Integration of Production Data for Estimation of Natural Fracture Properties in Tight Gas Reservoirs Using Ensemble Kalman Filter

Author(s):  
Siavash Nejadi ◽  
Juliana Yuk Wing Leung ◽  
Japan J. Trivedi
2012 ◽  
Vol 52 (1) ◽  
pp. 611
Author(s):  
Mohammad Rahman ◽  
Sheik Rahman

This paper investigates the interaction of an induced hydraulic fracture in the presence of a natural fracture and the subsequent propagation of this induced fracture. The developed, fully coupled finite element model integrates a wellbore, an induced hydraulic fracture, a natural fracture, and a reservoir that simulates interaction between the induced and natural fracture. The results of this study have shown that natural fractures can have a profound effect on induced fracture propagation. In most cases, the induced fracture crosses the natural fracture at high angles of approach and high differential stress. At low angles of approach and low differential stress, the induced fracture is more likely to be arrested and/or break out from the far-end side of the natural fracture. It has also been observed that the propagation of the induced fracture is stopped by a large natural fracture at a high angle of approach, when the injection rate remains low. At a low angle of approach, the induced fracture deviates and propagates along the natural fracture. Crossing of the natural fracture and/or arrest by the natural fracture is controlled by the shear strength of the natural fracture, natural fracture orientation, and the in situ stress state of the reservoir. In tight-gas reservoir development, the optimum well spacing and induced hydraulic fracture length are correlated. Therefore, fracturing design should be performed during the initial reservoir development planning phase along with the well spacing design to obtain an optimal depletion strategy. This model has a potential application in the design and optimisation of fracturing design in unconventional reservoirs including tight-gas reservoirs and enhanced geothermal systems.


AAPG Bulletin ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 96 (3) ◽  
pp. 459-492 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohammed S. Ameen ◽  
Keith MacPherson ◽  
Maher I. Al-Marhoon ◽  
Zillur Rahim

SPE Journal ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 23 (02) ◽  
pp. 449-466 ◽  
Author(s):  
Siavash Hakim Elahi ◽  
Behnam Jafarpour

Summary Hydraulic fracturing is performed to enable production from low-permeability and organic-rich shale-oil/gas reservoirs by stimulating the rock to increase its permeability. Characterization and imaging of hydraulically induced fractures is critical for accurate prediction of production and of the stimulated reservoir volume (SRV). Recorded tracer concentrations during flowback and historical production data can reveal important information about fracture and matrix properties, including fracture geometry, hydraulic conductivity, and natural-fracture density. However, the complexity and uncertainty in fracture and reservoir descriptions, coupled with data limitations, complicate the estimation of these properties. In this paper, tracer-test and production data are used for dynamic characterization of important parameters of hydraulically fractured reservoirs, including matrix permeability and porosity, planar-fracture half-length and hydraulic conductivity, discrete-fracture-network (DFN) density and conductivity, and fracture-closing (conductivity-decline) rate during production. The ensemble Kalman filter (EnKF) is used to update uncertain model parameters by sequentially assimilating first the tracer-test data and then the production data. The results indicate that the tracer-test and production data have complementary information for estimating fracture half-length and conductivity, with the former being more sensitive to hydraulic conductivity and the latter being more affected by fracture half-length. For characterization of DFN, a stochastic representation is adopted and the parameters of the stochastic model along with matrix and hydraulic-fracture properties are updated. Numerical examples are presented to investigate the sensitivity of the observed production and tracer-test data to fracture and matrix properties and to evaluate the EnKF performance in estimating these parameters.


1990 ◽  
Vol 112 (4) ◽  
pp. 231-238 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. D. Evans ◽  
S. D. L. Lekia

The results of parametric studies of two naturally fractured lenticular tight gas reservoirs, Fluvial E-1 and Puludal Zones 3 and 4, of the U.S. Department of Energy Multi-Well Experiment (MWX) site of Northwestern Colorado are presented and discussed. The three-dimensional, two-phase, black oil reservoir simulator that was developed in a previous phase of this research program is also discussed and the capabilities further explored by applying it to several example problems. The simulation studies lead to the conclusion that 1) at early times the reservoir performance does not depend on lenticularity; 2) the initial reservoir performance does not depend on natural fracture concentration, although at later times the performance predictions of systems with lower natural fracture concentrations begin to fall below the ones with higher concentrations; 3) porosity change with time and pressure leads to double performance prediction reversals when comparing gas flow rates and cumulative gas production from naturally fractured and non-naturally fractured tight gas reservoirs; 4) the assumption of zero capillary pressure in the fractures can lead to erroneous predictions in the simulation of naturally fractured tight gas reservoir performance; and 5) the simulator developed in a prior phase of this project is capable of handling a reservoir block that is blanket sand, lenticular, completely fractured, partially fractured or completely unfractured and is amenable to an anisotropic heterogeneous reservoir whether the reservoir is fractured or not.


2014 ◽  
Author(s):  
He Ying ◽  
Pang Wei ◽  
Zhang Tongyou ◽  
Mao Jun ◽  
Du Juan

2008 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hans de Koningh ◽  
Bernd Heinrich Herold ◽  
Koksal Cig ◽  
Fahd Ali ◽  
Sultan Mahruqy ◽  
...  

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