@shakespear i cant open the webpage even after changing the ip address.
would appreciate it if you can zip it and send to me..
thanks so much!
@shakespear i cant open the webpage even after changing the ip address.
would appreciate it if you can zip it and send to me..
thanks so much!
And just for clarity - there is no 'SCAL section' in Eclipse.... as mentioned already SCAL is suite of core tests, and you use the data from SCAL tests to populate some of the required information in the PROPS section of the Eclipse deck.
ZIP file found here
[link Point to another website Only the registered members can access]
![]()
Regards
“Considering the many productive uses of petroleum, burning it for fuel is like burning a Picasso for heat.”
—Big Oil Executive
@vinomarky
yeah thats was what i am trying to say.. sorry for my bad info conveying skills =(
@shakespear
which file? the 1st file is removed due to violation of some kind..
Last edited by ivancxl; 10-01-2010 at 05:22 PM.
[link Point to another website Only the registered members can access]
Regards
“Considering the many productive uses of petroleum, burning it for fuel is like burning a Picasso for heat.”
—Big Oil Executive
ok i'll look into it!
thanks so much shakespear and vinomarky for your time and patience in dealing with me!
kudos to you both! =)
Thank you.
just a small favor can anyone zip this up for me too? its a manual on operating SCAL but i cant access the page too due to some error..
[link Point to another website Only the registered members can access]
thanks!
Ok, it is in
[link Point to another website Only the registered members can access]
Regards
“Considering the many productive uses of petroleum, burning it for fuel is like burning a Picasso for heat.”
—Big Oil Executive
Interestingly, I don't see ANY cap pressure data in these cases (imbibition or even drainage). Looks like they just use different rel perm curves
Read Chapter 35 of the Eclipse Technical Description manual - it is a whole chapter devoted to how to implement Hysterisis in WAG Floods, but even that does not seem to mention cap pressure, focusing (as everyone else) on rel perm....
Chapter 34 deal with hysterisis, and does cover cap pressure - (search for Capillary pressure hysteresis)
Otherwise, using IMBNUM keyword allows you to specify for each cell which set of imbibition cap pressure curves to use (as opposed to SATNUM which will point them to drainage curves)
Last edited by vinomarky; 10-02-2010 at 02:56 AM.
You beat me to it. I was about to start reading that MIT paper to see what they were doing.
Lets see if we can make sense of its intent and desired outcome![]()
Regards
“Considering the many productive uses of petroleum, burning it for fuel is like burning a Picasso for heat.”
—Big Oil Executive
This model is highly heterogeneous. Perms from 0.5 -1000 mD. I suspect that they just wanted to leave the Cap Pressure "parameter" frozen, by using the usual escape route of assuming zero. Their focus is rel perms, hence all rock types are given one set of curves. Otherwise this would not be OK IMHO.
The capillary pressure if allowed to vary between rock types would be a factory in changing the trapped CO2 amounts. Here they want to leave this variation alone, and keep things simple.![]()
Regards
“Considering the many productive uses of petroleum, burning it for fuel is like burning a Picasso for heat.”
—Big Oil Executive
Bookmarks