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Temperature logging is an old technique that quantifies fracture height based on cooldown anomalies. Warm anomalies are very frequently observed in post-fracturing measurements. One of the reasons for these anomalies is misalignment of the wellbore with the fracture, which depends on the geometry of wellbore and preferential fracture plane. A systematic study is presented here to avoid misinterpretation of fracture height. Two mathematical tools were coupled: (1) a geometrical resolution of the 3D space around the wellbore and (2) a numerical scheme solving the heat transfer partial differential equation (PDE) in dimensionless form to simulate temperature evolution around the wellbore. Finally, the findings were tested and corroborated with a few field cases in deep, hot, clastic reservoirs. The temperature log was conducted with three passes and was used for interpretation in deviated wellbores. The first tool utilized the wellbore deviation, wellbore azimuth, and fracture azimuth to resolve the relative positions and detailed geometry in 3D space. The tool yielded the fraction of total fracture height that will be coincident with the wellbore for a given set of inputs. The outputs were then coupled with the numerical tool with an explicit finite difference code to solve the relevant PDE with appropriate boundary conditions for the given geometrical space for the angled/separated fracture. The results showed that the further the fracture separates from wellbore, the more difficult it is to observe cooldown if the temperature logging is conducted soon after fracturing. Delaying the temperature passes allows the cold front from fracture to move towards wellbore and is a viable solution to capture cooldown, as seen from field measurements and validated by the model. The field cases demonstrated some complicated temperature behaviors, and the understanding developed from the modeling tools aided in interpreting the anomalous trends. The possibility of constructing pseduo temperature logs, lowering the number of passes, and extending the approach for multiple applications is discussed. The innovative approach avoids pitfalls of false indications of fracture containment in deviated wells. It can be used to improve the utility of high-resolution temperature logging data to enhance efficiency.
Temperature logging is an old technique that quantifies fracture height based on cooldown anomalies. Warm anomalies are very frequently observed in post-fracturing measurements. One of the reasons for these anomalies is misalignment of the wellbore with the fracture, which depends on the geometry of wellbore and preferential fracture plane. A systematic study is presented here to avoid misinterpretation of fracture height. Two mathematical tools were coupled: (1) a geometrical resolution of the 3D space around the wellbore and (2) a numerical scheme solving the heat transfer partial differential equation (PDE) in dimensionless form to simulate temperature evolution around the wellbore. Finally, the findings were tested and corroborated with a few field cases in deep, hot, clastic reservoirs. The temperature log was conducted with three passes and was used for interpretation in deviated wellbores. The first tool utilized the wellbore deviation, wellbore azimuth, and fracture azimuth to resolve the relative positions and detailed geometry in 3D space. The tool yielded the fraction of total fracture height that will be coincident with the wellbore for a given set of inputs. The outputs were then coupled with the numerical tool with an explicit finite difference code to solve the relevant PDE with appropriate boundary conditions for the given geometrical space for the angled/separated fracture. The results showed that the further the fracture separates from wellbore, the more difficult it is to observe cooldown if the temperature logging is conducted soon after fracturing. Delaying the temperature passes allows the cold front from fracture to move towards wellbore and is a viable solution to capture cooldown, as seen from field measurements and validated by the model. The field cases demonstrated some complicated temperature behaviors, and the understanding developed from the modeling tools aided in interpreting the anomalous trends. The possibility of constructing pseduo temperature logs, lowering the number of passes, and extending the approach for multiple applications is discussed. The innovative approach avoids pitfalls of false indications of fracture containment in deviated wells. It can be used to improve the utility of high-resolution temperature logging data to enhance efficiency.
