Questions On HW 1
Questions On HW 1
Use the steady-state flow equations, to simulate an 80-acre drainage area with 1) a vertical oil well in the center of a circular area, and 2) a 800 ft horizontal well in the
center of same circular area, and 3) a producing side of square drainage area equivalent to 80 acres. The producing-face area is the length of a square side times
formation thickness.
a) For q=200 STB/day, plot Pwf (Y-axis) vs. S (X-axis) for the 3 cases. Discuss the resulting graphs.
b) For Pwf =1000 psi, plot q (Y-axis) vs. S (x-axis) for the 3 cases. Discuss the resulting graphs.
c) For S=0, plot q as a function of Pwf = 5000, 4000, 3000, 2000, 1000, 0, for the 3 cases. Discuss the resulting graphs.
Given, Kv = 1 md; Kh = 5 md, µ = 0.25 cp; h = 50 ft; B = 1.12 bbl/stb; Pe = 6000 psi; rw = 0.25 ft; S = -0.5, 0, 2, 5, 10, 15, 30
Radial Flow:
0.00708𝑘ℎ 𝑃𝑒 − 𝑃𝑤𝑓
𝑞=
𝑟
𝜇𝐵 ln 𝑒 + 𝑆
𝑟𝑤
Linear Flow:
0.001127𝑘𝐴 𝑃𝑒 − 𝑃𝑤𝑓
𝑞=
𝜇𝐵𝐿
Horizontal Well:
𝐾𝐻 ℎ 𝑃𝑒 − 𝑃𝑤𝑓
𝑞=
𝑎 + 𝑎2 − 𝐿/2 2 𝐼𝑎𝑛𝑖 ℎ 𝐼𝑎𝑛𝑖 ℎ
141.2𝜇𝐵 ln + ln +𝑠
𝐿/2 𝐿 𝑟𝑤 𝐼𝑎𝑛𝑖 + 1
𝐾𝐻
𝐼𝑎𝑛𝑖 =
𝐾𝑉
4 0.5
𝐿 𝑟𝑒
𝑎= 0.5 + 0.25 +
2 𝐿/2
1
Skin: Mathematical Modeling
2
Damage Characterization
◼ Pressure drawdown due to damage ( ΔPs )
◼ Productivity index ( J )
3
0.007082 k o h (Pe − Pwf )
qo =
Hawkins’ model
o Bo ln
re
+ S
rw
141.2 qB
◼ This pressure drop is referred as ∆𝑃𝑆 Ps = S
Kh
4
5
Example
What is the skin factor for a damaged well with 𝑟𝑤 = 0.328 if the
damaged area extended 3ft around the well and 𝑘/𝑘𝑆 is (a) 5 and
(b)10? (c) what is the skin radius for same skin factor as in (b) and
𝑘
= 5?
𝑘𝑆
𝑘 𝑟𝑠
𝑆= − 1 ln
𝑘𝑠 𝑟𝑤
3.328
(a) 𝑆 = 5 − 1 ln 0.328 = 9.27
3.328
(b) 𝑆 = 10 − 1 ln 0.328 = 20.85
𝑟
(c)
𝑆
5 − 1 ln 0.328 = 20.85 → 𝑟𝑠 = 0.328 𝑒 5.214 = 60.3𝑓𝑡
141.2 qB
Ps = S
Kh
141.2qB K rs
Ps = − 1 ln
Kh Ks rw
rs = rw e S k s / ( K − K s )
K
Ks =
S
1+
ln (rs / rw )
141.2 qB re
Pe − Pwf = ln −s
rs
Kh rw e re
rw
Pe
141.2 qB r e Ks
Pe − Pwf = ln '
Kh rw
K
−s
r = rw e
'
w
7
Example
Calculate the effective wellbore radius for a well of rw = 0.328 ft and
Skin factor of (a) 10, (b) 5, and (c) -5
−s
r = rw e
'
w
a) 𝑟′𝑤 = 𝑟𝑤 𝑒 −𝑆 = 0.328 𝑒 −10 = 1.49 x 10 −5 ft
b) 𝑟′𝑤 = 𝑟𝑤 𝑒 −𝑆 = 2.2 x 10 −3 ft
c) 𝑟′𝑤 = 𝑟𝑤 𝑒 −𝑆 = 48.6 ft
8
Effective rw of a fractured well
rw'
S = − ln
rw
Effective (apparent) wellbore radius in a fractured well is:
Xf Xf rw' Xf
rw' = and
e−S = ➔
S = − ln = − ln
2 2rw rw 2rw
𝑥𝑓 = 2𝑟𝑤 𝑒 −𝑆
Example
A PBU test has given you the following information:
q = 120 STBOPD rw = 0.265 ft B = 1.12 RB/STB
μ = 3.15 cp Pe-Pwf = 265 psi k = 105 md
h = 20 ft S = 3.2
Find pressure drop from skin:
141.2qB
Ps = S
kh
141.2 *120 *1.12 * 3.15
Ps = * 3.2
105 * 20
Ps = 91.1 psi
S t = S d + S p + S gp + S + S pp + S F + S psuedo
12
Total skin
S t = S d + S p + S gp + S + S pp + S F + S psuedo
◼ Slanted skin may overshadow Sd. The slant contributes a negative skin.
