April 19, 2024
Shahriar Osfouri

Shahriar Osfouri

Academic Rank: Professor
Address:
Degree: Ph.D in Chemical Engineering
Phone: 88019360
Faculty: Faculty of Petroleum, Gas and Petrochemical Engineering

Research

Title Evaluation of mass transfer coefficient for gas condensates in porous systems: Experimental and modeling
Type Article
Keywords
Journal FUEL
DOI
Researchers Mohamad Mohamadi-Baghmolaei (First researcher) , Reza Azin (Second researcher) , Shahriar Osfouri (Third researcher) , Sohrab Zendehboudi (Fourth researcher)

Abstract

The gas condensate reservoirs are significant resources of energy for various municipal and industrial purposes. An unfavourable phenomenon attributed to this kind of reservoirs is liquid drop-out due to excessive near-wellbore pressure drop during production. Gas injection is normally employed to recover the liquid loss in the underground formation. The amount of condensate recovery is determined by assuming a thermodynamic local equilibrium, which seems irrational due to the limited contact area, high velocity, and low residence time for fluids around the wellbore. In this work, a series of experiments are conducted based on the Taguchi design of experiment (DOE) to study the steady-state mass transfer during gas injection. Three injection gases (CO2, N2, and CH4), three liquids to represent the liquid condensate (C5, C6, and C7), and three mean grain sizes within the range of 150–300??m are the vital design variables of the experiments where a broad range of gas velocity (0.00472–0.0283?cm/s) is employed. Results of Taguchi DOE approach are then analyzed to find the optimum design levels and influence/contribution of each factor. The experimental data are utilized to develop new models for estimation of the mass transfer coefficient in terms of Schmidt number (Sc), Peclet number (Pe), normalized velocity, and mean grain size. The comparison between the modeling results and real data confirms the reliability and precision of the proposed correlations. Based on the research outputs, the injection rate (60% contribution factor) and grain size (nearly 10% contribution factor) have the highest and lowest effects on the mass transfer coefficient in porous systems, respectively. It is also found that the difference between the equilibrium concentration and the actual concentration of volatile component in the gas phase increases as the gas velocity increases. Based on the DOE, the optimal design levels for the injection rate, gas type, liquid type, and mean grain size a