scholarly journals Interpretation of interwell connectivity tests in a waterflood system

2021 ◽  
Vol 6 ◽  
pp. 18-36
Author(s):  
Dinh Viet Anh ◽  
Djebbar Tiab

This study is an extension of a novel technique to determine interwell connectivity in a reservoir based on fluctuations of bottom hole pressure of both injectors and producers in a waterflood system. The technique uses a constrained multivariate linear regression analysis to obtain information about permeability trends, channels, and barriers. Some of the advantages of this new technique are simplified one-step calculation of interwell connectivity coefficients, small number of data points and flexible testing plan. However, the previous study did not provide either in-depth understanding or any relationship between the interwell connectivity coefficients and other reservoir parameters. This paper presents a mathematical model for bottom hole pressure responses of injectors and producers in a waterflood system. The model is based on available solutions for fully penetrating vertical wells in a closed rectangular reservoir. It is then used to calculate interwell relative permeability, average reservoir pressure change and total reservoir pore volume using data from the interwell connectivity test described in the previous study. Reservoir compartmentalisation can be inferred from the results. Cases where producers as signal wells, injectors as response wells and shut-in wells as response wells are also presented. Summary of results for these cases are provided. Reservoir behaviours and effects of skin factors are also discussed in this study. Some of the conclusions drawn from this study are: (1) The mathematical model works well with interwell connectivity coefficients to quantify reservoir parameters; (2) The procedure provides in-depth understanding of the multi-well system with water injection in the presence of heterogeneity; (3) Injectors and producers have the same effect in terms of calculating interwell connectivity and thus, their roles can be interchanged. This study provides flexibility and understanding to the method of inferring interwell connectivity from bottom-hole pressure fluctuations. Interwell connectivity tests allow us to quantify accurately various reservoir properties in order to optimise reservoir performance. Different synthetic reservoir models were analysed including homogeneous, anisotropic reservoirs, reservoirs with high permeability channel, partially sealing fault and sealing fault. The results are presented in details in the paper. A step-by-step procedure, charts, tables, and derivations are included in the paper.

2020 ◽  
pp. 014459872096415
Author(s):  
Jianlin Guo ◽  
Fankun Meng ◽  
Ailin Jia ◽  
Shuo Dong ◽  
Haijun Yan ◽  
...  

Influenced by the complex sedimentary environment, a well always penetrates multiple layers with different properties, which leads to the difficulty of analyzing the production behavior for each layer. Therefore, in this paper, a semi-analytical model to evaluate the production performance of each layer in a stress-sensitive multilayer carbonated gas reservoir is proposed. The flow of fluids in layers composed of matrix, fractures, and vugs can be described by triple-porosity/single permeability model, and the other layers could be characterized by single porosity media. The stress-sensitive exponents for different layers are determined by laboratory experiments and curve fitting, which are considered in pseudo-pressure and pseudo-time factor. Laplace transformation, Duhamel convolution, Stehfest inversion algorithm are used to solve the proposed model. Through the comparison with the classical solution, and the matching with real bottom-hole pressure data, the accuracy of the presented model is verified. A synthetic case which has two layers, where the first one is tight and the second one is full of fractures and vugs, is utilized to study the effects of stress-sensitive exponents, skin factors, formation radius and permeability for these two layers on production performance. The results demonstrate that the initial well production is mainly derived from high permeable layer, which causes that with the rise of formation permeability and radius, and the decrease of stress-sensitive exponents and skin factors, in the early stage, the bottom-hole pressure and the second layer production rate will increase. While the first layer contributes a lot to the total production in the later period, the well bottom-hole pressure is more influenced by the variation of formation and well condition parameters at the later stage. Compared with the second layer, the scales of formation permeability and skin factor for first layer have significant impacts on production behaviors.


2013 ◽  
Vol 37 ◽  
pp. 3291-3298 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mingze Liu ◽  
Bing Bai ◽  
Xiaochun Li

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