scholarly journals A New Pseudo Steady-State Constant for a Vertical Well with Finite-Conductivity Fracture

Processes ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 6 (7) ◽  
pp. 93 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yudong Cui ◽  
Bin Lu ◽  
Mingtao Wu ◽  
Wanjing Luo

The Pseudo Steady-State (PSS) constant bDpss is defined as the difference between the dimensionless wellbore pressure and dimensionless average pressure of a reservoir with a PSS flow regime. As an important parameter, bDpss has been widely used for decline curve analysis with Type Curves. For a well with a finite-conductivity fracture, bDpss is independent of time and is a function of the penetration ratio of facture and fracture conductivity. In this study, we develop a new semi-analytical solution for bDpss calculations using the PSS function of a circular reservoir. Based on the semi-analytical solution, a new conductivity-influence function (CIF) representing the additional pressure drop caused by the effect of fracture conductivity is presented. A normalized conductivity-influence function (NCIF) is also developed to calculate the CIF. Finally, a new approximate solution is proposed to obtain the bDpss value. This approximate solution is a fast, accurate, and time-saving calculation.

1981 ◽  
Vol 21 (03) ◽  
pp. 390-400 ◽  
Author(s):  
K.H. Guppy ◽  
Heber Cinco-Ley ◽  
Henry J. Ramey

Abstract In many low-permeability gas reservoirs, producing a well at constant rate is very difficult or, in many cases, impossible. Constant-pressure production is much easier to attain and more realistic in practice. This is seen when production occurs into a constant-pressure separator or during the reservoir depletion phase, when the rate-decline period occurs. Geothermal reservoirs, which produce fluids that drive backpressure turbines, and open-well production both incorporate the constant-pressure behavior. For finite-conductivity vertically fractured systems, solutions for the constant-pressure case have been presented in the literature. In many high-flow-rate wells, however, these solutions may not be useful since high velocities are attained in the fracture, which results in non-Darcy effects within the fracture. In this study, the effects of non-Darcy flow within the fracture are investigated. Unlike the constant-rate case, it was found that the fracture conductivity does not have a constant apparent conductivity but rather an apparent conductivity that varies with time. Semianalytical solutions as well as graphical solutions in the form of type curves are presented to illustrate this effect. An example is presented for analyzing rate data by using both solutions for Darcy and non-Darcy flow within the fracture. This example relies on good reservoir permeability from prefracture data to predict the non-Darcy effect accurately. Introduction To fully analyze the effects of constant-bottomhole-pressure production of hydraulically fractured wells, it is necessary that we understand the pressure behavior of finite-conductivity fracture systems producing at constant rate as well as the effects of non-Darcy flow on gas flow in porous media. Probably one of the most significant contributions in the transient pressure analysis theory for fractured wells was made by Gringarten et al.1,2 In the 1974 paper,2 general solutions were made for infinite-conductivity fractures. Cinco et al.3 found a more general solution for the case of finite-conductivity fractures and further extended this analysis in 1978 to present a graphical technique to estimate fracture conductivity.4 For the case of constant pressure at the wellbore, solutions were presented in graphical form by Agarwal et al.5 In his paper, a graph of log (1/qD) vs. log (tDxf) can be used to determine the conductivity of the fracture by using type-curve matching. Although such a contribution is of great interest, unique solutions are difficult to obtain. More recently, Guppy et al.6 showed that the Agarwal et al. solutions may be in error and presented new type curves for the solution to the constant-pressure case assuming Darcy flow in the fracture. That paper developed analytical solutions which can be applied directly to field data so as to calculate the fracture permeability-width (kfbf) product.


SPE Journal ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 22 (04) ◽  
pp. 1103-1111 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hongliang Sun ◽  
Zhengfu Ning ◽  
Xiantong Yang ◽  
Yunhu Lu ◽  
Yan Jin ◽  
...  

