Dynamic Underbalance Applied with Gun Hanger Technology for Early Oil Production with Artificial Lift System

2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jorge Patino ◽  
Fausto Gainza ◽  
Gustavo Cosios
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert Downey ◽  
Kiran Venepalli ◽  
Jim Erdle ◽  
Morgan Whitelock

Abstract The Permian Basin of west Texas is the largest and most prolific shale oil producing basin in the United States. Oil production from horizontal shale oil wells in the Permian Basin has grown from 5,000 BOPD in February, 2009 to 3.5 Million BOPD as of October, 2020, with 29,000 horizontal shale oil wells in production. The primary target for this horizontal shale oil development is the Wolfcamp shale. Oil production from these wells is characterized by high initial rates and steep declines. A few producers have begun testing EOR processes, specifically natural gas cyclic injection, or "Huff and Puff", with little information provided to date. Our objective is to introduce a novel EOR process that can greatly increase the production and recovery of oil from shale oil reservoirs, while reducing the cost per barrel of recovered oil. A superior shale oil EOR method is proposed that utilizes a triplex pump to inject a solvent liquid into the shale oil reservoir, and an efficient method to recover the injectant at the surface, for storage and reinjection. The process is designed and integrated during operation using compositional reservoir simulation in order to optimize oil recovery. Compositional simulation modeling of a Wolfcamp D horizontal producing oil well was conducted to obtain a history match on oil, gas, and water production. The matched model was then utilized to evaluate the shale oil EOR method under a variety of operating conditions. The modeling indicates that for this particular well, incremental oil production of 500% over primary EUR may be achieved in the first five years of EOR operation, and more than 700% over primary EUR after 10 years. The method, which is patented, has numerous advantages over cyclic gas injection, such as much greater oil recovery, much better economics/lower cost per barrel, lower risk of interwell communication, use of far less horsepower and fuel, shorter injection time, longer production time, smaller injection volumes, scalability, faster implementation, precludes the need for artificial lift, elimination of the need to buy and sell injectant during each cycle, ability to optimize each cycle by integration with compositional reservoir simulation modeling, and lower emissions. This superior shale oil EOR method has been modeled in the five major US shale oil plays, indicating large incremental oil recovery potential. The method is now being field tested to confirm reservoir simulation modeling projections. If implemented early in the life of a shale oil well, its application can slow the production decline rate, recover far more oil earlier and at lower cost, and extend the life of the well by several years, while precluding the need for artificial lift.


2012 ◽  
Vol 217-219 ◽  
pp. 2451-2457
Author(s):  
Ang Li ◽  
De Chun Chen ◽  
Hong Xia Meng

In view of the questions that heavy oil has badly flow condition and lifting efficient, and considering low carbon, energy conservation and environment as goal, an advanced artificial lift technology of cyclic nature gas heat insulation and geothermal temperature heating is developed, and the temperature calculation model of the technology was founded. The analysis that different cyclic nature gas volume, cyclic depth and oil production affect the formation produced fluid temperature distribution was made. The result is that the formation produced fluid temperature increases with the addition of cyclic depth and the function of rising temperature decreases from cyclic depth to wellhead, and that the formation produced fluid temperature increases with the addition of oil production and cyclic nature gas volume. A certain well as example, using the technology, the formation produced fluid temperature increases 11.14°C, compared to the conventional artificial lift technology. And it is favorable for surface transportation.


Author(s):  
Gabriel A. Alarcón ◽  
Carlos F. Torres-Monzón ◽  
Nellyana Gonzalo ◽  
Luis E. Gómez

Abstract Continuous flow gas lift is one of the most common artificial lift method in the oil industry and is widely used in the world. A continuous volume of gas is injected at high pressure into the bottom of the tubing, to gasify the oil column and thus facilitate the extraction. If there is no restriction in the amount of injection gas available, sufficient gas can be injected into each oil well to reach maximum production. However, the injection gas available is generally insufficient. An inefficient gas allocation in a field with limited gas supply also reduces the revenues, since excessive gas injection is expensive due to the high gas prices and compressing costs. Therefore, it is necessary to assign the injection gas into each well in optimal form to obtain the field maximum oil production rate. The gas allocation optimization can be considered as a maximization of a nonlinear function, which models the total oil production rate for a group of wells. The variables or unknowns for this function are the gas injection rates for each well, which are subject to physical restrictions. In this work a MATLAB™ nonlinear optimization technique with constraints was implemented to find the optimal gas injection rates. A new mathematical fit to the “Gas-Lift Performance Curve” is presented and the numeric results of the optimization are given and compared with results of other methods published in the specialized literature. The optimization technique proved fast convergence and broad application.


