Pressure Transient Analysis of a Vertically Fractured Well Produced by Solution Gas Drive

1977 ◽  
Vol 17 (05) ◽  
pp. 369-376 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Raghavan

Abstract Pressure transient data were investigated in a homogeneous and uniform reservoir containing oil and gas and producing at a constant surface oil rate by solution gas drive by means of a vertically fractured well. The well is assumed to be located at the center of a closed-square drainage area. Gravity effects were not included. To my best knowledge, this is the first study ort the pressure transient behavior of a vertically fractured well producing by solution gas drive. producing by solution gas drive. A recent paper presented a new method for analyzing pressure data in wells producing by solution gas drive. The method incorporates changes in effective permeability and fluid properties (formation volume factor, viscosity, and gas solubility) with pressure by means of a pseudo-pressure function however, it dealt exclusively pseudo-pressure function however, it dealt exclusively with plane radial flow. This paper presents the application of that new technique to vertically fractured wells. Dimensionless groups are used throughout to extend the results to other situations having different permeabilities, spacing, reservoir thickness, porosity, etc, provided the PVT relations and relative-permeability characteristics are identical to those used in this study. The pseudo-pressure function concept used to analyze pseudo-pressure function concept used to analyze drawdown and buildup behavior extends the applicability of the results to a wide range of PVT relations and relative-permeability characteristics. Introduction In recent years, the analysis of pressure data of fractured wells has received considerable attention. However, most of this work is related to single-phase flow. An examination of the literature indicated that no rigorous study has been made regarding the pressure behavior of a vertically fractured well producing by solution gas drive. The first objective of this paper is to discuss the transient floe, behavior of the system described above. The second objective is to demonstrate the applicability of a recent technique for determining absolute formation permeability when two phases (oil and gas) are flowing simultaneously. This technique is based on using a pseudo-pressure function that rigorously incorporates changes in permeability with saturation and fluid properties permeability with saturation and fluid properties with pressure. It will be shown that, by using the procedure suggested here, better estimates of procedure suggested here, better estimates of fracture length also can be obtained. LITERATURE REVIEW General equations of motion describing multiphase flow in porous media are well known and will not be discussed here. A summary of the work in this area as if pertains to well test analysis is presented in Ref. 5. This section briefly reviews only the computation of an integral (henceforth called the pseudo-pressure function), which was used in Ref. pseudo-pressure function), which was used in Ref. 5 to analyze drawdown and buildup. In a recent paper, Fetkovich suggested that if the pseudo-pressure function, m (p), given by: (1) is used, then transient, pseudo-steady-state and steady-state multiphase flow through porous media may be described by simple expressions similar to that for the flow of a slightly compressible fluid. For example, Fetkovich suggested that for transient radial flow one can express the flow rate as (2) where to is the dimensionless time given by (3) In Eq. 2, s' represents the skin effect that, in general, includes the effects of damage in the vicinity of the wellbore, as well as a skin effect caused by the development of a gas saturation. SPEJ P. 369

1976 ◽  
Vol 16 (04) ◽  
pp. 196-208 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Raghavan

Abstract Drawdown and buildup data in a homogeneous, uniform, closed, cylindrical reservoir containing oil and gas and producing by solution gas drive at a constant surface oil rate were investigated. The well was assumed to be located at the center of the reservoir. Gravity effects were not included. Though the reservoir systems studied were assumed to be homogeneous, the effect of a damaged region in the vicinity of the wellbore was examined. Recently, alternate expressions for describing multiphase flow through porous media have been presented. These expressions incorporate changes presented. These expressions incorporate changes in effective permeability and fluid properties (formation volume factor, viscosity, gas solubility) with pressure by means of a pseudopressure function. The validity of applying the pseudopressure-function concept to drawdown and pseudopressure-function concept to drawdown and buildup testing for multiphase-flow situations was investigated. The pseudopressure function for analyzing drawdown behavior is calculated difrerently from that required to analyze buildup data. Consequently, two pseudopressure functions are required for analysis of well behavior in multiphase-flow systems. Dimensionless groups are used to extend the results to other situations having different permeabilities, spacing, reservoir thickness, well permeabilities, spacing, reservoir thickness, well radii, porosity, etc., provided the PVT relations and relative-permeability characteristics are identical to those used in this study. The pseudopressure-function concept used to analyze pseudopressure-function concept used to analyze drawdown and buildup behavior extends the applicability of the results to a wide range of PVT relations and relative-permeability characteristics. Introduction During the past 30 years, more than 300 publications have considered various problems publications have considered various problems pertaining to well behavior. Except for a few (about pertaining to well behavior. Except for a few (about 10), most papers examining transient pressure behavior assume that the fluids in the reservoir obey the diffusivity equation. This implies the use of a single-phase, slightly compressible fluid. The reason for the popularity of this approach is twofold:(1)the ease with which the diffusivity equation can be solved for a wide variety of problems, and(2)the demonstration by some problems, and(2)the demonstration by some workers that, for some multiphase-flow situations, single-phase flow results may be used provided appropriate modifications are made. The necessary modifications are summarized in Ref. 1. The main objective of this study is to present a method for rigorously incorporating changes in fluid properties and relative-permeability effects in the properties and relative-permeability effects in the analysis of pressure data when two phases of oil and gas are flowing. This should enable the engineer to calculate the absolute formation permeability rather than the effective permeability to each of the flowing phases. This method is based on an idea suggested by Fetkovich, who proposed that if an expression similar to the real gas pseudopressure is defined, then equations describing pseudopressure is defined, then equations describing simultaneous flow of oil and gas through porous media may be simplified considerably. The validity of the equations and methods for calculating the pseudopressure function, however, was not presented pseudopressure function, however, was not presented by Fetkovich. LITERATURE REVIEW AND THEORETICAL CONSIDERATIONS General equations of motion describing multiphase flow in porous media have been known since 1936. These equations, and the assumptions involved in deriving them, are discussed thoroughly in the literature and will not be considered here. Equations for two-phase flow were first solved by Muskat and Meres for a few special cases. Evinger and Muskat studied the effect of multiphase flow on the productivity index of a well and examined the steady radial flow of oil and gas in a porous medium. Under conditions of steady radial porous medium. Under conditions of steady radial flow the oil flow rate is given by (1) SPEJ P. 196


