scholarly journals The Influence of the Characteristics of the Gas Reservoirs Perforation-Entering on the Well Production Capabilities

Author(s):  
R. М. Kondrat ◽  
L. І. Khaidarova

The main complications in the production of residual gas from depleted gas reservoirs are characterized. The deterioration of the formation pay zone in the depleted reservoirs occurs mainly due to the accumulation of liquid and particles and due to possible deformation of the rocks. One of the methods to reduce the effect of the for-mation bottom-hole zone contamination on the productive characteristics of wells is to create perforation tunnels in the bottomhole zone that can pass through the contaminated zone and improve the hydrodynamic connection of the gas-bearing reservoir with the well. The author studies the effect of the number and the size of perforation tun-nels (depending on the permeability of the reservoir at constant wellhead pressure) on the gas-well flow rate. The research results are presented in the form of graphical dependence of the ratio between the flow rate of the well with perforation channels and a hydrodynamically perfect well q/q0 on determining factors, as well as in the form of graphic relationships among individual determining factors. Using the research results, it is found that the ra-tional value of the diameter of the perforation channels should be at least 0,03 m, the channel lengths should not be shorter than 0,292-0,307 m and the number of channels per meter of the revealed reservoir thickness should be not less than 17-19 depending on the permeability of the formation. The number of perforation tunnels and their length de-crease with the growth of reservoir permeability according to the exponential law.

Author(s):  
R. М. Kondrat ◽  
О. R. Kondrat ◽  
L. І. Khaidarova ◽  
N. М. Hedzyk

The development of gas deposits at the final stage is usually complicated by watering production wells. With the advent of water in the formation product, the gas production rate decreases due to the decrease in the gas-saturated thickness of the reservoirs and the increase in pressure loss during movement of the liquid-gas mixture in the wellbore and flow lines as compared to the movement of gas only. Well operation is gradually becoming unstable, periodic with the subsequent cessation of natural flowing. The methods of operation of flooded wells are characterized. The use of the gas-lift method for the operation of flooded gas wells in depleted gas fields is justified. The effect of tubing diameter, wellhead pressure and water factor on the parameters of gas-lift operation of flooded wells is investigated. The research is carried out using the improved technique proposed by the authors and the PipeSim program for hypothetical (simulated) well conditions. The studies performed are presented in the form of graphical dependences of the production rate of reservoir gas, the minimum required gas production rate for the liquid to be taken from the bottom of the well to the surface, lift gas flow rate and bottomhole pressure on wellhead pressure, diameter of tubing and water factor. The research results indicate a significant coincidence of the values ​​of the calculated parameters of the gas-lift operation of the watered well according to the proposed methods and the PipeSim program. Using the research results, it is possible to select the optimal diameter of the tubing string and evaluate the value of formation gas flow rate and gas-lift flow rates for various values ​​of water factor and wellhead pressure.


1998 ◽  
pp. 358-360

2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jinghua Liu ◽  
Mingjing Lu ◽  
Guanglong Sheng

Based on the distribution of complex fractures after volume fracturing in unconventional reservoirs, the fractal theory is used to describe the distribution of volume fracture network in unconventional reservoirs. The method for calculating the fractal parameters of the fracture network is given. The box dimension method is used to analyze a fracturing core, and the fractal dimension is calculated. The fractal index of fracture network in fracturing vertical wells are also firstly calculated by introducing an analysis method. On this basis, the conventional dual-media model and the fractal dual-media model are compared, and the distribution of reservoir permeability and porosity are analyzed. The results show that the fractal porosity/permeability can be used to describe the reservoir physical properties more accurately. At the same time, the flow rate calculating by conventional dual-media model and the fractal dual-media model were calculated and compared. The comparative analysis found that the flow rate calculated by the conventional dual-media model was relatively high in the early stage, but the flow rate was not much different in the later stage. The research results provide certain guiding significance for the description of fracture network of volume fracturing vertical well in unconventional reservoirs.


2014 ◽  
Vol 962-965 ◽  
pp. 570-573
Author(s):  
Jian Yan ◽  
Xiao Bing Liang ◽  
Qian Wu ◽  
Qing Guo

Because of the gas slippage, the testing methods of stress sensitivity for gas reservoir should be different from that for oil reservoir. This text adopts the method that imposing back pressure on the outlet of testing core to weaken the gas slippage effect and tests the stress sensitivity of low permeability gas reservoirs, then analyzes the influence of permeability and water saturation on stress sensitivity. The results show that: low permeable and water-bearing gas reservoirs have strong stress sensitivity; the testing permeability has the power function relationship with net stress, compared to the exponential function, the fitting correlation coefficient is larger and more suited to the actual; the lower the permeability is and the higher water saturation is, the stronger the stress sensitivity is. The production of gas well is affected when considering the stress sensitivity, so the pressure dropping rate should be reasonable when low permeable gas reservoirs are developed. The results provide theoretical references for analyzing the well production and numerical simulation.


