The Effect of Permeability Anisotropy on the Evaluation and Design of Hydraulic Fracture Treatments and Well Performance

1991 ◽  
Author(s):  
J.M. Gatens ◽  
W.J. Lee ◽  
C.W. Hopkins ◽  
D.E. Lancaster
1999 ◽  
Vol 2 (05) ◽  
pp. 462-469 ◽  
Author(s):  
J.P. Spivey ◽  
W. John Lee

Summary This article presents a method for finding the equivalent isotropic system for a horizontal well or a hydraulically fractured well at an arbitrary azimuth in an anisotropic reservoir. The equivalent isotropic system can then be used to calculate the pressure response of the original system. The horizontal well solution is compared with previous solutions reported in the literature. The general hydraulically fractured well case has not, to our knowledge, been presented before. This study confirms the observation by Yildiz and Ozkan1 that small deviations (up to 20°) from the optimal azimuth for a horizontal well do not have a major effect on the pressure response. Because this solution is obtained by finding an equivalent isotropic system, this study also confirms the observation by Earlougher2 that an anisotropic system cannot be identified from a single-well test. Introduction Permeability anisotropy may occur for a variety of reasons. One of the most important causes of permeability anisotropy is the presence of natural fractures. These reservoirs are often candidates for horizontal drilling. The optimal wellbore orientation is perpendicular to the direction of maximum permeability. Often, the principal axes of permeability are not well characterized during the initial stages of field development. Thus, the wellbore orientation may lie at any angle to the principal axes of permeability. A similar situation is that of a well with a hydraulic fracture in a naturally fractured reservoir. Although the fracture created will often be parallel to the primary set of natural fractures, this is not necessarily the case. Tectonic stresses control the direction of growth of both natural fracture systems and hydraulic fractures. If the tectonic stresses have changed since the formation of the natural fracture system, the hydraulic fracture may have a different orientation from the natural fractures. This may even occur because of production. Cases have been documented where repeat fracture treatments had a different orientation from the original fractures because of the change in the tectonic stresses caused by reservoir depletion.3 The case of a horizontal well in an anisotropic reservoir with the wellbore parallel to one of the principal axes of permeability has been studied by a number of authors. The case of a horizontal well having the wellbore at an arbitrary orientation with respect to the principal axes of permeability has previously been studied by Besson,4 by Zhang and Dusseault,5 and by Yildiz and Ozkan.1 Besson4 studied the case of a horizontal or slanted wellbore in a reservoir with horizontal to vertical anisotropy. Although he presented the transformations for the general case of kx?ky?kz, he did not consider the case of areal anisotropy further. Zhang and Dusseault5 presented a solution based on transforming the anisotropic system to an equivalent isotropic system. They also proposed graphical and numerical methods for determining the permeability anisotropy from analysis of tests in two horizontal wells having different azimuths. Yildiz and Ozkan1 likewise presented a solution by defining dimensionless variables that perform an implicit coordinate transformation. To the best of our knowledge, the fractured well case has been studied only for the situation where the hydraulic fracture is parallel to one of the principal axes of permeability.6 We present new analytical solutions for these two situations. The new solutions are obtained by transforming the original problem with anisotropic permeability into an equivalent problem with isotropic permeability. Thus, the pressure transient response in an anisotropic system cannot be distinguished from that of an isotropic system from the shape of the pressure response alone. The major contribution of this article is to define the properties of the equivalent isotropic system in terms of the properties of the original anisotropic system. Any existing solution for an isotropic system can then be used to evaluate the pressure response. For the hydraulically fractured well case, we assume a finite-conductivity fracture. The infinite-conductivity fracture case may be obtained in the limit as the fracture conductivity increases. In the next section we discuss a solution for the horizontal well case, while in the following section we discuss the hydraulically fractured well case. The derivations of the equivalent systems for these two cases are given in Appendices B and C, respectively.


2017 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 25
Author(s):  
Bin Yuan ◽  
Chen Xu ◽  
Kai Wang ◽  
Wei Zhang ◽  
Rouzbeh Ghanbarnezhad Moghanloo ◽  
...  

