Gas Formation Volume Factor

The formation volume factor relates the reservoir volume to the volume at standard conditions of any hydrocarbon mixture. In the case of a natural gas, the formation volume factor, Bg, can be related with the application of the real gas law for reservoir conditions and for standard conditions. Thus,

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For the same mass, nR can be cancelled out and, after substitution of Zsc ≈ 1, Tsc = 60 + 460 = 520°R, and psc = 14.7 psi, Equation (4-27) becomes

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Example 4-5. Initial Gas-in-Place

Calculate the initial gas-in-place, Gi, in 1900 acres of the reservoir described in Appendix C. Properties are also listed in Appendix C.

Solution

The initial formation volume factor, Bgi, is given by Equation (4-28) and therefore

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Then

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and

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Gas Isothermal Compressibility

The gas compressibility, cg, often referred to as isothermal compressibility, has an exact thermodynamic expression:

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For an ideal gas, it can be shown readily that cg is exactly equal to 1/p. For a real gas, using Equation (4-2), the derivative ∂V/∂p can be evaluated:

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Substitution of the volume, V, by its equivalent from Equation (4-2) and the derivative ∂V/∂p from Equation (4-33) into Equation (4-32) results in

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or, more conveniently, remembering the relationship between pseudoreduced and pseudocritical pressure (Equation 4-3),

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Equation (4-35) is useful because it allows the calculation of the compressibility of a real gas at any temperature and pressure. Needed are the gas compressibility factor Z and the slope of the Standing-Katz correlation, ∂Z/∂ppr, at the corresponding temperature (i.e., the associated pseudoreduced temperature curve). The slope can be determined by differentiating Equation 4-35 with respect to the pseudoreduced pressure holding the temperature constant.


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