Real-Time 3D Ultra Deep Directional Electromagnetic LWD Inversions: An Innovative Approach for Geosteering and Geomapping Water Slumping Movement Around Sub-Seismic Fault, Onshore Abu Dhabi

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maniesh Singh ◽  
Parmanand Dhermeshwar Thakur ◽  
Mariam N. M. Al Baloushi ◽  
Haitham Ali Al Saadi ◽  
Maisoon M. Al Mansoori ◽  
...  

Abstract An Ultra-Deep Directional Electromagnetic LWD Resistivity (UDDE) tool was deployed in a mature Lower Cretaceous carbonate reservoir to map injection water movement. These thick carbonate reservoirs experience injection water preferentially travelling laterally at the top of the reservoir. The water held above oil by negative capillary forces slumps quickly, leading to increasing water cut, eventually killing the natural lift horizontal producing well. Real time 3D and 1D inversions provided important accurate mapping of the non-uniform water fronts and reservoir boundaries, providing insights into reservoir architecture and water movement. The candidate well is located in an area of significant uncertainty regarding fluid distribution and structural elements like sub-seismic faults etc. Pre-well 1D inversion results indicated that the water slumping front away from wellbore can be mapped within a vertical radius of 60-100 ft TVD. However, 1D inversion is not accurate where steeply dipping or discontinuous formations exist due to the presence of faults and is expected to impact well placement, mapping water fronts / formation boundaries and long-term oil recovery. Therefore in the real time, full 3D and 1D inversions of the Ultra-Deep EM data were run to provide high quality reservoir imaging in this complex geometrical setting and deliver improved reservoir fluid distribution and structure mapping. The pre-well inversion modeling optimized the frequency and transmitter-receiver spacing of the UDDE tool. The bottom hole assembly (BHA) configuration also included conventional LWD tools such as Neutron-Density, propagation Resistivity and Gamma Ray. Multiple 3D inversion datasets were processed in real-time using different depths of inversion ranging from 50 ft up to 120 ft depth. The 3D inversion results during the real-time drilling operation detected the non-uniform waterfront boundaries and water slumping up to 80 ft TVD above the wellbore using a slimhole (4¾″) tool. An interpreted sub-seismic down-thrown fault was mapped which controlled the non-uniform slumping fluid distribution, causing the water front to approach closest to the wellbore in this location. This suggests that the fault zone is open and provides a degree of increased permeability around the plane of the fault. The real-time 3D inversion, 1D shallow and 1D deep inversion results showed comparable structural imaging despite being inverted independently of each other. These results permitted updates to the static / dynamic reservoir models and an optimization of the completion design, to delay the water influx and thereby sustain oil production for a longer period of time. Field wide implementation of the UDDE tool and its advanced technology with improved 1D and 3D inversion results will enhance the quality of realtime geosteering, mapping and updating of reservoir models which have challenging water slumping fronts and structural variations. This will enable improvment in well locations, their spacing and finally allowing the proactive design of smart completions for enhanced oil production and improved recovery factors.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Parmanand Thakur ◽  
Maniesh Singh ◽  
Saif Al Arfi ◽  
Mohamed Al Gohary ◽  
Mariam Al Baloushi ◽  
...  

Abstract Abu Dhabi's thick Lower Cretaceous carbonate reservoirs experience injection water overriding oil. The water is held above the oil by negative capillary pressure until a horizontal borehole placed at the reservoir base creates a small pressure drawdown. This causes the water above to slump unpredictably towards the horizontal producer, increasing water cut and eventually killing the well under natural lift after a moderate amount of oil production. Water slumping is difficult to forecast using the reservoir model. This paper showcases the successful deployment of an ultra-deep electromagnetic directional resistivity (UDDE) instrument to map injection water movement. The UDDE instrument selected for the 6-in. horizontal hole was a 4¾-in. OD multifrequency tool with configurable transmitter-to-receiver spacings. Pre-well modeling using hybrid deterministic 1D resistivity inversions was conducted for the candidate well to investigate the resistivity tool's ability to identify water slumping at distances 60-100 ft TVD above the planned well trajectory. The inversions aided the selection of optimum operating frequencies, transmitter-to-receiver spacings and BHA configuration. During operations, multiple 1D and 3D inversions were run in the cloud real time during drilling to provide simultaneous deep and shallow resistivity inversions for early identification of the water fronts and structural changes, and near wellbore changes to geosteer and maximize reservoir contact in the complex layered reservoir. Real-time 1D and 3D deep inversion results indicated the resistivity tool had a depth of reliable waterflood detection of more than 80 ft. While drilling, an interpreted subseismic fault was encountered which appeared to influence how water moved in the reservoir. Water slumped closest through the sub-seismic fault towards the well path. Past the fault, the waterfront receded upwards away from the well bore. The data proved useful for updating the static model, providing a snapshot of water flood areas, reservoir tops and faults with throw, helping to optimize the completion design to defer water production and enhance oil production. Furthermore, it captured resistivities of target, underlying and overlying reservoirs to integrate with other geology and geophysics data for better reservoir and fluid characterization near the drilled area. The positive results of this case study encouraged field-wide implementation of this technology for waterflood mapping. The information provided allowed petroleum engineers to adjust the completion design to delay water breakthrough. This proactive approach to waterflood field management improves cumulative oil production and recovery factors according to mechanistic models which have been built and tested.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gaurav Modi ◽  
Manu Ujjwal ◽  
Srungeer Simha

