CA2299790C - Method and apparatus for stimulating heavy oil production - Google Patents

Method and apparatus for stimulating heavy oil production Download PDF

Info

Publication number
CA2299790C
CA2299790C CA002299790A CA2299790A CA2299790C CA 2299790 C CA2299790 C CA 2299790C CA 002299790 A CA002299790 A CA 002299790A CA 2299790 A CA2299790 A CA 2299790A CA 2299790 C CA2299790 C CA 2299790C
Authority
CA
Canada
Prior art keywords
solvent
formation
temperature
vapour
pressure
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
CA002299790A
Other languages
French (fr)
Other versions
CA2299790A1 (en
Inventor
John Nenniger
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Hatch Ltd
Original Assignee
Nsolv Corp
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Nsolv Corp filed Critical Nsolv Corp
Priority to CA2785871A priority Critical patent/CA2785871C/en
Priority to CA2633061A priority patent/CA2633061C/en
Priority to CA002299790A priority patent/CA2299790C/en
Publication of CA2299790A1 publication Critical patent/CA2299790A1/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of CA2299790C publication Critical patent/CA2299790C/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E21EARTH DRILLING; MINING
    • E21BEARTH DRILLING, e.g. DEEP DRILLING; OBTAINING OIL, GAS, WATER, SOLUBLE OR MELTABLE MATERIALS OR A SLURRY OF MINERALS FROM WELLS
    • E21B43/00Methods or apparatus for obtaining oil, gas, water, soluble or meltable materials or a slurry of minerals from wells
    • E21B43/30Specific pattern of wells, e.g. optimizing the spacing of wells
    • E21B43/305Specific pattern of wells, e.g. optimizing the spacing of wells comprising at least one inclined or horizontal well
    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E21EARTH DRILLING; MINING
    • E21BEARTH DRILLING, e.g. DEEP DRILLING; OBTAINING OIL, GAS, WATER, SOLUBLE OR MELTABLE MATERIALS OR A SLURRY OF MINERALS FROM WELLS
    • E21B43/00Methods or apparatus for obtaining oil, gas, water, soluble or meltable materials or a slurry of minerals from wells
    • E21B43/34Arrangements for separating materials produced by the well
    • E21B43/40Separation associated with re-injection of separated materials
    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E21EARTH DRILLING; MINING
    • E21BEARTH DRILLING, e.g. DEEP DRILLING; OBTAINING OIL, GAS, WATER, SOLUBLE OR MELTABLE MATERIALS OR A SLURRY OF MINERALS FROM WELLS
    • E21B43/00Methods or apparatus for obtaining oil, gas, water, soluble or meltable materials or a slurry of minerals from wells
    • E21B43/16Enhanced recovery methods for obtaining hydrocarbons
    • E21B43/24Enhanced recovery methods for obtaining hydrocarbons using heat, e.g. steam injection
    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E21EARTH DRILLING; MINING
    • E21BEARTH DRILLING, e.g. DEEP DRILLING; OBTAINING OIL, GAS, WATER, SOLUBLE OR MELTABLE MATERIALS OR A SLURRY OF MINERALS FROM WELLS
    • E21B43/00Methods or apparatus for obtaining oil, gas, water, soluble or meltable materials or a slurry of minerals from wells
    • E21B43/25Methods for stimulating production
    • E21B43/255Methods for stimulating production including the injection of a gaseous medium as treatment fluid into the formation

Abstract

A method of enhanced oil recovery having a number of steps. One step is to establish a flow path between an injection well and a production well. Then a solvent is heated, under pressure, until the condensation temperature of the solvent vapour is above the naturally occurring formation temperature. Then, the solvent is injected, under pressure, into the formation where it is permitted to condense. Then, the latent heat of condensation, together with warm solvent reduce the viscosity of the insitu hydrocarbon, while precipitating out asphaltenes. The reduced viscosity solvent/heavy oil blend is then recovered.

Description

Title: METHOD AND APPARATUS FOR STIMULATING HEAVY
OIL PRODUCTION

FIELD OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates to the extraction of hydrocarbons such as heavy oil and bitumen. In particular this invention relates to reducing the viscosity of hydrocarbons such as heavy oil in situ to permit the heavy oil to flow more readily and thus to improve the recovery thereof.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Heavy oils refer to crude oils which have high specific gravity and viscosity and are therefore difficuit to extract commercially because they do not readily flow. Heavy oils are found, for example, in the tar sand deposits in Alberta, Canada. Typically these heavy oils will have viscosities greater than 1000 centiPoise or specific gravities greater than .934 at 60 F
(i.e. less than 20 API). There has long been sought a means to accelerate the heavy oil production process by permitting the oil to flow more readily thereby increasing the rate of return on capital and decreasing the financial risk of such heavy oil production projects.
One thermal extraction technique, called fireflood, is generally uneconomic due to very severe operating problems including corrosion, scale precipitation and explosion hazards after breakthrough, not to mention the difficulty in controlling the process and the production of plugging deposits such as coke.
Another prior approach that has had some merit is to use steam in a thermal stimulation for improving heavy oil extraction. Steam raises the temperature of the oil and thereby reduces its viscosity and allows it to flow more easily. Steam stimulation is subject to a number of problems, including heat losses during injection, clay swelling problems, thief zones, emulsions, capillary surface tension effects and lack of confinement for
-2-shallower zones. Further, injecting steam creates water (condensate) in the formation which is much less viscous than oil and which will therefore be preferentially produced due to relative permeability effects. Preferential production of water perversely makes the oil production or recovery more difficult.
An additional problem, which has become more important recently, is that most thermal recovery processes such as steam require large amounts of methane gas to be burned to provide the energy to vaporize the water above grade. This can lead to the emission of enormous amounts of greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide. For example a 100,000 bbl oil/day heavy oil facility requires 200,000 - 300,000 bbl water /day to be converted into steam at 200 C. Thus, for a methane gas burner system, to recover 100,000bbl oil/day requires producing more than 12 million pounds per day of carbon dioxide emissions. The two main traditional approaches used in steam recovery systems have been "huff and puff' (i.e., cyclic steaming) and steam floods. Recently, however, steam assisted gravity drainage (SAGD) has become popular.
SAGD begins with the formation of a steam chamber in the formation. The steam is injected into the chamber and transfers heat to the surface of the chamber thereby mobilizing oil at the chamber surface. The heated oil flows down the walls of the chamber underthe influence of gravity and drains into the producing well, thereby increasing the size of the chamber. The advantage of SAGD is that the countercurrent flow of steam upwards into the reservoir and oil down and out of the reservoir is relatively efficient, thus the heavy oil production rates are high enough to provide favourable economics in some situations.
There are many possible SAGD geometries including single well (injection and production from the same well) and dual or multiple well.
The wells may be either horizontal or vertical. Generally horizontal wells are favoured by producers because they offer a longer exposure to the pay zone and thereby offer increased production rates for highly viscous oils.
-3-Single well SAGD offers the least capital cost, but heat losses due to countercurrent flow of steam into and oil out of the wellbore are severe. Quite simply, as the hot steam going into the well passes the cold oil coming out of the well and the steam loses heat to the oil. For example, at an injection pressure of 1000 psig and 285 C, the enthalpy of the steam is 1192 btu/Ib and the enthalpy of the water is 542 btu/Ib. Due to countercurrent heat exchange the produced fluids (water and oil) are at the same temperature as the injected steam. For typical injection conditions, the steam quality is 80% (i.e., 80% vapour and 20% liquid). Thus, the maximum heat delivered to the formation is only the latent heat of vaporization (i.e. about 50% of the total heat input). With additional heat losses through the well casing, the net heat delivery to the formation is quite low and thus this process is inefficient.
There have also been in the past suggestions to use cold solvent vapour to lower the viscosity of the heavy oil in situ. This was first proposed by Nenniger' (1979). This idea has shown much promise for production of heavy oil with minimal environmental impact, primarily because such a process does not require heating large volumes of steam nor huge amounts of fresh water suitable for steam generation. Energy requirements for solvent extraction are expected to be less than 4% of those required for steam extraction. Insitu recovery has minimal environmental impact compared to surface mining techniques.
The physics of cold solvent stimulation are not fully understood. The measured solvent diffusion rates are typically 100 - 1000 times higher than predicted by theory2,3. A key economic requirement is Nenniger, E.H., Hydrocarbou Recovery, Canadian Patent 1,059,432 2 Duiui, S.G.; E.H. Nenniger, V.S.V. Rajan, A Study of Bitumen Recovery by Gravity Drainage Using Low Temperature Soluble Gas Iniectiou, The Cauadiau Jounial of Chemical Eugiueeriug, Vol 67, December 1989.

