scholarly journals FORMATION DAMAGE MECHANISMS AND NUMERICAL SIMULATION OF PERMEABILITY IMPAIRMENT IN HORIZONTAL WELLS

2021 ◽  
Vol 15 (2) ◽  
pp. 184-204
Author(s):  
Tunde Adeosun ◽  
Moruffdeen Adabanija ◽  
Folake Akinpelu

Puzzling circumstance associated with formation damage near wellbore occur frequently, resulting in permeability impairments and increased pressure losses. Potential damage phenomenon usually starts from drilling to completion via production and such mechanisms have been fully considered. Most of the existing tasks to mitigate the near oil wellbore damages involve use of empirical models, conducting experiments, frequent shut down of wells for proper well tests and pressure maintenance are highly expensive and time consuming. Permeability impairments have been simulated by modifying Darcy’s equation to optimize reservoir pressure for improved near wellbore in horizontal wells. The model, transient linear partial differential equation (TLPDE) for impaired permeability is developed and numerically resolved using finite difference method. The model was implemented by writing codes in MATLAB language and the solution obtained was validated using synthetic/ field data. The results obtained for TLPDE model indicated pressure depletion over time. This was also shown for every values of coefficient of anisotropy until 400 days when the anisotropy became insignificant approaching isotropy condition, suggesting permeability impairment. Numerical simulation proved to be effective in simulating near oil wellbore damages. This paper describes the detailed mechanisms of formation damage and provided a numerical approach to model impaired permeability in horizontal wells. This approach allowed us to study the impact of various damage mechanisms related to drilling, completion conditions and significant improvement of near oil wellbore for well performance.

Author(s):  
Zunce Wang ◽  
Yan Xu ◽  
Sen Li ◽  
Fengxia Lv ◽  
Wei Li

Based on Reynolds Stress Model (RSM), numerical simulation of flow field around Bypass Crossover Sub in the fracturing process of horizontal wells is carried out by Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) analysis. Distribution rules of axial velocity, tangential velocity and radial velocity of fluid field in calculation region are achieved. Results show that strong vortexes and reverse flow exist at the slots on Bypass Crossover Sub, which brings the impact of the fluid on the wall at certain angle. Impacting velocity and angle at different positions of the wall are studied in detail. A Laser Doppler Anemometer (LDA) is applied to examine the flow field velocity distribution. Experimental results agree well with the numerical simulation results, which prove the validity of turbulence model and computational method. Numerical simulation is carried out at different Length-Breadth ratio of slots on the Bypass Crossover Sub. Effect of the Length-Breadth ratio on the scale of vortexes, speed distributions and flow field near the wall area is discussed. All of these will provide some reference on structural optimization and the analysis of erosion.


2005 ◽  
Vol 127 (3) ◽  
pp. 257-263 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. Ding ◽  
G. Renard

It is well recognized that near-wellbore formation damage can dramatically reduce well productivities, especially for open hole completed horizontal wells. The economic impact of poor productivity of these wells has pushed toward significant efforts in recent years to study laboratory testing techniques and numerical modeling methods for predicting and controlling drilling-induced formation damage. This paper presents an integrated approach, combining a near-wellbore modeling with laboratory experiments for data acquisition as input for the model, to evaluate the performance of oil and gas wells after drilling-induced formation damage.


2007 ◽  
Vol 10 (04) ◽  
pp. 348-358 ◽  
Author(s):  
P.V. Suryanarayana ◽  
Zhan Wu ◽  
John Ramalho ◽  
Ronald Earl Himes

