An Integrated Approach to the Design and Evaluation of Hydraulic Fracture Treatments in Tight Gas and Coalbed Methane Reservoirs

Author(s):  
Mohammad Ali Aghighi ◽  
Karen Joy Legaspino Valencia ◽  
Zhixi Chen ◽  
Sheikh S. Rahman
2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rinat Lukmanov ◽  
Said Jabri ◽  
Ehab Ibrahim

Abstract The tight gas reservoirs of Haima Supergroup provide the majority of gas production in the Sultanate of Oman. The paper discusses a possibility of using the anomalies from natural radioactivity to evaluate the fracture height for complex tight gas in mature fields of Oman. The standard industry practice is adding radioactive isotopes to the proppant. Spectral Gamma Ray log is used to determine near wellbore traced proppant placement. Spectral Noise log in combination with Production logs helps to identify the active fractures contributing to production. These methods complement each other, but they are obviously associated with costs. Hence, majority of wells are fracced without tracers or any other fracture height diagnostics. However, in several brown fields, an alternative approach to identify fracture height has been developed which provides fit-for-purpose results. It is based on the analysis of naturally occurring radioactive minerals (NORM) precipitation. The anomalies were observed in the many gas reservoirs even in cases when tracers were not used. At certain conditions, these anomalies can be used to characterize fracture propagation and optimize future wells hydraulic Fracture design. A high number of PLTs and well test information were analyzed. Since tight formations normally don't produce without fracturing, radioactive anomalies flag the contributing intervals and hence fracture propagation. The main element of analysis procedure is related to that fact that if no tracers applied, the discrepancy between normalized Open Hole Gamma Ray and Gamma Ray taken during PLT after 6-12 months of production can be used instead to establish fracture height. This method cannot be applied for immediate interpretation of fracture propagation because time is required to precipitate NORM and using the anomalies concept. The advantage of this method is that it can be used in some fields to estimate the frac effectiveness of wells without artificial tracers. It is normally assumed that the Natural radioactivity anomalies appear mainly due to co-production of the formation water. However, in the fields of interest the anomalies appear in wells producing only gas and condensate. This observation provides an opportunity for active fracture height determination at minimum cost.


2009 ◽  
Vol 12 (02) ◽  
pp. 254-262 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yueming Cheng ◽  
W. John Lee ◽  
Duane A. McVay

Summary Gas wells in low-permeability formations usually require hydraulic fracturing to be commercially viable. Pressure transient analysis in hydraulically fractured tight gas wells is commonly based on analysis of three flow regimes: bilinear, linear, and pseudoradial. Without the presence of pseudoradial flow, neither reservoir permeability nor fracture half-length can be independently estimated. In practice, as pseudoradial flow is often absent, the resulting estimation is uncertain and unreliable. On the other hand, elliptical flow, which exists between linear flow and pseudoradial flow, is of long duration (typically months to years). We can acquire much rate and pressure data during this flow regime, but no practical well test analysis technique is currently available to interpret these data. This paper presents a new approach to reliably estimate reservoir and hydraulic fracture properties from analysis of pressure data obtained during the elliptical flow period. The method is applicable to estimate fracture half-length, formation permeability, and skin factor independently for both infinite- and finite-conductivity fractures. It is iterative and features rapid convergence. The method can estimate formation permeability when pseudoradial flow does not exist. Coupled with stable deconvolution technology, which converts variable production-rate and pressure measurements into an equivalent constant-rate pressure drawdown test, this method can provide fracture-property estimates from readily available, noisy production data. We present synthetic and field examples to illustrate the procedures and demonstrate the validity and applicability of the proposed approach.


2019 ◽  
Vol 174 ◽  
pp. 1208-1222 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pouria Behnoudfar ◽  
Mohammad Bagher Asadi ◽  
Alireza Gholilou ◽  
Sohrab Zendehboudi

2020 ◽  
pp. 014459872096083
Author(s):  
Yulong Liu ◽  
Dazhen Tang ◽  
Hao Xu ◽  
Wei Hou ◽  
Xia Yan

Macrolithotypes control the pore-fracture distribution heterogeneity in coal, which impacts stimulation via hydrofracturing and coalbed methane (CBM) production in the reservoir. Here, the hydraulic fracture was evaluated using the microseismic signal behavior for each macrolithotype with microfracture imaging technology, and the impact of the macrolithotype on hydraulic fracture initiation and propagation was investigated systematically. The result showed that the propagation types of hydraulic fractures are controlled by the macrolithotype. Due to the well-developed natural fracture network, the fracture in the bright coal is more likely to form the “complex fracture network”, and the “simple” case often happens in the dull coal. The hydraulic fracture differences are likely to impact the permeability pathways and the well productivity appears to vary when developing different coal macrolithtypes. Thus, considering the difference of hydraulic fracture and permeability, the CBM productivity characteristics controlled by coal petrology were simulated by numerical simulation software, and the rationality of well pattern optimization factors for each coal macrolithotype was demonstrated. The results showed the square well pattern is more suitable for dull coal and semi-dull coal with undeveloped natural fractures, while diamond and rectangular well pattern is more suitable for semi-bright coal and bright coal with more developed natural fractures and more complex fracturing fracture network; the optimum wells spacing of bright coal and semi-bright coal is 300 m and 250 m, while that of semi-dull coal and dull coal is just 200 m.


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