3 Lim, et al, Three dimensional Scaled Physical Modelling of Solvent Vapour Extraction of Cold Lake Bitumen, JCPT, April 1996, Page 37
-4-efficient recovery of the solvent, so light gases such as ethane and propane which can be recovered by pressure blowdown are generally preferred. A
recent study has reported the ratio of ethane solvent loss to bitumen produced, was as low as seven percent (wt/wt). However, the calculated production rates for solvent extraction are marginal for commercial application and to date there has never been a successful commercial pilot.
In a bench test4 warm solvent (propane) was injected into a sample of warmed heavy oil. This experiment showed that if the solvent temperature was raised and the heavy oil temperature was also raised to the same temperature (ie. Isothermal conditions) production rates could be increased about 20 fold simply by increasing the temperature from 20 C to 90 C.
This observation led to the development of the Vapex process4 which proposes to combine solvent with steam or hot water heated above grade to provide downhole heat. Because of the water/steam this process suffers from all the problems mentioned above (countercurrent heat exchange, formation damage problems with clays, emulsions, capillary pressure, water treatment, water supply, reduced oil relative permeability due to high water saturations and the like).
A key requirement for both steam assisted gravity drainage and solvent assisted gravity drainage is the formation of a steam or solvent chamber in the reservoir. The chamber allows efficient countercurrent flow of solvent vapour (or steam) upwards. and flow of the heavy crude downwards along the walls of the chamber. The predicted oil drainage rate is proportional to the square root of the height of the chamber (reference 4).
Thus the oil production rates are predicted to be very small initially and then grow with time until the roof of the chamber encounters a boundary such as an impermeable shale.

This has been confirmed by lab tests which have shown that 4 See Table 1 and Figure 7 of Butler et al, A New Process for Recovering Heavy Oils using Hot Water aiid Hydrocarbon Vapours, JCPT Jaii 1991, pg 100
-5-the maximum oil production rates will not occur until a large solvent chamber is formed. Unfortunately, in the field this means that peak oil production rates do not occur until 3-4 years after the well is placed on production.
Thus, for solvent vapour extraction the peak oil production rates are not typically achieved until perhaps three years after the capital costs of the well and the production facilities are incurred. The delayed production response decreases the rate of return and increases the risk to the operator. For example thief zones, etc, may not be identified until substantial costs have been incurred (i.e. until after three years of solvent injection).
Thus, there is a need for the solvent chamber to be quickly established. For example, the capital cost of drilling and completing a horizontal well pair might be typically 1,800,000 dollars. The minimum internal rate of return for a oil project is typically about 15%. Thus, the opportunity cost of a one year delay in the peak production rate is 275K$.
If peak production is accelerated, so it occurs in the first year rather than the third, then the value added by early development of the solvent chamber would be about 800K$ per well pair.
Thus, while the cold solvent vapour extraction process has great advantages due to energy efficiency and minimal environmental damage, it has never been successfully used. The primary reason is the cold solvent vapour production rates are too low to be economic, particularly with a 3 - 4 year delay in achieving peak production rates. Another way of looking at this issue, is to apply a discount to value of the produced oil if the production is delayed. At 15% rate of return, the 3 year delay gives a discount of 33%, so the value of the oil production is reduced by 1/3. In other words, if the market price of oil is 20$/bbl, the effective price the producer receives is only 14$/bbl, due to the three year delay. Obviously this delayed startup has a huge negative impact on the commercial feasibility of this environmentally friendly technology.
What is desired is a way of stimulating production of heavy oil
-6-which is energy efficient and yet is effective. In this respect it should not require the use of very high temperatures or high energy use rates as is the case presently. Further, it would be preferable to avoid introduction of steam or water into the formation which has negative effects on the production rates.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
What is desired therefore, is a means to accelerate the oil production rate by encouraging the rapid extraction of heavy oil or bitumen. According to the present invention it is possible to accelerate the extraction process by the injection of heated solvent vapor into the reservoir in the absence of a water/steam phase under certain predetermined conditions. As the solvent condenses on the cold bitumen surface it supplies heat to the bitumen interface, by releasing the latent heat of condensation, and greatly accelerates the extraction without the problems associated with a liquid water phase. Furthermore, by using solvent condensation as a heat transfer mechanism, it is possible to significantly increase the proportion of solvent in the bitumen solvent blend, thereby reducing blend viscosity, improving drainage rates (production) and also achieving enhanced insitu upgrading of the oil. Further according to the present invention countercurrent heat exchange losses can be avoided by injecting the heated solvent from an injection well and removing the produced fluid from an adjacent well which is communication with the injection well. Thus, the present invention contemplates establishing such a connection between the production and injections wells prior to injecting a surface heated solvent vapor.
The present invention also takes into consideration various additional factors such as the kinetics of extraction, hydraulics and heat transfer for hot gas delivery to the reservoir and recovery and recycle of solvent from the produced fluid.

Accordingly, in the present invention, there is a provided a
-7-method of enhanced heavy oil recovery, said method comprising the steps of:
a) establishing a flow path between an injection well and a production well through an oil bearing formation;
b) vapourizing a solvent to inject into said formation;
c) pressurizing said formation sufficiently to raise a condensation temperature of said solvent above an original formation temperature;
d) delivering said vapourized solvent to said formation to permit said solvent to condense within said formation, and to release the latent heat of condensation to said formation at said condensation temperature; and e) extracting heavy oil from said production well.
According to another aspect of the present invention, there is provided a method of enhanced heavy oil recover, said method comprising:
a) selecting a solvent having a predetermined latent heat of condensation;
b) selecting a predetermined amount of heat to deliver to a formation;
c) vapourizing said selected solvent to permit said solvent to be delivered to said formation in a vapour state;
d) delivering said solvent to said formation at a rate sufficient to deliver the predetermined amount of heat;
e) condensing said solvent onto said formation to deliver said predetermined amount of heat to said formation; and f) recovering, from said formation, a solvent/heavy oil blend.
According to another aspect of the present invention, there is provided a method of enhanced hydrocarbon recovery comprising the steps of:
a) injecting a vapourized condensing solvent into a formation;
b) condensing said solvent in said formation to deliver a latent heat of condensation to said formation to heat said hydrocarbon to reduce a viscosity of said hydrocarbon;

- $ -c) dissolving said solvent into said hydrocarbon to form a solvent/hydrocarbon blend having a further reduced viscosity; and d) recovering from said formation said reduced viscosity hydrocarbon blend.
According to another aspect of the present invention, there is provided a method of improved hydrocarbon recovering comprising:
a) heating said hydrocarbon to be recovered insitu in the presence of a solvent to increase the solvent penetration rate into said hydrocarbon.
According to another aspect of the present invention, there is provided a method of increasing the value of a recovered hydrocarbon comprising the steps of:
a) injecting a condensing solvent vapour into a formation;
b) said solvent vapour at a pressure above its condensation pressure (at original reservoir temperature);
c) condensing said solvent into said heated hydrocarbon thereby providing a mobile hydrocarbon fraction; and d) extracting said mobile hydrocarbon fraction from said formation;
whereby asphaltenes remain in said formation in a substantially immobilized hydrocarbon fraction.
According to another aspect of the present invention, there is provided a method of enhanced recovery of hydrocarbon from a hydrocarbon bearing formation said method comprising the steps of:
a) establishing a flow path between an injection well and a production well;
b) injecting a heated solvent into said formation under sufficient pressure to raise a condensation temperature of said solvent above a formation temperature;
c) heating said formation by condensing said solvent onto said formation to help remove hydrocarbons from said formation and to create a chamber;

d) increasing the size of the chamber by continuing to inject heated solvent;
e) reducing the injection pressure as said chamber expands; and f) reducing the energy delivered to said formation as said pressure is reduced.
According to another aspect of the present invention, there is provided a method of enhanced hydrocarbon recovery comprising the steps of:
a) injecting a heated solvent into a formation under sufficient initial injection pressure to raise a condensation temperature of said heated solvent above a naturally occurring formation temperature; and b) reducing, over time, said injection pressure from said initial pressure.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
Reference will now be made, by way of example only, to preferred embodiments of the invention as illustrated in the accompanying drawings and in which:
Figure 1 illustrates a process schematic of the present invention showing formation of a solvent chamber;
Figure 2 illustrates the solvent chamber along section A-A of Figure 1 in more detail;
Figure 3 is a graph which shows a relationship between viscosity and temperature for Athabasca bitumen, and the predicted relationship between diffusion rate and temperature based on the Stokes-Einstein equation;
Figure 4 is a graph which illustrates a relationship between temperature rise and volume of a theoretical reservoir heated at a constant power rate of 1 megawatt;
Figure 5 is a graph which illustrates the vapour pressure of propane solvent as a function of temperature;
Figure 6 is a graph which shows the latent heat of vaporization for propane solvent as a function of temperature and the mass of propane solvent vapour required to deliver one megawatt of heat (via latent heat of condensation);
Figure 7 is a graph which shows the volumetric heat capacity of vapour (via latent heat of condensation) as a function of temperature for several solvents compared to steam;

