reservoir stimulation
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2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Glyn Roberts ◽  
Souvick Saha ◽  
Johanna Waldheim

Abstract This paper further develops an analysis of proppant distribution patterns in hydraulically fractured wells initially presented in SPE-199693-MS. A significantly enlarged database of in-situ perforation erosion measurements provides a more rigorous statistical basis allowing some previously reported trends to be updated, but the main objective of the paper is to present additional insights identified since the original paper was published. Measurements of the eroded area of individual perforations derived from downhole camera images again provide the input for this study. Entry hole enlargement during limited entry hydraulic fracturing provides strong and direct evidence that proppant was successfully placed into individual perforations. This provides a straightforward evaluation of cluster efficiency. Perhaps more importantly the volume of proppant placed into a perforation can also be inferred from the degree of erosion. Summing individual perforation erosion at cluster level allows patterns and biases to be identified and an understanding of proppant distribution across stages has been developed. Outcomes from an analysis of a database that now exceeds 50,000 eroded perforations are presented. Uniform reservoir stimulation is a key objective of fracture treatments but remains challenging to measure and report. The study therefore focused on understanding how uniformly proppant is distributed across more than 1,800 measured stages. Results demonstrate how proppant distribution within stages is influenced when treatment parameters change. Our approach was to vary one parameter, for example the stage length, while all other parameters were maintained at a consistent value. We investigated multiple parameters that can be readily controlled during treatment design and show how these can be manipulated to improve proppant distribution. These included stage length, cluster spacing, perforation count per cluster and perforation phase. Hydraulic fracturing is a complex, high energy process with numerous input parameters. At individual cluster and stage level outcomes can be unpredictable and diagnostic results are often quite variable. The approach taken here was to complete a statistical analysis of a sufficiently large dataset of in-situ measurements. This allowed common trends and patterns to be confidently identified and conclusions reached on how proppant distribution is affected by varying specific design parameters. This should be of interest and value to those designing hydraulic fracture treatments.


2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sheng Zheng ◽  
Wei Zhou ◽  
Xiaoguang Wang ◽  
Liang Chen ◽  
Dan Xie ◽  
...  

Abstract China has abundant low-permeability oil and gas resources. A lot of practice has proved that low-permeability reservoirs must undergo hydraulic fracturing to obtain commercial production capacity. Geomechanical characteristics are the key factor for fracturing. It plays a very important role in the oil field exploration and production. It is not only the driving force for oil and gas migration, but also provides a basis for wellbore stability analysis and drilling optimization design. The state of the formation stress field and the mechanical properties of the rock jointly determine the direction, shape and orientation of the fracture extension of the fracturing. Together it affects the stimulation effect of fracturing. Realizing the high-efficiency development of low-permeability reservoirs is a key and difficult problem facing for oil filed operator. Horizontal wells drilling and hydraulic fracturing are the core technology for increasing single well production in low-permeability reservoirs. The effectiveness of reservoir reconstruction directly determines the production capacity of the reservoir. In order to clarify the influence of static and dynamic geomechanics on the scale of reservoir stimulation in the process of horizontal well fracturing, and ultimately provide effective technical support for the formulation and optimization of reservoir stimulation design. This study is based on the study of single well one-dimensional geomechanics, using the structural characteristics and seismic attributes of low-permeability reservoirs to study the characteristics of the three-dimensional spatial distribution of mechanics. On this basis, combined with real-time fracturing treatment data and micro-seismic monitoring data, dynamic (four-dimensional) stress field simulations are continuously carried out. The research results can be mainly used to guide the optimization of reservoir stimulation and the evaluation of filed development plan.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Javier Franquet ◽  
A. N. Martin ◽  
Viraj Telaj ◽  
Hamad Khairy ◽  
Ahmed Soliman ◽  
...  