Summary This work presents an analytical solution for the pseudosteady-state (PSS) flow in a hydraulically fractured stratified reservoir with finite fracture conductivity in the presence of interlayer crossflows. Specifically, a three-layer configuration is considered, with the midlayer hydraulically fractured and sandwiched between two adjacent layers feeding the midlayer by crossflows. The circular drainage area is approximated as elliptical, allowing the problem to be solved in elliptical coordinates analytically. Explicit expressions in the physical-variable space for the dimensionless productivity index (PI) and the wellbore-pressure drawdown for the PSS flow of such a hydraulically fractured system with interlayer crossflows are derived for the first time. Compared with the case without interlayer crossflows, the dimensionless PI is reduced because of additional pressure drawdown occurring in the sandwiching layers; on the other hand, the time rate of increase of the pressure drawdown at the wellbore is also decreased because of the addition of the producible fluid stored in the sandwiching layers. This slower time rate of increase of the wellbore-pressure drawdown prolongs the PSS production period, which can lead to a larger accumulative production. It is also shown that when the layers have comparable thickness, fracturing the higher-permeability layer provides the best performance because the wellbore-pressure drawdown experiences the slowest time rate of increase during the PSS flow period. The analytical solution can also be used for fracture-design optimization as well as production-decline analysis for fractured stratified systems.


SPE Journal ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 21 (06) ◽  
pp. 2208-2219 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yunhu Lu ◽  
Kang Ping Chen

Summary Productivity-index (PI) optimization by means of optimal fracture design for a vertical well in a circular reservoir is a canonical problem in performance optimization for hydraulically fractured wells. Recent availability of the exact analytical solution for the pseudosteady-state (PSS) flow of a vertically fractured well with finite fracture conductivity in an elliptical drainage area provides an opportunity to re-examine this fundamental problem in a more-rigorous manner. This paper first quantitatively estimates the shape-approximation-induced error in the PI when the exact solution for an elliptical drainage area is applied to a circular drainage area. It is shown that the shape-approximation-induced error in the PSS-flow PI is less than 1% for fracture penetration ratios up to 53%, and this error decreases significantly as the fracture conductivity is increased. PI optimization is then performed with the highly accurate analytical solution for this range of the penetration ratios. The results show that the optimal fracture conductivity increases linearly from 1.39 to 1.71 when the proppant number is increased from 0.0001 to 0.6. PI for the steady-state flow and a popular ad hoc PSS-flow PI are compared with the analytical PSS-flow PI. It is found that both the steady-state and the ad hoc PIs deviate significantly from the analytical PSS-flow PI. In particular, the optimal fracture conductivity for the steady-state flow and the ad hoc PIs decreases with the proppant number, opposite to the trend observed for the optimal fracture conductivity for the PSS flow. It is suggested that the ad hoc PI should be abandoned in favor of the more-rigorous analytical PSS-flow solution.


Geofluids ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 ◽  
pp. 1-21
Author(s):  
Hongfei Ma ◽  
Wenqi Zhao ◽  
Meng Sun ◽  
Xiaodong Wang ◽  
Lun Zhao ◽  
...  

The volume fracturing technique has been widely used to improve the productivity of ultralow-permeability reservoirs. This paper presents a new semianalytical model to simulate the pressure transient and production behaviour of finite conductivity vertical fractured wells with stimulated reservoir volume (SRV) in heterogeneous reservoirs. The model is based on the five-linear flow model, the Warren-Root model, and fracture conductivity influence function. The model is validated by comparing its results with a numerical model. One novelty of this model is its consideration of three different kinds of production prediction models. Constant rate, constant pressure, and compound working systems are taken into account. This paper illustrates the effects of the SRV size and shape, mobility ratio, initial flow rate, limiting wellbore pressure, and hydraulic fracture parameters under different working systems. Results show that the SRV and parameters of fractures have a significant influence on long-term well performance. Moreover, the initial rate can extend the constant rate period by 418%, and limiting wellbore pressure can effectively improve the cumulative recovery rate by 23%. Therefore, this model can predict long-term wells’ behaviour and provide practical guiding significance for hydraulic fracturing design.


Energies ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (12) ◽  
pp. 2449 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guoqiang Xing ◽  
Mingxian Wang ◽  
Shuhong Wu ◽  
Hua Li ◽  
Jiangyan Dong ◽  
...  

