1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to the drilling, completion, and production of an essentially horizontal (hereafter “horizontal”) well section into and along a subsurface, geological formation that contains heavy, viscous hydrocarbons, as disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,289,881 and 5,607,018, both issued to Frank J. Schuh.
2. Description of the Prior Art
U.S. Pat. No. 5,289,881 discloses in its FIG. 1 a horizontally extending well bore and casing section which contains steam injection tubing (injection tubing) 32. This injection tubing is terminated at its far down stream end by a choke 22 through which all vaporous steam (steam) injected from the surface of the earth leaves the tubing and enters the well bore casing annulus 42 for injection, through casing perforations 18, into producing zone 14. Zone 14 contains the viscous hydrocarbons that are desired to be produced to and recovered at the earth's surface. U.S. Pat. No. 5,289,881 is hereby incorporated in its entirety by reference.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,607,018 discloses a related production scheme in its FIG. 9 except that steam leaves the interior of steam injection tubing 132 by way of a series of holes 133 in that tubing. Holes 133 allow steam to exit the tubing in a direction that is directly toward casing 116, i.e., a direction that is essentially perpendicular to the long axes of both the injection tubing and the casing (liner) 116. Put another way, the exiting steam from the injection tubing is pointed directly at the inner surface of the casing, and its perforations 118, for injection of that steam into the hydrocarbon bearing formation 114 to liquefy such hydrocarbons for ultimate production to and recovery at the earth's surface. It is also disclosed in this patent, column 12, that the horizontal portion of the well bore can deviate less than 90° or more than 90° from the essentially horizontal portion of the well bore. U.S. Pat. No. 5,607,018 is hereby incorporated in its entirety by reference.
For sake of clarity, the horizontal sections of the well bore, casing and injection tubing are all shown in both of the aforesaid patents to be essentially straight along their longitudinal axes. In reality, this is not always the case. In drilling the horizontal portion of a well bore, the driller uses a commercially available instrument known as a three axis accelerometer to direct the drilling of that horizontal section. The typical accuracy for this instrument ranges from ¼ to ½ degree and can cause the driller to unknowingly deviate from the desired path. If the drilling path for any of a number of well known reasons, e.g., subsurface heterogeneities, tends too far upward or downward while drilling in the formation, the driller makes adjustments either up or down to the drilling apparatus to get the drill bit back on the desired drilling path. As explained hereinafter in greater detail, these adjustments, which are made while drilling proceeds unchecked, can result in the horizontal section of the well bore having, at least in parts thereof, a sinusoidal shape along the longitudinal axis of the well bore. Any sinusoidal configuration of the well bore is, upon completion of the well, transferred to the casing and injection tubing contained in the horizontal section of that well bore.
Thus, in reality, there can be one or more low spots in the horizontal sections of the well bore, casing, and injection tubing which can be substantial. For example, it is not uncommon for a low spot to deviate from about one to about five feet lower in elevation than the adjacent high spot.
Produced fluids, as used herein, are primarily a combination of liquid water (largely condensed steam) and liquid hydrocarbons that have been mobilized by contact with the steam injected into the formation from the injection tubing by way of the casing perforations. Produced fluids can collect in the aforementioned low spots. Undesired pools of produced fluids in such low spots not only mean lost production of desired hydrocarbons to the earth's surface, but can adversely affect the hydrocarbon production operation, e.g., by impeding or otherwise altering in a deleterious way the flow of steam in the casing annulus that surrounds the injection tubing.
Accordingly, it is highly desirable to have a horizontal well bore production scheme that overcomes the ill effects of hydrocarbons collecting in casing low spots, and this invention does just that.
In accordance with this invention, there is provided a method and apparatus for rendering mobile a viscous hydrocarbon held in a subsurface geologic formation by employing a horizontal well bore completion scheme that includes a steam injection tubing string that contains a plurality of jet nozzles that inject vaporous steam along the injection tubing, and toward a production tubing inlet.
