An Integrated Reservoir Model for Sand Production and Foamy Oil Flow During Cold Heavy Oil Production

Author(s):  
Yarlong Wang ◽  
Carl C. Chen ◽  
Maurice B. Dusseault
SPE Journal ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 19 (02) ◽  
pp. 260-269 ◽  
Author(s):  
C.M.. M. Istchenko ◽  
I.D.. D. Gates

Summary Cold heavy-oil production with sand (CHOPS) is a nonthermal heavy-oil-recovery technique used primarily in the heavy-oil belt in eastern Alberta, Canada, and western Saskatchewan, Canada. Under CHOPS, typical recovery factors are between 5 and 15%, with the average being less than 10%. This leaves approximately 90% of the oil in the ground after the process becomes uneconomic, making CHOPS wells and fields prime candidates for enhanced-oil-recovery (EOR) follow-up process field optimization. CHOPS wells show an enhancement in production rates compared with conventional primary production, which is explained by the formation of high-permeability channels known as wormholes. The formation of wormholes has been shown to exist in laboratory experiments as well as field experiments conducted with fluorescein dyes. The major mechanisms for CHOPS production are foamy oil flow, sand failure (or fluidization), and sand production. Foamy oil flow aids in mobilizing sand and reservoir fluids, leading to the formation of wormholes. Foamy oil behavior cannot be effectively modeled by conventional pressure/volume/temperature (PVT) behavior. Here, a new well/wormhole model for CHOPS is proposed. The well/wormhole model uses a kinetic model to deal with foamy oil behavior, and sand is mobilized because of sand failure determined by a minimum fluidization velocity. The individual wormholes are modeled in a simulator as an extension of a production well. The model grows the well/wormhole dynamically within the reservoir according to a growth criterion set by the fluidization velocity of sand along the existing well/wormhole. If the growth criterion is satisfied, the wormhole extends in the appropriate direction; otherwise, production continues from the existing well/wormhole until the criterion is met. The proposed model incorporates sand production and reproduces the general production behavior of a typical CHOPS well.


2001 ◽  
Vol 4 (05) ◽  
pp. 366-374 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yarlong Wang ◽  
Carl C. Chen

Summary A coupled reservoir-geomechanics model is developed to simulate the enhanced production phenomena in both heavy-oil reservoirs (northwestern Canada) and conventional oil reservoirs (i.e., North Sea). The model is developed and implemented numerically by fully coupling an extended geomechanics model to a two-phase reservoir flow model. Both the enhanced production and the ranges of the enhanced zone are calculated, and the effects of solid production on oil recovery are analyzed. Field data for solid production and enhanced oil production, collected from about 40 wells in the Frog Lake area (Lloydminster, Canada), are used to validate the model for the cumulative sand and oil production. Our studies indicate that the enhanced oil production is mainly contributed (1) by the reservoir porosity and permeability improvement after a large amount of sand is produced, (2) by higher mobility of the fluid caused by the movement of the sand particles, and (3) by foamy oil flow. A relative permeability reduction after a certain period of production may result in a pressure-gradient increase, which can promote further sand flow. This process can further improve the absolute permeability and the overall sand/fluid slurry production. Our numerical results simulate the fact that sand production can reach up to 40% of total fluid production at the early production period and decline to a minimum level after the peak, generating a high-mobility zone with a negative skin near the wellbore. Such an improvement reduces the near-well pressure gradient so that the sanding potential is weakened, and it permits an easier path for the viscous oil to flow into the well. Our studies also suggest that the residual formation cement is a key factor for controlling the cumulative sand production, a crucial factor that determines the success of a cold production operation and improved well completion. Introduction Field results from many heavy-oil reservoirs in northwestern Canada, such as Lindbergh and Frog Lake in the Lloydminster fields, suggest that primary recovery is governed mainly by the processes of sand production and foamy-oil flow.1–3 To manage production in such reservoirs, the challenge we face is optimizing production so that sand production is under control. For decades, industries have developed various highly effective tools for sand control. In practice, however, sand control often results in reduced oil flow or no production at all, particularly in heavy-oil reservoirs. For example, it has been observed that an average oil production of only 0.0 to 1.5 m3/d can be achieved in a well in which no sand production is allowed, while 7 to 15 m3/d oil may be produced with sand production.4 A significant improvement in production also has been reported by allowing a certain amount of sand produced before gravel packing in the high-rate production well in conventional reservoirs.5 It seems that sanding corresponds to a high oil production in these reservoirs, as sand production either increases the reservoir mobility or allows the development of highly permeable zones such as channels (wormholes).1 Encouraging sand production to enhance oil production, on the other hand, increases oil production costs owing to environmental problems. Consequently, neither trying to eliminate the sand production completely nor letting sand be produced freely, we attempt to develop a quantified model linking sand rate and reservoir enhancement so that we can forecast the economic outcome of such an operation. The investigation of sand production has been extensive, but it has been limited primarily to the areas of incipience of sand production and control. Sand arching and production initiation from a cavity simulating a perforating tunnel were studied, and a critical flow rate before sanding was found for single-phase steady-state flow.6 Such a study was extended to gas reservoirs, in which the gas density is a function of pressure,7 and to those formations subject to nonhydrostatic loading.8,9 Studying the enhanced production and the cumulative sand production, a series of simplified models for massive sand production have been developed.10,11 Similar models based on a coupled classic geomechanics model were also proposed thereafter.12,13 Because these aforementioned sand-production models are somewhat restricted by the fact that they are simplified by analytical methods, and in reality reservoir formations are much more complex (i.e. nonlinear behaviors), a numerical model coupling a multiphase transient fluid flow to elastoplastic geomechanical deformation is thus developed in this article; its purpose is to simulate these major nonlinear effects. According to the proposed model, a corresponding plastic yielding zone (or a disturbed zone) propagates into reservoir formation because of the transient fluid pressure diffusion, and the corresponding effective stresses change near a wellbore. A possible absolute permeability change inside the yielding zone is also considered, as dilatant deformation developed may enhance the permeability in the plastic zone. As a primary unknown, saturation is assumed to change with the induced pore-pressure change. The relative permeability is updated by the saturation, which in turn changes the response of the pore pressure and the skeleton deformation. A continuum mechanics approach is used in our calculation. Rather than characterizing each random wormhole proposed,1,4,5 we impose a homogeneous medium with an average permeability to make the numerical solutions manageable. The wormholes or geomechanical dilatation zone can be represented by a higher-permeability region in the plastic yielding zone owing to porosity enhancement,1 and solid flow is considered as a continuous moving phase along the transient fluid flow. Alternatively, a sand erosion model was introduced, and the geomechanics coupling to a single-phase flow was presented previously.14,15


