4.7 Article

Application of mixed kernels function (MKF) based support vector regression model (SVR) for CO2 - Reservoir oil minimum miscibility pressure prediction

Journal

FUEL
Volume 184, Issue -, Pages 590-603

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.fuel.2016.07.030

Keywords

CO2-oil minimum miscibility pressure; CO2 enhanced oil recovery; Support vector regression; Mixed kernels function; Particle swarm optimization algorithm

Funding

  1. US-China Clean Energy Research Center, Advanced Coal Technology Consortium, from the National Energy Technology Laboratory of the US Department of Energy [DE-PI0000017]

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Carbon dioxide (CO2) injection into oil reservoirs is considered a mature enhanced oil recovery (EOR) technique for conventional reservoirs. The local displacement efficiency of the CO2-EOR process is highly dependent on the minimum miscibility pressure (MMP), estimating this parameter is critical to design of the CO2 injection process. Traditional empirical methods to test the CO2-oil MMP are time consuming and expensive; derived correlations are fast but not accurate. Therefore, an efficient and reliable method to determine MMP is beneficial. In this study, a mixed kernels function (MKF) based support vector regression (SVR) model was developed and used to predict the MMP for both pure and impure CO2 injection cases. Four parameters were chosen as input parameters: (1) reservoir temperature; (2) average critical temperature; (3) molecular weight of pentane plus (C5+) fraction of crude oil, and; (4) the ratio of volatile components to intermediate components in crude oil. MMP was selected as the desired output parameter to train and test this newly developed model. The performance of basic kernels function based SVR model is compared with that of this newly developed MKF-SVR model. The well-trained MFK-SVR was compared with three well-established published correlations, demonstrated the highest correlation coefficient (R of 0.9381), lowest root mean square error (RMSE of 1.9151), smallest average absolute error (AAE of 1.1406) and maximum absolute error (MAE of 4.6291). We believe that the proposed MFK-SVM model is a more reliable and stable regression model to predict MMP. In addition, a sensitivity analysis was conducted to evaluate the physical correctness. It indicates that the predicted results from the newly developed model are in excellent agreement with previous empirical work. (C) 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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