Volatile light hydrocarbons (VLH) are an essential component of reservoir petroleum fluids. Understanding of their origin and fate is crucial not only in exploration but increasingly also in petroleum engineering, as this greatly impacts fluid typing, proper mapping, recoverability and economic value. Due to their sensitivity to subsurface thermal stress and geological alteration processes, their proper characterisation holds promise to understanding the thermal conditions under which petroleum fluids were generated and subsequent fluid modifications during migration and within the reservoir.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhase envelopes are routinely employed by reservoir engineers for fluid characterisation. These envelopes are controlled by reservoir fluid composition, pressure and temperature. As a result of increasing source-rock maturation, fluids with decreasing molecular weights and densities and increasing gas-to-oil ratios (and hence different phase envelopes) are generated, which are thus linked to fluid history.
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