2010 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brij B. Maini ◽  
Bashir Busahmin ◽  
Kambiz Vafai

2018 ◽  
Vol 141 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Xinqian Lu ◽  
Xiang Zhou ◽  
Jianxin Luo ◽  
Fanhua Zeng ◽  
Xiaolong Peng

In our previous study, a series of experiments had been conducted by applying different pressure depletion rates in a 1 m long sand-pack. In this study, numerical simulation models are built to simulate the lab tests, for both gas/oil production data and pressure distribution along the sand-pack in heavy oil/methane system. Two different simulation models are used: (1) equilibrium black oil model with two sets of gas/oil relative permeability curves; (2) a four-component nonequilibrium kinetic model. Good matching results on production data are obtained by applying black oil model. However, this black oil model cannot be used to match pressure distribution along the sand-pack. This result suggests the description of foamy oil behavior by applying equilibrium black oil model is incomplete. For better characterization, a four-component nonequilibrium kinetic model is developed aiming to match production data and pressure distribution simultaneously. Two reactions are applied in the simulation to capture gas bubbles status. Good matching results for production data and pressure distribution are simultaneously obtained by considering low gas relative permeability and kinetic reactions. Simulation studies indicate that higher pressure drop rate would cause stronger foamy oil flow, but the exceed pressure drop rate could shorten lifetime of foamy oil flow. This work is the first study to match production data and pressure distribution and provides a methodology to characterize foamy oil flow behavior in porous media for a heavy oil/methane system.


2012 ◽  
Vol 524-527 ◽  
pp. 1866-1871
Author(s):  
Rong Rong Wang ◽  
Jian Hou ◽  
Xian Song Zhang ◽  
Xiao Dong Kang

Cold Heavy Oil Production with Sand (CHOPS) is an emerging technology. Field practice and laboratory experiment research show the main mechanism of CHOPS are stable foam oil flow producing the internal driving force and the mass sand inflow forming wormhole network leading to the permeability enhancement. In this paper, we summarize the mathematical models describing the mechanism of CHOPS: foam oil model, wormhole model and comprehensive model. The foam oil models mainly describe the formation, properties and flow of foam oil while the wormhole models describe the wormhole growth, the flow in wormhole and sand production predicting. Finally, we discuss the emphasis and directions of research in the future.


SPE Journal ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 24 (03) ◽  
pp. 988-1001 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhaoqi Fan ◽  
Daoyong Yang ◽  
Xiaoli Li

Summary Cold heavy-oil production with sand (CHOPS) has been one of the major recovery processes for developing unconsolidated heavy-oil reservoirs by taking advantage of sand production and foamy-oil flow. However, effective characterization and accurate prediction of sand production is still a challenge. In this work, a pressure-gradient-based sand-failure criterion is proposed for quantifying sand production and characterizing wormhole propagation. The proposed sand-failure criterion was initially developed at the pore-scale level, while a pseudointeraction force between two neighboring sand grains was proposed to implicitly represent the potential contributions of cementation and geomechanical stresses to the fluidization of sand. The criterion was then extended to a grid scale within a wormhole because the pressure gradient is constant at either a pore scale or a grid scale. With the bottomhole pressure being an input constraint, the proposed sand-failure criterion was validated with good agreement by reproducing production profiles and wormhole propagation from laboratory experiments and a CHOPS well in the Cold Lake Oil Sands Area. This was a confirmation that the proposed sand-failure criterion can be used to characterize the sand production in a CHOPS process.


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