scholarly journals Coalbed Methane Production System Simulation and Deliverability Forecasting: Coupled Surface Network/Wellbore/Reservoir Calculation

2017 ◽  
Vol 2017 ◽  
pp. 1-13
Author(s):  
Jun Zhou ◽  
Guangchuan Liang ◽  
Tao Deng ◽  
Shiwei Zhou ◽  
Jing Gong

As an unconventional energy, coalbed methane (CBM) mainly exists in coal bed with adsorption, whose productivity is different from conventional gas reservoir. This paper explains the wellbore pressure drop, surface pipeline network simulation, and reservoir calculation model of CBM. A coupled surface/wellbore/reservoir calculation architecture was presented, to coordinate the gas production in each calculation period until the balance of surface/wellbore/reservoir. This coupled calculation method was applied to a CBM field for predicting production. The daily gas production increased year by year at the first time and then decreased gradually after several years, while the daily water production was reduced all the time with the successive decline of the formation pressure. The production of gas and water in each well is almost the same when the structure is a star. When system structure is a dendritic surface system, the daily gas production ranked highest at the well which is the nearest to the surface system collection point and lowest at the well which is the farthest to the surface system collection point. This coupled calculation method could be used to predict the water production, gas production, and formation pressure of a CBM field during a period of time.

2018 ◽  
Vol 36 (6) ◽  
pp. 1593-1608 ◽  
Author(s):  
Huihu Liu ◽  
Shuxun Sang ◽  
Junhua Xue ◽  
Tianhe Lan ◽  
Hongje Xu ◽  
...  

Determination of the velocity sensitivity in coal reservoirs during the different production stages of coalbed methane wells is fundamentally crucial to adopt appropriate drainage technologies. To address this need, simulation experiments of coal samples from southern Qinshui Basin in China were conducted to test the variation of coal permeability with fluid flow. The pore structures were tested before and after the simulation experiment by using mercury injections, and the pore shape was observed using scanning electron microscope (SEM). The results show that formation water with fast flow may remove solid particles and that there is no velocity sensitivity under the experimental conditions of different coal samples and formation waters during the water production and depressurization stages of the coalbed methane well. There is a trend of the velocity sensitivity in the coalbed methane reservoir showing high concentration of solid particles during the stages of water production and depressurization. Coal permeability decreases with the increase of the fluid flow, there are different levels of velocity sensitivity in the coalbed methane reservoir during gas production of the coalbed methane well. The critical drainage flow should be within 11.26 m3/d during gas production of the coalbed methane well. The generation of the velocity sensitivity will make the pore structure of the coalbed methane reservoir poorly. During the stage of gas production, the formation water produces poorly, and the solid particles adhered to the surface of coal easily fall off and are deposited in the transition pore and micropore, which further results in the decrease of coal permeability.


2017 ◽  
Vol 36 (2) ◽  
pp. 282-296 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xianbo Su ◽  
Fengde Zhou ◽  
Stephen Tyson

This paper presents a study on the impact of well integrity failure on coalbed methane (also known as coal seam gas) production and potential shallow water contamination using numerical simulations with a finite-difference method. Two connection types and 12 cases were simulated: Type A – leakage through cement sheath and Type B – impaired zonal isolation at the aquifer interval. The effect of the distance between the aquifer and the coal seam, drainage area and desorption time on gas and water production was also inspected. Results show that both connection types have strong effects on the gas and water production; the cumulative water and gas production increases with increasing drainage radius; the distance between aquifer and the coal seam has a negative effect on the water production but a negligible effect on the gas production; desorption time, ranging from 5 to 30 days, has a negligible effect on the water and gas production. Connection Type A yields a potential water contamination but connection Type B does not. Gas concentration in the shallow aquifer decreases sharply with an increase of distance away from the producer and the unsafe area are within an area with a radius ranging from approximately 50 m to 90 m away from the producer in this study.


Energies ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. 644 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xinlu Yan ◽  
Songhang Zhang ◽  
Shuheng Tang ◽  
Zhongcheng Li ◽  
Yongxiang Yi ◽  
...  

