Successful Application of Relative-Permeability Modifiers To Control Water Production in Rose Run Fracturing

2006 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leonard Eugene Fry ◽  
Don M. Everett ◽  
Mark Allen Moody ◽  
Bradley Todd Hina ◽  
James Edward Gessel ◽  
...  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ali Al-Taq ◽  
Abdullah Alrustum ◽  
Basil Alfakher ◽  
Hussain Al-Ibrahim

Abstract It is challenging to control water production in horizontal wells or in vertical wells having oil and water produced from the same zone using conventional methods such as through-tubing bridge plugs or other mechanical means. Relative permeability modifiers (RPMs), known to selectively reduce the relative permeability to water with minimum impact on the relative permeability to oil or gas, are considered a promising technology for solving this problem. The current generation of RPMs, unlike the old ones, can tolerate high hardness and so have higher success rates. An extensive experimental work was carried out to evaluate three RPMs for water control in gas and oil wells. Test conditions included gas flow in sandstone cores with temperatures of up to 300°F, and oil flow in carbonate cores with temperatures as high as 220°F. The effect of initial core permeability to brine, RPM concentration, flow rate, and water-wetting surfactants on the effectiveness of RPM to reduce water production was investigated using sandstone and carbonate cores. Coreflood experiments were undertaken at downhole conditions. The end-point relative permeabilities to various phases were measured. A back pressure of 500 psi, an overburden pressure of 3,500 to 5,000 psi and flow rates of 0.1 to 5 cm3/min were used. The concentration of RPM polymers was monitored in the core effluent using total organic carbon (TOC) analyzer to determine polymer retention in the core. The results revealed that temperature adversely affected the effectiveness of all RPMs evaluated. A better reduction in permeability to water was obtained at 220°F compared to that obtained at 300°F. The use of RPM at the right concentrations was found to significantly reduce permeability to water. A better water reduction was obtained at higher polymer injection rates, which was attributed to flow-induced polymer retention. Adsorption of RPM polymer tended to alter wettability of a carbonate rock to more water-wet. This paper discusses the effects of the above parameters on the performance of RPM in sandstone and carbonate reservoirs, and it gives some recommendations for improving the success rate of these chemical applications in the field.


2008 ◽  
Vol 11 (05) ◽  
pp. 882-891 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ali A. Al-Taq ◽  
Hisham A. Nasr-El-Din ◽  
Jimmy K. Beresky ◽  
Khalid M. Al-Naimi ◽  
Leopoldo Sierra ◽  
...  

Summary Matrix acidizing and water control are usually addressed as two separate issues. Associative polymers can be used to simultaneously achieve effective acidizing and water control during a single treatment. A polymer-based treatment was applied in an offshore, perforated vertical well with two sets of perforations in a carbonate reservoir in Saudi Arabia. The acid treatment was needed to restore the productivity of the upper set of perforations and reduce water production from the lower set of perforations. Experimental studies were carried out to investigate the potential use of associative polymers to control water mobility and act as an acid diverter. Coreflood experiments were conducted on reservoir cores at downhole conditions (temperature of 200°F and pressure of 3,500 psi). Extensive laboratory testing showed that associative polymers had no significant effect on the relative permeability to oil. However, the relative permeability to water was significantly reduced. This paper presents a case history where an associative polymer was applied during matrix acid treatment of a damaged well. The treatment included two stages of associative polymer solutions and 20 wt% HCl with additives. Post-stimulation treatment production data showed that oil rate increased 11.18-fold, whereas water rate decreased 1.7-fold, resulting in a reduction in the water cut from 75 to 14 vol%. The production logging tool (PLT) results indicated that the associative polymer was effective in diverting the acid into the oil producing zone. The upper set of perforations was producing most of the fluid, which further confirmed that the associative polymer significantly reduced water production from the lower zone. Introduction Matrix acidizing and water control are two important treatments conducted to enhance well performance. These treatments are commonly addressed as two separate issues. Associative polymers can be used to simultaneously achieve effective acidizing and water control utilizing a single treatment (Eoff et al. 2005). Acid diversion is an important issue contributing to the success of any matrix acid stimulation treatment. For this reason, extensive laboratory studies and field applications have been performed on several acid diverting agents as reported in the literature. Among the techniques that have been applied to improve acid coverage are: mechanical (packers, ball sealers, and particulate diverting agents) and chemicals (foam, polymers, and in-situ-gelled fluids). More recently, viscoelastic surfactants have been used extensively for diversion during matrix acid treatments, and have shown a tendency to reduce water production as reported by Nasr-El-Din et al. (2006). Relative permeability modifiers, commonly used for water control, can also be utilized for acid diversion. They can act simultaneously to enhance diversion during matrix acid treatments and impair water mobility. Eoff et al. (2005) presented laboratory and field tests, which showed that associative polymers could provide both goals in sandstone reservoirs. However, a few studies considered application of associative polymers to divert and control water production in carbonate formations. Therefore, the objectives of the present study are to:assess the effectiveness of associative polymers in reducing brine permeability in carbonate cores,design a polymer-based treatment to control water and divert acid in matrix treatments, andevaluate the use of associative polymers based on field application. This paper presents laboratory data that support the use of this new technology in carbonate reservoirs. It will also give for the first time field results on the application of associative polymers in a carbonate reservoir in Saudi Arabia. Field data were in good agreement with laboratory results.


SPE Journal ◽  
2020 ◽  
pp. 1-15
Author(s):  
Gang Li ◽  
Lifeng Chen ◽  
Meilong Fu ◽  
Lei Wang ◽  
Yadong Chen ◽  
...  