Summary We present a novel approach that combines dynamic reservoir simulations and special core tests to model the extent of invasive damage and its impact on flowback during production. A radially adaptive 3D microsimulator is used to estimate the extent and impact of filtrate invasion on near-wellbore saturation and reservoir pressure. Time-varying reservoir exposure is used to simulate the acts of drilling, tripping, completions, and workovers. Extremely fine, core-scale grids are used to capture saturation and pressure in the invasion zone. Special core tests using a specially designed core holder are conducted on the subject reservoir core. Test results are interpreted to obtain an estimate of endpoint relative permeabilities, dynamic mudcake effect on filtrate loss, and impact of solids invasion on return permeability. The saturation and pressure profiles from this model are then used as initial conditions in a sector-scale simulator to model flowback effects. Absolute-permeability damage is modeled using the core-test results as an incremental and hyperbolically recovering effect during flowback simulations. A near-wellbore fine-grid overlay is used to capture the near-wellbore effects from the microsimulator results. Several sensitivities, including initial reservoir pressure, degree of overbalance and drawdown, heterogeneity, anisotropy, and mudcake effect, are examined. Equivalent skin factors that vary with time and depth are developed to enable comparison with full-field simulations. A horizontal-well example is used to illustrate the results of the study. Results illustrate the stark and often underappreciated effects of invasive damage on flowback and, therefore, on production performance. The methods described in this work can be used in reservoir-specific studies to quantify formation damage and aid in the selection of mud types, drilling techniques, and remediation methods required to improve performance. It is hoped that this work bridges the typically empirical damage-characterization methods and dynamic reservoir simulations. Introduction Conventional (or overbalanced) drilling and workover operations invariably result in invasion of filtrate and solids present in the drilling and workover fluids. In most cases, the damage caused is limited to a near-wellbore region and can reduce productivity because of degradation in effective permeability. Permeability degradation from filtrate and solids invasion could be caused by a variety of damage mechanisms, such as blockage of pore throats by solids, reduction in relative permeability to hydrocarbons because of a change in saturation, phase blockage, and clay swelling in the formation. Damage can be harsher in horizontal wells and mature reservoirs because of greater overbalance and longer duration of exposure to drilling fluids. During drilling, mudcake buildup can reduce the invasion depth. The buildup and effectiveness of mudcake depend greatly upon the formulation of the mud, the type and heterogeneity of the formation being drilled, the maturity of the reservoir, and the degree of overbalance during drilling or workovers. In horizontal wells, mudcake effectiveness is compromised further because of repeated movement of the pipe against the mudcake, leading to several events of removal and re-laying of the mudcake. The effects of damage also can be alleviated by the use of remedial stimulation techniques such as acidizing and hydraulic fracturing. These may not always produce the desired results, particularly in horizontal wells in highly heterogeneous formations. Moreover, implementing some of these techniques in horizontal wells is difficult. Given the potential for reduced productivity from invasion, characterization of invasion-induced damage has been of interest for decades. However, the implicit presumption when dealing with invasion-induced damage has been that it can be mitigated (by appropriate selection of muds and formation of mudcake), bypassed (through perforations), or remedied (through stimulation and fracturing). Most prior damage-characterization work has been empirical in nature, relying on log and core tests to assess damage parameters. More recently, some authors also have attempted to quantify and model formation damage from the fundamental principles of deep-bed filtration, fines migration, and percolation theory. Dynamic modeling of invasion with numerical simulations has also received much-needed attention in recent times. However, much of the numerical invasion-modeling work in the literature has focused on the invasion only (typically because of interest in the impact of the invasion zone on log accuracy), and very few works have dealt with the impact of invasion on flowback during production. The problem of bridging empirical models and dynamic simulations to obtain reasonable estimates of the impact on production has been one of the challenges. In this work, we present a novel approach that combines dynamic reservoir simulations and special core tests to model the extent of invasive damage and its impact on flowback during production. The approach uses an ultrafine-grid numerical simulator to model invasion, with parameters calibrated to special core tests. Flowback is then modeled using a sector-scale simulator with near-wellbore fine gridding, with the initial saturation and pressure profiles as determined by the invasion model and parameters calibrated to the core tests. The experimental and numerical approaches are described in detail, along with examples to illustrate the use of the methods we describe. Several sensitivity analyses are presented to demonstrate the often overlooked and underestimated impact of invasion on productivity. The method can be used to compare different mud types, evaluate the benefits of different remediation methods, and value the impact of underbalanced drilling (UBD) on productivity.


2002 ◽  
Vol 124 (3) ◽  
pp. 163-172 ◽  
Author(s):  
Turhan Yildiz

This study presents a simplified method to predict inflow performance of and cumulative production from selectively perforated wells in bounded reservoirs. The model first calculates the pseudo-skin for a fully perforated well penetrating a formation with only unit thickness. Then, perforation pseudo-skin is superimposed on a two-dimensional selectively open completed well model. Using the new model, a sensitivity study is carried out to identify the parameters controlling the well flow rate and total recovery. The sensitivity study includes the impact of shot density, perforation size and length, phasing angle, perforated length/formation thickness ratio, and the degree of formation damage around the wellbore and perforations.


