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Published December 2007 | public
Journal Article

Semiautomatic multiple resolution design for history matching

Abstract

History matching is an inverse problem in which an engineer calibrates key geological/fluid-flow parameters by fitting a simulator's output to the real reservoir production history. It has no unique solution because of insufficient constraints. History-match solutions are obtained by searching for minima of an objective function below a preselected threshold value. Experimental design and response surface methodologies provide an efficient approach to build proxies of objective functions (OF) for history matching. The search for minima can then be easily performed on the proxies of OF as long as its accuracy is acceptable. In this paper, we first introduce a novel experimental design methodology for semi -automatically selecting the sampling points, which are used to improve the accuracy of constructed proxies of the nonlinear OF. This method is based on derivatives of constructed proxies. We propose an iterative procedure for history matching, applying this new design methodology. To obtain the global optima, the proxies of an OF are initially constructed on the global parameter space. They are iteratively improved until adequate accuracy is achieved. We locate subspaces in the vicinity of the optima regions using a clustering technique to improve the accuracy of the reconstructed OF in these subspaces. We test this novel methodology and history-matching procedure with two waterflooded reservoir models. One model is the Imperial College fault model (Tavassoli et al. 2004). It contains a large bank of simulation runs. The other is a modified version of the SPE9 (Killough 1995) benchmark problem. We demonstrate the efficiency of this newly developed history-matching technique.

Additional Information

© 2007 Society of Petroleum Engineers. This paper (SPE 102277) was accepted for presentation at the 2006 SPE Annual Technical Conference and Exhibition. San Antonio, Texas, 24-27 September, and revised for publication. Original manuscript received for review 8 June 2006. Revised manuscript received 26 December 2006. Paper peer approved 12 January 2007. This work was conducted at the California Institute of Technology and financially supported by Chevron Petroleum Company. The authors thank Chevron for the permission to publish the results.

Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 20, 2023