Novel Completion Designs in Horizontal Well with Transverse Hydraulic Fractures for Enhanced Recovery in Unconventional or Tight Reservoirs

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shubham Mishra ◽  
Christopher Fredd ◽  
Dean Wilberg ◽  
Umur Yanbollu

Abstract Low recovery, 2 to 15%, in unconventional plays (including tight reservoirs and source rocks) has long been recognized as a business deterrent. The industry applies enhanced oil recovery (EOR) techniques, along with hydraulic fractures in tight/unconventional plays, to improve the recovery. To maximize matrix sweep, the fractures are aligned in a face-to-face assembly. Such an arrangement can be achieved using vertical or longitudinal hydraulic fracture on horizontal wells, but these, generally, do not provide as effective reservoir contact (hydraulic fracture surface area) as horizontal wells with multistage transverse hydraulic fractures. The multistage transverse hydraulic fracture, however, comes at the costs of conformance issues with early water breakthrough from short-circuiting and inability to achieve fracture face-to-fracture face alignment of the injection and production fractures. The vast majority of wells drilled in unconventional plays are in the transverse configuration; hence, there is a need for an optimal solution for transverse fractures combined with improved oil recovery (IOR)/EOR approaches. In this work, we introduce the multistage enhanced recovery (MS-ER) techniques that enable face-to-face alignment for optimal enhanced hydrocarbon recovery/IOR/EOR in horizontal wells with multistage transverse fractures, thereby enabling optimal recovery and mitigating the key risk of fracture short-circuiting.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ivan Krasnov ◽  
Oleg Butorin ◽  
Igor Sabanchin ◽  
Vasiliy Kim ◽  
Sergey Zimin ◽  
...  

Abstract With the development of drilling and well completion technologies, multi-staged hydraulic fracturing (MSF) in horizontal wells has established itself as one of the most effective methods for stimulating production in fields with low permeability properties. In Eastern Siberia, this technology is at the pilot project stage. For example, at the Bolshetirskoye field, these works are being carried out to enhance the productivity of horizontal wells by increasing the connectivity of productive layers in a low- and medium- permeable porous-cavernous reservoir. However, different challenges like high permeability heterogeneity and the presence of H2S corrosive gases setting a bar higher for the requirement of the well construction design and well monitoring to achieve the maximum oil recovery factor. At the same time, well and reservoir surveillance of different parameters, which may impact on the efficiency of multi-stage hydraulic fracturing and oil contribution from each hydraulic fracture, remains a challenging and urgent task today. This article discusses the experience of using tracer technology for well monitoring with multi-stage hydraulic fracturing to obtain information on the productivity of each hydraulic fracture separately.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shubham Mishra ◽  
Vinil Reddy

Abstract Unconventional resources, which are typically characterized by poor porosity and permeability are being economically developed only after the introduction of hydraulic fracturing (HF) technology, which is required to stimulate the hydrocarbon flow from these impermeable/tight reservoir rocks. Since 1960, HF has been extensively used in the industry. HF is the process of (1) injecting viscous gel fluids through the wellbore into the subterranean hydrocarbon formation, at high pressures sufficient enough to exceed tensile strength of the rock and hydraulically induce cracks/fractures (2) followed by injecting proppant-laden fluid into the open fractures and packing up the fracture with proppant pack, after the injected fluid leaks off into formation. The resultant proppant pack keeps the induced fracture propped open and thus creates a highly conductive flow path for the hydrocarbon to flow from the far-field subterranean formation into the wellbore. Most the modern wells in unconventional reservoirs are horizontal/near-horizontal wells that are completed with large multiple HF treatments across the entire length of the horizontal wellbore (lateral), to increase the reservoir contact per well. Productivity of these wells is dictated by the stimulated reservoir volume (SRV), which is dependent on the number of fractures and conductive hydraulic fracture surface area of each fracture that is propped open. Therefore, estimation of the hydraulic fracture geometry (HFG) dimensions has become very critical for any unconventional field development. Key dimensions are hydraulic fracture length, height, and orientation, which are required to assess the optimum configuration of fracturing, well completion, and reservoir management strategy to achieve maximum production. Designs can be assessed based on HFG observations, and infill well trajectories, spacing, etc. can be planned for further field development. This workflow proposes a method to estimate and model all or at least two parameters of HFG in predominantly horizontal or nearly horizontal wells by use of interwell electromagnetic recordings. The foundation of this workflow is the difference in salinity, or more precisely resistivity, of the fracturing fluid and the resident fluid (hydrocarbon or formation water). The fracturing fluid is usually significantly less resistive than the hydrocarbon that is the dominant resident fluid where fracturing is usually conducted, or less resistive than the formation water in case the HF occurs in high water saturation regions. Therefore, the resistivity contrast between the two fluids will demarcate the boundary of hydraulic fractures and thus help in precisely modeling some or all parameters of HFG. The interwell recordings can be interpreted along a 2D plane between the two wells, one of them bearing the transmitter and the other with the receiver. The interpretations along a 2D plane can be used to calibrate a 3D unstructured HF model, thereby introducing a reliable calibration input that did not exist before. There can be multiple such 2D planes as more than one well can have a receiver, and, in that case, the 3D HF model has more calibration data and is even more precise. The reason this workflow significantly improves precision in HFG estimation and modeling is that it provides the ability to demarcate only the open portion of the HF and not the entire volume where pumping fluid entered, which would include parts that closed too quickly to contribute to the production from the well. Today, the industry, by its best methods, can only see the entire rock volume that broke due to fracturing, although significant parts of that broken volume might not be contributing to the production and thus are irrelevant in the 3D models upon which important decisions such as production forecast and project economics are based.


