scholarly journals Method for Calculating Productivity of Water Imbibition Based on Volume Fracturing Stimulations of Low Permeability Reservoirs

Geofluids ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 ◽  
pp. 1-12
Author(s):  
Lisha Zhao ◽  
Xin Li ◽  
Shuhong Wu ◽  
Zhongbao Wu ◽  
Min Tong

Spontaneous water imbibition is an important mechanism in water-wet fractured reservoirs. For volume-fractured reservoirs, to evaluate the oil productivity and oil recovery through water counter-current imbibition, we propose an analytical method for optimizing the reservoir volume fracturing scheme. Based on the two-phase fluid flow differential equation for capillary force, a three-dimensional water imbibition productivity equation is derived analytically. The equation for the water imbibition productivity considering the fracture network is obtained. A numerical model is constructed to verify the validity of the average capillary diffusivity coefficient and the results of the analytical model. By applying this method to a low permeability reservoir, after volume fracturing and waterflooding huff and puff, the relationship between the tenth year’s oil recovery and oil production rate and the length, width, and density of the fracture network is predicted, which gives an optimization of the field fracturing construction scale. The results show that the length and width of the fracture network should be no less than 50% of the well spacing and row spacing to obtain a reasonable production. Considering the fracturing technique and economic feasibility, the higher the density of the fracture network, the better the production obtained. Through hydraulic volume fracturing and waterflooding huff and puff, water imbibition is brought into full play and the 10 year oil recovery is increased by 6%–8% in this area.

1985 ◽  
Vol 25 (1) ◽  
pp. 95
Author(s):  
S.T. Henzell ◽  
H.R. Irrgang ◽  
E.J. Janssen ◽  
R.A.H. Mitchell ◽  
G.O. Morrell ◽  
...  

The Fortescue field in the Gippsland Basin, offshore southeastern Australia is being developed from two platforms (Fortescue A and Cobia A) by Esso Australia Ltd. (operator) and BHP Petroleum.The Fortescue reservoir is a stratigraphic trap at the top of the Latrobe Group of sediments. It overlies the western flank of the Halibut and Cobia fields and is separated from them by a non-net sequence of shales and coals which form a hydraulic barrier between the two systems. Development drilling into the Fortescue reservoir commenced in April 1983 with production coming onstream in May 1983. Fortescue, with booked reserves of 44 stock tank gigalitres (280 million stock tank barrels) of 43° API oil, is the seventh major oil reservoir to be developed in the offshore Gippsland Basin by Esso/BHP.In mid-1984, after drilling a total of 20 exploration and development wells, and after approximately one year of production, a detailed three-dimensional, two-phase reservoir simulation study was performed to examine the recovery efficiency, drainage patterns, pressure performance and production rate potential of the reservoir.The model was validated by history matching an extensive suite of Repeat Formation Test (RFT)* pressure data. The results confirmed the reserves basis, and demonstrated that the ultimate oil recovery from the reservoir is not sensitive to production rate.This result is consistent with studies on other high quality Latrobe Group reservoirs in the Gippsland Basin which contain undersaturated crudes and receive very strong water drive from the Basin-wide aquifer system. With the development of the simulation model during the development phase, it has been possible to more accurately define the optimal well pattern for the remainder of the development.* Mark of Schlumberger


2020 ◽  
Vol 17 (34) ◽  
pp. 892-904
Author(s):  
Zinon A KUANGALIEV ◽  
Gulsin S DOSKASIYEVA ◽  
Altynbek S MARDANOV

The main part of Russia's hard-to-recover reserves is 73% for low-grade and carbonate reservoirs, 12% for high-viscosity oil, about 15% of extensive sub-gas zones of oil and gas deposits and 7% of reservoirs lying at great depths. The development of such stocks with the usage of traditional technologies is economically inefficient. It requires the application of new technologies for their development and fundamentally new approaches to design, taking into account the features of extraction of hard-to-extract reserves (HtER). The purpose of this research is to find ways to improve the performance of low-permeability reservoirs. To accomplish this task, the Novobogatinsk South-Eastern Oil Field has been taken as an example and described. The necessary properties of production facilities in the field are highlighted, along with economic feasibility and technological efficiency. The reserves involved in the development are determined and, thanks to the knowledge of the geological oil reserves of the deposits, the potential oil recovery factor is calculated with the existing development technology. As a result of the research, development options were worked out with the results of the calculation of design indicators for the field as a whole. The comparison of oil recovery schedules and ORI, as well as the layout of wells, have been presented. As a result of the study, a description of 3 options for the development of design indicators for the field as a whole is given. The figures show oil production graphs, as well as location patterns. The authors of the study conclude which of the recommended development options can help extract maximum oil reserves.


2014 ◽  
Vol 2014 ◽  
pp. 1-9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yu-Long Zhao ◽  
Lie-Hui Zhang ◽  
Zhi-Xiong He ◽  
Bo-Ning Zhang

This paper presents a semianalytical steady-state productivity of oil/water two-phase flow in low-permeability reservoirs with both top and bottom boundaries closed which takes the permeability stress-sensitive and threshold pressure gradient into account. Using the similar approach as Joshi’s (1988), the three-dimensional (3D) horizontal well problem is divided into two two-dimensional problems (2D), and then the corresponding nonlinear steady seepage mathematical models in vertical and horizontal planes are established. Through the separation of variables method and equivalent flow resistance principle, the productivity equation of horizontal well is obtained. The liquid and oil productivity with different influential factors are plotted, and the related effects are also analyzed. This paper expanded the conventional productivity equations of single phase into multiphase flow which have both theoretical and practical significance in predicting production behaviors in such reservoirs.