Figure 8 is a graph which shows volume fraction of propane solvent in produced fluid vs chamber temperature;
Figure 9 illustrates the bitumen- propane blend viscosity at 8C
as a function of propane solvent volume fraction and the favorable reduction in viscosity at higher solvent ratios;
Figure 10 illustrates the propane solvent/bitumen blend viscosity as a function of temperature; and Figure 11 illustrates the extraction rate forthe heated propane solvent vapour as a function of temperature and how the rate is limited by mass transfer at temperatures below 40C and limited by heat transfer at temperatures above 40C.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS

Figure 1 shows a schematic of a process of stimulating heavy oil or bitumen recovery according to the present invention. Generally, a hot solvent 10 is injected down an injection well 12 into a reservoir 14. The hot solvent 10 is most preferably a vapour, enters a solvent chamber 16 through a perforated or slotted casing 18 or the like and flows out to condense on the cold bitumen interface 20 to form a solvent/bitumen blend. The terms "bitumen" and "heavy oil" are used interchangably in this specification and for the purposes of this invention means hydrocarbons which are recovered from naturally occurring formations and which in their natural state are generallytoo viscous to readily flow into a production well. It will be appreciated that the present invention is most suitable for such formations as tar sands, but may also be used in other formations.

The solvent bitumen blend 15 formed at the interface drains to the bottom of the chamber 16 (shown at 22 in Figure 2), where it is removed via a production well 24 and produced to surface 26. Valves 17 are located at each well head. The bitumen is separated from the solvent at the surface 26 and the bitumen is sold 27. The separation at 29 of a solvent such as propane from the bitumen, might involve a flash at a temperature above the critical temperature of the solvent. The present invention comprehends that there may be several stages of separation to maximize solvent recovery, which of course will minimize solvent losses in the sold bitumen. It will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that some factors to consider in establishing solvent recovery are energy efficiency, reliability, and potential for fouling problems (i.e. deposition of asphaltenes). The recovered solvent 33 is then compressed, and/or heated at 32 and then reinjected into the injection well 18. Additional make up solvent is added as needed to replace the void volume created by the extracted bitumen at 30. It may also be necessary to remove light gases from solvent/bitumen blend which may have been co-produced from the reservoir. These may also be used as fuel in re-heating the solvent.
The present invention comprehends a process in which a flow path has already been established between an injection well and a production well. This flow path could be established by any of a number of means including downhole heaters or the like. The establishment of a flow connection is desirable because this avoids countercurrent heat losses which might otherwise occur. However, this step is not deemed essential if such countercurrent heat losses can be mitigated through use of other strategies such as insulated injection tubing or the like. It will be appreciated though that the most preferred form of the present invention is a flow through from an injection well to a production or recovery well.
Figure 2 shows the solvent chamber 16 formed in this formation in more detail. Also shown is a pressure containment layer, such as shale barrier layer 21. The heated solvent vapour rises within the chamber 16 to condense on the walls and roof 19 of the chamber 16. As the solvent condenses it releases its latent heat of condensation thereby heating the bitumen interface at the chamber surface. As the solvent dissolves and is mixed into the bitumen the bitumen is upgraded by the precipitation out of asphaltenes. At this stage the bitumen begins to flow as its viscosity has been lowered by two effects namely, the heating effect from the latent heat of condensation and the dilution effect from being blended with the now liquid solvent. The bitumen- solvent liquid blend 25 drains along the wall or down off the ceiling into the sump 22. The liquid is then drained into the production well 24. As will be more fully understood from the description below, the production of bitumen solvent blend is preferably restricted to avoid solvent gas bypassing. This is accomplished via a steam trap type control as currently practiced in SAGD technology.
Figure 3 shows the viscosity of a typical Athabasca bitumen as a function of temperature by way of example. The Stokes-Einstein law states that the diffusion coefficient for any solvent is inversely related to the solute viscosity. Using this relationship an estimate can be made of the improvement in the diffusion coefficent as the temperature is increased and the bitumen viscosity decreases. For example, at 40C the diffusion coefficient is increased by 100 fold above that at 8C (i.e. original reservoir temperature).
The thermal diffusivity in the Athabasca tar sands is typically about 100 times larger than the molecular diffusivity at 8C. Thus, Figure 3 shows that the heat transfer process becomes the rate limiting process step at temperatures above 40C, while the molecular diffusion will be the rate limiting process step at temperatures below 40C.
Figure 4 shows the volume of reservoir heated per day with a power delivery rate of 1 megawatt. This figure illustrates a simple heat balance and does not reflect any heat transfer limitations. As a point of reference 1 megawatt will heat 600m3/day of reservoir from 8C to 70C.
Assuming a recovery rate of about 80% recovery of the original bitumen in place (assuming 35% porosity and 85% bitumen saturation) 1 megawatt will provide 140 m3/day of bitumen production at 70C.

Figure 5 shows the vapour pressure of one preferred solvent, propane, as a function of temperature. As can now be appreciated, the present invention comprehends enhancing the delivery of heat to the heavy oil insitu by increasing the pressure of the solvent vapour which 'in tum increases the dew point temperature. As the vapour pressure is increased the dew point temperature increases. Above the critical temperature a separate liquid phase ceases to exist, so the vapour pressure concept no longer applies. By way of example, assuming that the solvent used is propane, at 70C the vapour pressure of propane is about 375 psia. This means that if the solvent chamber is pressurized to 375 psia, then liquid propane will condense on any surface which is at a temperature below 70C. This condensation will eventually heat the surface (via the latent heat of condensation), to a temperature approaching 70C. Conversely if the target temperature was 40C, then the pressure of propane in the chamber would have to be held only at about 200 psia. Thus, according to the present invention by pre-heating a solvent under predetermined pressure and injecting the same into a formation, a predetermined amount of heat can be delivered to a formation by controlling the injection rate of heated solvent vapour.

Figure 6 shows the latent heat of condensation for propane as a function of temperature. As the temperature approaches the critical temperature the latent heat of vaporization drops to zero. Figure 6 also shows the metric tons of propane required per day to supply 1 megawatt via the latent heat of condensation. At 70C about 350 metric tons of propane vapour per day are required to supply one megawatt of heat. Thus, according to the present invention heat can be delivered at a predetermined rate to the hydrocarbon bearing formation by latent heat of condensation. As will now be appreciated with appropriate pressure maintenance such a heat delivery mechanism avoids many of the problems of the prior art.
Figure 7 compares the latent heat of condensation as a function of temperature for several solvents and water. The latent heat is presented on a volumetric basis (i.e. per m3 of saturated vapour at temperature and pressure). The saturation pressure is the same thing as the vapour pressure and can be obtained from Figure 5. On this basis, propane at 70C has a latent heat content comparable to steam at 180C. Ethane has an even higher heat content but is not as useful due to its low critical temperature. Figure also shows that butane would be useful if one wanted to achieve a reservoir temperature between 85 and 115C. While ethane, butane and propane are all possible solvents, many other solvents could also be used without departing from the present invention. Essentially for the purposes of this invention, the term solvent means any material which mixes with oil in a liquid phase and which can be injected into a formation as a gas to deliver a latent heat of condensation to the formation. Solvents which are substantially miscible with the hydrocarbon or bitumen are preferred. By way of example, light volatile hydrocarbons such as propane, propylene, butane, ethylene, ethane and pentane are most preferred. While many solvents are available, the most preferred ones will have a dew point temperature above a formation temperature at reasonable operating pressures (i.e. belowformation orcasing fracture pressures).
Retuming again to propane, Figure 8 shows the volume fraction of propane in the bitumen propane blend as a function of temperature. This graph was derived from Figures 4 and 6, which show bitumen production and solvent injection rate at 1 megawatt of heat delivery. Figure 8 shows a great advantage of the present invention, namely that solvent proportion in the blend can be increased by operating at higher temperatures. This increased solvent proportion at high temperatures is made possible because the solvent circulation rate is determined by heat transfer requirements rather than solubility in the bitumen under those conditions. In other words, to deliver the desired rate of heat transfer involves injecting enough solvent under pressure to provide the predetermined heat. This higher injection rate leads to a higher solvent fraction in the produced blend, with a beneficially lowered blend viscosity.
Figure 9 shows the blend viscosity at 8C as a function of = -15-propane volume fraction. It is clear that higher solvent proportions in the blend are very advantageous in terms of reducing viscosity. As the solvent proportion increases the viscosity of the blend decreases quite rapidly. This low blend viscosity provides rapid drainage of the bitumen from the chamber interface and exposes fresh coid bitumen to fresh hot condensing solvent vapour. Figure 9 also shows the approximate viscosity range expected for a typical VAPEX solvent/oil ratio at bracket 100 and the preferred much lower approximate viscosity range preferred for the present invention at higher solvent oil ratios at range 102.
Figure 10 shows the blend viscosity as a function of temperature. At 70C the blend viscosity is reduced by at least 10 fold over blend viscosity at original reservoir temperature. This again increases extraction relative to an unheated or ambient process.
Consider the rate of bitumen extraction with warm solvent vapour according to the present invention. Making a determination of this rate in advance is complicated because factors to simultaneously consider include heat, mass and momentum transfer in a porous medium. Furthermore, the measured mass transfer rates (diffusion coefficients) for cold solvent vapour extraction are higher than predicted by theory. Therefore the calculation which follows is an approximation only.
Consider temperatures above 40 C where the molecular diffusivity is higher than the thermal diffusivity. Assuming the process is limited by thermal diffusivity it is possible to model the process as a solvent SAGD with appropriate adjustments to the viscosity and permeability. Butler (Canadian Patent 1,130,201, pg. 19) gives a formula which states thatthe rate is proportional to (k/u). =(k*p/p). O'Rourke, J.C. (Canadian Joumal of Petroleum Technology, Sept. 1999, pg, 50, Fig. 5.1) reports that the SAGD
extraction rate at 200 C is about 5cm/day.