Due to the unique adsorption and desorption characteristics of coal, coal reservoir permeability changes dynamically during coalbed methane (CBM) development. Coal reservoirs can be classified using a permeability dynamic characterization in different production stages. In the single-phase water flow stage, four demarcating pressures are defined based on the damage from the effective stress on reservoir permeability. Coal reservoirs are classified into vulnerable, alleviative, and invulnerable reservoirs. In the gas desorption stage, two demarcating pressures are used to quantitatively characterize the recovery properties of permeability based on the recovery effect of the matrix shrinkage on permeability, namely the rebound pressure (the pressure corresponding to the lowest permeability) and recovery pressure (the pressure when permeability returns to initial permeability). Coal reservoirs are further classified into recoverable and unrecoverable reservoirs. The physical properties and influencing factors of these demarcating pressures are analyzed. Twenty-six wells from the Shizhuangnan Block in the southern Qinshui Basin of China were examined as a case study, showing that there is a significant correspondence between coal reservoir types and CBM well gas production. This study is helpful for identifying geological conditions of coal reservoirs as well as the productivity potential of CBM wells.


Energies ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 213
Author(s):  
Chao Cui ◽  
Suoliang Chang ◽  
Yanbin Yao ◽  
Lutong Cao

Coal macrolithotypes control the reservoir heterogeneity, which plays a significant role in the exploration and development of coalbed methane. Traditional methods for coal macrolithotype evaluation often rely on core observation, but these techniques are non-economical and insufficient. The geophysical logging data are easily available for coalbed methane exploration; thus, it is necessary to find a relationship between core observation results and wireline logging data, and then to provide a new method to quantify coal macrolithotypes of a whole coal seam. In this study, we propose a L-Index model by combing the multiple geophysical logging data with principal component analysis, and we use the L-Index model to quantitatively evaluate the vertical and regional distributions of the macrolithotypes of No. 3 coal seam in Zhengzhuang field, southern Qinshui basin. Moreover, we also proposed a S-Index model to quantitatively evaluate the general brightness of a whole coal seam: the increase of the S-Index from 1 to 3.7, indicates decreasing brightness, i.e., from bright coal to dull coal. Finally, we discussed the relationship between S-Index and the hydro-fracturing effect. It was found that the coal seam with low S-Index values can easily form long extending fractures during hydraulic fracturing. Therefore, the lower S-Index values indicate much more favorable gas production potential in the Zhengzhuang field. This study provides a new methodology to evaluate coal macrolithotypes by using geophysical logging data.


2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hashem Al-Obaid ◽  
Sultan A. Asel ◽  
Jon Hansen ◽  
Rio Wijaya

Abstract Many techniques have been used to model, diagnose and detect fracture dimension and propagation during hydraulic fracturing. Diagnosing fracture dimension growth vs time is of paramount importance to reach the desired geometry to maximize hydrocarbon production potential and prevent contacting undesired fluid zones. The study presented here describes a technique implemented to control vertical fracture growth in a tight sandstone formation being stimulated near a water zone. This gas well was completed vertically as openhole with Multi- Stage Fracturing (MSF). Pre-Fracturing diagnostic tests in combination with high-resolution temperature logs provided evidence of vertical fracture height growth downward toward water zone. Pre-fracturing flowback indicated water presence that was confirmed by lab test. Several actions were taken to mitigate fracture vertical growth during the placement of main treatment. An artificial barrier with proppant was placed in the lower zone of the reservoir before main fracturing execution. The rate and viscosity of fracturing fluids were also adjusted to control the net pressure aiming to enhance fracture length into the reservoir. The redesigned proppant fracturing job was placed into the formation as planned. Production results showed the effectiveness of the artificial lower barrier placed to prevent fracture vertical growth down into the water zone. Noise log consists of Sonic Noise Log (SNL) and High Precision Temperature (HPT) was performed. The log analysis indicated that two major fractures were initiated away from water-bearing zone with minimum water production. Additionally, in- situ minimum stress profile indicated no enough contrast between layers to help confine fracture into the targeted reservoir. Commercial gas production was achieved after applying this stimulation technique while keeping water production rate controlled within the desired range. The approach described in this paper to optimize gas production in tight formation with nearby water contact during hydraulic fracturing treatments has been applied with a significant improvement in well production. This will serve as reference for future intervention under same challenging completion conditions.