1979 ◽  
Vol 19 (03) ◽  
pp. 175-182 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hossein Kazemi ◽  
L.S. Merrill

Original manuscript received in Society f Petroleum Engineers office Sept. 15, 1977. Paper accepted for publication June 9, 1978. Revised manuscript received Feb. 19, 1979. Paper (SPE 6890) first presented at the SPE-AIME 52nd Annual Fall Technical Conference and Exhibition, held in Denver, Oct. 9-12, 1977. Abstract A two-dimensional, two-phase, semi-implicit, numerical simulator was used to simulate water imbibition and oil recovery in artificially fractured and unfractured cores. Experimental results were matched satisfactorily by the numerical simulator. These results provide evidence of the reliability of the concepts underlying an earlier numerical simulator, which was tailored specifically for field applications. We show that the flow equations used to match the laboratory data reduce to the equations used in the field simulator. In addition, the experiments themselves were conducted quite differently from those commonly used in imbibition experiments and provide added insight into oil recovery from fractured reservoirs. Introduction Previously, we reported on the development of a Previously, we reported on the development of a numerical reservoir simulator for use in field applications. In this paper, we examine the reliability of the concepts underlying the numerical simulation by matching experimental results of fractured and unfractured cores with a simulator that accounts for the fracture and the matrix components. The simulator is a conventional two-dimensional, two-phase, semi-implicit simulator, but we show that it reduces to the formulation used in the field simulator. Several studies have reported on water imbibition in fractured media. These studies were concerned primarily with the imbibition aspects of the flow primarily with the imbibition aspects of the flow mechanism in the matrix rather than the total flow problem in the fracture-matrix system. Mattax and problem in the fracture-matrix system. Mattax and Kyte developed equations for scaling up imbibition effects. Parsons and Chaney used these equations to study imbibition effects in carbonate rocks. Iffly et al., in addition to experimental work, used a one-dimensional, two-phase, semi-implicit mathematical model to match oil recoveries from the matrix. A similar mathematical model in two dimensions was used by Kleppe and Morse to match the results of their imbibition experiments. While the last two papers show that imbibition oil recovery can be simulated numerically, the total concept of fluid flow in fracture-matrix systems has not been investigated adequately either numerically or experimentally. Mathematical Model The porous media used here were cylindrical cores or rectangular blocks cut along the long axis. The flow experiments were conducted so that the fracture plane and the entire core were horizontal. Therefore, the fractured cores were simulated by a layered two-dimensional simulator. The core halves were simulated as two matrix layers having the properties of the original core. The fracture was simulated as a very thin, high-permeability, and high-flow-capacity layer, where capillary pressure was essentially zero. The basic flow equations, assuming imcompressible flow, are w w----- wx ------ + ----- wz --------x x x zax az Sw+ qw Bw (X - Xo) = -------................(1)at t o o------ ox------ + ------ oz -------qoBo (X-Xo)x x z z So= ---------..................................(2)t Sw + So = 1.....................................(3) Pc(Sw) = po - pw....................................(4) kxkrwwx = 0.006328 -----------,......................(5)w SPEJ P. 175


2016 ◽  
Vol 139 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Chong Hyun Ahn ◽  
Robert Dilmore ◽  
John Yilin Wang

A three-dimensional, two-phase, dual-continuum hydraulic fracture (HF) propagation simulator was developed and implemented. This paper presents a detailed method for efficient and effective modeling of the fluid flow within fracture and matrix as well as fluid leakoff, fracture height growth, and the fracture network propagation. Both a method for solving the system of coupled equations, and a verification of the developed model are presented herein.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chem Int

Traditionally, carbon dioxide (CO2) injection has been considered an inefficient method for enhancing oil recovery from naturally fractured reservoirs. Obviously, it would be useful to experimentally investigate the efficiency of waterflooding naturally fractured reservoirs followed by carbon dioxide (CO2) injection. This issue was investigated by performing water imbibition followed by CO2 gravity drainage experiments on artificially fractured cores at reservoir conditions. The experiments were designed to illustrate the actual process of waterflooding and CO2 gravity drainage in a naturally fractured reservoir in the Brass Area, Bayelsa. The results demonstrate that CO2 gravity drainage could significantly increase oil recovery after a waterflood. During the experiments, the effects of different parameters such as permeability, initial water saturation and injection scheme was also examined. It was found that the efficiency of the CO2 gravity drainage decrease as the rock permeability decreases and the initial water saturation increases. Cyclic CO2 injection helped to improve oil recovery during the CO2 gravity drainage process which alters the water imbibition. Oil samples produced in the experiment were analyzed using gas chromatography to determine the mechanism of CO2-improved oil production from tight matrix blocks. The results show that lighter components are extracted and produced early in the test. The results of these experiments validate the premises that CO2 could be used to recover oil from a tight and unconfined matrix efficiently.


Author(s):  
Olga A. Abramova ◽  
Yulia A. Itkulova ◽  
Nail A. Gumerov

Modeling of motion of two-phase liquids in microchannels of different shape is needed for a variety of industrial applications, such as enhanced oil recovery, advanced material processing, and biotechnology. Development of efficient computational techniques is required for understanding the mechanisms of many effects in “liquid-liquid” systems, such as the jamming of emulsion flows in microchannels and blood cell motion in capillaries. In the present study, a mathematical model of a three-dimensional flow of a mixture of two Newtonian liquids of a droplet structure in microchannels at low Reynold’s numbers is considered. The computational approach is based on the boundary element method accelerated both via an advanced scalable algorithm (FMM), and via utilization of a heterogeneous computing architecture (multicore CPUs and graphics processors). To solve large scale problems flexible GMRES solver is developed. Example computations are conducted for dynamics of many deformable drops of different sizes in microchannels. The results of simulations and accuracy/performance of the method are discussed. The developed approach can be used for solution of a wide range of problems related to emulsion flows in micro- and nanoscales.


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