All oil and gas reservoirs have water associated with them. Since it is a common part of the system, we will need to discuss how it is stored and moves in the reservoir.
The water (or more correctly, the brine) Formation Volume Factor, Bw, (sometimes referred to as the FVF) is a pressure and temperature dependent property that relates the volume of 1.0 stock tank barrel, STB, of water to its volume in barrels, bbl, at another pressure. It has the units of bbls/STB. We have already discussed the use of the stock tank pressure and temperature as an oilfield reference system.
By definition, if we had 1.0 STB of water at pST and TST, and that same STB occupied 1.02 bbls at reservoir conditions, pr and Tr, then it would have a formation volume factor of:
We can also define the formation volume factor in terms of densities at stock tank conditions and at reservoir conditions. If we assume the mass of 1.0 STB, m1 STB, then at reservoir conditions, we would have:
which implies:
Water is considered to be a slightly compressible liquid with a very low value of compressibility. From Equation 3.26 we have:
One correlation for water compressibility[5] , cw, is:
Where:
We can develop an explicit formula for the water formation volume factor based on the water compressibility. If we take 1.0 STB of water and its volume in barrels at a reservoir pressure and temperature, then we would have: Vw (bbl) = Bw (pr, Tr) (bbl/STB) x 1.0 STB. Now,
or,
In the laboratory, the water viscosity is measured with an apparatus called a Viscometer. The mechanics and test procedures for a viscometer are beyond the scope of this course, and we will work with known correlations. One correlation from McCain has the form:
with
and
where
Once the viscosity at 14.7 psi and T °F are determined, the water viscosity at other pressures can be determined from:
The density of water is also a property of interest in petroleum engineering. McCain[6] provides the following correlation for estimating the water density at reference conditions:
where
The water density at reservoir conditions can then be calculated using Equation 3.29.
[5] Petro Wiki: Produced water compressibility [1]
[6] McCain, W.D. Jr.: McCain, W.D. Jr. 1990. The Properties of Petroleum Fluids, second edition. Tulsa, Oklahoma: PennWell Books.