may be solved permit repeated ana1yses as a check upon reservoir performance. INTRODUCTION This paper describes the use of a new analog com- puter in determining the optimum injection program for a complex reservoir. The Holt-Bryant (Fig. 1) is the major reservoir in the Delhi field of Louisiana. Production is from the Tuscaloosa at subsea depths of 2,970 to 3,286 ft. The sand dips to the south and southwest from three to five degrees. The reservoir is approximately 12 miles long and varies in width from 1/2 to 2 miles. Various calculations have placed the initial volume of oil in-place in the wide range of 275 to 355 million STB. Two small gas caps were initially present in the reservoir. The Holt-Bryant reservoir was discovered in Dec.. 1944, and was fully developed with 188 producing wells by 1948. After development was completed, an east-west pressure gradient began to establish itself. This
Citation

APA: O. L. Patterson Granville Dutton H. E. Ellis  (1957)  Reservoir Engineering Equipment - The Determination of the Water-Injection Program for the Delhi Field by Means of the Automatic Multi-Pool Analyzer

MLA: O. L. Patterson Granville Dutton H. E. Ellis Reservoir Engineering Equipment - The Determination of the Water-Injection Program for the Delhi Field by Means of the Automatic Multi-Pool Analyzer. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1957.

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