Rate transient analysis of fractured horizontal wells

Author(s):  
R.R. Urazov ◽  
◽  
A.Ya. Davletbaev ◽  
A.I. Sinitskiy ◽  
A.Kh. Nuriev ◽  
...  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ruslan Rubikovich Urazov ◽  
Alfred Yadgarovich Davletbaev ◽  
Alexey Igorevich Sinitskiy ◽  
Ilnur Anifovich Zarafutdinov ◽  
Artur Khamitovich Nuriev ◽  
...  

Abstract This research presents a modified approach to the data interpretation of Rate Transient Analysis (RTA) in hydraulically fractured horizontal well. The results of testing of data interpretation technique taking account of the flow allocation in the borehole according to the well logging and to the injection tests outcomes while carrying out hydraulic fracturing are given. In the course of the interpretation of the field data the parameters of each fracture of hydraulic fracturing were selected with control for results of well logging (WL) by defining the fluid influx in the borehole.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jiali Zhang ◽  
Xinwei Liao ◽  
Nai Cao

Abstract This paper develops a mathematical model for rate transient analysis in multi-stage fractured horizontal wells with considering weak fluid supply. A new concept of additional skin factor is introduced in the proposed model to characterize the fluid supply. Then, the mathematical model are solved by using the perturbation transformation, point source integration method, Laplace transform, and numerical inversion, while the fracture flow equations are solved by fracture discretization and superposition principle. First, the flow regimes of multi-stage fractured horizontal wells with considering weak fluid supply are identified based on the rate transient behaviors, including wellbore storage and skin effect, bilinear flow, linear flow, pseudo-radial flow in the fractured zone, interface skin effect, pseudo-radial flow in the original zone, and boundary-dominated flow. The effect of additional interface skin makes the double logarithmic curve of production rate appear an abrupt "overlap". The results of the sensitivity study show that the abrupt "overlap" becomes more obvious with the increase of the fracture conductivity, fracture number, the stress sensitivity coefficient, especially the interface skin. Finally, the proposed mathematical model is used to perform a case study on the production data of actual tight-gas wells from the Ordos Basin. The interface skin factor, fracture half-length, fracture conductivity, and boundary radius are evaluated. Through the proposed model, the characteristics of weak fluid supply in tight gas reservoirs are fully understood.


SPE Journal ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 18 (04) ◽  
pp. 795-812 ◽  
Author(s):  
C.R.. R. Clarkson ◽  
J.D.. D. Williams-Kovacs

Summary Early fluid production and flowing pressure data gathered immediately after fracture stimulation of multifractured horizontal wells may provide an early opportunity to generate long-term forecasts in shale-gas (and other hydraulically fractured) reservoirs. These early data, which often consist of hourly (if not more frequent) monitoring of fracture/formation fluid rates, volumes, and flowing pressures, are gathered on nearly every well that is completed. Additionally, fluid compositions may be monitored to determine the extent of load fluid recovery, and chemical tracers added during stage treatments to evaluate inflow from each of the stages. There is currently debate within the industry of the usefulness of these data for determining the long-term production performance of the wells. “Rules of thumb” derived from the percentage of load-fluid recovery are often used by the industry to provide a directional indication of well performance. More-quantitative analysis of the data is rarely performed; it is likely that the multiphase-flow nature of flowback and the possibility of early data being dominated by wellbore-storage effects have deterred many analysts. In this work, the use of short-term flowback data for quantitative analysis of induced-hydraulic-fracture properties is critically evaluated. For the first time, a method for analyzing water and gas production and flowing pressures associated with the flowback of shale-gas wells, to obtain hydraulic-fracture properties, is presented. Previous attempts have focused on single-phase analysis. Examples from the Marcellus shale are analyzed. The short (less than 48 hours) flowback periods were followed by long-term pressure buildups (approximately 1 month). Gas + water production data were analyzed with analytical simulation and rate-transient analysis methods designed for analyzing multiphase coalbed-methane (CBM) data. This analogy is used because two-phase flowback is assumed to be similar to simultaneous flow of gas and water during long-term production through the fracture system of coal. One interpretation is that the early flowback data correspond to wellbore + fracture volume depletion (storage). It is assumed that fracture-storage volume is much greater than wellbore storage. This flow regime appears consistent with what is interpreted from the long-term pressure-buildup data, and from the rate-transient analysis of flowback data. Assuming further that the complex fracture network created during stimulation is confined to a region around perforation clusters in each stage, one can see that fluid-production data can be analyzed with a two-phase tank-model simulator to determine fracture permeability and drainage area, the latter being interpreted to obtain an effective (producing) fracture half-length given geometrical considerations. Total fracture half-length, derived from rate-transient analysis of online (post-cleanup) data, verifies the flowback estimates. An analytical forecasting tool that accounts for multiple sequences of post-storage linear flow, followed by late-stage boundary flow, was developed to forecast production with flowback-derived parameters, volumetric inputs, matrix permeability, completion data, and operating constraints. The preliminary forecasts are in very good agreement with online production data after several months of production. The use of flowback data to generate early production forecasts is therefore encouraging, but needs to be tested for a greater data set for this shale play and for other plays, and should not be used for reserves forecasting.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
HanYi Wang ◽  
Mukul Sharma ◽  
Harold McGowen

Abstract Market-induced production shut-downs and restarts offer us an opportunity to gather step-rate and shut-in data for pressure transient analysis (PTA) and rate transient analysis (RTA). In this study, we present a unified transient analysis (UTA) to combine PTA and RTA in a single framework. In this new approach continuous production data, step-rate data, shut-in data and re-start data can be visualized and analyzed in a single superposition plot, which can be used to estimate both Afk and infer formation pore pressure in a holistic manner by utilizing all available data. Most importantly, we show that traditional log-log and square root of time plots can lead to false interpretation of the termination of linear-flow or power-law behavior. Field cases are presented to demonstrate the superiority of the newly introduced superposition plot, along with discussion on the calibration of long-term bottom-hole pressure with short-term measurements.


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