Search citation statements
Paper Sections
Citation Types
Year Published
Publication Types
Relationship
Authors
Journals
In this paper we detail the work done in rearch for horizontal well reasonable drawdown pressure of heavy oil reservoir with bottom water based on detailed analysis of the geological, reservoir, production history, horizontal well data and production conditions with the intent to enhance rate and recovery efficiency in a heavy oil reservoir with bottom water. We study the geological, reservoir, production history and horizontal well data relate to optimizing horizontal well reasonable pressure drawdown in a heavy oil reservoir with bottom water, like reservoir thickness, horizontal well standoff over oil water contact, honrizontal section length, barriers distribution and viscosity in-place oil. This paper breaks up the past development idea of controlling horizontal well drawdown pressure to delay bottom water conning, and a new theory to high efficiency develop bottom water reservoir is present. This new development theory comes from geology & reservoir and takes production conditions on sea into account, has strong base of theory and practicability. A combination of geological, reservoir and production history is considered to optimize horizontal well pressure drawdown. Through the work done we are able to identify the reasonable pressure drawdown with every horizontal well including on production and planning. And we are able to identify how much these factors affect optimizing horizontal well pressure drawdown. There are 27 horizontal wells to develop heavy oil reservoir with bottom water at QHD32-6 Oilfield, and next step more horizontal wells will drilled. Some horizontal wells produce poorly because bottom water coning quickly, these wells obtain successful production after enlarging drawdown pressure and accumulative oil production exceed those wells with small drawdown pressure to delay bottom water conning.The rate and recovery efficiency in QHD32-6 Oilfield have been increased largely after this pressure drawdown optimization. The paper details techniques for pressure drawdown optimization in heavy oil reservoir with bottom water, and indicates high efficiency recovery by horizontal wells in heavy oil reservoir with bottom water is obtainable. This development idea has been applied to several fields at Bohai bay including QHD32-6, CFD11-1, SZ36-1 and CB. Producing practice have testified that high recovery rate for horizontal well of heavy oil reservoir with bottom water is very successful.
In this paper we detail the work done in rearch for horizontal well reasonable drawdown pressure of heavy oil reservoir with bottom water based on detailed analysis of the geological, reservoir, production history, horizontal well data and production conditions with the intent to enhance rate and recovery efficiency in a heavy oil reservoir with bottom water. We study the geological, reservoir, production history and horizontal well data relate to optimizing horizontal well reasonable pressure drawdown in a heavy oil reservoir with bottom water, like reservoir thickness, horizontal well standoff over oil water contact, honrizontal section length, barriers distribution and viscosity in-place oil. This paper breaks up the past development idea of controlling horizontal well drawdown pressure to delay bottom water conning, and a new theory to high efficiency develop bottom water reservoir is present. This new development theory comes from geology & reservoir and takes production conditions on sea into account, has strong base of theory and practicability. A combination of geological, reservoir and production history is considered to optimize horizontal well pressure drawdown. Through the work done we are able to identify the reasonable pressure drawdown with every horizontal well including on production and planning. And we are able to identify how much these factors affect optimizing horizontal well pressure drawdown. There are 27 horizontal wells to develop heavy oil reservoir with bottom water at QHD32-6 Oilfield, and next step more horizontal wells will drilled. Some horizontal wells produce poorly because bottom water coning quickly, these wells obtain successful production after enlarging drawdown pressure and accumulative oil production exceed those wells with small drawdown pressure to delay bottom water conning.The rate and recovery efficiency in QHD32-6 Oilfield have been increased largely after this pressure drawdown optimization. The paper details techniques for pressure drawdown optimization in heavy oil reservoir with bottom water, and indicates high efficiency recovery by horizontal wells in heavy oil reservoir with bottom water is obtainable. This development idea has been applied to several fields at Bohai bay including QHD32-6, CFD11-1, SZ36-1 and CB. Producing practice have testified that high recovery rate for horizontal well of heavy oil reservoir with bottom water is very successful.
Using horizontal wells in a waterflooding process, a higher sweep efficiency for less cost is expected as opposed to the use of classical patterns by vertical wells. However, the use of horizontal wells is very sensitive to the well pattern designed to operate such a process. The paper presents an analysis of how the overall efficiency of a waterflooding process is influenced by the well pattern using horizontal injectors and producers in different configurations. Recent investigations used vertical injectors and horizontal producers, with the horizontal well completed at the top of formation and having its toe close to the injection well, which was perforated at the lower part of formation. This process, known as a short-distance Toe-To-Heel Waterflooding "(TTHW) process", was found sound for the light-heavy oils with viscosity up to 2,000 cP, and proved to have maximum efficiency for relatively thick formations. The general necessity to inject higher water rates, simultaneously with the preservation of a certain control on the injection, prompted the investigation of the use of horizontal wells as injectors both for light-heavy oil and light oil recovery in thin oil reservoirs in a long distance displacement configuration, as well. A two phase two dimensional numerical simulator for thin formations to investigate the Waterflooding by Horizontal Injectors and Producers, including an "areal" TTHW process, was used. Both the sink/source and the discretized well were considered, in order to estimate the effect of pressure drop along both injectors and producers on the oil recovery performance. The results showed that the pressure loss along the horizontal section has a significant influence on the sweep efficiency. A numerical simulation study for 10 oils having viscosities between 1 cP and 150 cP was undertaken. The study was performed for both long-distance and short-distance displacement configurations, although for some oil viscosity values it was made just for illustrative purposes. The main parameters, such as time of water break-through, oil recovery at break-through, sweep efficiency, injection-production pressure drop, etc were analyzed in all cases. For optimization purposes two types of configuration were investigated: a staggered parallel horizontal wells configuration, having their heels in opposite directions and their toes arranged in a direct line, and an L shaped configuration, with perpendicular horizontal wells having their toes relatively close to each other. Introduction The waterflooding efficiency is highly influenced by the pressure loss along the horizontal well section and the geometry of the well pattern. Thus, the pressure loss along the horizontal section of a well will result in a non uniform distribution of the fluid flux along this section1,2. Accordingly, the flow rate is greater toward the heal section of the well and lower toward the toe section of the well, both for a production and an injection horizontal well. As concluded in a previous paper3 it is strongly recommended to use an inverse pattern for an waterflooding process rather than a direct one. As it was shown, due to the preferable tendency of the water to flow from the heel of the injector toward the heel of the producer, for the first case the sweep efficiency is much greater than for the later one.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2025 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.