Abstract Short Term Injection Re-distribution (STIR) is a python based real-time WaterFlood optimization technique for brownfield assets that uses advanced data analytics. The objective of this technique is to generate recommendations for injection water re-distribution to maximize oil production at the facility level. Even though this is a data driven technique, it is tightly bounded by Petroleum Engineering principles such as material balance etc. The workflow integrates and analyse short term data (last 3-6 months) at reservoir, wells and facility level. STIR workflow is divided into three modules: Injector-producer connectivity Injector efficiency Injection water optimization First module uses four major data types to estimate the connectivity between each injector-producer pair in the reservoir: Producers data (pressure, WC, GOR, salinity) Faults presence Subsurface distance Perforation similarity – layers and kh Second module uses connectivity and watercut data to establish the injector efficiency. Higher efficiency injectors contribute most to production while poor efficiency injectors contribute to water recycling. Third module has a mathematical optimizer to maximize the oil production by re-distributing the injection water amongst injectors while honoring the constraints at each node (well, facility etc.) of the production system. The STIR workflow has been applied to 6 reservoirs across different assets and an annual increase of 3-7% in oil production is predicted. Each recommendation is verified using an independent source of data and hence, the generated recommendations align very well with the reservoir understanding. The benefits of this technique can be seen in 3-6 months of implementation in terms of increased oil production and better support (pressure increase) to low watercut producers. The inherent flexibility in the workflow allows for easy replication in any Waterflooded Reservoir and works best when the injector well count in the reservoir is relatively high. Geological features are well represented in the workflow which is one of the unique functionalities of this technique. This method also generates producers bean-up and injector stimulation candidates opportunities. This low cost (no CAPEX) technique offers the advantages of conventional petroleum engineering techniques and Data driven approach. This technique provides a great alternative for WaterFlood management in brownfield where performing a reliable conventional analysis is challenging or at times impossible. STIR can be implemented in a reservoir from scratch in 3-6 weeks timeframe.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jorge Gomes ◽  
Jane Mason ◽  
Graham Edmonstone

This paper highlights the application of downhole fiber optic (FO) distributed temperature sensing (DTS) measurements for well and reservoir management applications: 1) Wellbore water injectivity profiling. 2) Mapping of injection water movement in an underlying reservoir. The U.A.E. field in question is an elongated anticline containing several stacked carbonate oil bearing reservoirs (Figure 1). Reservoir A, where two DTS monitored, peripheral horizontal water injectors (Y-1 and Y-2) were drilled, is less developed and tighter than the immediately underlying, more prolific Reservoir B with 40 years of oil production and water injection history. Reservoirs A and B are of Lower Cretaceous age, limestone fabrics made up of several 4th order cycles, subdivided by several thin intra dense, 2-5 ft thick stylolitic intervals within the reservoir zones. Between Reservoir A and Reservoir B there is a dense limestone interval (30-50 ft), referred as dense layer in the Figure 1 well sections.


1970 ◽  
Vol 5 (1.) ◽  
Author(s):  
Şahin Yildirim ◽  
Menderes Kalkat

In recent years, bicycle races, along with the crest of the high technology continues to increase. Because of this increased races, performance of bicycles, in both biological and mechanical terms, is extraordinarily important and efficient. In terms of the ratio of cargo weight a bicycle can carry to total weight, it is also a most efficient means of cargo transportation. In spite of advanced technology, there are still some problems on bicycles during working conditions and road roughness such as on the mountain from tire and mechanical parts. In this investigation, a extraordinary designed with fiber-carbon body and light bicycle is tested on mountain road conditionswith prescribed trajectory on the mountain for different elevation, speed, hearth rate, bike cadence and average temperature. The real time measured parameters are predicted with proposed two types of neural networks for approaching real time neural network predictors. The results of the proposed neural network have shown that neural predictor has superior performance to adopt the real time bicycle performance.


2019 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 356-362
Author(s):  
Jennifer W. Means ◽  
Casey McCaffrey

Purpose The use of real-time recording technology for clinical instruction allows student clinicians to more easily collect data, self-reflect, and move toward independence as supervisors continue to provide continuation of supportive methods. This article discusses how the use of high-definition real-time recording, Bluetooth technology, and embedded annotation may enhance the supervisory process. It also reports results of graduate students' perception of the benefits and satisfaction with the types of technology used. Method Survey data were collected from graduate students about their use and perceived benefits of advanced technology to support supervision during their 1st clinical experience. Results Survey results indicate that students found the use of their video recordings useful for self-evaluation, data collection, and therapy preparation. The students also perceived an increase in self-confidence through the use of the Bluetooth headsets as their supervisors could provide guidance and encouragement without interrupting the flow of their therapy sessions by entering the room to redirect them. Conclusions The use of video recording technology can provide opportunities for students to review: videos of prospective clients they will be treating, their treatment videos for self-assessment purposes, and for additional data collection. Bluetooth technology provides immediate communication between the clinical educator and the student. Students reported that the result of that communication can improve their self-confidence, perceived performance, and subsequent shift toward independence.


2014 ◽  
Author(s):  
Irving Biederman ◽  
Ori Amir
Keyword(s):  

2015 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 35-41
Author(s):  
Rivan Risdaryanto ◽  
Houtman P. Siregar ◽  
Dedy Loebis

The real-time system is now used on many fields, such as telecommunication, military, information system, evenmedical to get information quickly, on time and accurate. Needless to say, a real-time system will always considerthe performance time. In our application, we define the time target/deadline, so that the system should execute thewhole tasks under predefined deadline. However, if the system failed to finish the tasks, it will lead to fatal failure.In other words, if the system cannot be executed on time, it will affect the subsequent tasks. In this paper, wepropose a real-time system for sending data to find effectiveness and efficiency. Sending data process will beconstructed in MATLAB and sending data process has a time target as when data will send.


Author(s):  
Jiyang Yu ◽  
Dan Huang ◽  
Siyang Zhao ◽  
Nan Pei ◽  
Huixia Cheng ◽  
...  

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