Tehnika ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 71 (3) ◽  
pp. 381-388
Author(s):  
Miroslav Crnogorac ◽  
Dusan Danilovic ◽  
Vesna Karovic-Maricic ◽  
Branko Lekovic

Author(s):  
Majid Abdulhameed Abdulhy Al-Ali ◽  
V. Yu. Kornilov ◽  
A. G. Gorodnov

Numerous oil wells within Rumaila field contain Electrical Submersible Pumps (ESPs). ESPs are utilised to maximise the oil production from existing wells by providing artificial lift where pressure is low, which helps maintain oil production levels. The number of ESPs installed throughout the Rumaila. Field is growing consistently to sustain oil field production. Due to the remote locations for each of the ESPs the current strategy is to supply power to ESPs using individual diesel engine generators located at each remote ESP well site. This is an inefficient design, as individual diesel engines are resource intensive due to maintenance and frequent diesel filling. The generators are also a source of significant unreliability causing ESP shutdowns/trips resulting in extended downtime. Given the above a Pre-FEED has been carried out considering supplying ESPs using OHTL’s supplying electrical power from EPP to ESPs in Area C. by uses parallel operation of diesel Generators , we could to constrict 124 from 184 and use 60 only ,by this we get high economic gain and technique, in additional that environmental protection by decreasing pollution.


2021 ◽  
Vol 73 (03) ◽  
pp. 42-43
Author(s):  
Chris Carpenter

This article, written by JPT Technology Editor Chris Carpenter, contains highlights of paper SPE 201130, “Novel Progressing-Cavity-Pump Configurations Address Operational Challenges,” by Lonnie Dunn, SPE, Ryan Rowan, and Abhishek Prakash, Lifting Solution, et al., prepared for the 2020 SPE Virtual Artificial Lift Conference and Exhibition-Americas, 10-12 November. The paper has not been peer reviewed. While downhole progressing-cavity-pump (PCP) designs provide options for end users, the numerous products available, combined with a lack of industry standardization, can make selection and application challenging. The complete paper provides an overview of the development of a PCP concept and implementation, which is not included in this synopsis, and then summarizes two novel PCP configurations deployed to address specific operational challenges. Design and Manufacturing, Configuration 1 A novel PCP configuration was developed from phased design trials and experience in cold heavy-oil production with sand (CHOPS) wells. This configuration uses a modified rotor to create alternating sections of contact and noncontact within a conventional stator (Fig. 1). The rotor is landed in the stator and operated until there is a performance decline. Then, the rotor is repositioned to move the active section of the rotor into the areas of the stator where there originally was no contact and, as such, normally no associated damage. Keeping the length of the alternating sections short simplifies the surface rotor positioning process, allowing it to be performed riglessly. The main benefit of this is that, rather than having to pull the rod string and run a different rotor, the same rotor is used and repositioned through lifting of the rod string at surface.


Author(s):  
Saurabh Goswami ◽  
◽  
Dr. Tej Singh Chouhan

2010 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexander Petrov ◽  
Alexander Mikhaylov ◽  
Konstantin Litvinenko

2002 ◽  
Vol 124 (4) ◽  
pp. 262-268 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gabriel A. Alarco´n ◽  
Carlos F. Torres ◽  
Luis E. Go´mez

Continuous flow gas lift is one of the most common artificial lift methods widely used in the oil industry. A continuous volume of high-pressure gas is injected as deep as possible into the tubing, to gasify the oil column, and thus facilitate the production. If there is no restriction in the amount of injection gas available, sufficient gas can be injected into each oil well to reach maximum production. However, the injection gas available is generally insufficient. An inefficient gas allocation in a field with limited gas supply reduces the revenues, since excessive gas injection is expensive due to the high gas prices and compressing costs. Therefore, it is necessary to assign the injection gas into each well in optimal form to obtain the field maximum oil production rate. The gas allocation optimization can be considered as a maximization of a nonlinear function, which models the total oil production rate for a group of wells. The variables or unknowns for this function are the gas injection rates for each well, which are subject to physical restrictions. In this work a nonlinear optimization technique, based on an objective function with constraints, was implemented to find the optimal gas injection rates. A new mathematical fit to the gas-lift performance curve (GLPC) is presented and the numeric results of the optimization are given and compared with those of other methods published in the specialized literature. The GLPC can be either measured in the field, or alternatively generated by computer simulations, by mean of nodal analysis. The optimization technique proved fast convergence and broad application.


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