A condensing propane flood will increase permeability k by 4-5, because there is no relative permeability reduction due to high water saturations from steam (see Table I on pg. 14 of Butler Canadian Patent 1,130,201). Op is reduced by'/~ due to the lower density difference between condensed and vaporized propane relative to water and steam (i.e. 0.5 for propane vs 1 for water). The blend viscosity p at 40 C is 0.3cP vs 10cP for steam at 200 C. Therefore, the production rate using solvent vapours at 40 C
is predicted to increase by (4*0.5*10/0.3)" = 8 above the rate for SAGD at 200 C.
With the SAGD extraction rate of 5 cm/day at 200 C (where cm/day equals the distance the steam chamber expands), one can predict a hot pressurized propane solvent vapour extraction rate according to the present invention of about 8 x 5= 40cm/day. Thus, the present invention, with condensing propane in gravity drainage solvent extraction process can give bitumen production rates about 8 times larger than a SAGD, with about 1/6 of the energy requirement of a SAGD (due to the lower reservoir temperature 40 C vs 200 C) and 1/6 of the greenhouse gas emissions. Furthermore, the produced oil will more valuable due to the insitu upgrading (i.e. loss of undesirable asphaltenes).
Figure 11 shows the extraction rate as a function of temperature for a heat transfer limited case for propane. The formation extraction temperature is shown ranging from 10 degrees C to 80 degrees C
in ten degree increments. As noted earlier, the mass transfer rate via molecular diffusion will be limiting at lower temperatures, so a different mechanism occurs at temperatures below 40 C. Dunn et al. (Canadian Journal of Chemical Engineering, Vol. 67, December 1989, pg. 979) present an analogous equation for the case where mass transfer is limiting. In this case the rate is proportional to (D/v)'2.=(D*p/N)'2.
Assuming that the extraction rate at 40 C is the same for the heat transfer limited case above (i.e. 40cm/day) as the mass transfer rate limited case (since the rates must converge to the same value at some temperature). The variation in D (diffusion rate) is known from Figure 3. The blend viscosity is known from Figure 10. Figure 11 also shows the predicted extraction rates for temperatures less than 40 C where the mass transfer is the rate limiting step. This low temperature part of the curve is very steep, due to the relationship between viscosity and diffusion coefficient. Thus a relatively small increase in the solvent vapour chamber temperature can increase the extraction rates significantly.
It will now be understood that as the chamber grows in size, the requirements for solvent, (such as propane vapour) delivery will rapidly increase due to the increased surface area if the temperature is to be maintained. The ability to deliver hot vaporized propane to the injection well may become rate limiting. To some extent, the solvent vapour delivery can be improved by injecting at higher pressures and temperatures. However, this will require very high bitumen-propane separation rates in the surface facilities.
For example, consider a heat delivery of 1 megawatt at 70 C.
This requires 350 metric tons per day of propane vapour delivered to the reservoir. At saturation pressure of 375 psia at 70 C, the propane vapour requirement is about 8800m3/day. This gives a velocity of 5m/s in 7" casing and a pressure drop of about 1 psi/100m. Over 700 meters of horizontal injection well the total pressure drop is less than 3 psi, which corresponds to a hydrostatic head variation of about 3 meters of propane bitumen blend. (n.b.
the pressure drop along the horizontal section is less than 7 psi due to leakoff into the formation). If the injection and production wells are separated by 5 meters, the liquid interface can be kept between the injector and the producer.

Considerthe case where SAGD production is 3000 bopd so the predicted production according to the present invention will be 24000 bopd at 40 C. This yields a propane volume fraction of 0.67, so the propane injection rate will be 48000 bbl/day of liquid solvent equivalent. This corresponds to a volumetric flowrate of about 220,000 m3/day of vapour at 200psia and 40 C.
In 9" casing the velocity is 65m/s which gives a pressure gradient of 100 psi/100m. It is desirable to minimize the pressure gradient along the injector and to this end flow control means 40 (see Figures 1 and 2) can be used. For example, the pressure gradient can be mitigated by using larger casing or a tubing string with orifices or the like to help distribute the solvent more evenly.
The orifices can be metered to deliver a constant flow over different pressures, or can be designed to yield a variable flow at different pressures.
Further, the flow control means can be varied along the length of the well to yield a more constant injection pressure in spite of line losses. Of course, at such high volumes, an additional challenge will be to separate the solvent from the bitumen at surface.
At some point increasing the injection/separation rates probably won't be practical. When the supply of propane vapour to the reservoir becomes rate limiting, the pressure in the solvent chamber will begin to drop.
This will lead to a reduction in the dew point or saturation temperature and a reduction in the solvent penetration rate as the bitumen surface viscosity is increased and the molecular diffusivity the solvent is reduced. Thus, it is anticipated that the pressure in the solvent chamber will gradually decrease with time and the process will eventually trend towards a process at the original ambient temperature of the reservoir. Thus, the present invention comprehends an extraction process which begins hot and pressurized and in which overtime both heat and pressure are reduced as the production volume increases. The supply bottleneck for solvent vapour could also be mitigated, by using shorter horizontal wells, but this may not be economically desirable.
It can now be appreciated that a cold or ambient process may be used once the solvent chamber has been made large enough by the hot process first to give reasonable production rates.
Thus the proposed hot vapour extraction technique will be most useful for providing high initial production rates by rapidly forming a chamber of size and quickly recovering the upfront capital costs. By growing a chamber quickly, the hot vapour extraction technique described here will allow the operator to have a large chamber much more quickly and thereby allow subsequent energy efficient, cold extraction to proceed economically.
Forexample, one can now estimate the minimum chamber size at 40 C and 200 psi for 1 megawatt of heat via condensing vapour. At 40cm/day x 750 m long x.35 porosity x.85 oil saturation x.8 recovery factor, the production rate is 71 m3 of solvent per meter of chamber circumference.
Therefore for 270m3/day of bitumen production, the circumference of the solvent chamber must be greater than 4m, or the solvent chamber diameter should be larger than about 2 m. Since this is small relative to the distance between the wells (5 m), high rates of bitumen extraction should be feasible immediately after breakthrough between the wells.
The advantages of the present invention can now be understood. The priorart, a cold (unheated) solvent vapour extraction process the solvent- bitumen ratio is largely determined by the solubility of propane in the bitumen (it also depends somewhat on the mobility of the blend).
However, with a heated pressurized solvent vapour the solvent injection rate is determined by the heat balance. In other words, the amount of liquid solvent condensed within the reservoir depends on the volumetric heating requirements required to heat the reservoir to the dewpoint of the solvent. (i.e. the temperature difference between the solvent vapour at its dewpoint temperature and the ambient reservoir temperature, the heat capacity of the reservoir and the latent heat of vaporization of the solvent.).
Thus the first advantage is that the solvent - bitumen ratio is uncoupled so that higher solvent proportions can be achieved in the blend.