2021 ◽  
Vol 73 (07) ◽  
pp. 57-57
Author(s):  
Leonard Kalfayan

As unconventional oil and gas fields mature, operators and service providers are looking toward, and collaborating on, creative and alternative methods for enhancing production from existing wells, especially in the absence of, or at least the reduction of, new well activity. While oil and gas price environments remain uncertain, recent price-improvement trends are supporting greater field testing and implementation of innovative applications, albeit with caution and with cost savings in mind. Not only is cost-effectiveness a requirement, but cost-reducing applications and solutions can be, too. Of particular interest are applications addressing challenging well-production needs such as reducing or eliminating liquid loading in gas wells; restimulating existing, underperforming wells, including as an alternative to new well drilling and completion; and remediating water blocking and condensate buildup, both of which can impair production from gas wells severely. The three papers featured this month represent a variety of applications relevant to these particular well-production needs. The first paper presents a technology and method for liquid removal to improve gas production and reserves recovery in unconventional, liquid-rich reservoirs using subsurface wet-gas compression. Liquid loading, a recurring issue downhole, can severely reduce gas production and be costly to remediate repeatedly, which can be required. This paper discusses the full technology application process and the supportive results of the first field trial conducted in an unconventional shale gas well. The second paper discusses the application of the fishbone stimulation system and technique in a tight carbonate oil-bearing formation. Fishbone stimulation has been around for several years now, but its best applications and potential have not necessarily been fully understood in the well-stimulation community. This paper summarizes a successful pilot application resulting in a multifold increase in oil-production rate and walks the reader through the details of the pilot candidate selection, completion design, operational challenges, and lessons learned. The third paper introduces and proposes a chemical treatment to alleviate phase trapping in tight carbonate gas reservoirs. Phase trapping can be in the form of water blocking or increasing condensate buildup from near the wellbore and extending deeper into the formation over time. Both can reduce relative permeability to gas severely. Water blocks can be a one-time occurrence from drilling, completion, workover, or stimulation operations and can often be treated effectively with solvent plus proper additive solutions. Similar treatments for condensate banking in gas wells, however, can provide only temporary alleviation, if they are even effective. This paper proposes a technique for longer-term remediation of phase trapping in tight carbonate gas reservoirs using a unique, slowly reactive fluid system. Recommended additional reading at OnePetro: www.onepetro.org. SPE 200345 - Insights Into Field Application of Enhanced-Oil-Recovery Techniques From Modeling of Tight Reservoirs With Complex High-Density Fracture Network by Geng Niu, CGG, et al. SPE 201413 - Diagnostic Fracture Injection Test Analysis and Simulation: A Utica Shale Field Study by Jeffery Hildebrand, The University of Texas at Austin, et al.


2015 ◽  
Vol 15 (10) ◽  
pp. 2201-2208 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Mucciarelli ◽  
F. Donda ◽  
G. Valensise

Abstract. While scientists are paying increasing attention to the seismicity potentially induced by hydrocarbon exploitation, so far, little is known about the reverse problem, i.e. the impact of active faulting and earthquakes on hydrocarbon reservoirs. The 20 and 29 May 2012 earthquakes in Emilia, northern Italy (Mw 6.1 and 6.0), raised concerns among the public for being possibly human-induced, but also shed light on the possible use of gas wells as a marker of the seismogenic potential of an active fold and thrust belt. We compared the location, depth and production history of 455 gas wells drilled along the Ferrara-Romagna arc, a large hydrocarbon reserve in the southeastern Po Plain (northern Italy), with the location of the inferred surface projection of the causative faults of the 2012 Emilia earthquakes and of two pre-instrumental damaging earthquakes. We found that these earthquake sources fall within a cluster of sterile wells, surrounded by productive wells at a few kilometres' distance. Since the geology of the productive and sterile areas is quite similar, we suggest that past earthquakes caused the loss of all natural gas from the potential reservoirs lying above their causative faults. To validate our hypothesis we performed two different statistical tests (binomial and Monte Carlo) on the relative distribution of productive and sterile wells, with respect to seismogenic faults. Our findings have important practical implications: (1) they may allow major seismogenic sources to be singled out within large active thrust systems; (2) they suggest that reservoirs hosted in smaller anticlines are more likely to be intact; and (3) they also suggest that in order to minimize the hazard of triggering significant earthquakes, all new gas storage facilities should use exploited reservoirs rather than sterile hydrocarbon traps or aquifers.