Hydraulic fracturing is a common method of production enhancement for low- and mid-permeability reserves. Deep, hot gas reservoirs are usually fractured using ceramic proppant that is prone to flowback during fracture cleanup and production phases. Design techniques such as tip screenout (TSO) mode, particle size for a stable proppant arch, and choke management exist but are not foolproof. Resin-coated proppant (RCP) is a common method for proppant flowback control. However, it requires additional time and may reduce proppant pack permeability in the critical near-wellbore zone. A proppant with high aspect ratio (HARP) was trial tested as an alternative to RCP to optimize the mitigation of solids production. Multiple repeatability long-term conductivity tests were conducted on the proppant samples. HARP was implemented in two wells replacing RCP as a tail-in proppant. HARP placement was a concern due to its size and weight; the candidate well is the deepest and the hottest well so far where HARP has been pumped globally. Therefore, the HARP concentration was limited to a maximum 7 PPA at the first trial compared to 9 PPA in the offset area with 20/40-mesh proppant. The treatment execution, challenges, performance, and solids recovery of the trial wells were compared to their offset wells using the local solids-free criteria. A novel fracture flowback simulator was used to couple fracture modeling, placement, and flowback schedule design. The numerical simulator was built by digitizing flow tests to approximate the bridging and failure criteria for proppant packs. Post-fracturing shut-in time reduction by 55% was found to be an early benefit of using HARP. The trial Well-A resulted in zero solids recovery during the post-treatment well cleanup. Following this, multiple wells were trialed with similar results except in one well that showed formation sand during flowback. In no cases was HARP recovered at surface. Offset well analysis showed higher cumulative production of proppant and formation sand, even when the RCP to total proppant ratio was two-to threefold higher compared to the ratio of HARP amount to total proppant. Also, the end-of-treatment net pressure gain increased up to 50% higher compared to the offsets. The gas production for both of the trial wells exceeded the offsets due to 50% to 900% higher conductivity, which was evaluated through long-term conductivity tests input to validate the post-fracturing net pressure history match. It was also realized that perforation strategy, including gun orientation, interval length, etc., is a critical factor for solids flowback control and must be optimized together with proppant selection. Flowback tests with HARP also showed a much higher critical velocity for proppant pack failure compared to RCP. This paper presents an alternate solution for proppant flowback control material and even an alternate design strategy to integrate the flowback schedule design along with fracturing design as opposed to the silo approach. The unconventional proppant coupled with a robust flowback simulator opens high potential for unconsolidated formations. A frac-and-pack design with HARP engineering with a choke schedule has the potential to replace expensive screen completions and the complications associated with them.
Gas wells with high porosity and a low productivity index have mechanical and petrophysical properties that require fracture development to improve productivity. Fundamental solutions through treatment design have a lower impact than the characteristics of the reservoir and rock properties. Problems related to controlled fracture geometry, excessive fluid leakoff, proppant settling, proppant flowback, and near-wellbore and far-field diversion do not have promising solutions. Utilization of degradable chemistry, especially with ability of simulating the performance with advanced numerical models, has promising and underutilized potential for fracturing, stimulation, and production optimization. Numerous versions of fibers and particulates with different particle distributions were developed with polylactic acid (PLA) chemistry by altering properties and morphologies for applicability over a wide range of 140 to 350°F. Techniques such as dynamic fluid loss, plugging, degradation, and core-flow testing and scanning electron microscopy were used to characterize, evaluate, and qualify the product for a tailored solution. Nine challenging cases were studied using rigorous integration of laboratory experimentation and state-of the art high-fidelity, high-resolution, multiphysics, multimaterial fracture modeling in the design and evaluation phases. Degradation acceleration was studied and optimized using various chemical media to avoid long well shut-in times and rock pore throat and surface line plugging. The following cases and resolutions are detailed in the paper: (1) In a high-leakoff formation with fracturing fluid efficiency (FE) of 4.7%, the 150-µm version of the PLA powder was used to increase the FE to 27%. This enabled successful proppant placement and reduced formation damage. (2) In a well with a parted liner, the target perforation interval was inaccessible. We perforated above the deformed region to access the target net pay from above. Due to the high Young's modulus at perforations, there is a huge risk of proppant settling and loss of wellbore-fracture connection. Fiber-laden slurry allowed saving this challenging intervention well with commercial post-fracturing production. (3) A strategic proppant and fibers composite mixture was used to create an artificial stress barrier. Height growth control allowed successfully avoiding contact with the water-gas contact 70 ft away from the bottom perforation. The production showed no formation water. The concept can be used for fracture geometry control overall to reduce fracture-driven interactions. (4) Fibers were used to increase the CO2 foam stability and decrease proppant settling twofold, enabling treatment placement by decreasing proppant friction by 62% with no indications of the near-wellbore bridging observed in CO2 foam without fibers. (5) Near-wellbore diverters were used to mitigate interstage communication in openhole multistage acid fracturing with packers. The technique is extendible to controlling losses in coiled tubing interventions and plugging other completion elements such as flow control valves. (6) Engineered multimodal near-wellbore diverters were used to enhance stimulation and operational efficiency ~threefold and reduce 58% of the stages required to have effective reservoir contact. (7) Far-field diversion was achieved successfully with fiber-laden viscous acids for low-, mid-, and high-temperature carbonates. (8) Proppant flowback control was achieved with use of fibers. (9) Fibers were used in cleaning/scrubbing applications.
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