A second advantage is that higher propane ratios provide a higher degree of deasphalting and thereby enhance the value of the produced oil (i.e. add up to 30% of incremental value to the oil). For a 100,000 bopd facility each dollar of incremental value/bbl adds 36 million dollars per year to the cash flow, so a higher degree of insitu upgrading could add up to 100 million dollars of cashflow to a project annually.
A third advantage is that the solvent penetration rate into the bitumen increases as the bitumen temperature is raised, because the diffusion rate increases as the viscosity is decreased, and thermal diffusivity is 100x faster than molecular diffusion at ambient reservoir temperature.

A fourth advantage of higher solvent ratios is that the bitumen solvent blend will have significantly lower viscosities than a cold or ambient process and therefore will drain faster and thereby speed up the extraction process. This is important because the production rate is minimal for the first three years of a cold start Vapex due to the small size of the solvent chamber.
At 15% rate of return, the three year delay in the cash flow reduces the value of the oil production by 30%. For example if the oil is sold for 20$/bbl, the year delay means that the producer is effectively paid only 14$/bbl. Thus, on a 100,000 bopd facility, the fast start up will add $600,000/day of value to the production or 220million$ of value to the cash flow per year.
As will be appreciated with higher production rates fewer wells are required to produce the same cash flow which is more efficient economically.
A further advantage of the present invention is that the elevated reservoir pressure can enormously simplify production of the fluids. For example, at elevated reservoir pressure it may not be necessary to supply a recovery pump on the production well side, because the reservoir pressure may be sufficient to overcome the hydrostatic head. In this case the production well would be choked back to maintain the pressure in the horizontal portion of the production well above the bubble point, in a manner analogous to the steam trap technique used for SAGD. This could save 3M$.
A further advantage of the present invention is that the energy requirements are quite modest compared to SAGD. For example, if the entire reservoir is heated to 40 C, instead of the 200 C for SAGD, then the greenhouse gas emissions are reduced by about 80%. This is particularly significant, since greenhouse gas emissions from heavy oil, bitumen and tar sands account for 25% of the excess above Canada's obligation under the Kyoto Accord.
As will be appreciated by those skilled in the art, off setting these benefits are the requirement to recover and recycle higher volumes of solvent per bbl of bitumen production. It is expected that in the end stages of the extraction process, the solvent recovery may become a bottleneck, so solvent pressure (i.e. dewpoint temperature) in the solvent chamber will be reduced. However, this will help to offset higher heat losses to the overburden as the chamber spreads along the top of the oil bearing zone. Thus, the final stages of extraction may occur at ambient reservoirtemperature as previously described.
Thus we can see that the advantages of hot solvent gas injection include accelerated cash flow (fast start up), increased cash flow (upgrading) delayed capital expenditures, reduced solvent inventory and lifting costs, reduced energy costs (relative to steam) and reduced greenhouse gas emissions (relative to steam). The hot solvent extraction process described here has the potential to add about 1 million$/day of incremental value to a 100,000 bopd cold vapex project.
As will be appreciated, the example reference conditions discussed in this patent have been injection of propane solvent vapour at 40 C and 200psia. This particular choice of solvent, temperature and pressure was intended to teach by way of preferred example only. The optimum choice of temperature and solvent for a particular reservoir will depend on both cost factors (i.e., solvent separation rates) and bitumen production rates.
While the foregoing description of the present invention includes various altematives and variations, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that various additional modifications are possible without departing from the broad spirit of the invention as noted in the appended claims. Some of the variations are discussed above, such as the various pressures and temperatures which are suitable for the different solvents which are suitable according to the present invention. Others will be apparent to those skilled in the art. What is considered important in this invention is the selection of a suitable solvent which can effectively deliver heat to the formation by a latent heat of condensation to decrease the viscosity of the hydrocarbons being recovered.

Claims (77)

THE EMBODIMENTS OF THE INVENTION IN WHICH AN EXCLUSIVE
PROPERTY OR PRIVILEGE IS CLAIMED ARE DEFINED AS
FOLLOWS:
1. A method of enhanced heavy oil recovery, said method comprising the steps of:
a) selecting a solvent which is capable of being injected as a vapour and then condensing within an oil bearing formation at a saturation temperature, said solvent being further characterised as having a releasable heat of condensation per unit volume of vapour greater than a releasable heat of condensation contained in the same unit volume of steam at the same temperature and at their respective saturation pressures;
b) performing at least one of the steps of heating and pressurizing said solvent sufficiently to permit said solvent to be injected into said formation as a vapour;
c) controlling the pressure within said formation by controlling the injection rate of the solvent to raise said saturation temperature of said selected solvent above an original formation temperature but below a critical temperature for said selected solvent;
d) elevating a temperature in said extraction chamber by condensing said solvent vapour within said formation, to release said heat of condensation to said formation at said controlled pressure;
e) draining a liquid blend of said solvent and mobilized heavy oil through said chamber at said elevated temperature; and f) extracting said solvent and mobilized heavy oil blend from said heated chamber in said formation.
2. The method of claim 1 further including a preliminary step of establishing a flow path through said oil bearing formation between an injection well and a production well.
3. The method of claim 1 wherein said step of controlling the pressure within said formation further comprises pressurizing said formation to a pressure above a naturally occurring formation pressure to enhance the delivery of releasable heat of condensation to said formation by said condensing solvent vapour.
4. The method of claim 1 wherein said step of controlling the pressure within said formation further comprises pressurizing said formation to cause a saturation temperature in said formation elevated enough to achieve a sufficient reduction in viscosity of said heavy oil in said formation by said condensing solvent vapour to mobilize said heavy oil in said formation.
5. The method of claim 2 wherein said solvent is miscible with heavy oil.
6. The method of claim 1 wherein step of selecting said solvent includes the step of selecting said solvent to reduce a viscosity of said heavy oil.
7. The method of claims 1 to 6 wherein said viscosity is reduced by increasing the temperature of said heavy oil in the formation and by diluting said heavy oil in said formation with said solvent.
8. The method of claim 2 further including the step of using a down hole solvent heater to provide sufficient heat to mobilize enough heavy oil to establish said flow path.
9. The method of claims 1 or 3 wherein said solvent is one or more of propane, butane, pentane and ethane.
10. The methods of claims 1 or 3 wherein said solvent is propane and said saturation temperature and formation pressure are selected to cause a reduction in viscosity of said heavy oil which is sufficient to increase the extraction rates of said heavy oil from said formation.
11. The method of claim 10 wherein said saturation temperature of said solvent at extraction conditions is below the boiling temperature of water at extraction conditions to reduce greenhouse gas emissions as compared to steam assisted gravity drainage extraction process.
12. The method of claim 1 wherein said injection well is a horizontal well and said method further includes providing flow control means placed in said injection well to maintain a preferred pressure profile along said injection well.
13. The method of claim 1 wherein said step of extracting said heavy oil includes co-producing said liquid solvent in a heavy oil solvent blend.
14. The method of claim 13 wherein said step of extracting said heavy oil further includes recovering said solvent from said heavy oil solvent blend.
15. The method of claim 14 wherein said recovered solvent is reused for further solvent injection into said oil bearing formation.
16. A method of enhanced heavy oil recovery, said method comprising:
a) selecting a solvent having a predetermined latent heat of condensation per volume of vapour greater than a latent heat of condensation of steam per volume of vapour at a temperature and at their respective saturation pressures;
b) selecting an extraction temperature to heat said formation to during said recovery process;
c) pressurizing and heating said selected solvent to permit said solvent to be delivered to said formation in a vapour state;
d) delivering said heated solvent vapour to said formation at a controlled temperature, pressure and rate sufficient to achieve the predetermined temperature in said formation;

