Practical Well Test Design To Evaluate Hydraulic Fractures In Low Permeability Wells

1985 ◽  
Author(s):  
A.D. Laird ◽  
L. Mattar
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vil Syrtlanov ◽  
Yury Golovatskiy ◽  
Konstantin Chistikov ◽  
Dmitriy Bormashov

Abstract This work presents the approaches used for the optimal placement and determination of parameters of hydraulic fractures in horizontal and multilateral wells in a low-permeability reservoir using various methods, including 3D modeling. The results of the production rate of a multilateral dualwellbore well are analyzed after the actual hydraulic fracturing performed on the basis of calculations. The advantages and disadvantages of modeling methods are evaluated, recommendations are given to improve the reliability of calculations for models with hydraulic fracturing (HF)/ multistage hydraulic fracturing (MHF).


SPE Journal ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 19 (03) ◽  
pp. 443-462 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sahar Ghannadi ◽  
Mazda Irani ◽  
Rick Chalaturnyk

Summary Inductive methods, such as electromagnetic steam-assisted gravity drainage (EM-SAGD), have been identified as technically and economically feasible recovery methods for shallow oil-sands reservoirs with overburdens of more than 30 m (Koolman et al. 2008). However, in EM-SAGD projects, the caprock overlying oil-sands reservoirs is also electromagnetically heated along with the bitumen reservoir. Because permeability is low in Alberta thermal-project caprock formations (i.e., the Clearwater shale formation in the Athabasca deposit and the Colorado shale formation in the Cold Lake deposit), the pore pressure resulting from the thermal expansion of pore fluids may not be balanced with the fluid loss caused by flow and the fluid-volume changes resulting from pore dilation. In extreme cases, the water boils, and the pore pressure increases dramatically as a result of the phase change in the water, which causes profound effective-stress reduction. After this condition is established, pore pressure increases can lead to shear failure of the caprock, the creation of microcracks and hydraulic fractures, and subsequent caprock integrity failure. It is typically believed that low-permeability caprocks impede the transmission of pore pressure from the reservoir, making them more resistant to shear failure (Collins 2005, 2007). In cases of induced thermal pressurization, low-permeability caprocks are not always more resistant. In this study, analytical solutions are obtained for temperature and pore-pressure rises caused by the constant EM heating rate of the caprock. These analytical solutions show that pore-pressure increases from EM heating depend on the permeability and compressibility of the caprock formation. For stiff or low-compressibility media, thermal pressurization can cause fluid pressures to approach hydrostatic pressure, and shear strength to approach zero for low-cohesive-strength units of the caprock (units of the caprock with high silt and sand percentage) and sections of the caprock with pre-existing fractures with no cohesion.


2001 ◽  
Vol 38 (2) ◽  
pp. 316-327 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ron CK Wong ◽  
Marolo C Alfaro

This paper presents a field study on hydraulic fracturing for in situ remediation of contaminated ground. Sand-propped hydraulic fractures were placed from vertical and horizontal wells at a test facility. Field excavations were conducted to expose the fractures and inspect their distribution and geometry. Fractures that were mapped by field excavation were found to be near horizontal, implying that the soil formation is overconsolidated. It was also observed that the sand "proppant" was thicker at locations where the soil layers were relatively weak or contained weak fissures. Electrical resistivity tomography (ERT) was also conducted in an attempt to map the fractures. There was no indication that fractures were being mapped by this geophysical technique. Fracture mapping based on tiltmeter data analyses conformed closely with the actual fracture placement in the vertical well but did not properly predict the actual fracture placement in the horizontal well.Key words: hydraulic fracturing, field test, low-permeability soil, electrical resistivity tomography, tiltmeters, horizontal well, vertical well.


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