2011 ◽  
Vol 14 (06) ◽  
pp. 750-762 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicolas Legrand ◽  
Joop de Kok ◽  
Pascale Neff ◽  
Torsten Clemens

Summary The fractured basement field in Yemen described in this paper is characterized by two types of fracturing: background fractures with a very low effective permeability of less than 0.001 md and fracture corridors with an effective permeability of up to several millidarcies. Except for some dissolution porosity related to fracture corridors, no significant matrix porosity is encountered (total porosity is only 1.15%). Approximately one-half of the oil in place is contained in the fracture corridors and one-half in the background fractures. Production from this field commenced in 2007. It is currently produced by depletion. Compositional grading has been observed in the 3,120-ft oil column. Despite the fact that the oil is close to bubblepoint pressure at the top of the reservoir, a moderate increase in gas/oil ratio (GOR) has been seen. Detailed studies using material balance and discrete-fracture-network (DFN) models revealed that the reason for the slow increase in GOR is the low permeability of the background fractures. The low permeability leads to viscous forces being dominant over gravity forces and, hence, limited gravity segregation of gas and oil. Because of the relatively small viscosity difference between the gas and the oil in this field(µo/µg = 6.5), the gas mobility is not much higher than the oil mobility at low gas saturations. Hence, oil and gas are produced effectively from the background fractures into the fracture corridors and the reservoir pressure is not depleting as fast as in reservoirs with higher viscosity difference between gas and oil. This results in a more effective solution-gas-drive recovery mechanism than that expected for a conventional reservoir. A number of reservoir-management strategies have been investigated. The results indicate that the low permeability of the fracture corridors and very low permeability of the background fractures lead to low recovery factors of 14% for gas injection. However, the efficiency of solution-gas drive is higher than in conventional reservoirs.


2017 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 152-176
Author(s):  
Ahmed M. Daoud ◽  
Mahmoud Abdel Salam ◽  
Abdel Alim Hashem ◽  
M.H. Sayyouh

Background:The Inflow Performance Relationship (IPR) describes the behavior of flow rate with flowing pressure, which is an important tool in understanding the well productivity. Different correlations to model this behavior can be classified into empirically-derived and analytically-derived correlations. The empirically-derived are those derived from field or simulation data. The analytically-derived are those derived from basic principle of mass balance that describes multiphase flow within the reservoir. The empirical correlations suffer from the limited ranges of data used in its generation and they are not function of reservoir rock and fluid data that vary per each reservoir. The analytical correlations suffer from the difficulty of obtaining their input data for its application.Objectives:In this work, the effects of wide range of rock and fluid properties on IPR for solution gas-drive reservoirs were studied using 3D radial single well simulation models to generate a general IPR correlation that functions of the highly sensitive rock and fluid data.Methodology:More than 500 combinations of rock and fluid properties were used to generate different IPRs. Non-linear regression was used to get one distinct parameter representing each IPR. Then a non-parametric regression was used to generate the general IPR correlation. The generated IPR correlation was tested on nine synthetic and three field cases.Results & Conclusion:The results showed the high application range of the proposed correlation compared to others that failed to predict the IPR. Moreover, the proposed correlation has an advantage that it is explicitly function of rock and fluid properties that vary per each reservoir.


2004 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cengiz Satik ◽  
Carlon Robertson ◽  
Bayram Kalpakci ◽  
Deepak Gupta

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