NON-ADDITIVE SKIN-FACTOR IN CASE OF A FORMATION COMPLEX DAMAGE

2019 ◽  
pp. 36-38
Author(s):  
M.V. Zaitsev ◽  
◽  
N.N. Mikhailov ◽  
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
M.M. Khasanov ◽  
◽  
K.E. Lezhnev ◽  
V.D. Pashkin ◽  
A.P. Roshchektaev ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dimitry Chuprakov ◽  
Ludmila Belyakova ◽  
Ivan Glaznev ◽  
Aleksandra Peshcherenko

Abstract We developed a high-resolution fracture productivity calculator to enable fast and accurate evaluation of hydraulic fractures modeled using a fine-scale 2D simulation of material placement. Using an example of channel fracturing treatments, we show how the productivity index, effective fracture conductivity, and skin factor are sensitive to variations in pumping schedule design and pulsing strategy. We perform fracturing simulations using an advanced high-resolution multiphysics model that includes coupled 2D hydrodynamics with geomechanics (pseudo-3D, or P3D, model), 2D transport of materials with tracking temperature exposure history, in-situ kinetics, and a hindered settling model, which includes the effect of fibers. For all simulated fracturing treatments, we accurately solve a problem of 3D planar fracture closure on heterogenous spatial distribution of solids, estimate 2D profiles of fracture width and stresses applied to proppants, and, as a result, obtain the complex and heterogenous shape of fracture conductivity with highly conductive cells owing to the presence of channels. Then, we also evaluate reservoir fluid inflows from a reservoir to fracture walls and further along a fracture to limited-size wellbore perforations. Solution of a productivity problem at the finest scale allows us to accurately evaluate key productivity characteristics: productivity index, dimensional and dimensionless effective conductivity, skin factor, and folds of increase, as well as the total production rate at any day and for any pressure drawdown in a well during well production life. We develop a workflow to understand how productivity of a fracture depends on variation of the pumping schedule and facilitate taking appropriate decisions about the best job design. The presented workflow gives insight into how new computationally efficient methods can enable fast, convenient, and accurate evaluation of the material placement design for maximum production with cost-saving channel fracturing technology.


2020 ◽  
pp. 35-39
Author(s):  
T.Sh. Salavatov ◽  
◽  
M.A. Dadash-zade ◽  
T.S. Babaeva ◽  
◽  
...  

Numerous research surveys justified that the major purpose of well stimulation is the productivity increase by means of elimination of bottomhole damages in formation and well. This process appears directly by creating a certain structure in formation. Thus, in field conditions as a stimulation method the fracturing, acid treatment of reservoirs, as well as acid treatment of cracks (acid fracturing) are generally applied. Field studies showed that due to the radial nature of the flow the pressure decrease is basically occurs near the well and in the bottomhole. The analysis justifies that any damage in this area significantly increases the pressure reduction and the effect of such damages may be presented by means of “skin-factor”. The authors present more generalized concept of “skin factor” combining the most important aspects of bottomhole zone damages of production well. These processes create additional resistance decreasing production. From our perspective, the well stimulation is the productivity increase. In this case there is scientific-practical sense to consider the stimulation as a method for “skin-effect” value reduction. The paper offers a new parameter of “generalized skin-effect” or “generalized skin-factor” showing positive results with negative values, i.e. increases performance and productivity.


Water ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
pp. 744
Author(s):  
Daniel Kahuda ◽  
Pavel Pech

This study analyzes the unsteady groundwater flow to a real well (with wellbore storage and the skin effect) that fully penetrates the confined aquifer. The well is located within an infinite system, so the effect of boundaries is not considered. The Laplace-domain solution for a partial differential equation is used to describe the unsteady radial flow to a well. The real space solution is obtained by means of the numerical inversion of the Laplace transform using the Stehfest algorithm 368. When wellbore storage and the skin effect dominate pumping test data and testing is conducted for long enough, two semilogarithmic straight lines are normally obtained. The first straight line can be identified readily as the line of the maximum slope. The correlation of the dimensionless drawdown for the intersection time of this first straight line, with the log time axis as a function of the dimensionless wellbore storage and the skin factor, is shown. This paper presents a new method for evaluating the skin factor from the early portion of a pumping test. This method can be used to evaluate the skin factor when the well-known Cooper–Jacob semilogarithmic method cannot be used due to the second straight line not being achieved in the semilogarithmic graph drawdown vs. the log time. A field example is presented to evaluate the well rehabilitation in Veselí nad Lužnicí by means of the new correlation.


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