Investigation of the fracture initiation pressure for water injection wells in poorly consolidated sandstone reservoir

Author(s):  
Yu Lu ◽  
Haitao Li ◽  
Xiaoxu Tang ◽  
Xiaodong Huang ◽  
Jincheng Shan ◽  
...  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jongsoo Hwang ◽  
Mukul Sharma ◽  
Maria-Magdalena Chiotoroiu ◽  
Torsten Clemens

Abstract Horizontal water injection wells have the capacity to inject larger volumes of water and have a smaller surface footprint than vertical wells. We present a new quantitative analysis on horizontal well injectivity, injection scheme (matrix vs. fracturing), and fracture containment. To precisely predict injector performance and delineate safe operating conditions, we simulate particle plugging, thermo-poro-elastic stress changes, thermal convection and conduction and fracture growth/containment in reservoirs with multiple layers. Simulation results show that matrix injection in horizontal wells continues over a longer time than vertical injectors as the particle deposition occurs slowly on the larger surface area of horizontal wellbores. At the same time, heat loss occurs uniformly over a longer wellbore length to cause less thermal stress reduction and delay fracture initiation. As a result, the horizontal well length and the injection rates are critical factors that control fracture initiation and long-term injectivity of horizontal injectors. To predict fracture containment accurately, thermal conduction in the caprock and associated thermal stresses are found to be critical factors. We show that ignoring these factors underestimates fracture height growth. Based on our simulation analysis, we suggest strategies to maintain high injectivity and delay fracture initiation by controlling the injection rate, temperature, and water quality. We also provide several methods to design horizontal water injectors to improve fracture containment considering wellbore orientation relative to the local stress orientations. Well placement in the local maximum horizontal stress direction induces longitudinal fractures with better containment and less fracture turning than transverse fractures. When the well is drilled perpendicular to the maximum horizontal stress direction, the initiation of transverse fractures is delayed compared with the longitudinal case. Flow control devices are recommended to segment the flow rate and the wellbore. This helps to ensure uniform water placement and helps to keep the fractures contained.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shuang Zheng ◽  
Mukul Sharma

Abstract Reservoir cooling during waterflooding or waste-water injection can significantly alter the reservoir stress field by thermo-poro-elastic effects. Colloidal particles in the injected water decrease the matrix permeability and buildup the injection pressure. Fractures may initiate and propagate from injectors. These fractures are of great concern for both environmental reasons and strong influence on reservoir sweep and oil recovery. This paper introduces methods to fully couple reservoir simulation with wellbore flow models in fractured injection wells. A method to fully couple reservoir-fracture-wellbore models was developed. Fluid flow, solid mechanics, energy balance, fracture propagation, and particle filtration are modelled in the reservoir, fracture and wellbore domains. Effective stress in the reservoir domain is altered by thermo-poro-elastic effects during cold water injection. Fracture initiation and propagation induced by thermal and filtration effects is modelled in the fracture domain. Particle filtration on the borehole and fracture surfaces is modelled by matrix permeability reduction and filter cake build-up. Leakoff through the borehole and fracture surface is balanced dynamically. The coupled nonlinear system of equations is solved implicitly using Newton-Raphson method. We validate our model with existing analytical solutions for simple cases. We show how the poro-elasticity effect, thermo-elasticity effect, water quality, and wellbore open/cased conditions influence well injectivity, induced fracture propagation and flow distribution. Simulation results show that water quality and thermal effects control fluid leak-off and fracture growth. While it is difficult to predict the exact location of fracture initiation due to reservoir heterogeneity, we proposed a reasonable method to handle fracture initiation without predefined fracture location in the water injection applications. In open-hole completions, this may lead to "thief" fractures propagating deep into the reservoir. Thermal stress changes in the injection zone are shown to be significant because of the combined effect of forced convection, heat conduction and poroelasticity. The accurate predictions of thermal stress in different reservoir layers allow us to study fracture height growth and containment numerically for the first time. We show that controlling the temperature and the injection water quality is also found to be an effective way to ensure fracture containment.


2013 ◽  
Vol 807-809 ◽  
pp. 2508-2513
Author(s):  
Qiang Wang ◽  
Wan Long Huang ◽  
Hai Min Xu

In pressure drop well test of the clasolite water injection well of Tahe oilfield, through nonlinear automatic fitting method in the multi-complex reservoir mode for water injection wells, we got layer permeability, skin factor, well bore storage coefficient and flood front radius, and then we calculated the residual oil saturation distribution. Through the examples of the four wells of Tahe oilfield analyzed by our software, we found that the method is one of the most powerful analysis tools.


2007 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christine S.H. Dalmazzone ◽  
Amandine Le Follotec ◽  
Annie Audibert-Hayet ◽  
Allan Jeffery Twynam ◽  
Hugues M. Poitrenaud

Geofluids ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 2018 ◽  
pp. 1-12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuwei Li ◽  
Dan Jia

Unconventional oil and gas are important resources of future energy supply, and shale gas is the focus of the development of unconventional resources. Shale is a special kind rock of porous medium, and an orderly structure of beddings aligned in the horizontal direction where causing the strong elastic anisotropy of shale is easy. A new model has been established to calculate the fracture initiation pressure with the consideration of mechanical characteristics of shale and the anisotropic tensile strength when judging rock failure. The fracture initiation model established in this paper accurately reflects the stress anisotropy and matches well with the actual situation in porous media. Through the sensitivity analysis, the results show that σv/σH, Ev/EH, υv/υH, m/s, and A/B have a certain impact on the tangential stress when the circumferential angle changes, and there is a positive relationship between the initiation pressure and the above sensitive factors except for A/B. The results can provide a valuable and effective guidance for the prediction of fracture initiation pressure and fracture propagation mechanism under special stratum conditions of shale.


1998 ◽  
Author(s):  
I.A. Al-Ghamdi ◽  
A.A. Al-Hendi ◽  
O.J. Esmail

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