Summary
Steamflooding is one of the most effective and mature methods for developing heavy oil. However, existing research has not fully explained the phenomena of steam overburden and heat loss, particularly overlooking the steam velocity loss at the steam cavity front. Therefore, the condensation heat transfer coefficient (CHTC) was introduced to describe the decrease in steam velocity at the steam cavity front. A steam cavity front expansion model, considering shape factor, pseudofluidity ratio, and CHTC ratio (CHTCR), was established and validated by using mine monitoring data. The research results show that the steam cavity of the revised model is in the shape of a “funnel,” and the steam overburden phenomenon is more pronounced at the steam cavity front. Through comparison with the field data of the P6 and P612-1 well groups, it is observed that the average displacement error of the steam cavity front of the two is only 6.58%. As steam injection progresses, the steam cavity is more degraded, and the steam overburden phenomenon is more intensified compared with the initial stage. Taking into account the phenomenon of kinetic energy loss, a higher formation heat loss rate is calculated during the middle and late stages of steam injection in the modified model. The pressure gradient at the steam cavity front is analyzed to determine an optimal displacement radius of 40 m for vertical well steamflooding in heavy oil reservoirs. When parameters such as shape factor, steam injection rate, and CHTC are increased, the development shape of the steam cavity is more ideal, but the convexity of the steam cavity front is increasingly pronounced as the pseudomobility ratio increases. The CHTC was incorporated into the steam cavity expansion model, elucidating the steam overburden phenomenon and advancing the theoretical understanding of steamflooding. By improving the existing model, the analytical formula can be used to rapidly predict the position of the steam cavity front and estimate of the steam-saturated zone, even in the absence of some field data or numerical models. Practical guidance for optimizing steam injection strategies is provided, with the potential to significantly enhance the recovery of heavy oil reservoirs.