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Carbon dioxide storage and cumulative oil production predictions in unconventional reservoirs applying optimized machine-learning models

Shadfar Davoodi, Hung Vo Thanh, David A. Wood, Mohammad Mehrad, Sergey V. Muravyov, Valeriy S. Rukavishnikov

2024Petroleum Science22 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

To achieve carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) storage through enhanced oil recovery, accurate forecasting of CO 2 subsurface storage and cumulative oil production is essential. This study develops hybrid predictive models for the determination of CO 2 storage mass and cumulative oil production in unconventional reservoirs. It does so with two multi-layer perceptron neural networks (MLPNN) and a least-squares support vector machine (LSSVM), hybridized with grey wolf optimization (GWO) and/or particle swarm optimization (PSO). Large, simulated datasets were divided into training (70%) and testing (30%) groups, with normalization applied to both groups. Mahalanobis distance identifies/eliminates outliers in the training subset only. A non-dominated sorting genetic algorithm (NSGA-II) combined with LSSVM selected seven influential features from the nine available input parameters: reservoir depth, porosity, permeability, thickness, bottom-hole pressure, area, CO 2 injection rate, residual oil saturation to gas flooding, and residual oil saturation to water flooding. Predictive models were developed and tested, with performance evaluated with an overfitting index (OFI), scoring analysis, and partial dependence plots (PDP), during training and independent testing to enhance model focus and effectiveness. The LSSVM-GWO model generated the lowest root mean square error (RMSE) values (0.4052 MMT for CO 2 storage and 9.7392 MMbbl for cumulative oil production) in the training group. That trained model also exhibited excellent generalization and minimal overfitting when applied to the testing group (RMSE of 0.6224 MMT for CO 2 storage and 12.5143 MMbbl for cumulative oil production). PDP analysis revealed that the input features “area” and “porosity” had the most influence on the LSSVM-GWO model's prediction performance. This paper presents a new hybrid modeling approach that achieves accurate forecasting of CO 2 subsurface storage and cumulative oil production. It also establishes a new standard for such forecasting, which can lead to the development of more effective and sustainable solutions for oil recovery.

Topics & Concepts

Production (economics)Petroleum engineeringEnhanced oil recoveryCarbon dioxideCarbon sequestrationCarbon capture and storage (timeline)Oil productionEnvironmental scienceCumulative effectsEngineeringBiochemical engineeringChemistryClimate changeGeologyEconomicsEcologyBiologyMacroeconomicsOceanographyOrganic chemistryReservoir Engineering and Simulation MethodsEnhanced Oil Recovery TechniquesHydraulic Fracturing and Reservoir Analysis