Logging interpretation taking into account hydrodynamical and geomechanical processes in an invaded zone

2012 ◽  
Vol 445 (2) ◽  
pp. 1021-1024 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. N. Yeltsov ◽  
L. A. Nazarov ◽  
L. A. Nazarova ◽  
G. V. Nesterova ◽  
M. I. Epov
Keyword(s):  
2000 ◽  
Vol 3 (03) ◽  
pp. 256-262 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amit K. Sarkar ◽  
Lee Jaedong ◽  
Ekrem Kasap

Summary Wireline formation testers are routinely used at discrete depths of a well to collect reservoir fluid samples and to estimate undisturbed reservoir pressures, near-wellbore formation permeabilities, fluid compressibilities, and saturation pressures. A pressure profile in the vertical direction yields fluid densities and fluid contacts (gas/oil and water/oil contacts) in the reservoir. Reliable results are obtained when the mudcake isolates the wellbore from the formation. When the mudcake cannot provide isolation, mud filtrate invasion continues and supercharging occurs. The issue of sample quality becomes critical when using oil-based muds because the filtrate is also oil and is difficult to separate from the formation oil, a pure sample of which is needed for fluid characterization studies. This study investigated the effects of poor mudcake seal on sample quality and formation test data and its analysis when oil-based muds are used. Modeling studies were conducted using a finite-element simulator. The results of the study indicate that mudcake permeabilities must be less than 1 µd and mudcake-to-formation permeability ratios must be less than 10–4 to achieve sample qualities higher than 90%. Such conditions as high pumpout rates, low overbalance pressures, and shallow filtrate invasion depths improve sample quality. The presence of a permeability-damaged zone around the mudcake improves the sample quality but reduces the sampling pressure. The formation rate analysis (FRASM)*** technique estimates formation permeability accurately in the presence or absence of supercharging. The formation pressure estimated using the buildup data is the pressure at the mudcake-formation interface. The supercharged pressure must be subtracted from the apparent formation pressure to obtain the true formation pressure. A simple procedure is developed for estimating the mudcake permeability and the supercharged pressure. Supercharged pressure is shown to be a product of the apparent overbalance pressure, mudcake-to-formation permeability ratio, and an invasion factor representing the distance up to which supercharging extends. Introduction Drilling typically alters formations in such a way that a mudcake, a fines-invaded zone, and a filtrate-invaded zone are created between the wellbore and the native formation (Fig. 1, top). Zone properties such as thickness, permeability, porosity, and fluid saturation depend upon the mud and formation properties, hole size, and overbalance pressure, which is the difference between the wellbore and the formation pressure. Mudcake is an external (outside the formation) layer created by the fines-migration mechanisms of size exclusion and bridging.1 The fines-invaded zone is created by smooth deposition and bridging. The fines involved are generated by the processes of drilling, sudden salinity changes in porous media, and high viscous forces. The zone permeability may be an order of magnitude less than that of the formation. The filtrate-invaded zone usually extends beyond the fines-invaded zone. Poor quality mudcakes with low thicknesses and high permeabilities are commonly formed on surfaces of low permeability formations because the rate of filtrate flow through the formation is low. The filtrate invasion continues and the pressures in the near-wellbore area are higher than the native formation pressure. This phenomenon is called supercharging (Fig. 1, bottom). Use of oil-based muds has increased recently because of advantages such as faster penetration, good wellbore stability, better lubrication that is especially important in deviated wellbores, and less solid and filtrate invasion into the formation. Lee and Kasap2 used a three-dimensional, single-phase, two-component, isothermal finite-element simulator to study the quality of samples (fraction of formation oil in the sample) received from a wireline formation tester (WFT) when oil-based muds were used. The simulator models wellbore geometry and formation-tool connections realistically; wellbore radius, mudcake thickness, permeability, and porosity are simulated functionally. Effects of viscous and dispersive forces are considered but not those of gravitational forces. For a sealing-type of mudcake, the results indicated that the sample quality reached 90% for a filtrate invasion distance of 10 cm. The rate of increase in sample quality with further pumpout was too low. The pumpout rate and formation permeability were insensitive parameters. The pumpout time required to obtain high-quality samples increased exponentially with the depth of filtrate invasion. The presence of a permeability-damaged zone around the wellbore improved sample quality because the angular inflow of filtrate from the invaded zone decreased. Higher formation anisotropy (horizontal-to-vertical permeability ratio) also improved sample quality because the vertical flow from the filtrate-invaded zone decreased. Effects of leaking mudcakes have previously been studied to a limited extent.2,3 This study investigates the effects of mudcake quality on fluid sampling and supercharging when oil-based muds are used. The results of the study indicate that both the mudcake permeability and the mudcake-to-formation permeability ratio must be low to achieve high-quality samples. Conditions including high pumpout rates, low overbalance pressures, and shallow filtrate invasion depths improve sample quality. The presence of a permeability-damaged zone around the mudcake improves sample quality but reduces the sampling pressure. A simple procedure is developed for estimating the supercharged pressure that must be subtracted from the apparent reservoir pressure to obtain the true formation pressure.