e) condensing said heated solvent vapour in said formation to warm said formation substantially through latent heat of condensation to said extraction temperature; and f) recovering, from said formation, a solvent/heavy oil blend.
17. A method as claimed in claim 16 wherein said solvent is one or more of propane, propylene, butane, ethylene, ethane, pentane.
18. A method as claimed in claim 16 wherein said controlled solvent delivery rate provides a predetermined amount of heat of between 50KW
and 50MW.
19. A method as claimed in claim 16 wherein said extraction temperature of said solvent is a temperature of between 5C and 200C.
20. A method as claimed in claim 16 wherein said solvent is pressurized to a pressure of between 1 bar absolute and 100 bar absolute.
21. A method as claimed in claim 16 further including a step of recovering said solvent from said solvent/heavy oil blend, after said solvent/heavy oil blend has been produced.
22. A method as claimed in claim 21 further including a step of repressurizing and reheating said recovered solvent for reinjection into said formation.
23. A method of enhanced hydrocarbon recovery comprising the steps of:
a) injecting a heated and pressurized condensing solvent into an oil bearing formation at a temperature and pressure above naturally occurring formation conditions said solvent being characterised as having a releasable heat of condensation per unit volume of vapour greater than a releasable heat of condensation contained in the same unit volume of steam at the same temperature and at their respective saturation pressures;
b) pressurizing an underground hydrocarbon bearing formation by controlling the injection rate of a solvent vapour to raise said saturation temperature of said selected solvent above an original formation temperature but below a critical temperature for said selected solvent c) condensing said solvent in said formation to deliver a latent heat of condensation to said formation at said elevated saturation temperature to heat said hydrocarbon to reduce a viscosity of said hydrocarbon;
d) dissolving said condensed solvent into said hydrocarbon to form a solvent/hydrocarbon blend having a further reduced viscosity; and e) recovering from said formation said reduced viscosity hydrocarbon blend.
24. A method as claimed in claim 23 further including a pretreatment step of forming a chamber in said formation.
25. A method as claimed in claim 23 wherein said step of condensing said solvent further comprises condensing said solvent on a hydrocarbon surface of said chamber.
26. A method of improved hydrocarbon recovery comprising:
pressurizing an underground hydrocarbon bearing formation by controlling the injection rate of a solvent vapour to raise a saturation temperature of said solvent above an original formation temperature but below a critical temperature for said solvent;
mobilizing said hydrocarbon to be recovered from an underground formation by condensing, in said underground formation, said solvent vapour at a pressure above a naturally occurring formation pressure to release a latent heat of condensation at a saturation temperature for said solvent which is sufficiently above a naturally occurring formation temperature to cause said hydrocarbons to flow wherein said hydrocarbons can be recovered from the formation, said solvent being characterised as having a releasable heat of condensation per unit volume of vapour greater than a releasable heat of condensation contained in the same unit volume of steam at the same temperature and at their respective saturation pressures.
27. The method claimed in claim 26 wherein said solvent is propane and said pressure of said reservoir is raised to increase a saturation temperature of said solvent to between 20 degrees C and 90 degrees C.
28. A method of in situ upgrading of hydrocarbons to be recovered comprising the steps of:
a) injecting a heated condensing solvent vapour having a latent heat of condensation per volume of vapour greater than a latent heat of condensation of steam per volume of vapour at their respective saturation pressures into a formation wherein said solvent vapour is at a pressure sufficient to raise said saturation temperature above original reservoir temperature;
b) controlling the injection rate of the solvent to maintain said pressure;
c) controlling an extraction chamber temperature by means of said elevated saturation temperature;
d) condensing said solvent in said formation to provide a mobile hydrocarbon fraction at said controlled saturation temperature; and e) extracting said mobile hydrocarbon fraction from said formation;
wherein asphaltenes which remain in said formation are found in a substantially immobilized hydrocarbon fraction.
29. A method of increasing a solvent to oil ratio in an oil extraction process said method comprising injecting a heated solvent vapour into said formation at a predetermined pressure, said predetermined pressure being at least 25kPa above a boiling point pressure of the solvent at an original reservoir temperature, but below formation or casing fracture pressures, controlling the injection rate of said solvent into said formation to pressurize said formation to said predetermined pressure, wherein said solvent is characterised as having a releasable heat of condensation per unit volume of vapour greater than a releasable heat of condensation contained in the same unit volume of steam at the same temperature and at their respective saturation pressures and controlling the extraction chamber temperature by means of said injection rate control.
30. The method claimed in 29 whereby said injection of heated solvent vapour increases a solvent to oil ratio in said formation, precipitates asphaltenes from the hydrocarbon blend in said formation and increases a value of any produced hydrocarbons by such in situ upgrading.
31. The method as claimed in claim 29 further including the step of condensing said heated solvent at elevated predetermined pressure and releasing sufficient latent heat of condensation to raise a solvent vapour chamber temperature at least 3C above an original temperature of the reservoir.
32. The method as claimed in claim 29 further including the step of adjusting the amount of heat delivered to said formation by said condensing heated solvent by adjusting a pressure of said formation to provide a saturation temperature above a formation temperature and below a critical temperature for said heated solvent to permit the recovery of hydrocarbons to be optimized for the amount of energy required in the method.
33. The method as claimed in claim 29 whereby said solvent is a hydrocarbon species or a blend of species substantially miscible with the in situ hydrocarbon to be recovered from said reservoir to thereby minimize relative permeability reduction from multiple liquid phases.
34. A method of enhanced recovery of hydrocarbons from a hydrocarbon bearing formation said method comprising the steps of:
a) establishing a flow path between an injection well and a production well;

b) selecting a solvent having a releasable heat of condensation per volume of vapour greater than a releasable heat of condensation of steam per volume of vapour at a temperature and at their respective saturation pressures;
c) controlling the injection of said solvent into said formation to achieve a pressure in said formation sufficient to raise a saturation temperature of said heated solvent above a naturally occurring formation temperature;
d) heating said formation by condensing said solvent in said formation to help remove hydrocarbons from said formation and to create a chamber;
e) increasing the size of said chamber by extracting a solvent oil blend and continuing to inject heated solvent vapour into said chamber;
and f) reducing the formation pressure and said saturation temperature as said chamber expands.
35. A method of enhanced hydrocarbon recovery comprising the steps of:
a) injecting a heated solvent vapour into an oil bearing formation under sufficient initial injection pressure to raise a saturation temperature of said heated solvent vapour above a naturally occurring formation temperature wherein said solvent vapour has a releasable heat of condensation per volume of vapour greater than a releasable heat of condensation of steam per volume of vapour at a temperature and of their respective saturation pressures; and b) reducing, over time, said injection pressure from said initial pressure.
36. A method of enhanced heavy oil recovery, said method comprising the steps of:
a) establishing a flow path between an injection well and a production well through an oil bearing formation;

b) selecting a solvent which is capable of being injected as a vapour and then condensing within the oil bearing formation at a saturation temperature, said solvent being further characterized as having a lower saturation temperature than steam at the same level of releasable heat of condensation per unit volume and at their respective saturation pressures;
c) controlling the injection rate of said solvent into said formation to control a pressure within said formation to a pressure and temperature sufficient to permit said solvent vapour to condense within said formation, and to release a latent heat of condensation to said formation at a saturation temperature above a naturally occurring formation temperature but below a critical temperature for said solvent; and d) extracting oil and solvent from said production well.
37. The method of claim 36 wherein said step of controlling a pressure within said formation further comprises pressurizing said formation to a pressure above naturally occurring formation pressure enhance the delivery of a releasable heat of condensation to said formation by said heated solvent vapour.
38. The method of claims 36 or 37 wherein said solvent is propane and said step of controlling a pressure within said formation further comprises pressurizing said formation to a achieve a solvent saturation temperature of between 40C and 70C wherein said releasable heat of said solvent vapour causes a reduction in viscosity of said heavy oil in said formation to permit said oil to be recovered.
39. The method of claim 36 wherein said solvent is miscible with heavy oil.
40. The method of claim 36 wherein step of selecting said solvent includes the step of selecting said solvent capable of reducing a viscosity of said heavy oil by dilution.
41. The method of claim 36 wherein said viscosity is reduced by increasing a temperature of said heavy oil in said formation and by diluting said heavy oil in said formation with said solvent.
42. The method of claim 36 wherein step (a) further includes the step of using a down hole heater to provide sufficient heat to mobilize said heavy oil to establish said flow path.
43. The method of claim 36 wherein said solvent is one or more of propane, butane, pentane and ethane.
44. The methods of claim 36 wherein said solvent is propane and said formation pressure is controlled to a pressure between 200psia and 375psia.
45. The method of claim 36 wherein said injection well is a horizontal well and said method further includes providing flow control means placed in said injection well to maintain a preferred pressure profile along said injection well.
46. The method of claim 36 wherein said step of extracting said heavy oil includes co-producing said liquid solvent in a heavy oil solvent blend.
47. The method of claim 46 wherein said step of extracting said heavy oil further includes recovering said solvent from said recovered heavy oil solvent blend.
48. The method of claim 47 wherein said recovered solvent is reused for further solvent injection into said oil bearing formation.
49. A method of enhanced heavy oil recovery, said method comprising:
a) selecting a solvent having a lower saturation temperature than steam at the same level of releasable heat of condensation per unit volume at their respective saturation pressures;

