School of Mechanical Engineering Seminar
Monday, June 4, 2018 at 14:00
Wolfson Building of Mechanical Engineering, Room 206
Improved Oil Recovery of Mature Water Floods: Can we have a sizeable impact?
Dr. Carlos A. Glandt
Quantum Reservoir Impact (QRI), Houston TX
Mature waterfloods suffer from extended periods of ever increasing high water cuts. Although there are well established conformance technologies to arrest or mitigate these trends they have rarely been adopted across the field as part of a routine surveillance plan.
This presentation discusses two technologies that provide key information to design conformance jobs. They are Capacitance-Resistance Modeling (CRM) and interwell tracer tests. CRM, based on injection-production data only, provides a) interwell connectivities that are key to understand water distribution, and b) the ranking of injectors’ contribution to oil production, that immediately leads to injection optimization. Interwell tracer tests provide fluid flow paths and swept volumes required to design in-depth conformance treatments.
Polymer flooding offers a more robust alternative to in-depth conformance. Polymer flooding mitigates both, poor sweep efficiency and unfavorable mobility ratios which are the main culprits of poor recovery.
The talk will address the impact of cost on the adoption of technologies to improve recovery factors and suggests means of lowering costs to make these technologies widely deployed. .
Biographical Note
Dr. Glandt has more than 36 years of Reservoir Engineering experience in areas such as Field Development, Heavy Oil, Waterflooding, EOR, Smart Wells, and others. He worked at Shell for 28 years both in the US and internationally, covering a wide range of technical assignments and managerial responsibilities. He was manager of EOR R&D, Smart Wells Global Implementation, Reservoir Engineering Skill Pool for the R&D Organization, and Technical Manager for the Cedar Creek Anticline asset in Montana.
After retiring from Shell Dr. Glandt was Director of Development of YPF, the leading Argentinean oil company, and is now Sr. Consultant for QRI of Houston with assignments in projects around the world, and of YPF’s leadership on the implementation of an aggressive tertiary recovery program for a wide range of fields in the portfolio.
He holds an Engineering Degree from the University of Buenos Aires and a PhD from Princeton University, both in Chemical Engineering.