2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ruqia Al Shidhani ◽  
Ahmed Al Shueili ◽  
Hussain Al Salmi ◽  
Musallam Jaboob

Abstract Due to a resource optimization and efficiency improvements, wells that are hydraulically fractured in the tight gas Barik Formation of the Khazzan Field in the Sultanate of Oman are often temporarily left shut-in directly following a large scale massive hydraulic fracturing stimulation treatment. Extensive industry literature has often suggested (and reported), that this may result in a significant direct loss of productivity due to the delayed flowback and the resulting fracture conductivity and formation damage. This paper will review the available data from the Khazzan Field address these concerns; indicating where the concerns should and should not necessarily apply. The Barik Formation in the Khazzan Field is an over-pressured gas-condensate reservoir at 4,500 m with gas permeability ranging from 0.1 to 20 mD. The average well after hydraulic fracturing produces 25 MMscfd and 500 bcpd against a wellhead pressure of 4,000 psi. A typical hydraulic fracturing stimulation treatment consists of 14,000 bbl of a borate-crosslinked guar fluid, placing upwards of 1MM Lbs of high conductivity bauxite proppant within a single fracture. In order to assess the potential production loss due to delayed flowback operations, BP Oman performed a suite of formation damage tests including core samples from the Barik reservoir, fracture conductivity considerations and dynamic behaviors. Additionally, normalized production was compared between offset wells that were cleaned-up and put onto production at different times after the hydraulic fracturing operations. Core tests showed a range of fracture conductivities over time with delayed flowback after using the breaker concentrations from actual treatments. As expected, enhanced conductivity was achieved with additional breaker. The magnitude of the conductivity being created in these massive treatments was also demonstrated to be dominant with respect to damage effects. Finally, a normalized comparison of an extensive suite of wells clearly showed no discernible loss of production resulted from any delay in the flowback operations. This paper describes in details the workflow and resulting analysis of the impact of extensive shut-in versus immediate flowback post massive hydraulic fracturing. It indicates that the impact of such events will be limited if the appropriate steps have been taken to minimize the opportunity for damage to occur. Whereas the existing fracturing literature takes the safe stance of indicating that damage will always result from such shut-ins, this paper will demonstrate the limitations of such assumptions and the flexibility that can be demonstrated with real data.


Fluids ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 25
Author(s):  
Iris Gerken ◽  
Thomas Wetzel ◽  
Jürgen J. Brandner

Micro heat exchangers have been revealed to be efficient devices for improved heat transfer due to short heat transfer distances and increased surface-to-volume ratios. Further augmentation of the heat transfer behaviour within microstructured devices can be achieved with heat transfer enhancement techniques, and more precisely for this study, with passive enhancement techniques. Pin fin geometries influence the flow path and, therefore, were chosen as the option for further improvement of the heat transfer performance. The augmentation of heat transfer with micro heat exchangers was performed with the consideration of an improved heat transfer behaviour, and with additional pressure losses due to the change of flow path (pin fin geometries). To capture the impact of the heat transfer, as well as the impact of additional pressure losses, an assessment method should be considered. The overall exergy loss method can be applied to micro heat exchangers, and serves as a simple assessment for characterization. Experimental investigations with micro heat exchanger structures were performed to evaluate the assessment method and its importance. The heat transfer enhancement was experimentally investigated with microstructured pin fin geometries to understand the impact on pressure loss behaviour with air.


2021 ◽  
Vol 692 (4) ◽  
pp. 042002
Author(s):  
Yanyu Zhang ◽  
Xiangyu Wang ◽  
Xiaofei Sun ◽  
Hangfei Gong ◽  
Yunshi Zhang

2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 297
Author(s):  
Jarosław Konior ◽  
Marek Sawicki ◽  
Mariusz Szóstak

The research presented in the article, which includes methods, models, and conclusions, contains synthetic and analytical model solutions concerning the problems of the technical maintenance and wear of residential buildings with a traditional construction. The cause and effect relationships between the occurrence of damage in the elements of tenement houses (treated as proof of their maintenance conditions), and the size of the technical wear of these elements were determined using a representative and purposefully selected sample of 102 residential buildings erected during the second half of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries in Wroclaw’s “Downtown” district. Quantitative damage analysis, which was carried out using empirical (visual) methods of assessing the technical condition of a building, indicates the type and size of damage to the building’s elements that are characteristic for the relevant maintenance conditions. Research concerning the cause–effect relationships (“damage–technical wear”) in observed states allows for a numerical approach to the impact of building maintenance conditions on the degree of the technical wear of its components. The maintenance and exploitation conditions determine the degree of the technical wear of the elements of an old residential building. The exploitation condition of these buildings is manifested by damage to elements caused by water and moisture penetration, which is especially important for poorly maintained buildings. The article shows that the age of the elements of an old residential building with a traditional construction is of secondary importance in the process of the intensity of losing its serviceability value. It was calculated that no more than 30% of the damage of building components is explained by the passage of time, and it is therefore not age that determines the course of the technical wear of the elements of the analyzed tenement houses.


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