b) selecting a predetermined amount of heat to deliver to a formation;
c) heating and pressurizing said selected solvent to permit said solvent to be delivered to said formation in a vapour state and in the absence of a co-injected steam/water phase;
d) delivering said heated solvent vapour to said formation at a temperature, pressure and rate sufficient to deliver the predetermined amount of heat;
e) condensing said heated solvent vapour onto said formation to deliver said predetermined amount of heat to said formation substantially by means of a latent heat of condensation; and f) recovering, from said formation, a solvent/heavy oil blend.
50. A method as claimed in claim 49 wherein said solvent is one or more of propane, propylene, butane, ethylene, ethane, pentane.
51. A method as claimed in claim 49 wherein said predetermined amount of heat is between 50KW and 50MW.
52. A method as claimed in claim 49 wherein said solvent is heated to a temperature of between 5C and 90C.
53. A method as claimed in claim 49 wherein said solvent is pressurized to a pressure of between 1 bar absolute and 100 bar absolute.
54. A method as claimed in claim 49 further including a step of recovering said solvent from said solvent/heavy oil blend, after said solvent/heavy oil blend has been produced.
55. A method as claimed in claim 54 further including a step of repressurizing and reheating said recovered solvent for reinjection into said formation.
56. A method of enhanced hydrocarbon recovery comprising the steps of:
a) injecting a heated and pressurized condensing solvent into an oil bearing formation, said solvent being heated and pressurized to a temperature and pressure above naturally occurring reservoir conditions but at a temperature lower than steam at the same level of releasable heat of condensation per unit volume and at their respective saturation pressures;
b) controlling the injection rate of said solvent into said formation to pressurize said formation and to control a chamber temperature;
c) condensing said solvent vapour in said formation to deliver a latent heat of condensation to said formation to heat said hydrocarbon to reduce a viscosity of said hydrocarbon;
d) dissolving said solvent into said hydrocarbon to form a solvent/hydrocarbon blend having a further reduced viscosity; and e) recovering from said formation said reduced viscosity hydrocarbon blend.
57. A method as claimed in claim 56 further including a pretreatment step of forming a chamber in said formation.
58. A method as claimed in claim 57 wherein said step of condensing said solvent further comprises condensing said solvent on a heavy oil surface of said chamber.
59. A method of improved hydrocarbon recovering comprising:
a) mobilizing said hydrocarbon to be recovered by means of a solvent vapour which condenses within an underground formation and has a lower saturation temperature than steam at the same level of releasable heat of condensation per unit volume, wherein said mobilizing step takes place in said formation and at a solvent saturation pressure at a level to reduce a formation production temperature below a temperature level for a steam treatment delivering the same releasable heat energy per unit of volume of vapour at a steam saturation pressure, and wherein said saturation temperature of said solvent is sufficiently above naturally occurring hydrocarbon temperatures to mobilize said hydrocarbon by said solvent condensing within said formation by controlling an injection rate for said solvent to pressurize said formation to control a temperature of said condensation process.
60. The method claimed in claim 59 wherein said solvent is propane and said pressure of said reservoir is raised to increase a saturation temperature of said solvent to between 20 degrees C and 90 degrees C.
61. A method of in situ upgrading of hydrocarbons to be recovered comprising the steps of:
a) injecting a heated condensing solvent vapour having a lower saturation temperature than steam at the same level of releasable heat of condensation per unit volume and at the same temperature;
b) pressurizing said solvent to a pressure above said solvent saturation pressure at original reservoir temperature;
c) controlling the injection rate of said solvent into said formation to raise a saturation temperature of said solvent above the original reservoir temperature;
d) condensing said heated solvent vapour in said formation to provide a mobile hydrocarbon fraction; and e) extracting said mobile hydrocarbon fraction from said formation;
whereby asphaltenes remain in said formation in a substantially immobilized hydrocarbon fraction.
62. A method of enhanced recovery of hydrocarbon from a hydrocarbon bearing formation said method comprising the steps of:
a) establishing a flow path between an injection well and a production well;
b) selecting a solvent having a releasable heat of condensation per volume of vapour greater than a releasable heat of condensation of steam per volume of vapour at a temperature and at their respective saturation pressures;

c) heating said solvent to form a solvent vapour;
d) injecting a heated solvent vapour into said formation under sufficient pressure to raise a saturation temperature of said solvent above a formation temperature;
e) heating said formation by condensing said solvent onto said formation to help remove hydrocarbons from said formation and to create a chamber;
f) increasing the size of said chamber by continuing to inject heated solvent vapour;
g) reducing the injection pressure as said chamber expands; and h) reducing the energy delivered to said formation as said injection pressure is reduced.
63. A method of enhanced hydrocarbon recovery comprising the steps of:
a) injecting a heated solvent vapour into an oil bearing formation under sufficient initial injection pressure to raise a saturation temperature of said heated solvent vapour above a naturally occurring formation temperature wherein said solvent vapour having a lower saturation temperature than steam at the same level of releasable heat of condensation per unit volume and at their respective saturation pressures;
and b) reducing, over time, said injection pressure from said initial pressure.
64. A method of enhanced hydrocarbon recovery comprising the steps of:
a) selecting a solvent which is capable of being injected as a vapour and then condensing within an oil bearing formation at a saturation temperature, said solvent being further characterized as having a releasable heat of condensation per unit volume of vapour greater than a releasable heat of condensation contained in the same unit volume of steam at the same temperature and at their respective saturation pressures and having a lower saturation temperature than steam at the same level of releasable heat of condensation per unit volume at their respective saturation pressures;
b) heating said solvent sufficiently to permit said solvent to be injected into said formation; and c) injecting said solvent in the absence of co-injecting a steam or water phase under sufficient pressure into said formation to permit said heated solvent vapour to condense in said formation at a saturation temperature above a naturally occurring formation temperature but below a critical temperature for said solvent; and d) extracting hydrocarbons from said formation.
65. A method as claimed in claim 64 including a pretreatment step of establishing at least one flow path between an injection well and a production well.
66. The method of claim 64 further comprising selecting a predetermined amount of heat to deliver to said formation.
67. The method of claim 64 wherein said step of heating said solvent further comprises heating said solvent sufficiently to achieve hydrocarbon recovery at an energy expenditure level below that for a comparable steam treatment.
68. An apparatus for stimulating production from a hydrocarbon reservoir, said apparatus comprising:
a) source of solvent, wherein said solvent has a releasable heat of condensation per unit volume of vapour greater than a releasable heat of condensation contained in the same unit volume of steam at the same temperature and at their respective saturation pressures ;
b) a means for heating and pressurizing said solvent to a temperature and pressure above a naturally occurring reservoir temperature and pressure, but below a critical pressure for said solvent;

c) a means to control the injection rate of said solvent into said reservoir to pressurize said reservoir and to control an extraction temperature;
d) an injection well to inject said heated pressurized solvent into said reservoir as a vapour, and e) a production well to permit said hydrocarbons mobilized by said heated pressurized solvent vapour to be produced to the surface.
69. An apparatus as claimed in claim 68 further including insulated injection tubing for carrying said solvent vapour into said reservoir.
70. An apparatus as claimed in claim 69 wherein said injection well and said production wells are horizontal wells.
71. An apparatus as claimed in claim 68 further including a surface separator for separating solvent from said mobilized and produced fluids.
72. An apparatus as claimed in claim 68 further including flow control means to minimize the pressure gradient along the injection well.
73. An apparatus as claimed in claim 72 wherein said flow control means includes metering orifices on said injection well.
74. An apparatus as claimed in claim 72 wherein said metering orifices help to distribute the solvent vapour evenly into the reservoir.
75. An apparatus as claimed in claim 73 wherein said metering orifices deliver a constant flow over different pressures.
76. An apparatus as claimed in claim 73 wherein said metering orifices deliver a variable flow over different solvent vapour injection pressures.
77. A method as claimed in claims 1 to 48 and 56 to 63 wherein said solvent is delivered to said formation in the absence of a co-injected steam phase, a co-injected water phase or both.
CA002299790A 2000-02-23 2000-02-23 Method and apparatus for stimulating heavy oil production Expired - Lifetime CA2299790C (en)

Priority Applications (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
CA2785871A CA2785871C (en) 2000-02-23 2000-02-23 Method and apparatus for stimulating heavy oil production
CA2633061A CA2633061C (en) 2000-02-23 2000-02-23 Method and apparatus for stimulating heavy oil production
CA002299790A CA2299790C (en) 2000-02-23 2000-02-23 Method and apparatus for stimulating heavy oil production

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
CA002299790A CA2299790C (en) 2000-02-23 2000-02-23 Method and apparatus for stimulating heavy oil production

Related Child Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
CA2633061A Division CA2633061C (en) 2000-02-23 2000-02-23 Method and apparatus for stimulating heavy oil production

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
CA2299790A1 CA2299790A1 (en) 2001-08-23
CA2299790C true CA2299790C (en) 2008-07-08