Many oil wells in closed reservoirs continue to produce in the pseudo-steady-state flow regime for a long time. The principal objective of this work is to investigate the characteristics of two key pseudo-steady-state parameters—pseudo-steady-state constant (bDpss) and pseudo-skin factor (S)—for a well penetrated by a fracture with an azimuth angle (θ) in an anisotropic reservoir. Firstly, a general analytical pressure solution for a finite-conductivity fracture with or without an azimuth angle in an anisotropic rectangular reservoir was developed by using the point-source function and spatial integral method, and two typical cases were employed to verify this solution. Secondly, with the asymptotic analysis method, the expressions of pseudo-steady-state constant and pseudo-skin factor were obtained on the basis of their definitions, and the effects of permeability anisotropy, fracture azimuth angle, fracture conductivity and reservoir shape on them were discussed in detail. Results show that all the bDpss-θ and S-θ curves are symmetric around the vertical line, θ = 90° and form a hump or groove shape. The optimized fracture direction in an anisotropic reservoir is perpendicular to the principal permeability axis. Furthermore, a new formula to calculate pseudo-skin factor was successfully proposed based on these two parameters’ relationship. Finally, as an application of pseudo-steady-state constant, a set of Blasingame format rate decline curves for the proposed model were established.


2012 ◽  
Vol 134 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Wang Lei ◽  
Wang Xiao-dong ◽  
Ding Xu-min ◽  
Zhang Li ◽  
Li Chen

Rate decline analysis is a significant method for predicting well performance. Previous studies on rate decline analysis of fractured wells are all based on homogeneous reservoirs rather than homogeneous ones considering fracture face damage. In this article, a well model intercepted by a finite conductivity vertical fracture with fracture face damage is established to investigate how face damage factor affects the productivity of fractured well. Calculative results show that in transient flow, dimensionless rate decreases with the increase of fracture face damage and in pseudo steady-state flow, all curves under different face damage factors coincide with each other. Then, a new pseudo steady-state analytic formula and its validation are presented. Finally, new Blasingame type curves are established. It is shown that the existence of fracture damage would decrease the rate when time is relatively small, so fracture damage is an essential factor that we should consider for type curves analysis. Compared with traditional type curves, new type curves could solve the problem of both variable rate and variable pressure drop for fractured wells with fracture face damage factor. A gas reservoir example is performed to demonstrate the methodology of new type curves analysis and its validation for calculating important formation parameters.


Cells ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (4) ◽  
pp. 811
Author(s):  
Camille Boisson ◽  
Minke A. E. Rab ◽  
Elie Nader ◽  
Céline Renoux ◽  
Celeste Kanne ◽  
...  

(1) Background: The aim of the present study was to compare oxygen gradient ektacytometry parameters between sickle cell patients of different genotypes (SS, SC, and S/β+) or under different treatments (hydroxyurea or chronic red blood cell exchange). (2) Methods: Oxygen gradient ektacytometry was performed in 167 adults and children at steady state. In addition, five SS patients had oxygenscan measurements at steady state and during an acute complication requiring hospitalization. (3) Results: Red blood cell (RBC) deformability upon deoxygenation (EImin) and in normoxia (EImax) was increased, and the susceptibility of RBC to sickle upon deoxygenation was decreased in SC patients when compared to untreated SS patients older than 5 years old. SS patients under chronic red blood cell exchange had higher EImin and EImax and lower susceptibility of RBC to sickle upon deoxygenation compared to untreated SS patients, SS patients younger than 5 years old, and hydroxyurea-treated SS and SC patients. The susceptibility of RBC to sickle upon deoxygenation was increased in the five SS patients during acute complication compared to steady state, although the difference between steady state and acute complication was variable from one patient to another. (4) Conclusions: The present study demonstrates that oxygen gradient ektacytometry parameters are affected by sickle cell disease (SCD) genotype and treatment.