Abstract The objective of this work was to quantify the in-situ stress contrast between the reservoir and the surrounding dense carbonate layers above and below for accurate hydraulic fracturing propagation modelling and precise fracture containment prediction. The goal was to design an optimum reservoir stimulation treatment in a Lower Cretaceous tight oil reservoir without fracturing the lower dense zone and communicating the high-permeability reservoir below. This case study came from Abu Dhabi onshore where a vertical pilot hole was drilled to perform in-situ stress testing to design a horizontal multi-stage hydraulic fractured well in a 35-ft thick reservoir. The in-situ stress tests were obtained using a wireline straddle packer microfrac tool able to measure formation breakdown and fracture closure pressures in multiple zones across the dense and reservoir layers. Standard dual-packer micro-injection tests were conducted to measure stresses in reservoir layers while single-packer sleeve-frac tests were done to breakdown high-stress dense layers. The pressure versus time was monitored in real-time to make prompt geoscience decisions during the acquisition of the data. The formation breakdown and fracture closure pressures were utilized to calibrated minimum and maximum lateral tectonic strains for accurate in-situ stress profile. Then, the calibrated stress profile was used to simulate fracture propagation and containment for the subsequent reservoir stimulation design. A total 17 microfrac stress tests were completed in 13 testing points across the vertical pilot, 12 with dual-packer injection and 5 with single-packer sleeve fracturing inflation. The fracture closure results showed stronger stress contrast towards the lower dense zone (900 psi) in comparison with the upper dense zone (600 psi). These measurements enabled the oilfield operating company to place the lateral well in a lower section of the tight reservoir without the risk of fracturing out-of-zone. The novelty of this in-situ stress testing consisted of single packer inflations (sleeve frac) in an 8½-in hole in order to achieve higher differential pressures (7,000 psi) to breakdown the dense zones. The single packer breakdown permitted fracture propagation and reliable closure measurements with dual-packer injection at a lower differential reopening pressure (4,500 psi). Microfracturing the tight formation prior to fluid sampling produced clean oil samples with 80% reduction of pump out time in comparison to conventional straddle packer sampling operations. This was a breakthrough operational outcome in sampling this reservoir.


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (12) ◽  
Author(s):  
Menglai Wang ◽  
Dongming Zhang

A sound understanding of the water permeability evolution in fractured shale is essential to the optimal hydraulic fracturing (reservoir stimulation) strategies. We have measured the water permeability of six fractured shale samples from Qiongzhusi Formation in southwest China at various pressure and stress conditions. Results showed that the average uniaxial compressive strength (UCS) and average tensile strength of the Qiongzhusi shale samples were 106.3 and 10.131 MPa, respectively. The nanometre-sized (tiny) pore structure is the dominant characteristic of the Qiongzhusi shale. Following this, we proposed a pre-stressing strategy for creating fractures in shale for permeability measurement and its validity was evaluated by CT scanning. Shale water permeability increased with pressure differential. While shale water permeability declined with increasing effective stress, such effect dropped significantly as the effective stress continues to increase. Interestingly, shale permeability increased with pressure when the pressure is relatively low (less than 4 MPa), which is inconsistent with the classic Darcy's theory. This is caused by the Bingham flow that often occurs in tiny pores. Most importantly, the proposed permeability model would fully capture the experimental data with reasonable accuracy in a wide range of stresses.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. He ◽  
L. He ◽  
B. Guan ◽  
C. M. Yuan ◽  
J. Xie ◽  
...  

Insight into the difference between the mechanical properties of rocks at low and in situ deep reservoir temperatures is vital for achieving a better understanding of fracking technologies with supercritical CO2 and liquid nitrogen. To address this issue, the fracking-related mechanical properties of the Shaximiao Formation sandstone (SS) were investigated through direct tension, uniaxial compression, and three-point bending fracture tests at a typical low temperature (Tlow) of −10°C and a reservoir temperature (Tin situ) of 70°C. The results showed that the tensile strength σt, compressive strength σc, and fracture toughness KIC of the SS were all higher at Tlow than at Tin situ, although to different extents. The KIC of the SS increased slightly more than σt at the lower temperature, while both σt and KIC of the SS increased significantly more than σc at the lower temperature. In addition to the strength, the stiffness (particularly the tensile stiffness) and the brittleness indices of SS were similarly higher at Tlow than at Tin situ. In situ monitoring using the digital image correlation technique revealed that a highly strained band (HSB) always appeared at the crack front. However, because of the inhomogeneous microstructure of the SS, the HSB did not always develop along the line connecting the notch tip to the loading point. This was a possible cause of the highly dispersed KIC values of the SS. The HSB at the crack front was notably narrower at Tlow than at Tin situ, suggesting that low temperatures suppress the plastic deformation of rocks and are therefore beneficial to reservoir stimulation.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eyad A. Alali ◽  
Mohammed A. Bataweel

