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Autonomous Inflow Control Technology and Its Impact on Energy Efficiency

Abstract

Summary Inflow control technology has been utilized extensively as part of the lower completion strategy to effectively isolate reservoir sections that are susceptible to unwanted fluid breakthroughs. However, this technology imposes additional pressure drop, which can limit total liquid production, thereby affecting the drainage strategy and impacting overall energy efficiency. In this paper, we compare various drainage strategies and well completion configurations on the installation of inflow control technology by considering energy efficiency. Our findings indicate that there is a balance between maintaining sufficient reservoir pressure and reducing selective inflow. Although it is crucial to maintain reservoir pressure, excessive increase in reservoir pressure appears to be disadvantageous to energy efficiency while concurrently giving limited increase in hydrocarbon recovery. Another key finding highlights the importance of device characteristics on choking performance and energy efficiency. The results demonstrate that excessive choking, while beneficial in reducing the production of unwanted fluids, will reduce both net present value (NPV) and energy efficiency. This indicates that specific device characteristics are suitable for particular drainage strategies.

Category

Academic article

Language

English

Author(s)

Affiliation

  • SINTEF Industry / Process Technology
  • Norwegian University of Science and Technology

Date

10.12.2025

Year

2025

Published in

SPE Journal

ISSN

1086-055X

Volume

30

Issue

12

Page(s)

7778 - 7778

View this publication at Norwegian Research Information Repository