2012 ◽  
Vol 52 (1) ◽  
pp. 587 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hassan Bahrami ◽  
Vineeth Jayan ◽  
Reza Rezaee ◽  
Dr Mofazzal Hossain

Welltest interpretation requires the diagnosis of reservoir flow regimes to determine basic reservoir characteristics. In hydraulically fractured tight gas reservoirs, the reservoir flow regimes may not clearly be revealed on diagnostic plots of transient pressure and its derivative due to extensive wellbore storage effect, fracture characteristics, heterogeneity, and complexity of reservoir. Thus, the use of conventional welltest analysis in interpreting the limited acquired data may fail to provide reliable results, causing erroneous outcomes. To overcome such issues, the second derivative of transient pressure may help eliminate a number of uncertainties associated with welltest analysis and provide a better estimate of the reservoir dynamic parameters. This paper describes a new approach regarding welltest interpretation for hydraulically fractured tight gas reservoirs—using the second derivative of transient pressure. Reservoir simulations are run for several cases of non-fractured and hydraulically fractured wells to generate different type curves of pressure second derivative, and for use in welltest analysis. A field example from a Western Australian hydraulically fractured tight gas welltest analysis is shown, in which the radial flow regime could not be identified using standard pressure build-up diagnostic plots; therefore, it was not possible to have a reliable estimate of reservoir permeability. The proposed second derivative of pressure approach was used to predict the radial flow regime trend based on the generated type curves by reservoir simulation, to estimate the reservoir permeability and skin factor. Using this analysis approach, the permeability derived from the welltest was in good agreement with the average core permeability in the well, thus confirming the methodology’s reliability.


2019 ◽  
Vol 141 (11) ◽  
Author(s):  
Qianhua Xiao ◽  
Feifei Fang ◽  
Zhiyuan Wang ◽  
Bocai Jiang ◽  
Yingzhong Yuan

The water invasion property and water drive gas displacement efficiency of water drive gas reservoirs are studied under different displacement pressure gradients by using nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) online detection technology to better guide the scientific exploration of these reservoirs. The breakthrough pressures of the water seal and water lock are also analyzed. The results show that low-permeability gas reservoir water bodies pass through large pores preferentially and then pass through holes and small pores. The remaining gas is mainly distributed in holes and small pores. In contrast, high-permeability gas reservoir water bodies pass through large pores and holes preferentially, and the remaining gas is mainly distributed in large pores and small pores. As the permeability increases, the water drive gas displacement efficiency decreases. As the displacement pressure gradient increases, the displacement efficiency initially increases and then decreases. The breakthrough pressures of the water seal and water lock are highly affected by the permeability. Large permeability results in easy water breakthrough. Variations in the water invasion and water drive gas displacement efficiency are consistent with the variations of the breakthrough pressure and accurately reflect the properties of water drive gas reservoirs.


1989 ◽  
Vol 257 (6) ◽  
pp. H2006-H2016
Author(s):  
J. H. Linehan ◽  
T. A. Bronikowski ◽  
D. A. Rickaby ◽  
C. A. Dawson

The present study was carried out to begin to evaluate the saturable kinetics of the hydrolysis of a synthetic substrate, benzoyl-phenylalanyl-alanyl-proline (BPAP), for angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE), by the pulmonary endothelium of the dog using a multiple indicator dilution method. In the experiments, isolated dog lung lobes were perfused with a salt solution containing 5% bovine serum albumin. Boluses containing [3H]BPAP, and various amounts of unlabeled BPAP were injected into the lobar artery, and timed samples of venous effluent were collected. The samples were analyzed to determine the fractional hydrolysis of the injected BPAP. The BPAP hydrolysis on passage through the lungs exhibited the saturable behavior and the relative insensitivity to changing flow rate previously described. Since we have described previously that BPAP behaves as if it exists in two forms, one of which is virtually unhydrolyzable on a single pass through the lungs, a model was formulated to include the influence of the unhydrolyzable form, as well as the saturable hydrolysis of the hydrolyzable form, on the fractional hydrolysis of the injected BPAP. This model provides a new method for estimating the kinetic parameters of BPAP hydrolysis by pulmonary endothelial ACE, and it explains the observation that the fractional BPAP hydrolysis does not vary with flow rate and transit time to the extent predicted by previous models.


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