Energies ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (22) ◽  
pp. 7482
Author(s):  
Mingxian Wang ◽  
Xiangji Dou ◽  
Ruiqing Ming ◽  
Weiqiang Li ◽  
Wenqi Zhao ◽  
...  

Refracturing treatment is an economical way to improve the productivity of poorly or damaged fractured horizontal wells in tight reservoirs. Fracture reorientation and fracture face damage may occur during refracturing treatment. At present, there is still no report on the rate decline solution for refractured horizontal wells in tight reservoirs. In this work, by taking a semi-analytical method, traditional rate decline and Blasingame-type rate decline solutions were derived for a refractured horizontal well intercepted by multiple reorientation fractures with fracture face damage in an anisotropic tight reservoir. The accuracy and reliability of the traditional rate decline solution were verified and validated by comparing it with a classic case in the literature and a numerical simulation case. The effects of fracture reorientation and fracture face damage on the rate decline were investigated in depth. These investigations demonstrate that fracture face damage is not conducive to increasing well productivity during the early flow period and there is an optimal matching relationship between the principal fracture section angle and permeability anisotropy, particularly for the reservoirs with strong permeability anisotropy. The fracture length ratio and fracture spacing have a weak effect on the production rate and cumulative production while the fracture number shows a strong influence on the rate decline. Furthermore, multifactor sensitivity analysis indicates that fracture conductivity has a more sensitive effect on well productivity than fracture face damage, implying the importance of improving fracture conductivity. Finally, a series of Blasingame-type rate decline curves were presented, and type curve fitting and parameter estimations for a field case were conducted too. This work deepens our understanding of the production performance of refractured horizontal wells, which helps to identify reorientation fracture properties and evaluate post-fracturing performance.


2014 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. T111-T127 ◽  
Author(s):  
Baishali Roy ◽  
Bruce Hart ◽  
Anastasia Mironova ◽  
Changxi Zhou ◽  
Ulrich Zimmer

We integrated several independent geophysical and geologic methods to examine the effects of stratigraphic and structural heterogeneities on the growth of hydraulic fracture networks from two horizontal wells in the Barnett Shale, Fort Worth Basin, Texas. Our data set included time-lapse 3D seismic surveys, microseismic data, wireline logs, and distributed temperature sensing (DTS) data. We first created a local stratigraphic framework using wireline logs. In our area, the lower Barnett Shale consists of siliceous mudstones (the primary reservoir) intercalated with carbonate submarine fan deposits. The latter are low porosity (i.e., nonreservoir) and, if thick enough are potential baffles to the growth of hydraulic fractures. We used stochastic inversion to define the 3D distribution of fan lobes with much better resolution than could be obtained using deterministic inversion and obtained a geologically reasonable lithology prediction. The lowest of the fan lobes partially overlies the two horizontal wells, and its limits could be defined using wireline logs, the stochastic inversion, and seismic attributes (e.g., coherence, seismic facies classification). As suggested by the distribution of microseismic events, the extent of this lobe (locally up to 80 ft/24-m-thick) had a significant impact on the growth of the hydraulic fracture networks. The DTS data showed that high production correlates to dense microseismic activity in this area. Our time-lapse seismic analyses suggested that velocity changes induced by the hydraulic injections are detectable, although (largely because of logistical problems) the data were inadequately sampled to quantitatively define these changes. Alone, none of the analyses described herein provided an adequate understanding of the subsurface. However, once integrated, our multidisciplinary work provided a coherent, if still largely qualitative, understanding of the relationships between the geology and the growth of hydraulic fracture networks and some of the geophysical and engineering methods that can be used to define those links.


