Abstract
This study presents the development of a next-generation asphaltene precipitation modeling module integrated into a novel PVT analysis software, specifically engineered for accurate prediction of asphaltene-induced formation damage. The objective is to deliver a reliable and field-applicable tool that surpasses existing commercial simulators in accuracy and computational performance. The module is built upon an optimized implementation of the PC-SAFT equation of state and is designed to support reservoir and production engineers in evaluating solid deposition risks under variable pressure–temperature conditions.
The modeling framework employs a rigorous thermodynamic formulation using PC-SAFT, combined with an intelligent calibration workflow based on experimental saturation pressures, asphaltene onset pressures, and precipitated mass data. Once tuned, the model accurately predicts phase behavior and asphaltene precipitation across operating conditions relevant to depletion, gas injection, and compositional changes with high fidelity. Validation was conducted using two asphaltenic crude oil systems and benchmarked against two industry-standard PVT simulators.
Comparative evaluation demonstrates that the developed tool consistently achieves the highest accuracy. For the first crude oil, the module attained average absolute relative deviations (AARD) of 2.13% for asphaltene onset pressure and 1.32% for bubble-point pressure, markedly outperforming commercial simulators, which generated AARDs of 6.73% and 5.07%, and 10.11% and 10.93%, respectively. For the second crude oil, the new module provided the most accurate match to experimental precipitated asphaltene mass and predicted bubble-point pressure with an ARD of 3.1%, compared with 7.46% and 13.51% from the two reference tools.
These improvements result from an optimized parameter-estimation algorithm and an efficient numerical implementation of PC-SAFT. By directly linking advanced thermodynamic modeling with practical reservoir engineering workflows, the software enables rapid assessment of deposition severity and supports proactive decisions in well design, production management, and chemical mitigation. Overall, the results confirm that the proposed module is the most accurate, robust, and operationally relevant tool currently available for managing asphaltene-related risks in petroleum reservoirs.
The modeling framework employs a rigorous thermodynamic formulation using PC-SAFT, combined with an intelligent calibration workflow based on experimental saturation pressures, asphaltene onset pressures, and precipitated mass data. Once tuned, the model accurately predicts phase behavior and asphaltene precipitation across operating conditions relevant to depletion, gas injection, and compositional changes with high fidelity. Validation was conducted using two asphaltenic crude oil systems and benchmarked against two industry-standard PVT simulators.
Comparative evaluation demonstrates that the developed tool consistently achieves the highest accuracy. For the first crude oil, the module attained average absolute relative deviations (AARD) of 2.13% for asphaltene onset pressure and 1.32% for bubble-point pressure, markedly outperforming commercial simulators, which generated AARDs of 6.73% and 5.07%, and 10.11% and 10.93%, respectively. For the second crude oil, the new module provided the most accurate match to experimental precipitated asphaltene mass and predicted bubble-point pressure with an ARD of 3.1%, compared with 7.46% and 13.51% from the two reference tools.
These improvements result from an optimized parameter-estimation algorithm and an efficient numerical implementation of PC-SAFT. By directly linking advanced thermodynamic modeling with practical reservoir engineering workflows, the software enables rapid assessment of deposition severity and supports proactive decisions in well design, production management, and chemical mitigation. Overall, the results confirm that the proposed module is the most accurate, robust, and operationally relevant tool currently available for managing asphaltene-related risks in petroleum reservoirs.
| Originalsprache | Englisch |
|---|---|
| Titel | SPE International Conference and Exhibition on Formation Damage Control |
| Erscheinungsort | USA |
| DOIs | |
| Publikationsstatus | Veröffentlicht - 11 Feb. 2026 |
| Veranstaltung | SPE International Conference & Exhibition on Formation Damage Control - Louisiana, Lafayette, USA / Vereinigte Staaten Dauer: 18 Feb. 2026 → 20 Feb. 2026 https://www.spe-events.org/international-conference-exhibition-formation-damage-control |
Publikationsreihe
| Name | Proceedings - SPE International Symposium on Formation Damage Control |
|---|---|
| ISSN (Print) | 2643-4830 |
| ISSN (elektronisch) | 2643-4849 |
Konferenz
| Konferenz | SPE International Conference & Exhibition on Formation Damage Control |
|---|---|
| Land/Gebiet | USA / Vereinigte Staaten |
| Ort | Lafayette |
| Zeitraum | 18/02/26 → 20/02/26 |
| Internetadresse |
Bibliographische Notiz
Publisher Copyright:© 2026, Society of Petroleum Engineers (SPE). All rights reserved.
UN SDGs
Dieser Output leistet einen Beitrag zu folgendem(n) Ziel(en) für nachhaltige Entwicklung
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SDG 7 – Erschwingliche und saubere Energie
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SDG 9 – Industrie, Innovation und Infrastruktur
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SDG 12 – Verantwortungsvoller Konsum und Produktion
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