2011 ◽  
Vol 14 (02) ◽  
pp. 248-259 ◽  
Author(s):  
E.. Ozkan ◽  
M Brown ◽  
R.. Raghavan ◽  
H.. Kazemi

Summary This paper presents a discussion of fractured-horizontal-well performance in millidarcy permeability (conventional) and micro- to nanodarcy permeability (unconventional) reservoirs. It provides interpretations of the reasons to fracture horizontal wells in both types of formations. The objective of the paper is to highlight the special productivity features of unconventional shale reservoirs. By using a trilinear-flow model, it is shown that the drainage volume of a multiple-fractured horizontal well in a shale reservoir is limited to the inner reservoir between the fractures. Unlike conventional reservoirs, high reservoir permeability and high hydraulic-fracture conductivity may not warrant favorable productivity in shale reservoirs. An efficient way to improve the productivity of ultratight shale formations is to increase the density of natural fractures. High natural-fracture conductivities may not necessarily contribute to productivity either. Decreasing hydraulic-fracture spacing increases the productivity of the well, but the incremental production gain for each additional hydraulic fracture decreases. The trilinear-flow model presented in this work and the information derived from it should help the design and performance prediction of multiple-fractured horizontal wells in shale reservoirs.


Energies ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (20) ◽  
pp. 6747
Author(s):  
Abdulaziz Ellafi ◽  
Hadi Jabbari

Researchers and operators have recently become interested in the individual stage optimization of unconventional reservoir hydraulic fracture. These professionals aim to maximize well performance during an unconventional well’s early-stage and potential Enhanced Oil Recovery (EOR) lifespan. Although there have been advances in hydraulic fracturing technology that allow for the creation of large stimulated reservoir volumes (SRVs), it may not be optimal to use the same treatment design for all stages of a well or many wells in an area. We present a comprehensive review of the main approaches used to discuss applicability, pros and cons, and a detailed comparison between different methodologies. Our research outlines a combination of the Diagnostic Fracture Injection Test (DFIT) and falloff pressure analysis, which can help to design intelligent production and improve well performance. Our field study presents an unconventional well to explain the objective optimization workflow. The analysis indicates that most of the fracturing fluid was leaked off through natural fracture surface area and resulted in the estimation of larger values compared to the hydraulic fracture calculated area. These phenomena might represent a secondary fracture set with a high fracture closure stress activated in neighbor stages that was not well-developed in other sections. The falloff pressure analysis provides significant and vital information, assisting operators in fully understanding models for fracture network characterization.


Author(s):  
Yunsuk Hwang ◽  
Jiajing Lin ◽  
David Schechter ◽  
Ding Zhu

Multiple hydraulic fracture treatments in reservoirs with natural fractures create complex fracture networks. Predicting well performance in such a complex fracture network system is an extreme challenge. The statistical nature of natural fracture networks changes the flow characteristics from that of a single linear fracture. Simply using single linear fracture models for individual fractures, and then summing the flow from each fracture as the total flow rate for the network could introduce significant error. In this paper we present a semi-analytical model by a source method to estimate well performance in a complex fracture network system. The method simulates complex fracture systems in a more reasonable approach. The natural fracture system we used is fractal discrete fracture network model. We then added multiple dominating hydraulic fractures to the natural fracture system. Each of the hydraulic fractures is connected to the horizontal wellbore, and some of the natural fractures are connected to the hydraulic fractures through the network description. Each fracture, natural or hydraulically induced, is treated as a series of slab sources. The analytical solution of superposed slab sources provides the base of the approach, and the overall flow from each fracture and the effect between the fractures are modeled by applying the superposition principle to all of the fractures. The fluid inside the natural fractures flows into the hydraulic fractures, and the fluid of the hydraulic fracture from both the reservoir and the natural fractures flows to the wellbore. This paper also shows that non-Darcy flow effects have an impact on the performance of fractured horizontal wells. In hydraulic fracture calculation, non-Darcy flow can be treated as the reduction of permeability in the fracture to a considerably smaller effective permeability. The reduction is about 2% to 20%, due to non-Darcy flow that can result in a low rate. The semi-analytical solution presented can be used to efficiently calculate the flow rate of multistage-fractured wells. Examples are used to illustrate the application of the model to evaluate well performance in reservoirs that contain complex fracture networks.


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