It is now 10 years since the release of the FAG/Badleys TransGen software in 1999. Based on Tom Manzocchi's seminal paper [1] describing a geologically-based workflow for calculating fault-transmissibility multipliers in reservoir models, this methodology is now the industry-standard approach, often copied but never equalled.
The collaboration between the Fault Analysis Group (formerly Liverpool University, now UC Dublin) and Badleys dates back to the late 1980s. The world-leading research at the Fault Analysis Group has been a major input to the software portfolio of Badleys, and there have been many significant enhancements to the TransGen system during the last decade:
The image above shows a pair of cell-stacks from an original model; at right, a sub-resolution relay ramp added in TransGen. In each case the coloured cells indicate those which have faulted connections to the highlighted cell (colours show transmissibility, red=high). These connections (and hence the effects on flow of the relay) are included in the original simulation model without grid refinements using non-neighbour transmissibilities.
This long track record of R&D combined with software innovation has ensured that the TransGen/TrapTester system is the world leader for fault-seal prediction and analysis in reservoir models. TransGen/TrapTester is proven to deliver geologically robust and reliable results and is in routine use by many of the worlds major oil companies (e.g. Jolley et al. [3]). Ten years on, no other application matches the geological expertise, R&D pedigree or advanced functionality of TransGen/TrapTester.
Key References:
[1] Manzocchi, T., Walsh, J.J., Nell, P., & Yielding, G. (1999). Fault transmissibility multipliers for flow simulation models. Petroleum
Geoscience, Vol. 5, 53-63.
[2] Manzocchi T., Heath A. E., Palananthakumar B., Childs C. & Walsh J.J. (2008). Faults in conventional flow simulation models: a
consideration of representational assumptions and geological uncertainties. Petroleum Geoscience, Vol. 14, 91-110.
[3] Jolley, S. J., Dijk, H., Lamens, J. H., Fisher, Q. J., Manzocchi, T., Eikmans, H. & Huang, Y. (2007). Faulting and fault sealing in
production simulation models: Brent Province, northern North Sea. Petroleum Geoscience, Vol. 13, 321-340.
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