1963 ◽  
Vol 18 (4) ◽  
pp. 531-538
Author(s):  
Dallas T. Hayes

Localized solutions of the BETHE—GOLDSTONE equation for two nucleons in nuclear matter are examined as a function of the center-of-mass momentum (c. m. m.) of the two nucleons. The equation depends upon the c. m. m. as parameter due to the dependence upon the c. m. m. of the projection operator appearing in the equation. An analytical solution of the equation is obtained for a non-local but separable potential, whereby a numerical solution is also obtained. An approximate solution for small c. m. m. is calculated for a square-well potential. In the range of the approximation the two analytical solutions agree exactly.


1979 ◽  
Vol 11 (01) ◽  
pp. 240-255 ◽  
Author(s):  
Per Hokstad

The asymptotic behaviour of the M/G/2 queue is studied. The difference-differential equations for the joint distribution of the number of customers present and of the remaining holding times for services in progress were obtained in Hokstad (1978a) (for M/G/m). In the present paper it is found that the general solution of these equations involves an arbitrary function. In order to decide which of the possible solutions is the answer to the queueing problem one has to consider the singularities of the Laplace transforms involved. When the service time has a rational Laplace transform, a method of obtaining the queue length distribution is outlined. For a couple of examples the explicit form of the generating function of the queue length is obtained.


2003 ◽  
Vol 174 (5) ◽  
pp. 441-448 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jean-Christophe Maréchal ◽  
Pierre Perrochet

Abstract The present paper addresses two major problems encountered during tunnel drilling and related to the hydraulic interaction with surrounding groundwater bodies. The first one is the prediction of water discharge into the tunnel, as a function of the geometric and hydrogeological data. The second problem is related to the assessment of the draining effects on surface waters (springs, lakes, wetlands). Surface monitoring campaigns are costly and evaluating their duration is a sensitive question. Both problems are tightly related and depend on aquifer dynamics. It is shown that in a geological context with steeply dipping structures, nearly vertical, inducing series of aquifers and aquicludes such as in the Alps, the drainage of the aquifer by the tunnel can be modelled by the analytical solution of Jacob and Lohman [1952] for artesian wells. First developed for horizontal, confined unsteady flow towards a vertical well with constant drawdown, it is adapted here to a horizontal tunnel by a rotation of π/2. The main difference between this solution and more classical Theis’ solutions is that a constant drawdown condition replaces the constant discharge rate condition. Hence, a relation is obtained for the time-dependent discharge rate Q(t) detected at the tunnel after drilling, as a function of aquifer transmissivity (T), storage coefficient (S), initial drawdown (so) and tunnel radius (ro). This analytical solution is compared to a finite-elements model simulating a draining tunnel in a simplified 2D vertical cross-section. The comparisons show that the decay of the tunnel discharge can be divided into two periods. During the first period, radial drawdown develops around the tunnel and there is excellent match between analytical and numerical results. Tunnel discharge results from the decompression of rock and water (storage effects) as a response to the sudden initial drawdown at the tunnel location. During the second period, the drawdown cone reaches the aquifer limits (lateral and upper) and numerical discharge rates decrease faster than analytical rates because of hydraulic heads decline at the aquifer limits. In the Alps, such trends were observed for the discharge rates into the Simplon and Mont-Blanc tunnels, and the analytical solution of Jacob and Lohman [1952] was applied to the first discharge period to evaluate aquifer transmissivity and storage coefficients. As indicated by the simulations, and corroborated by field observations, the analytical solution is only valid during a first period after tunnel opening, the duration of which scaling with the inverse of the aquifer diffusivity (T/S). In the second part of the paper, dimensionless type-curves are presented to enable rapid evaluation of the time where a given drawdown is observed at a given distance from the tunnel. Accounting for tunnel geometry (radius and depth) and aquifer parametres (T and S), these curves could for instance help in practice to determine when surface waters would start to be affected by a draining tunnel underneath. Although neglecting the boundary effects discussed in the first part of the paper, these type-curves demonstrate the great inertia of mountain aquifers, and could be used to adjust the duration of surface monitoring campaigns according to the specific tunnel/aquifer settings.


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