Family

ID=4165412

Family Applications (3)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
CA002299790A Expired - Lifetime CA2299790C (en) 2000-02-23 2000-02-23 Method and apparatus for stimulating heavy oil production
CA2633061A Expired - Lifetime CA2633061C (en) 2000-02-23 2000-02-23 Method and apparatus for stimulating heavy oil production
CA2785871A Expired - Lifetime CA2785871C (en) 2000-02-23 2000-02-23 Method and apparatus for stimulating heavy oil production

Family Applications After (2)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
CA2633061A Expired - Lifetime CA2633061C (en) 2000-02-23 2000-02-23 Method and apparatus for stimulating heavy oil production
CA2785871A Expired - Lifetime CA2785871C (en) 2000-02-23 2000-02-23 Method and apparatus for stimulating heavy oil production

Country Status (1)

Country Link
CA (3) CA2299790C (en)

Cited By (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US8434551B2 (en) 2008-09-26 2013-05-07 N-Solv Corporation Method of controlling growth and heat loss of an in situ gravity draining chamber formed with a condensing solvent process
US8449764B2 (en) 2008-11-26 2013-05-28 Exxonmobil Upstream Research Company Method for using native bitumen markers to improve solvent-assisted bitumen extraction
US8455405B2 (en) 2008-11-26 2013-06-04 Exxonmobil Upstream Research Company Solvent for extracting bitumen from oil sands
US9970283B2 (en) 2013-09-09 2018-05-15 Exxonmobil Upstream Research Company Recovery from a hydrocarbon reservoir
US10487636B2 (en) 2017-07-27 2019-11-26 Exxonmobil Upstream Research Company Enhanced methods for recovering viscous hydrocarbons from a subterranean formation as a follow-up to thermal recovery processes
US11002123B2 (en) 2017-08-31 2021-05-11 Exxonmobil Upstream Research Company Thermal recovery methods for recovering viscous hydrocarbons from a subterranean formation
US11142681B2 (en) 2017-06-29 2021-10-12 Exxonmobil Upstream Research Company Chasing solvent for enhanced recovery processes
US11261725B2 (en) 2017-10-24 2022-03-01 Exxonmobil Upstream Research Company Systems and methods for estimating and controlling liquid level using periodic shut-ins
RU2779868C1 (en) * 2022-03-25 2022-09-14 Публичное акционерное общество "Татнефть" имени В.Д. Шашина Method for developing high-viscosity or bituminous oil deposits using paired horizontal wells

Families Citing this family (14)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
CA2351148C (en) 2001-06-21 2008-07-29 John Nenniger Method and apparatus for stimulating heavy oil production
US7514041B2 (en) * 2004-07-28 2009-04-07 N-Solv Corporation Method and apparatus for testing heavy oil production processes
CA2549614C (en) 2006-06-07 2014-11-25 N-Solv Corporation Methods and apparatuses for sagd hydrocarbon production
CA2552482C (en) 2006-07-19 2015-02-24 N-Solv Corporation Methods and apparatuses for enhanced in situ hydrocarbon production
CA2688937C (en) 2009-12-21 2017-08-15 N-Solv Corporation A multi-step solvent extraction process for heavy oil reservoirs
CA2691889C (en) 2010-02-04 2016-05-17 Statoil Asa Solvent injection recovery process
WO2011095547A2 (en) 2010-02-04 2011-08-11 Statoil Asa Solvent and gas injection recovery process
CA2762451C (en) 2011-12-16 2019-02-26 Imperial Oil Resources Limited Method and system for lifting fluids from a reservoir
CA2780670C (en) 2012-06-22 2017-10-31 Imperial Oil Resources Limited Improving recovery from a subsurface hydrocarbon reservoir
CA2837475C (en) 2013-12-19 2020-03-24 Imperial Oil Resources Limited Improving recovery from a hydrocarbon reservoir
US9739125B2 (en) 2014-12-18 2017-08-22 Chevron U.S.A. Inc. Method for upgrading in situ heavy oil
US10934822B2 (en) 2016-03-23 2021-03-02 Petrospec Engineering Inc. Low-pressure method and apparatus of producing hydrocarbons from an underground formation using electric resistive heating and solvent injection
CN113917116B (en) * 2021-09-29 2024-01-02 中国海洋石油集团有限公司 Method for determining liquid extraction capacity of emulsified thickened oil of oil well
CN115949930B (en) * 2023-02-17 2024-03-05 上海飞舟博源材料科技股份有限公司 Tubular electromagnetic induction steam generator and steam generation method

Cited By (11)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US8434551B2 (en) 2008-09-26 2013-05-07 N-Solv Corporation Method of controlling growth and heat loss of an in situ gravity draining chamber formed with a condensing solvent process
US9476291B2 (en) 2008-09-26 2016-10-25 N-Solv Corporation Method of controlling growth and heat loss of an in situ gravity drainage chamber formed with a condensing solvent process
US8449764B2 (en) 2008-11-26 2013-05-28 Exxonmobil Upstream Research Company Method for using native bitumen markers to improve solvent-assisted bitumen extraction
US8455405B2 (en) 2008-11-26 2013-06-04 Exxonmobil Upstream Research Company Solvent for extracting bitumen from oil sands
US9970283B2 (en) 2013-09-09 2018-05-15 Exxonmobil Upstream Research Company Recovery from a hydrocarbon reservoir
US9970282B2 (en) 2013-09-09 2018-05-15 Exxonmobil Upstream Research Company Recovery from a hydrocarbon reservoir
US11142681B2 (en) 2017-06-29 2021-10-12 Exxonmobil Upstream Research Company Chasing solvent for enhanced recovery processes
US10487636B2 (en) 2017-07-27 2019-11-26 Exxonmobil Upstream Research Company Enhanced methods for recovering viscous hydrocarbons from a subterranean formation as a follow-up to thermal recovery processes
US11002123B2 (en) 2017-08-31 2021-05-11 Exxonmobil Upstream Research Company Thermal recovery methods for recovering viscous hydrocarbons from a subterranean formation
US11261725B2 (en) 2017-10-24 2022-03-01 Exxonmobil Upstream Research Company Systems and methods for estimating and controlling liquid level using periodic shut-ins
RU2779868C1 (en) * 2022-03-25 2022-09-14 Публичное акционерное общество "Татнефть" имени В.Д. Шашина Method for developing high-viscosity or bituminous oil deposits using paired horizontal wells

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
CA2633061A1 (en) 2001-08-23
CA2299790A1 (en) 2001-08-23
CA2785871C (en) 2015-05-12
CA2633061C (en) 2012-09-25
CA2785871A1 (en) 2001-08-23

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
CA2299790C (en) Method and apparatus for stimulating heavy oil production
CA2351148C (en) Method and apparatus for stimulating heavy oil production
CA2243105C (en) Vapour extraction of hydrocarbon deposits
CA2391721C (en) Hydrocarbon production process with decreasing steam and/or water/solvent ratio
US4856587A (en) Recovery of oil from oil-bearing formation by continually flowing pressurized heated gas through channel alongside matrix
CA2462359C (en) Process for in situ recovery of bitumen and heavy oil
RU2452852C2 (en) Stepwise helical heating of hydrocarbon-containing reservoirs
US5407009A (en) Process and apparatus for the recovery of hydrocarbons from a hydrocarbon deposit
US3608638A (en) Heavy oil recovery method
US20080017372A1 (en) In situ process to recover heavy oil and bitumen
CA2766838C (en) Enhancing the start-up of resource recovery processes
WO2001027439A1 (en) Process for enhancing hydrocarbon mobility using a steam additive
CA2567399C (en) Method and apparatus for stimulating heavy oil production
US20150322758A1 (en) Solvent injection recovery process
CA2251157C (en) Process for sequentially applying sagd to adjacent sections of a petroleum reservoir
US4042027A (en) Recovery of petroleum from viscous asphaltic petroleum containing formations including tar sand deposits
US11927084B2 (en) Hydrocarbon-production methods employing multiple solvent processes across a well pad
CA3052855C (en) Thermal solvent gravity drainage process with operating strategies
CA3014879A1 (en) Process for producing hydrocarbons from a subterranean hydrocarbon-bearing formation
CA3060497A1 (en) Producing hydrocarbons from subterranean reservoir with solvent injection at controlled solvent density
CA2833068C (en) Bottom-up solvent-aided process and system for hydrocarbon recovery
CA3048579A1 (en) Solvent production control method in solvent-steam processes
CA3027274A1 (en) Hydrocarbon recovery with injected solvent and steam at selected ratios
CA3088228A1 (en) In situ combustion in late life bitumen recovery wells
CA3014841A1 (en) Process for producing hydrocarbons from a subterranean hydrocarbon-bearing formation

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
EEER Examination request
MKEX Expiry

Effective date: 20200224