Causes of Formation and Distribution of Abnormally High Formation Pressure in Petroleum Basins of Ukraine

Author(s):  
A.J. Polutranko
Keyword(s):  
2018 ◽  
pp. 58-62
Author(s):  
V.A. Zholudeva ◽  
◽  
V.V. Kolpakov ◽  
S.M. Yulyakshin ◽  
I.R. Rakhmatullin ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

2013 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anthony Jervis ◽  
Julia Kemper ◽  
Martin Richards ◽  
Mathew Taylor ◽  
Colin Clarke ◽  
...  

2012 ◽  
Vol 170-173 ◽  
pp. 836-841
Author(s):  
Wei Shao ◽  
Bin Lin

Gu Bei coal mine deep shaft freezing pressure of calcareous clay dynamic monitoring showed that the freezing pressure of the calcareous clay fastest grow in the first 2 weeks after the sidewall concrete pouring , freezing pressure has obvious direction . Analysis showed that the layer of freezing pressure is mainly calcareous clay layer deformation pressure, size and the temperature of well has a positive correlation. Maximum freezing pressure of the deep calcareous clay layer approximate the permanent formation pressure values and the maximum frost heave force determined by the frost heave experiments in indoor closed systems ,the average freezing pressure with depth variation of the exponential function can be used to good description.


2006 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ulrich Hahne ◽  
Aravindh Kaniappan ◽  
Jos Pragt ◽  
Arno Buysch

2011 ◽  
Vol 361-363 ◽  
pp. 520-525
Author(s):  
Jun Feng Yang ◽  
Han Qiao Jiang ◽  
Han Dong Rui ◽  
Xiao Qing Xie

Physical simulation experiments were made to research on the stress sensitivity on physical property of low permeability reservoir rocks. The experimental results shown that effective pressure had good exponential relationship with reservoir permeability. Combining with materaial balance method, reservoir engineering and rational deducation was made to reserach on water-flooding timing of low permeability reservoir development. Several production targets were obtained by these method, such as formation pressure, water and oil production, water cut and so on. The results shown that advanced water-flooding was very important in low permeability reservoir development to reduce the bad impact of stress sensitivity on formation permeability and maintain formation pressure.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sheng Chen ◽  
Qingcai Zeng ◽  
Xiujiao Wang ◽  
Qing Yang ◽  
Chunmeng Dai ◽  
...  

Abstract Practices of marine shale gas exploration and development in south China have proved that formation overpressure is the main controlling factor of shale gas enrichment and an indicator of good preservation condition. Accurate prediction of formation pressure before drilling is necessary for drilling safety and important for sweet spots predicting and horizontal wells deploying. However, the existing prediction methods of formation pore pressures all have defects, the prediction accuracy unsatisfactory for shale gas development. By means of rock mechanics analysis and related formulas, we derived a formula for calculating formation pore pressures. Through regional rock physical analysis, we determined and optimized the relevant parameters in the formula, and established a new formation pressure prediction model considering P-wave velocity, S-wave velocity and density. Based on regional exploration wells and 3D seismic data, we carried out pre-stack seismic inversion to obtain high-precision P-wave velocity, S-wave velocity and density data volumes. We utilized the new formation pressure prediction model to predict the pressure and the spatial distribution of overpressure sweet spots. Then, we applied the measured pressure data of three new wells to verify the predicted formation pressure by seismic data. The result shows that the new method has a higher accuracy. This method is qualified for safe drilling and prediction of overpressure sweet spots for shale gas development, so it is worthy of promotion.


2021 ◽  
pp. 39-45
Author(s):  
T.S. Ladeishchikova ◽  
◽  
V.A. Volkov ◽  
N.N. Sobyanin ◽  
A.V. Mitroshin ◽  
...  

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.


2021 ◽  
Vol 233 ◽  
pp. 01092
Author(s):  
Shengrui Lou

In recent years, the number of new wells has been increasing continuously, which has a large impact on production. During the drilling pass, the formation pressure has dropped greatly, the casing loss rate is high, and the water cut has increased, which affects the overall development situation of Zone A. In this paper, by studying the rule of index change in the process of drilling off and periodic water injection, the technology of combining drilling off and periodic water injection has been formed, and the application of the drilling off in Zone A has been completed.


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