Analysis of coupled gas flow and deformation process with desorption and Klinkenberg effects in coal seams

2007 ◽  
Vol 44 (7) ◽  
pp. 971-980 ◽  
Author(s):  
W.C. Zhu ◽  
J. Liu ◽  
J.C. Sheng ◽  
D. Elsworth
SPE Journal ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 1-28
Author(s):  
George Moridis ◽  
Niwit Anantraksakul ◽  
Thomas A. Blasingame

Summary The analysis of gas production from fractured ultralow-permeability (ULP) reservoirs is most often accomplished using numerical simulation, which requires large 3D grids, many inputs, and typically long execution times. We propose a new hybrid analytical/numerical method that reduces the 3D equation of gas flow into either a simple ordinary-differential equation (ODE) in time or a 1D partial-differential equation (PDE) in space and time without compromising the strong nonlinearity of the gas-flow relation, thus vastly decreasing the size of the simulation problem and the execution time. We first expand the concept of pseudopressure of Al-Hussainy et al. (1966) to account for the pressure dependence of permeability and Klinkenberg effects, and we also expand the corresponding gas-flow equation to account for Langmuir sorption. In the proposed hybrid partial transformational decomposition method (TDM) (PTDM), successive finite cosine transforms (FCTs) are applied to the expanded, pseudopressure-based 3D diffusivity equation of gas flow, leading to the elimination of the corresponding physical dimensions. For production under a constant- or time-variable rate (q) regime, three levels of FCTs yield a first-order ODE in time. For production under a constant- or time-variable pressure (pwf) regime, two levels of FCTs lead to a 1D second-order PDE in space and time. The fully implicit numerical solutions for the FCT-based equations in the multitransformed spaces are inverted, providing solutions that are analytical in 2D or 3D and account for the nonlinearity of gas flow. The PTDM solution was coded in a FORTRAN95 program that used the Laplace-transform (LT) analytical solution for the q-problem and a finite-difference method for the pwf problem in their respective multitransformed spaces. Using a 3D stencil (the minimum repeatable element in the horizontal well and hydraulically fractured system), solutions over an extended production time and a substantial pressure drop were obtained for a range of isotropic and anisotropic matrix and fracture properties, constant and time-variableQ and pwf production schemes, combinations of stimulated-reservoir-volume (SRV) and non-SRV subdomains, sorbing and nonsorbing gases of different compositions and at different temperatures, Klinkenberg effects, and the dependence of matrix permeability on porosity. The limits of applicability of PTDM were also explored. The results were compared with the numerical solutions from a widely used, fully implicit 3D simulator that involved a finely discretized (high-definition) 3D domain involving 220,000 elements and show that the PTDM solutions can provide accurate results for long times for large well drawdowns even under challenging conditions. Of the two versions of PTDM, the PTD-1D was by far the better option and its solutions were shown to be in very good agreement with the full numerical solutions, while requiring a fraction of the memory and orders-of-magnitude lower execution times because these solutions require discretization of only the time domain and a single axis (instead of three). The PTD-0D method was slower than PTD-1D (but still much faster than the numerical solution), and although its solutions were accurate for t < 6 months, these solutions deteriorated beyond that point. The PTDM is an entirely new approach to the analysis of gas flow in hydraulically fractured ULP reservoirs. The PTDM solutions preserve the strong nonlinearity of the gas-flow equation and are analytical in 2D or 3D. This being a semianalytical approach, it needs very limited input data and requires computer storage and computational times that are orders-of-magnitude smaller than those in conventional (numerical) simulators because its discretization is limited to time and (possibly) a single spatial dimension.


1981 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
pp. 137
Author(s):  
B. Wilkinson ◽  
L. Barro

Vast reserves of gas-bearing coal deposits are located in Queensland. Owing to the extremely low permeability and porosity of the coal, very low gas flow rates are normally encountered. In an effort to enhance the gas production to economic quantities and to degasify the coal to provide a safer mining environment, four experimental wells were drilled into coal seams near Blackwater, Queensland.Based on extensive laboratory testing of coal samples, computerised fracture design calculations were performed to determine a suitable stimulation programme. The wells were hydraulically fractured with up to 15 000 US gal of foamed stimulation fluid containing 75 per cent nitrogen. To prop open the induced fracture system, 15 000 lb of sand was pumped with the foam. The maximum concentration was eight pounds of 20-40 mesh sand per gallon of fluid. Gas production from the unstimulated wells was too low to measure. Early production data soon after the fracturing suggested a gas flow rate of approximately 50 Mcf/D.


2015 ◽  
Vol 362 ◽  
pp. 38-46
Author(s):  
Pavel Staša ◽  
Oldřich Kodym

There is a still dangerous effect in the form of methane leakage from coal seams in areas where mining activity still continuing or took place in the past. The issue of mining gas flow is still a matter that is necessary to pay attention and try to find new ways to solve this set of phenomena, no matter if it is the mining corridors or the flow in the rock massif. The number of measures to gradually reduce risk has been taken to protect the population. Nevertheless, the current situation is generally rated as serious as those risks still remain valid. Leakage of mine gases depend on many natural and technical mining conditions. With the closure of mines and thus the end of the ventilation situation considerably worse. This paper deals with the flow of dangerous mine gas, methane, through the rock mass using numerical flow modeling using CFD program Fluent. Using CFD codes can gain insight on the phenomenon under review and the results to take appropriate measures in the form of active or passive intervention.


2015 ◽  
Vol 27 ◽  
pp. 901-913 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xin Fan ◽  
Gensheng Li ◽  
Subhash N. Shah ◽  
Shouceng Tian ◽  
Mao Sheng ◽  
...  

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