1981 ◽  
Vol 21 (04) ◽  
pp. 435-443 ◽  
Author(s):  
Merle E. Hanson ◽  
Ronald J. Shaffer ◽  
Gordon D. Anderson

Abstract We are conducting a theoretical and experimental program on the hydraulic fracturing process. One primary objective of the program is to determine those reservoir properties or characteristics that can control the created fracture geometry. Theoretical models are applied to analyze some aspects of the dynamics of fracturing near material interfaces. The results of these calculations indicate that variation of material properties across a well-bonded interface can cause dynamic material response resulting from the fracturing, which could enhance propagation across the interface. Effects of friction also are analyzed theoretically; however, in the frictional calculations, the wave mechanics are ignored. These calculations show that frictional slip along the interface tends to draw a pressurized fracture toward the interface; this motion tends to reduce the chances of penetrating the material across the frictional interface.Small-scale laboratory experiments are performed to study the effects of frictional characteristics on hydraulic fracture growth across unbonded interfaces in rocks. Various lubricants and mechanical preparations of the interface surfaces are used to vary the coefficients of friction on the interface surfaces. It is found that the frictional shear stress that the interface surface can support determines whether a hydraulically driven crack will cross the interface. Experiments also are being performed to study the effects of pre-existing cracks, which perpendicularly intersect the unbonded interface, on hydraulic crack growth across the interface. It also is found that the presence of these pre-existing cracks impedes the propagation of the hydraulic fracture across the interface. The experimental results on the effects of friction on the interface and the effects of pre-existing cracks on hydraulic fracture penetration of interfaces are consistent with the predictions of the numerical model calculations. Introduction Massive hydraulic fracturing (MHF) is a primary candidate for stimulating production from the tight gas reservoirs in the U.S. Hydraulic fracturing has been widely used as a well completion technique for about 30 years. MHF is a more recent application that differs from hydraulic fracturing in that more fluid and proppant are pumped to create more extensive fractures in the reservoir. Application of MHF to increase production from the tight reservoirs has provided mixed and, in many cases, disappointing results - especially in lenticular reservoirs. For MHF to be successful in enhancing gas production from tight reservoirs, it is important that the fractures be created in productive reservoir rock with large drainage surfaces in the low-permeability material and conductive channels back to the wellbore. We are faced then with the problem of containing fractures in a given formation.Under the U.S. DOE's unconventional gas recovery program, Lawrence Livermore Natl. Laboratory is conducting a research program on the hydraulic fracture process. The general goal of this research is to determine if and to what extent reservoir parameters control the geometry of the created fractures. From theories implied and demonstrated, hydraulic fractures propagate perpendicular to the least principal stress. Hence, except for very shallow applications, the fractures will be primarily vertical, with the azimuthal orientation controlled by the in-situ stress. The vertical gradient in the horizontal stresses also could be a factor in the control of the shape or vertical extent of fractures. SPEJ P. 435^


2021 ◽  
pp. 014459872110204
Author(s):  
Wan Cheng ◽  
Chunhua Lu ◽  
Guanxiong Feng ◽  
Bo Xiao

Multistaged temporary plugging fracturing in horizontal wells is an emerging technology to promote uniform fracture propagation in tight reservoirs by injecting ball sealers to plug higher-flux perforations. The seating mechanism and transportation of ball sealers remain poorly understood. In this paper, the sensitivities of the ball sealer density, casing injection rate and perforation angle to the seating behaviors are studied. In a vertical wellbore section, a ball sealer accelerates very fast at the beginning of the dropping and reaches a stable state within a few seconds. The terminal velocity of a non-buoyant ball is greater than the fluid velocity, while the terminal velocity of a buoyant ball is less than the fluid velocity. In the horizontal wellbore section, the terminal velocity of a non-buoyant or buoyant ball is less than the fracturing fluid flowing velocity. The ball sealer density is a more critical parameter than the casing injection rate when a ball sealer diverts to a perforation hole. The casing injection rate is a more critical parameter than the ball sealer density when a ball sealer seats on a perforation hole. A buoyant ball sealer associated with a high injection rate of fracturing fluid is highly recommended to improve the seating efficiency.


