ROLE OF PHASE EQUILIBRIUM IN MODULATING PRESSURE-TEMPERATURE PROFILES IN GAS-CONDENSATE RESERVOIRS

Authors

  • Khaydarov Sanjar Ilkhomovich Author
  • Sirojiddinov Akhrorjon Mansurjon ogli Author

Abstract

Gas‑condensate fluids are complex multicomponent hydrocarbon mixtures that exhibit retrograde condensation — a phenomenon where liquid condenses from a single‑phase gas as pressure declines below the dew point at reservoir temperature. This paper reviews the thermodynamic properties, phase behavior, and production implications of gas‑condensate systems. It also provides quantitative phase diagrams for two representative fluids (Eilerts’ Fluid 843 and Fluid 1143) to illustrate real‑world variations in phase envelopes. The results underscore the importance of phase behavior in reservoir management, production optimization, and flow assurance.

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References

Eilerts, C. K., “Gas Condensate Reservoir Engineering: The Reservoir Fluid, its Composition and Phase Behavior,” Oil & Gas Journal, 1947.

Whitson, C.H. and Brulé, M.R., Phase Behavior, SPE Textbook, Society of Petroleum Engineers, 2000.

Ahmed, T., Reservoir Engineering Handbook, 4th ed., Gulf Publishing, 2010.

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Published

2025-12-21