Geophysics ◽  
1994 ◽  
Vol 59 (12) ◽  
pp. 1796-1805 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. K. Roy ◽  
D. J. Dutta

A borehole direct‐current resistivity boundary value problem for normal and lateral elctrode configuratin is soved assuming axial symmetry. The borehole mud, a flushed zone, an invaded zone, and an unciontaminated zone are all assumed to be present. A linear transition in resistivity is assumed for the invaded zone. Frobenius extended power series and the method of separation of variables are used to solved the 1-D problem. Single-run borehole resistivity sounding and solution of the inverse problem are suggested fo estimatingthe resisitivity of the uncontaminated zone and the radius of invasion. Finite‐difference modeling is dione to estimate the effect of shoulder beds ion borehole sounding. Some of the computed 1-D and 2-D model apparent reisivity curves are compared with the existing scale model data. The analysis reveals that the mud cake effect is negligible for normal and lateral electrode array and the invasion zone thickness is feflected in the forward models. Apparent resistivity curves with and without a transitional invaded zone are well separated. Resistivity departure curves are well separated for fixed resistivity and variable resistivity invaded zone models. A normal electrode configuration can feel the presence of the shoulder bed in a 2-D model when the bed thickness is about 12 time the electrode separation. One‐dimensional ridge regression inversion the synthetic forward model data is presented to suggest an alternative approach for determining the resistivey of the uncontaminated zone ([Formula: see text]) and the radius of invasion [Formula: see text]. We conclude that (1) a single run borehole sounding with 10 or 12 data points from a normal or lateral log may be used, rather than 3 points from a dual laterolog [Formula: see text] tool, for better estimation of [Formula: see text], and (2) a borehole forward model should include a transitional invaded zone. Finally, an alternative approach for the estimation of the radius of invasion is proposed.


SPE Journal ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 17 (04) ◽  
pp. 981-991 ◽  
Author(s):  
Duc H. Le ◽  
Hai N. Hoang ◽  
Jagannathan Mahadevan

Summary Hydraulic-fracturing operations carried out by injecting large volumes of water cause invasion of the injected water into the formation and create a water block. The flow of gas toward the wellbore/fracture during production will result in the removal of the water block through viscous displacement, as well as evaporation, that occurs because of gas expansion over a long period of time. However, some observations from the field show that the productivity of hydraulically fractured tight gas wells improves after a period of shut-in, leading to a speculation as to whether capillary suction is responsible for the cleanup of water block that eventually leads to productivity improvement. In this work, we use laboratory-scale experiments and modeling to find that capillary-driven transport is an important mechanism that helps redistribute water within the tight gas rock sample. Without capillarity, the model underpredicts the effective gas relative permeability recovery in the laboratory sample. We also find, using simulations, that capillary transport has the effect of enhancing the overall evaporation rate of water from the rock core. The model for calculating saturation changes and the effective gas relative permeability is complete with regard to all the mechanisms, such as displacement and evaporation. This is unlike previous studies, which did not include one or the other. Field-scale-simulation study of gas flowback using the new integrated model shows that the effective gas relative permeability of the invaded zone is significantly affected by capillary suction. In the absence of capillary suction, displacement and evaporation proceed as usual, but the invaded-zone water saturation does not dissipate quickly enough. The fracture-face skin, which is a function of the effective gas relative permeability, decreases faster as the invaded zone water is redistributed because of capillary suction. The simulations show that the evaporation of water from the invaded zone is very slow because of the low gas-flow rates in the tight rock matrix. In comparison to evaporative removal of water from the invaded zone, capillary-suction removal is significantly higher and faster. A sensitivity study on fracture-face skin shows that capillary suction has a significant effect on the cleanup at low drawdowns and smaller invasion depths. At complete shut-in conditions, the invaded-zone saturation continues to dissipate because of capillary suction. This confirms the general observation and anecdotal evidence that tight-sandstone wells produce at greater gas-flow rates after a period of shut-in. The methods described in this study can be adapted to perhaps determine the duration of such shut-in periods. Additionally, the models can be used to rigorously predict gas-production rates from a fractured well, including capillary effects, without resorting to averaging concepts such as fracture-face skin.


