Numerical Simulation of Shale Gas Development Based on Complex Fracture Network Growth

Author(s):  
D. Ye ◽  
C. Yin ◽  
Y. Li ◽  
S. Wang ◽  
G. Qin ◽  
...  
2014 ◽  
Author(s):  
D.. Ye ◽  
C.. Yin ◽  
Y.. Li ◽  
S.. Wang ◽  
G.. Qin ◽  
...  

Abstract Micro-seismic result has shown that compared to conventional reservoir, more complex fracture network will be generated in shale gas reservoirs after hydraulic fracturing stimulations, which provides key channels for shale gas to flow in economic rate. It is vitally important to recognize complex fracture network and model such complex system to better understand gas develop process, optimize hydraulic fracturing design, and determine development plans of shale gas reservoirs. Our proposed model enable realistic modeling of complex fracture network growth even with some uncertainty (SPE 157411), but it is possible to represent large-scale fracture network distribution in reservoir modeling and numerical simulation of shale gas development. In this paper, we used this proposed model to generate hydraulic fracture network distribution in shale formation, taking into account interaction between hydraulic fracture and actual large-scale natural fractures. Integrating hydraulic fracture network results and natural fractures in non-stimulated area, highly constrained unstructured gridding and a connection list are constructed, using the Discrete Fracturing Modeling (DFM) method. This model can effectively predict production performance. With real-world well data, the simulation system calibration is done, and the simulated well production performance has good agreement with real-world producing data. Using this simulation system, effective stimulated reservoir volume (ESRV) is also predicted. The proposed approach is capable of modeling complex fracture network propagation and predicting well producing rate, if information data on multi-scale pre-existing natural fracture is available. This approach provide one opportunity to predict well production performance and effective stimulated reservoir volume (ESRV), which is also significant for shale gas development plan.


Lithosphere ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 (Special 1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Haibo Wang ◽  
Tong Zhou ◽  
Fengxia Li

Abstract Shale gas reservoirs have gradually become the main source for oil and gas production. The automatic optimization technology of complex fracture network in fractured horizontal wells is the key technology to realize the efficient development of shale gas reservoirs. In this paper, based on the flow model of shale gas reservoirs, the porosity/permeability of the matrix system and natural fracture system is characterized. The fracture network morphology is finely characterized by the fracture network expansion calculation method, and the flow model was proposed and solved. On this basis, the influence of matrix permeability, matrix porosity, fracture permeability, fracture porosity, and fracture length on the production of shale gas reservoirs is studied. The optimal design of fracture length and fracture location was carried, and the automatic optimization method of complex fracture network parameters based on simultaneous perturbation stochastic approximation (SPSA) was proposed. The method was applied in a shale gas reservoir, and the results showed that the proposed automatic optimization method of the complex fracture network in shale gas reservoirs can automatically optimize the parameters such as fracture location and fracture length and obtain the optimal fracture network distribution matching with geological conditions.


Author(s):  
Yingzhong Yuan ◽  
Wende Yan ◽  
Fengbo Chen ◽  
Jiqiang Li ◽  
Qianhua Xiao ◽  
...  

AbstractComplex fracture systems including natural fractures and hydraulic fractures exist in shale gas reservoir with fractured horizontal well development. The flow of shale gas is a multi-scale flow process from microscopic nanometer pores to macroscopic large fractures. Due to the complexity of seepage mechanism and fracture parameters, it is difficult to realize fine numerical simulation for fractured horizontal wells in shale gas reservoirs. Mechanisms of adsorption–desorption on the surface of shale pores, slippage and Knudsen diffusion in the nanometer pores, Darcy and non-Darcy seepage in the matrix block and fractures are considered comprehensively in this paper. Through fine description of the complex fracture systems after horizontal well fracturing in shale gas reservoir, the problems of conventional corner point grids which are inflexible, directional, difficult to geometrically discretize arbitrarily oriented fractures are overcome. Discrete fracture network model based on unstructured perpendicular bisection grids is built in the numerical simulation. The results indicate that the discrete fracture network model can accurately describe fracture parameters including length, azimuth and density, and that the influences of fracture parameters on development effect of fractured horizontal well can be finely simulated. Cumulative production rate of shale gas is positively related to fracture half-length, fracture segments and fracture conductivity. When total fracture length is constant, fracturing effect is better if single fracture half-length or penetration ratio is relatively large and fracturing segments are moderate. Research results provide theoretical support for optimal design of fractured horizontal well in shale gas reservoir.


SPE Journal ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 22 (06) ◽  
pp. 1808-1833 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ruiyue Yang ◽  
Zhongwei Huang ◽  
Gensheng Li ◽  
Wei Yu ◽  
Kamy Sepehrnoori ◽  
...  

Summary Two-phase flow is generally significant in the hydraulic-fracturing design of a shale-gas reservoir, especially during the flowback period. Investigating the gas- and water-production data is important to evaluate stimulation effectiveness. We develop a semianalytical model for multifractured horizontal wells by incorporating the two-phase flow in both shale matrix and fracture domains. The complex-fracture network, including both primary/hydraulic fractures and secondary/natural fractures, is modeled explicitly as discretized segments. The node-analysis approach is used to discretize the networks into a number of fracture segments and connected nodes, depending on the complexity of the fracture system. The two-phase flow is incorporated by iteratively correcting the relative permeability to gas/water for each fracture segment and capillary pressure at each node with the fracture depletion. The accuracy of the proposed model is confirmed by the numerical model. Subsequently, the early-time gas- and water-production performance is analyzed by use of various fracture geometries and network configurations. The model was also used to history match an actual multistage hydraulically fractured horizontal well in the Marcellus Shale during the flowback period. The research findings have shed light on the factors that substantially influence the gas- and water-production behavior during the flowback period. We also investigate the effects of fracture-network geometries and complexities on the gas/water-ratio (GWR) diagnostic plots. The results depict that the GWR behavior on the diagnostic plots is highly dependent on fracture-network geometry, configuration, and connectivity, which could assist in deriving the critical fracture properties affecting the production performance. This work extends the semianalytical approach previously proposed for modeling single-phase to two-phase flowback problems in unconventional reservoirs with various fracture-network geometries. The method is easier to set up and is less data-intensive than use of a numerical reservoir simulator, and is capable of providing a straightforward and flexible way to model complex-nonplanar-fracture networks in a multiphase-flow environment.


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