Abstract The oil and gas industry has been developing various technologies to increase the productivity and recovery of hydrocarbons from conventional and unconventional reservoirs. Reservoir stimulation is an essential operation used to enhance production in many fields around the world. Hydraulic fracturing and acid treatments are the main stimulation methods. Reservoir tunneling concepts are used to drill branched channels in the formation from the main wellbore. With thousands of tunnels drilled to date, it is a viable technique that can improve the recovery of selected reservoirs. This paper reviews the recent developments in reservoir tunneling technologies and their current applications. These tunneling methods can be categorized mainly into water jetting, abrasive jetting, reactive jetting (acid), and needle and mechanical tunneling (radial drilling). The paper includes reviewing and analyzing these techniques based on documented literature results that include simulation studies, lab and yard experiments, field implementation, candidate selection, operational requirements, technology enhancements, advantages, limitations, and challenges of each technique. The paper provides a comprehensive summary of different tunneling techniques focusing on the operational practices, tunneling mechanisms, tunneling depth, and recent advancements available in the market. The most effective applications of the tunneling techniques are in stimulating low permeability, depleted and thin reservoirs, layers close to water zones, and bypassing near wellbore formation damage. The efficiency of creating tunnels is affected by many factors such as reservoir properties, nozzle, and fluid types, etc. The tunnel shape and trajectory are affected by reservoir geological properties. The combination of the tunneling with other stimulation techniques can result in more effective treatments, which enhance the methods of current stimulation. Reservoir tunneling technologies can pave the way to improve hydrocarbon recovery and enable access to unstimulated formations.


2021 ◽  
Vol 48 (5) ◽  
pp. 1198-1207
Author(s):  
Qun LEI ◽  
Dingwei WENG ◽  
Shengchun XIONG ◽  
Hanbin LIU ◽  
Baoshan GUAN ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Qiming Huang ◽  
Jun Li ◽  
Shimin Liu ◽  
Gang Wang

AbstractHydraulic fracturing is an effective technology for coal reservoir stimulation. After fracturing operation and flowback, a fraction of fracturing fluid will be essentially remained in the formation which ultimately damages the flowability of the formation. In this study, we quantified the gel-based fracturing fluid induced damages on gas sorption for Illinois coal in US. We conducted the high-pressure methane and CO2 sorption experiments to investigate the sorption damage due to the gel residue. The infrared spectroscopy tests were used to analyze the evolution of the functional group of the coal during fracturing fluid treatment. The results show that there is no significant chemical reaction between the fracturing fluid and coal, and the damage of sorption is attributed to the physical blockage and interactions. As the concentration of fracturing fluid increases, the density of residues on the coal surface increases and the adhesion film becomes progressively denser. The adhesion film on coal can apparently reduce the number of adsorption sites for gas and lead to a decrease of gas sorption capacity. In addition, the gel residue can decrease the interconnectivity of pore structure of coal which can also limit the sorption capacity by isolating the gas from the potential sorption sites. For the low concentration of fracturing fluid, the Langmuir volume was reduced to less than one-half of that of raw coal. After the fracturing fluid invades, the desorption hysteresis of methane and CO2 in coal was found to be amplified. The impact on the methane desorption hysteresis is significantly higher than CO2 does. The reason for the increasing of hysteresis may be that the adsorption swelling caused by the residue adhered on the pore edge, or the pore blockage caused by the residue invasion under high gas pressure. The results of this study quantitatively confirm the fracturing fluid induced gas sorption damage on coal and provide a baseline assessment for coal fracturing fluid formulation and technology.


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