PERFORMANCE COMPARISON OF FRACTURED AND UN-FRACTURED VERTICAL AND HORIZONTAL WELLS IN RESERVOIRS WITH BOTTOM-WATER DRIVE

2002 ◽  
Vol 20 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 405-423
Author(s):  
Mohamed A. Aggour
2012 ◽  
Vol 524-527 ◽  
pp. 1232-1235 ◽  
Author(s):  
Li Feng Li ◽  
Xiang An Yue ◽  
Li Juan Zhang

Finding the breakthrough position of horizontal wells is essential to water plugging and improving oil production in bottom water drive reservoirs. Physical modeling was carried out in this paper to research the law of bottom water’s movement. The experimental results indicated that: pressure drop in wells, well trajectory and area reservoir heterogeneity were all sensitive factors for breakthrough of bottom water, and the entry points of horizontal wells were determined by the combined function of them. In different well trajectory models, the concave down part of the well cooperate with pressure drop influenced the breakthrough position. Bottom water below the heel end reached the well earliest if the concave down part located at the heel end. When the concave part located at the middle of the well, the two factors played role respectively which resulted in breaking through of bottom water at two places with larger swept area. In different heterogeneous models, permeability difference and pressure drop were both favorable factors for bottom water’s non-uniformly rise. In the model that the heel end located at high permeability part, bottom water under the heel end reached the well earliest. If the heel end was set at the low permeability part, the breakthrough of bottom water occurred at the middle of the well.


Author(s):  
Tao Zhu ◽  
Jing Lu

Many gas reservoirs are with bottom water drive. In order to prevent or delay unwanted water into the wellbore, the producing wells are often completed as partially penetrating vertical wells, and more and more horizontal wells have been drilled in recent years in bottom water drive gas reservoirs to reduce water coning and increase productivity. For a well, non-Darcy flow is inherently a near wellbore phenomenon. In spite of the considerable study that non-Darcy behavior of fully penetrating vertical wells, there has been no study of a partially penetrating vertical well or a horizontal well in a gas reservoir with bottom water drive. This paper presents new binomial deliverability equations for partially penetrating vertical gas wells and horizontal gas wells, assuming that only radial flow occurs in the near wellbore non-Darcy’s flow domain. The inflow performance of a vertical gas well is compared with that of a horizontal gas well. The proposed equations can account for the advantages of horizontal gas wells.


2008 ◽  
Vol 130 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Binshan Ju ◽  
Xiaofeng Qiu ◽  
Shugao Dai ◽  
Tailiang Fan ◽  
Haiqing Wu ◽  
...  

The coning problems for vertical wells and the ridging problems for horizontal wells are very difficult to solve by conventional methods during oil production from reservoirs with bottom water drives. If oil in a reservoir is too heavy to follow Darcy’s law, the problems may become more complicated for the non-Newtonian properties of heavy oil and its rheology. To solve these problems, an innovative completion design with downhole water sink was presented by dual-completion in oil and water columns with a packer separating the two completions for vertical wells or dual-horizontal wells. The design made it feasible that oil is produced from the formation above the oil water contact (OWC) and water is produced from the formation below the OWC, respectively. To predict quantitatively the production performances of production well using the completion design, a new improved mathematical model considering non-Newtonian properties of oil was presented and a numerical simulator was developed. A series of runs of an oil well was employed to find out the best perforation segment and the fittest production rates from the formations above and below OWC. The study shows that the design is effective for heavy oil reservoir with bottom water though it cannot completely eliminate the water cone formed before using the design. It is a discovery that the design is more favorable for new wells and the best perforation site for water sink (Sink 2) is located at the upper 1/3 of the formation below OWC.


2013 ◽  
Vol 20 (12) ◽  
pp. 3612-3619 ◽  
Author(s):  
Li-feng Li ◽  
Xiang-an Yue ◽  
Hai-long Zhao ◽  
Zhi-guo Yang ◽  
Li-juan Zhang

2011 ◽  
Vol 367 ◽  
pp. 385-392
Author(s):  
E. Steve Adewole

When a reservoir experiences water influx, the actual source of the water often cannot be ascertained with precision. Thus well work over measures to minimize the water may not be easy to fashion. Bottom water encroaches through the bottom of the reservoir and rises vertically, appearing in all the wells in the field at the same time, if the wells experience the same production histories. This further makes work over difficult, more so, if there are other external fluid influences akin to a top gas. However, if the arrival time is known, then factors affecting bottom water movement, with or without any other contiguous top gas, may be studied with a view to fashioning an effective work over to mitigate premature water arrival into the well. Horizontal wells are already known to delay encroaching water breakthrough time. For a cross flow layered reservoir completed with a horizontal well in each layer, flow dynamics will certainly be different from a single layer reservoir due to differences in individual layer, layers fluid, wellbore and interface properties and rate histories. In this paper, theoretical expressions for predicting dimensionless breakthrough times of horizontal wells in a two layered reservoir of architecture like letter ‘B’, experiencing bottom water drive mechanism of different patterns, with or without a top gas, are derived. The theoretical breakthrough times are based on dimensionless pressure and dimensionless pressure derivative distributions of each identified model. Twenty-seven (28) different models emerged as the total of the different models possible.


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