1. Well Stimulation
2. Artificial lifting
b)
16
Stimulation: Upstream and Downstream
17
Stimulation Methods
▪ Mechanical
a) Hydraulic fracturing:
Proppant fracturing, FracPacking, Slickwater fracturing
b) Other types of fracturing:
Propellant fracturing, gas fracturing, plasma fracturing, acoustic
stimulation, acid fracturing (Mechanical)
c) Re-fracturing
d) Re-perforation
e) Jetting
18
▪ Chemical
a) Acid fracturing (carbonate), closed acidizing,
sandstone acidizing
b) Acid stimulation; matrix acidizing, acid washing
c) Microbial stimulation
d) In-situ gas generation
▪ Thermal
a) Steam injection
b) Electrical heating
c) Exothermic reaction
d) Endothermic fracturing (FreezFrac, Cryogenic)
19
20
Acid Stimulation
➢ Acidizing has been used by our industry for about 120 years. The
use of acidizing was limited because of not having an effective acid
corrosion inhibitors.
Acid wash
1. Removing damaging materials in wellbore
2. Removing damaging materials in completion hardware
3. Removing damaging materials in perforations
Matrix Stimulation
1. Matrix Acidizing in carbonate, sandstone, and shale
2. Non-Acid Stimulation
Hydraulic Fracturing
1. Acid fracturing
2. Proppant fracturing
22
Acid Wash
◼ To remove scale, corrosion (rust), mud debris, cementing materials, and any other
deposits from wellbore completion and perforation. Do not use acid for paraffin,
sludges, and tars.
◼ Only circulation that does not include injection into the reservoir thus no diversion.
◼ Contact time (soaking) is based on lab testing to determine effect of contact time.
◼ Acid wash may be used to remove wellbore and perforation damaging materials in
preparation for matrix acidizing or fracturing.
◼ Mainly HCl but weak acid such as acetic and formic acids are used.
23
Acid Wash
Estimate production rate at steady state for K= 10, 1, 0.1, 0.01 md for
S=0 and 10
25
26
Maximum injection rate
kh (Pr − Pwf )
qo = 0.007082
re 3
B ln − + S
rw 4
Pf : fracturing pressure = FG * H
H: Vertical depth, ft
FG: Fracture gradient, psi/ft
Δpsafety: 200-300 psi
μ: Acid viscosity, cp
𝑃ഥ𝑟 : Average reservoir pressure
Calculate the maximum injection rate? What is the maximum injection rate if
K=0.1 md
−6
k h (Pf − Psafe − Pr )
qi max = 4.917 *10
0.47 re
ln + S
rw
28
Acid injection pressure
◼ Acid Injection Pressure
◼ Proper design and pump selection requires prediction of surface tubing
pressure to handle calculated injection rate.
◼ Surface tubing pressure is monitored in most acidizing treatment.
IPTC 17603
30
Lab testing
IPTC 17603
31
SPE 82268
Wormholes casting with wood’s metal with same injection rate at 250 F
32
IPTC 17285
Radius (depth) of wormholes
𝐾 𝑟𝑠
𝑠= − 1 𝑙𝑛 = 0 …………… Ks=K
𝐾𝑠 𝑟𝑤
• Corrosion Inhibitors
• Surfactants
• Iron Controllers
• Clay Stabilizers
• Anti-Sludge/Emulsion Agents
• Friction Reducers
• Retarders/Gelling Agents
• Diverting/fluid loss additives
• Scale Removal and Control
• Mutual Solvents
Example: oil well acid treatment
• Wellbore clean-up
• Preflush
• Acid + Additives
• Shut-in
• Flow back
Post Treatment Evaluation 39
New PE Graduates
Hydraulic fracturing methods
• Proppant fracturing
• Acid fracturing
• FracPacking
• Unconventional fracturing
Proppant Fracturing http://www.kgs.ku.edu/Publications/PIC/pic32.html
Acid Fracturing
◼ First job was in 1947 in the
Hugoton field, Kansas using
gasoline gel
◼ Many applications
◼ Oil-based fracturing
◼ Energized fracturing
◼ Waterless fracturing
Fracturing applications
Well Productivity
(bbl/day
104
103
Qo
102
101
0 10 20 30
years
Fractured vertical
well
Well Productivity
(bopd)
104
Fractured
103
Hydraulic Fracture Qo
102
101
0 10 20 30
years
Hydraulic Fracturing
X
f
SPE 128612
Fracture Geometries: from conventional to
unconventional
Height, Hf
Fracture Tip
• Single planar
• Tortuosity
Fracture Wings
• Multiple fractures
• SRV in Shale
SPE-37363
SPE 24823