Reservoir Pressure Depletion and Water Flooding Influencing Hydraulic Fracture Orientation in Low-Permeability Oilfields

Author(s):  
Svetlana Kuzmina ◽  
Kreso Kurt Butula ◽  
Aleksei Nikolaevich Nikitin
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 ◽  
pp. 014459872110052
Author(s):  
Xizhe Li ◽  
Zhengming Yang ◽  
Shujun Li ◽  
Wei Huang ◽  
Jianfei Zhan ◽  
...  

Low-permeability to ultralow-permeability reservoirs of the China National Petroleum Corporation are crucial to increase the reserve volumes and the production of crude oil in the present and future times. This study aimed to address the two major technical bottlenecks faced by the low-permeability to ultralow-permeability reservoirs by a comprehensive use of technologies and methods such as rate-controlled mercury injection, nuclear magnetic resonance, conventional logging, physical simulation, numerical simulation, and field practices. The reservoir characteristics of low-permeability to ultralow-permeability reservoirs were first analyzed. The water flooding development adjustment mode in the middle and high water-cut stages for the low-permeability to ultralow-permeability reservoirs, where water is injected along the fracture zone and lateral displacement were established. The formation mechanism and distribution principles of dynamic fractures, residual oil description, and expanding sweep volume were studied. The development mode for Type II ultralow-permeability reservoirs with a combination of horizontal well and volume fracturing was determined; this led to a significant improvement in the initial stages of single-well production. The volume fracturing core theory and optimization design, horizontal well trajectory optimization adjustment, horizontal well injection-production well pattern optimization, and horizontal well staged fracturing suitable for reservoirs with different characteristics were developed. This understanding of the reservoir characteristics and the breakthrough of key technologies for effective development will substantially support the oil-gas valent weight of the Changqing Oilfield to exceed 50 million tons per year, the stable production of the Daqing Oilfield with 40 million tons per year (oil-gas valent weight), and the realization of 20 million tons per year (oil-gas valent weight) in the Xinjiang Oilfield.


2015 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert Downie ◽  
Joel Le Calvez ◽  
Barry Dean ◽  
Jeff Rutledge

Abstract Interpretation of the microseismic data acquired during hydraulic fracture treatments is based on a variety of techniques that make use of the locations, times, and source parameters of the detected events, in conjunction with the stimulation treatment data. It is sometimes possible to observe trends or changes in the microseismic data that correspond to the surface pressure measurements; however this aspect of interpretation becomes problematic due the variability of fluid friction, slurry density, perforation restrictions, and other near-wellbore pressures when computing bottom hole fracturing pressure. An interpretation technique is proposed that uses pressure measurements in observation wells that are offset to the treatment well during microseismic interpretations. The observation well can be any well with open perforations in close proximity to the treatment well. The observation well pressures are not affected by the many complicating factors that are encountered when estimating pressure in the fracture from the surface pressure measured in the treatment well. Example data from field observations are used to demonstrate that the detection of microseismic events near an observation well and corresponding detection of fluid pressure from the fracture in the observation well validates the calculated event locations. The relationship between fracture pressure, the state of stress, and microseismic responses is discussed using Mohr-Coulomb failure criteria. Observation-well pressures and microseismic events are also used to identify instances where reservoir pressure depletion near the observation well affects surface operations at the treatment well. The results of the study show that reliable measurements of fracture pressure for use in microseismic interpretations can be obtained from offset observation wells, and where reservoir pressure depletion causes deviations from expected fracture behavior. The results also show that microseismic responses are directly related to fracture pressure, and not simply the presence of fracturing fluid itself, leading to an improved understanding of the conditions under which microseismic events occur.


2017 ◽  
Vol 2017 ◽  
pp. 1-9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chengli Zhang ◽  
Guodong Qu ◽  
Guoliang Song

For the large pores and cracks of reservoirs with low temperatures, high salinity, and low permeability, a new type of high strength gel ABP system is developed in this paper. The defects of conventional gels such as weak gel strength, no gelling, and easy dehydration are overcome under the conditions of low temperature and high salinity. The temperature and salt resistance, plugging characteristics, and EOR of the gel system are studied. Under the condition of 32°C and 29500 mg/L salinity, the ABP system formulation is for 0.3% crosslinking agent A + 0.09% coagulant B + 3500 mg/L polymer solution P. The results show that when the temperature was increased, the delayed crosslinking time of the system was shortened and the gel strength was increased. The good plugging characteristics of the ABP system were reached, and the plugging rate was greater than 99% in cores with different permeability. A good profile control performance was achieved, and the recovery rate was improved by 19.27% on the basis of water flooding. In the practical application of the gel system, the salinity of formation water and the permeability of fractures are necessary to determine the appropriate formulation.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mario Hadinata Prasetio ◽  
Hanny Anggraini ◽  
Hendro Tjahjono ◽  
Aditya Bintang Pramadana ◽  
Aulia Akbari ◽  
...  

Abstract This paper describes the evolution of the hydraulic fracturing approach and design in the Alpha reservoir over the past years. Alpha reservoir in XYZ field is a laminated sandstone reservoir with low permeability in the range of 20 to 140 md at a depth of approximately 4,000 to 4,500 ft true vertical depth (TVD). XYZ field is located in Rokan block, Riau, Central Sumatra region. Due to Alpha reservoir's nature, producing from this reservoir commercially requires stimulation. Hydraulic fracturing has been applied as the selected stimulation method to increase productivity from this reservoir. However, several challenges were recognized during the initial period, such as depleted reservoir pressure, indication of fracture height growth, and low to medium Young's modulus, which leads to few screened-out cases as well as low production gain after the fracturing treatment. The fracturing job in Alpha reservoir has been applied since 2002. However, pressure depletion was observed through this time until waterflood optimization started in May 2018 by converting commingled injection to injection dedicated to the Alpha reservoir. The pressure responded and increased from 350 psi to approximately 800 psi. Hence this reservoir still cannot be produced in single completion without the hydraulic fracturing job due to laminated reservoir and low-permeability character. A detailed look at the mechanical earth model (MEM) was done to revise the elastic properties and stress profile considering reservoir pressure change. The revised model was later used as an input for fracture geometry simulation. Calibration injection tests were performed and analyzed prior to the main fracturing treatments to determine fracture closure pressure and leakoff characteristics, which led to fracturing fluid efficiency. Results of these tests were used in job modifications regarding pad percentage, fracturing fluid rheology, proppant volume, and proppant concentration. Pressure history matching both after fracturing and in real time as well as the temperature log were used to validate the MEM and fracture geometries. Each change, approach, and impact were documented and statistically analyzed to determine a generic trend and design envelope for the Alpha reservoir. Between 2019 and 2020, nine wells were stimulated that specifically targeted the Alpha reservoir, with continuous improvement in fracturing design and geomechanics properties with each well. After fracturing, the 30-day oil recovery was superior, higher than previous fractured wells, reaching more than 255 BFPD on average. The successful development of the Alpha reservoir with hydraulic fracturing led to further milestones to maximize oil recovery in XYZ field.


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