1999 ◽  
Vol 2 (02) ◽  
pp. 125-133 ◽  
Author(s):  
M.N. Hashem ◽  
E.C. Thomas ◽  
R.I. McNeil ◽  
Oliver Mullins

Summary Determination of the type and quality of hydrocarbon fluid that can be produced from a formation prior to construction of production facilities is of equal economic importance to predicting the fluid rate and flowing pressure. We have become adept at making such estimates for formations drilled with water-based muds, using open-hole formation evaluation procedures. However, these standard open-hole methods are somewhat handicapped in wells drilled with synthetic oil-based mud because of the chemical and physical similarity between the synthetic oil-based filtrate and any producible oil that may be present. Also complicating the prediction is that in situ hydrocarbons will be miscibly displaced away from the wellbore by the invading oil-based mud filtrate, leaving little or no trace of the original hydrocarbon in the invaded zone. Thus, normal methods that sample fluids in the invaded zone will be of little use in predicting the in situ type and quality of hydrocarbons deeper in the formation. Only when we can pump significant volume of filtrate from the invaded zone to reconnect and sample the virgin fluids are we successful. However, since the in situ oil and filtrate are miscible, diffusion mixes the materials and blurs the interface; as mud filtrate is pumped from the formation into the borehole, the degree of contamination is greater than one might expect, and it is difficult to know when to stop pumping and start sampling. What level of filtrate contamination in the in situ fluid is tolerable? We propose a procedure for enhancing the value of the data derived from a particular open-hole wireline formation tester by quantitatively evaluating in real time the quality of the fluid being collected. The approach focuses on expanding the display of the spectroscopic data as a function of time on a more sensitive scale than has been used previously. This enhanced sensitivity allows one to confidently decide when in the pumping cycle to begin the sampling procedure. The study also utilizes laboratory determined PVT information on collected samples to form a data set that we use to correlate to the wireline derived spectroscopic data. The accuracy of these correlations has been verified with subsequent predictions and corroborated with laboratory measurements. Lastly, we provide a guideline for predicting the pump-out time needed to obtain a fluid sample of a pre-determined level of contamination when sampling conditions fall within our range of empirical data. Conclusions This empirical study validates that PVT quality hydrocarbon samples can be obtained from boreholes drilled with synthetic oil-based mud utilizing wireline formation testers deployed with downhole pump-out and optical analyzer modules. The data set for this study has the following boundary conditions: samples were obtained in the Gulf of Mexico area; the rock formations are unconsolidated to slightly consolidated, clean to slightly shaly sandstones; the in situ hydrocarbons and the synthetic oil-based mud filtrate have measurable differences in their visible and/or near infrared spectra. Specifically, this study demonstrates that during the pump-out phase of operations we can use the optical analyzer response to predict the API gravity and gas/oil ratio of the reservoir hydrocarbons prior to securing a downhole sample. Additionally, we can predict the pump out time required to obtain a reservoir sample with less than 10% mud filtrate contamination if we know or can estimate reservoir fluid viscosity and formation permeability. Extension of this method to other formations and locales should be possible using similar empirical correlation methodology. Introduction The high cost of offshore production facilities construction and deployment require accurate prediction of hydrocarbon PVT properties prior to fabrication. In the offshore Gulf of Mexico, one method to obtain a PVT quality hydrocarbon sample is to use a cased hole drill stem test. However, this procedure is usually quite costly due to the need for sand control. Shell has been an advocate of eliminating this costly step by utilizing openhole wireline test tools to obtain the PVT quality sample of the reservoir hydrocarbon. The success of this approach depends upon the availability of a wireline tool with a downhole pump that permits removal of the mud filtrate contamination prior to sampling the reservoir fluids, and a downhole fluid analyzer that can distinguish reservoir fluid from filtrate. One such tool is the Modular Formation Dynamics Tester (MDT).1 The optical fluid analyzer module of the MDT functions by subjecting the fluids being pumped to absorption spectroscopy in the visible and near-infrared (NIR) ranges. Interpretation of these spectra is the subject of this paper. Tool descriptions and basic theory of operations were presented in an earlier text.2 The concept of using visible and/or NIR spectroscopy to characterize the fluids being sampled while pumping is straightforward when there are measurable differences in the spectra of the mud filtrate and the reservoir hydrocarbons. As shown in Fig. 1, there are well known areas3,4 of the NIR spectrum (800-2000 nm) that are diagnostic of water and oil. The optical fluid analyzer module (OFA) of the MDT has channels tuned at 10 locations as indicated in Fig. 1, and thus the response in channels 6, 8, and 9 can be used to discern water from hydrocarbon. Another section of the OFA is designed to detect gas by measuring reflected polarized light from the pumped fluids, but we do not discuss its operation further except to say that it is a reliable gas indicator.