Summary Horizontal wells that are completed with slotted liners often suffer from a severe water-production problem, which is detrimental to oil recovery. It is because the annulus between the slotted liners and wellbore cannot be fully filled with common hydrogels with poor thixotropy, which determines the ultimate hydrogel filling shape in the annulus. This paper presents a novel hydrogel with high thixotropy to effectively control water production in horizontal wells. This study is aimed at evaluating the thixotropic performance, gelation time, plugging performance, and degradation performance. The thixotropic performance of the new hydrogel was also investigated by measuring its rheological properties and examining its microstructures. It was found that the new hydrogel thickened rapidly after shearing. Its thixotropic recovery coefficient was 1.747, which was much higher than those of traditional hydrogels. The gelation time can be controlled in the range of 2 to 8 hours by properly adjusting the concentrations of the framework material, crosslinker, and initiator. The hydrogel could be customized for mature oil reservoirs, at which it was stable for more than 90 days. A series of laboratory physical modeling tests showed that the breakthrough pressure gradient and the plugging ratio of the hydrogel in sandpacks were higher than 9.5 MPa/m and 99%, respectively. At the same time, it was found that the hydrogel has good degradation properties; the viscosity of the hydrogel breaking solution was 4.22 mPa·s. Freeze-etching scanning-electron-microscopy examinations indicated that the hydrogel had a uniform grid structure, which can be broken easily by shear and restored quickly. This led to the remarkable thixotropic performance. The formation of a metastable structure caused by the electrostatic interaction and coordination effect was considered to be the primary reason for the high thixotropy. The successful development of the new thixotropic hydrogel not only helps to control water production from the horizontal wells, but also furthers the thixotropic theory of hydrogel. This study also provides technical guidelines for further increasing the thixotropies of drilling fluids, fracturing fluids, and other enhanced-oil-recovery polymers that are commonly used in the petroleum industry.


Energies ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (19) ◽  
pp. 3663
Author(s):  
Lindsey Rasmussen ◽  
Tianguang Fan ◽  
Alex Rinehart ◽  
Andrew Luhmann ◽  
William Ampomah ◽  
...  

The efficiency of carbon utilization and storage within the Pennsylvanian Morrow B sandstone, Farnsworth Unit, Texas, is dependent on three-phase oil, brine, and CO2 flow behavior, as well as spatial distributions of reservoir properties and wettability. We show that end member two-phase flow properties, with binary pairs of oil–brine and oil–CO2, are directly dependent on heterogeneity derived from diagenetic processes, and evolve progressively with exposure to CO2 and changing wettability. Morrow B sandstone lithofacies exhibit a range of diagenetic processes, which produce variations in pore types and structures, quantified at the core plug scale using X-ray micro computed tomography imaging and optical petrography. Permeability and porosity relationships in the reservoir permit the classification of sedimentologic and diagenetic heterogeneity into five distinct hydraulic flow units, with characteristic pore types including: macroporosity with little to no clay filling intergranular pores; microporous authigenic clay-dominated regions in which intergranular porosity is filled with clay; and carbonate–cement dominated regions with little intergranular porosity. Steady-state oil–brine and oil–CO2 co-injection experiments using reservoir-extracted oil and brine show that differences in relative permeability persist between flow unit core plugs with near-constant porosity, attributable to contrasts in and the spatial arrangement of diagenetic pore types. Core plugs “aged” by exposure to reservoir oil over time exhibit wettability closer to suspected in situ reservoir conditions, compared to “cleaned” core plugs. Together with contact angle measurements, these results suggest that reservoir wettability is transient and modified quickly by oil recovery and carbon storage operations. Reservoir simulation results for enhanced oil recovery, using a five-spot pattern and water-alternating-with-gas injection history at Farnsworth, compare models for cumulative oil and water production using both a single relative permeability determined from history matching, and flow unit-dependent relative permeability determined from experiments herein. Both match cumulative oil production of the field to a satisfactory degree but underestimate historical cumulative water production. Differences in modeled versus observed water production are interpreted in terms of evolving wettability, which we argue is due to the increasing presence of fast paths (flow pathways with connected higher permeability) as the reservoir becomes increasingly water-wet. The control of such fast-paths is thus critical for efficient carbon storage and sweep efficiency for CO2-enhanced oil recovery in heterogeneous reservoirs.


Energies ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (24) ◽  
pp. 4688 ◽  
Author(s):  
Faaiz Al-shajalee ◽  
Colin Wood ◽  
Quan Xie ◽  
Ali Saeedi

Excessive water production is becoming common in many gas reservoirs. Polymers have been used as relative permeability modifiers (RPM) to selectively reduce water production with minimum effect on the hydrocarbon phase. This manuscript reports the results of an experimental study where we examined the effect of initial rock permeability on the outcome of an RPM treatment for a gas/water system. The results show that in high-permeability rocks, the treatment may have no significant effect on either the water and gas relative permeabilities. In a moderate-permeability case, the treatment was found to reduce water relative permeability significantly but improve gas relative permeability, while in low-permeability rocks, it resulted in greater reduction in gas relative permeability than that of water. This research reveals that, in an RPM treatment, more important than thickness of the adsorbed polymer layer ( e ) is the ratio of this thickness on rock pore radius ( e r ).


2010 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohamed Salem ◽  
Rami Yassine ◽  
Syed Arshad Waheed ◽  
Ezz El-Din Mohamed Abd. El-Aal ◽  
Mohamed Abd El-Monsef

2011 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ahmed Ali Mohamed Abdel Meguid ◽  
Mohamed Amr ◽  
Rami Yassine ◽  
Tamer Abdel Khalek ◽  
Ahmed Hamdy Awaad

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