Fernando Bastos Fernandes , Arthur Martins Barbosa Braga , Antônio Luiz S. de Souza , Antônio Cláudio Soares
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Geomechanical effects monitoring on reservoir rock and fluid properties response during the oil production curve are essential to improve oil recovery in a petroleum field. Incorporating geomechanics to flow models become the mathematical formulation regarding well-test and reservoir engineering more realistic because geomechanical parameters, e.g., in situ and overburden stress, as well as Biot’s coefficient, play a fundamental role in pressure response. Hence, permeability stress-sensitive oil reservoirs are the scope of various research in the petroleum industry for minimizing formation damage during drilling, completion, and stimulation operations. In this context, mechanical formation damage control plays a key role in preventing early-permeability loss that may result in reservoir compaction and oil field disinvestments. This work develops a new analytical solution for the nonlinear hydraulic diffusivity equation (NHDE) with instantaneous point-source/sink effects in permeability effective stress-sensitive oil reservoirs. The proposed model considers Biot’s effective stress change in the permeability response, and a new deviation factor is derived from comparing the nonlinear effect concerning the constant permeability classical solution and a decoupled case available in the literature. The calibration methodology is performed using a numerical simulator named IMEX®, widely used in formation evaluation works, and the results presented high convergence. The findings of this study allowed us to notice the role of overburden stress, oil flow rate, deviation factor, and Biot’s coefficient in permeability change during production in the diagnostic plots. Thereby, the modeling developed in this paper becomes a useful and attractive tool for predicting and monitoring permeability loss, oil flow rate specification, and reservoir history matching.
期刊介绍:
The objective of the Journal of Petroleum Science and Engineering is to bridge the gap between the engineering, the geology and the science of petroleum and natural gas by publishing explicitly written articles intelligible to scientists and engineers working in any field of petroleum engineering, natural gas engineering and petroleum (natural gas) geology. An attempt is made in all issues to balance the subject matter and to appeal to a broad readership.
The Journal of Petroleum Science and Engineering covers the fields of petroleum (and natural gas) exploration, production and flow in its broadest possible sense. Topics include: origin and accumulation of petroleum and natural gas; petroleum geochemistry; reservoir engineering; reservoir simulation; rock mechanics; petrophysics; pore-level phenomena; well logging, testing and evaluation; mathematical modelling; enhanced oil and gas recovery; petroleum geology; compaction/diagenesis; petroleum economics; drilling and drilling fluids; thermodynamics and phase behavior; fluid mechanics; multi-phase flow in porous media; production engineering; formation evaluation; exploration methods; CO2 Sequestration in geological formations/sub-surface; management and development of unconventional resources such as heavy oil and bitumen, tight oil and liquid rich shales.