Geophysics ◽  
1984 ◽  
Vol 49 (10) ◽  
pp. 1580-1585 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Drahos

The ideal rock model in electrical well logging for prospecting hydrocarbon consists of three cylindrical layers characterized by homogeneous resistivities. The second layer of the model respresents the zone of invasion, where under real circumstances the resistivity is not constant but changes with the distance from the borehole. This condition could be taken into consideration, but the solution of the electrical direct problem for such case is very complicated. Any kind of invasion resistivity profile can be approximated by many cylindrical layers of homogeneous resistivities. A recursive formula is derived by which the many‐layer problem can be solved simply. Numerical calculations were made to study the effect of the inhomogeneity of the invaded zone. Apparent resistivities of different Laterolog and normal arrangements were calculated for several models having linearly increasing resistivity profile in the invaded zone. These apparent resistivity values were evaluated by least‐squares fitting to determine the equivalent electrical parameters of the usual model of three homogeneous layers. The results show that there is practically no error in determination of the true resistivity, but the depth of invasion may be significantly smaller than that of the linear resistivity profile.


Author(s):  
O. Karpenko ◽  
B. Sobol ◽  
M. Myrontsov ◽  
I. Karpenko

Possibilities of using the well-logging data for revealing the factors of the geological nature that influence the formation of invaded zone of a drilling mud filtrate at oil and gas wells drilling are considered. Electrical logging data were used with probes of different sizes and different types for adequate calculation of the relative diameter of the invaded zone. 5 wells from the gas condensate field were selected for analysis. The terrigenous section of the wells is represented by the alternation of argillites, siltstones and sandstones. Rocks reservoirs of granular type; the layers with thicknesses from 3,4 to 18,2 m were selected for analysis. The results of statistical analysis (cluster and factor analyzes) revealed 3 groups of rocks, the characteristic features of which are significantly differentfrom the invaded zone, layer thickness and porosity and gas saturation coefficients. It is established that for terrigenous sections with reservoir rocks of granular type (Serpukhovian) for one field on the example of 5 wells there is a maximum direct correlation between the value of the relative diameter of the invaded zone and the thickness of the layers. The conducted researches allow making prognostic estimations concerning the approximate distributions of diameters of an invaded zone in terrigenous cuts in case of accident-free drilling with observance of technological conditions.


1965 ◽  
Vol 7 (12) ◽  
pp. 2151-2155
Author(s):  
L.B. Berman ◽  
V.S. Neyman
Keyword(s):  

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