2018 ◽  
Vol 36 (6) ◽  
pp. 1424-1437 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mingjun Zou ◽  
Xiaochun Lv ◽  
Zhiquan Huang ◽  
Simin Wei ◽  
Miao Zhang ◽  
...  

Two indirect parameters influencing coalbed methane (CBM) drainage performances are proposed in this paper, which are effective desorption radius and difference between reservoir pressure and critical desorption pressure (DRPCDP). Variations of the two parameters during CBM drainage are investigated, which shows that they have a linear relationship. By using formula derivations, a theoretical model for gas production prediction is built. It suggests that the cumulative gas production is a product of square of effective desorption radius with DRPCDP, and there is also a cubic polynomial relationship between cumulative gas production and linear average DRPCDP. Furthermore, well PM01 located at southern Qinshui basin of China is selected as a case, and a commercial software is adopted to predict the gas production. Compared with the simulated and modeled cumulative gas productions, the simulated data match well with the modeled data, which indicates that the model has a good accuracy.


SPE Journal ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 24 (02) ◽  
pp. 681-697 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zheng Sun ◽  
Juntai Shi ◽  
Keliu Wu ◽  
Tao Zhang ◽  
Dong Feng ◽  
...  

Summary Low-permeability coalbed-methane (CBM) reservoirs possess unique pressure-propagation behavior, which can be classified further as the expansion characteristics of the drainage area and the desorption area [i.e., a formation in which the pressure is lower than the initial formation pressure and critical-desorption pressure (CDP), respectively]. Inevitably, several fluid-flow mechanisms will coexist in realistic coal seams at a certain production time, which is closely related to dynamic pressure and saturation distribution. To the best of our knowledge, a production-prediction model for CBM wells considering pressure-propagation behavior is still lacking. The objective of this work is to perform extensive investigations into the effect of pressure-propagation behavior on the gas-production performance of CBM wells. First, the pressure-squared approach is used to describe the pressure profile in the desorption area, which has been clarified as an effective-approximation method. Also, the pressure/saturation relationship that was developed in our previous research is used; therefore, saturation distribution can be obtained. Second, an efficient iteration algorithm is established to predict gas-production performance by combining a new gas-phase-productivity equation and a material-balance equation. Finally, using the proposed prediction model, we shed light on the optimization method for production strategy regarding the entire production life of CBM wells. Results show that the decrease rate of bottomhole pressure (BHP) should be slow at the water single-phase-flow stage, fast at the early gas/water two-phase-flow stage, and slow at the late gas/water two-phase-flow stage, which is referred to as the slow/fast/slow (SFS) control method. Remarkably, in the SFS control method, the decrease rate of the BHP at each period can be quantified on the basis of the proposed prediction model. To examine the applicability of the proposed SFS method, it is applied to an actual CBM well in Hancheng Field, China, and it enhances the cumulative gas production by a factor of approximately 1.65.


Author(s):  
Jared D. Harris ◽  
Samuel E. Bodily ◽  
Jenny Mead ◽  
Donald Adolphson ◽  
Brad Carmack ◽  
...  

Jane Barrow, CEO of Caprica Energy, must recommend to the board which of three potential “unconventional ” natural-gas development sites in different parts of the United States the company should pursue. The case takes place in January 2011, when the “low-hanging fruit ” of natural-gas production in the United States had essentially been picked. All three of the potential sites (shale, coalbed methane, and tight sands) would require hydraulic fracturing, a process of removing gas that was formerly considered inaccessible by injecting water and chemicals into the ground. Because of emerging concerns about the potential harm “fracking ” can do to drinking water, Barrow must not only analyze which site might be most profitable but also what the potential risks to the environment and area residents might be.


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