A finite volume framework for the fully implicit thermal-hydro-mechanical-compositional modeling in subsurface applications
A. Novikov (TU Delft - Reservoir Engineering)
I. Saifullin (TU Delft - Applied Geophysics and Petrophysics)
H Hajibeygi (TU Delft - Reservoir Engineering)
Denis V. Voskov (TU Delft - Reservoir Engineering)
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Abstract
Thermal-Hydro-Mechanical-Compositional analysis is crucial for addressing challenges like wellbore stability, land subsidence, and induced seismicity in the geo-energy applications. Numerical simulations of coupled thermo-poromechanical processes provide a general-purpose tool for evaluating these phenomena across laboratory and field scales. However, efficient integration of the coupled equations for fluid mass, energy and momentum poses multiple numerical and implementation difficulties, such as combining different numerical methods on staggered grids and associated limitations on admissible grids. This paper introduces a novel fully-implicit Finite Volume Method (FVM) for modeling thermal compositional flow in thermo-poroelastic rocks. The scheme employs gradient-based, coupled multi-point approximations of fluid mass, momentum and heat fluxes.
The novelty of the scheme lies in its integration of temperature as a parameter in the flux approximation process. The scheme supports a wide range of cell topologies, arbitrary heterogeneity and anisotropy as well as various boundary conditions, while respecting local flux balance under temperature gradients. Overall, the scheme represents a unified FVM-based approach for the integration of all conservation laws relevant to geo-energy applications on a cell-centered collocated grid. Additionally, the implemented two-stage block-partitioned preconditioning strategy enables the efficient solution of obtained linear systems.
The framework, implemented in the open-source Delft Advanced Research Terra Simulator (open-DARTS), leverages the Operator-Based Linearization (OBL) technique for flexibility in compositional fluid properties. Rigorous validation demonstrates the framework’s capabilities in capturing advanced phenomena, including thermal expansion, thermo-poroelastic effect and compositional flow with phase transitions. The performance of preconditioning strategy is assessed using the mechanical extension of the SPE10 benchmark model.