scholarly journals The Productivity Model of Horizontal Well Considering Acidification Effect in Anisotropic Reservoirs

2020 ◽  
Vol 08 (01) ◽  
pp. 19-32
Author(s):  
Enhui Sun ◽  
Wei Yang ◽  
Qin Peng ◽  
Peng Meng ◽  
Songru Mu
2007 ◽  
Vol 10 (01) ◽  
pp. 66-76 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nasser Saqer Al-Mohannadi ◽  
Erdal Ozkan ◽  
Hossein Kazemi

Summary This paper presents a discussion of the pressure-transient responses of horizontal wells in anticlinal structures and curved and undulating wells in slab reservoirs. It confirms that, in the absence of a gas cap, conventional horizontal-well models may be used to approximate the flow characteristics of the systems in which the trajectory of the well does not conform to the curvature of the producing structure. If a gas cap is present, however, the unconformity of the well trajectory and producing layer manifests itself, especially on derivative characteristics when the gas saturation increases around the well. In general, the most significant deviations from the conventional horizontal-well behavior are observed during the buildup periods following long drawdowns. In these cases, the pressure-transient analysis is complicated and requires detailed numerical modeling of the well trajectory and reservoir geometry in the vertical plane. Introduction Conventional horizontal-well pressure-transient models assume that the top and bottom boundaries of the reservoir are horizontal planes; that is, the producing stratum is a slab, and the well is straight and parallel to the slab boundaries. Wells, however, may be drilled horizontally in anticlines and domes, or they may be curved or undulating in a horizontal slab reservoir. In the literature, several reservoir shapes have been considered in the context of horizontal wells: infinite slab (Clonts and Ramey 1986; Ozkan et al. 1989; Goode and Thambynayagam 1987; Rosa and Carvalho 1989; Kuchuk et al. 1990, 1991; Ozkan and Raghavan 1990a), cylinder (Ozkan and Raghavan 1991a, 1991b), rectangular parallelepiped (Ozkan and Raghavan 1991a, 1991b; Daviau et al. 1988; Odeh and Babu 1990), and vertical no-flow boundary at an arbitrary orientation (Azar-Nejad et al. 1996a). The common feature of these reservoir models is the assumption that the top and bottom boundaries are horizontal planes. Despite the fact that the conditions at the top and bottom boundaries strongly influence the pressure-transient characteristics of horizontal wells (Clonts and Ramey 1986; Ozkan et al. 1989; Goode and Thambynayagam 1987; Ozkan 2001), the effect of the curvature of these boundaries, as in the case of anticlines and domes, has not been discussed in the literature. Similar to the curvature of the top and bottom boundaries, the curvature or undulations of horizontally oriented wells (referred to as horizontal wells in this paper) have not attracted much attention in the pressure-transient-analysis literature. Two studies have addressed this issue specifically. Azar-Nejad et al. (1996b) considered a curved well that was a quarter of a circle (from vertical to horizontal) in a slab reservoir. They showed that especially in anisotropic reservoirs, the pressure-transient response of the curved well could not be approximated by that of a straight horizontal well of equal drilled length. This study did not address the issue of effective well length and the effect of the aspect ratio (the ratio of the distance from the well to the closest boundary and thickness of the formation). Goktas and Ertekin (2003) discussed another common problem for horizontal wells—undulations. Their study indicated that when the vertical window of undulations becomes comparable to the formation thickness, undulations might influence the characteristics of pressure-transient responses. For practical windows of undulations that commonly result from standard drilling practices, however, the pressure-transient responses could be closely approximated by that of a straight horizontal well. This conclusion was different from that of Azar-Nejad et al. (1996b). It also must be noted that Goktas and Ertekin (2003) used the straight distance between the tips of the undulating well in the comparisons with straight horizontal wells, as opposed to the total drilled length used by Azar-Nejad et al. (1996b).


2013 ◽  
Vol 734-737 ◽  
pp. 1468-1471
Author(s):  
Cheng Lin Zhang

In order to visually reflect the characteristics of flowing tracks of horizontal linear well pattern in anisotropic reservoirs, By means of the source-sink theory, Newmans product method and potential superposition principle, the transient flow pressure distribution equation of horizontal well pattern is obtained, the calculation method of seepage field streamline is presented, and the distribution law for streamline is studied. It is shown that the streamline of horizontal linear well pattern is sensitive to the reservoir anisotropic and horizontal well length. In the pattern of well, there is a reasonable well spacing and row spacing under a given degree of anisotropy, which can maximize the effect of displacement and the productivity of horizontal well. The drainage area of production well will increase with the increasing of horizontal well length, which can improve the productivity of horizontal well. The streamline plots generated by this method can provide a scientific basis for the design of horizontal development well pattern, analysis of remain oil and optimization of injection strategy in anisotropic reservoirs.


2012 ◽  
Vol 134 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Junlai Wu ◽  
Yuetian Liu ◽  
Haining Yang

As a highly efficient production method, multibranch horizontal well is widely used in the development of low permeability reservoirs, naturally fracture reservoirs, heavy oil reservoirs, shallow layer reservoirs, and multilayer reservoirs, because it can significantly improve the productivity of a single well, inhibit edge or bottom water coning, and enhance oil recovery. This paper presents a new productivity equation for multibranch horizontal well in 3D anisotropic reservoirs. By applying coordinate transformation, a 3D anisotropic reservoir is transformed into an equivalent isotropic reservoir with considering wellbore deformation and vertical radial flow. An analytical solution of multibranch horizontal well productivity in 3D anisotropic reservoirs is obtained by using pseudo-3D solving method and similar flow replaces theory. The results show that branch number n, branch length (l), and permeability anisotropy degree (β3) are the three main factors that have big effects on the production rate of multibranch horizontal well.


Author(s):  
B.N. Starovoytova ◽  
◽  
S.V. Golovin ◽  
E.A. Kavunnikova ◽  
E.V. Shel ◽  
...  

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