No Cover Image

Conference Paper/Proceeding/Abstract 1254 views

3D Geological Feature Honored Cell-centered and Vertex-centered Unstructured Grid Generation, and CVD-MPFA Performance

S. Manzoor, M.G. Edwards, A.H. Dogru, T.M. Al-Shaalan, Michael G. Edwards

Swansea University Author: Michael G. Edwards

Full text not available from this repository: check for access using links below.

Abstract

This paper presents new methods for grid generation in reservoir simulation, together with a study of comparative performance of cell-vertex versus cell-centred CVD-MPFA finite-volume formulations using equivalent degrees of freedom. Classical key geological features and multilateral wells must be h...

Full description

ISSN: 2214-4609
Published: ECMOR XV - 15th European Conference on the Mathematics of Oil Recovery 2016
Online Access: Check full text

URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa31845
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Abstract: This paper presents new methods for grid generation in reservoir simulation, together with a study of comparative performance of cell-vertex versus cell-centred CVD-MPFA finite-volume formulations using equivalent degrees of freedom. Classical key geological features and multilateral wells must be honored by the grids, with control-volume faces aligned with the features. For the purpose of grid generation, the geological features are classified into two groups; 1) involving layers, faults, pinchouts and fractures, and 2) involving well distributions. In the former, control-volume boundary aligned grids(BAGs) are required, while in the latter, control-point well aligned grids(WAGs) are required. In reservoir simulation a choice of grid type and consequent control-volume type is made, i.e. either primal or dual-cells are selected as control-volumes. Regardless of control-volume type, the control-point is defined as the centroid of the control-volume. Three-dimensional unstructured grid generation methods are proposed that automate control-volume boundary alignment to geological features and control point alignment to wells, yielding essentially PEBI-meshes either with respect to primal or dual-cells depending on grid type. In the grid generation methods presented, for both primal and dual-cell feature based meshes, both frameworks use primal-cells (tetrahedra, pyramids, prisms and hexahedra) as grid elements. Dual-cell feature honored grids are derived from underlying primal-meshes such that features are recovered in the dual-setting. Geological features are honored by using the idea of protection spheres, and protection halos around key geological features. Halo construction requires the use of prisms and/or hexahedra. Pyramids are used as transition elements providing interfaces between quad faces of the halo elements and triangular faces of the main tetra-mesh. Novel pyramid transition elements are generated in an unstructured mesh together with a novel technique for ensuring fully constrained recovery of geological features is proposed. The grids generated are employed to study comparative performance of cell-vertex versus cell-centred CVD-MPFA finite-volume formulations using equivalent degrees of freedom. The benefits of both types of approximation are presented in terms of flow resolution relative to the respective degrees of freedom employed. The cell-vertex formulation proves to be the most beneficial with respect to accuracy and efficiency.
College: Faculty of Science and Engineering