2021 ◽  
pp. 014459872198899
Author(s):  
Weiyong Lu ◽  
Changchun He

Directional rupture is one of the most important and most common problems related to rock breaking. The goal of directional rock breaking can be effectively achieved via multi-hole linear co-directional hydraulic fracturing. In this paper, the XSite software was utilized to verify the experimental results of multi-hole linear co-directional hydraulic fracturing., and its basic law is studied. The results indicate that the process of multi-hole linear co-directional hydraulic fracturing can be divided into four stages: water injection boost, hydraulic fracture initiation, and the unstable and stable propagation of hydraulic fracture. The stable expansion stage lasts longer and produces more microcracks than the unstable expansion stage. Due to the existence of the borehole-sealing device, the three-dimensional hydraulic fracture first initiates and expands along the axial direction in the bare borehole section, then extends along the axial direction in the non-bare hole section and finally expands along the axial direction in the rock mass without the borehole. The network formed by hydraulic fracture in rock is not a pure plane, but rather a curved spatial surface. The curved spatial surface passes through both the centre of the borehole and the axial direction relative to the borehole. Due to the boundary effect, the curved spatial surface goes toward the plane in which the maximum principal stress occurs. The local ground stress field is changed due to the initiation and propagation of hydraulic fractures. The propagation direction of the fractures between the fracturing boreholes will be deflected. A fracture propagation pressure that is greater than the minimum principle stress and a tension field that is induced in the leading edge of the fracture end, will aid to fracture intersection; as a result, the possibility of connecting the boreholes will increase.


2021 ◽  
pp. 014459872110102
Author(s):  
Lu Weiyong ◽  
He Changchun

To better evaluate the spatial steering effect of directional perforation hydraulic fractures, evaluation indexes for the spatial steering effect are first proposed in this paper. Then, these indexes are used to quantitatively evaluate existing physical experimental results. Finally, with the help of RFPA2D-Flow software, the influence of perforation length and azimuth on the spatial steering process of hydraulic fracture are quantitatively analysed using four evaluation indexes. It is shown by the results that the spatial deflection trajectory, deflection distance, deflection angle and initiation pressure of hydraulic fractures can be used as quantitative evaluation indexes for the spatial steering effect of hydraulic fractures. The deflection paths of directional perforation hydraulic fractures are basically the same. They all gradually deflect to the maximum horizontal principal stress direction from the perforation hole and finally represent a double-wing bending fracture. The deflection distance, deflection angle and initiation pressure of hydraulic fractures increase gradually with increasing perforation azimuth, and the sensitivity of the deflection angle to the perforation azimuth of hydraulic fractures also increases. With increasing perforation length, the deflection distance of hydraulic fractures increases gradually. However, the deflection angle and initiation pressure decrease gradually, as does the sensitivity.


Energies ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (7) ◽  
pp. 1998
Author(s):  
Haishan Luo ◽  
Kishore K. Mohanty

Unlocking oil from tight reservoirs remains a challenging task, as the existence of fractures and oil-wet rock surfaces tends to make the recovery uneconomic. Injecting a gas in the form of a foam is considered a feasible technique in such reservoirs for providing conformance control and reducing gas-oil interfacial tension (IFT) that allows the injected fluids to enter the rock matrix. This paper presents a modeling strategy that aims to understand the behavior of near-miscible foam injection and to find the optimal strategy to oil recovery depending on the reservoir pressure and gas availability. Corefloods with foam injection following gas injection into a fractured rock were simulated and history matched using a compositional commercial simulator. The simulation results agreed with the experimental data with respect to both oil recovery and pressure gradient during both injection schedules. Additional simulations were carried out by increasing the foam strength and changing the injected gas composition. It was found that increasing foam strength or the proportion of ethane could boost oil production rate significantly. When injected gas gets miscible or near miscible, the foam model would face serious challenges, as gas and oil phases could not be distinguished by the simulator, while they have essentially different effects on the presence and strength of foam in terms of modeling. We provide in-depth thoughts and discussions on potential ways to improve current foam models to account for miscible and near-miscible conditions.


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