Reservoir Engineering Handbook, Third Edition

Nearly all hydrocarbon reservoirs are surrounded by water-bearing rocks called aquifers. These aquifers may be substantially larger than the oil or gas reservoirs they adjoin as to appear infinite in size, or they may be so small in size as to be negligible in their effect on reservoir performance.
As reservoir fluids are produced and reservoir pressure declines, a pressure differential develops from the surrounding aquifer into the reservoir. Following the basic law of fluid flow in porous media, the aquifer reacts by encroaching across the original hydrocarbon-water contact. In some cases, water encroachment occurs due to hydrodynamic conditions and recharge of the formation by surface waters at an outcrop.
In many cases, the pore volume of the aquifer is not significantly larger than the pore volume of the reservoir itself. Thus, the expansion of the water in the aquifer is negligible relative to the overall energy system, and the reservoir behaves volumetrically. In this case, the effects of water influx can be ignored. In other cases, the aquifer permeability may be sufficiently low such that a very large pressure differential is required before an appreciable amount of water can encroach into the reservoir. In this instance, the effects of water influx can be ignored as well.
This chapter focuses on those those reservoir-aquifer systems in which the size of the aquifer is large enough and the permeability of the rock is high enough that water influx occurs as the reservoir is depleted. This chapter also provides various...