Steam injected from earth's surface 110 through injection tubing 120 leaves the interior of that tubing by way of both holes 133, as shown by arrows 130, and choke 122; and enters the annulus 135 inside casing 116, which annulus surrounds horizontal section 132 of injection tubing 120. Annulus 135 has a substantially larger internal volume than the internal volume of injection tubing 120, e.g., a volumetric ratio of annular volume to injection tubing volume of from about 3/1 to about 5/1. This steam then leaves the interior of casing 116 by way of certain of the apertures 118 that extend around the circumference of section 112 of casing 116, and enters the interior of formation 114, as shown by arrows 136. This forms a steam cavity in formation 114 from which some hydrocarbon has been recovered and in which fresh steam is motivating (liquefying) additional viscous hydrocarbon present in the walls of such steam cavity. Produced fluids enter annulus 135 by way of certain other apertures 118 as shown by arrows 138.
Line 140 in
By using a plurality of nozzles 205 that discharge steam essentially parallel to the long axis 200 of injection tubing 120, and toward the production inlet 127, sufficient flow-energy is generated to transport essentially all produced fluids, including any and all produced fluids trapped in low spots, to production inlet 127.
The amount of flow-energy generated, and the lift capacity of the nozzle array employed will vary considerably depending on the details of the particular well completion, and can be controlled by the steam injection rate at the earth's surface, the production rate of produced fluids at the earth's surface, and nozzle sizing, spacing, and positioning along the injection tubing, all of which can readily be determined by one skilled in the art once apprised of this invention. With close spaced nozzles, the available energy is greater than required to transport produced fluids, and the uniformity of steam distribution maximized. With widely spaced nozzles, the available energy exceeds the transport requirement. Although nozzle spacing can vary widely, from a practical point of view a maximum spacing could be about 400 feet, and a minimum spacing about 35 feet. The spacing is from about 100 to about 150 feet under most conditions. Injection tubing 120 can, if desired, be essentially centralized inside annulus 135 to provide a clearer path for steam flow around the entire circumference of the injection tubing. Desirably, nozzles 205 will be located near the center of annulus 135 between the outer surface 201 of the injection tubing and the inner surface 400 (see
The maximum lift capacity can occur at the bottom of the horizontal portion of the well bore adjacent the closed end 300 (
The produced fluids rate at the earth's surface increases rapidly as the steam cavity expands upward to the top of formation 114. From that point it declines until the economic production rate limit is reached. The rate of liquid steam condensate production at the earth's surface is essentially the same as the steam injection rate at the earth's surface. Thus, for a typical design the steam injection rate at the earth's surface can start at about 12,000 pounds per hour, reach a peak of about 21,000 pounds per hour, and drop to about 11,000 pounds per hour as the economic production limit is reached.
Thus, it can be seen that produced fluids are driven by steam 208 toward inlet 127, and, because of the flow-energy imparted by a plurality of spaced apart jet nozzles along the length of injection tubing 120, not only moves newly entering produced fluid, but, at the same time, moves trapped produced fluids from low spots such as area 141 (
Formation 114 is at a depth of about 100 feet, and a thickness of about 36 feet. A well bore is drilled down to the formation and then horizontally in that formation for about 1,300 feet about 1 foot above the bottom of the formation. The well is cased with 9⅝ inch casing from the earth's surface to the beginning of the horizontal interval. The horizontal interval is cased with pre-perforated 7 inch outer diameter liner 116 (6.366 inch inner diameter). The 3½ inch outer diameter (2.992 inch inner diameter) production tubing string 124 extends from the earth's surface to and just through the dual packer 126, terminating at production inlet 127. Four inch outer diameter (3.548 inch inner diameter) steam injection tubing 120 extends essentially to the bottom of the well bore, i.e., far end of the horizontal section of the well bore and its casing (
The horizontal section of the well bore and the steam cavity in formation 114 are kept at an essentially constant temperature and pressure of about 350° F. and about 135 psia.
The 13 nozzles use an initial steam injection rate of about 945 pounds per hour per nozzle, using nozzle chokes from about 0.302 to about 0.308 inches. Individual nozzle steam emission velocities are about 1,339 feet per second. The horizontal interval varies in a sinusoidal manner up and down from the intended well bore path about 1 foot.
After 3.5 years of production, the maximum steam injection rate is about 20.6 million BTU's per hour, thereby producing about 200 barrels of hydrocarbon per day and about 1,520 barrels of water per day. At this time each nozzle is emitting about 1,620 pounds of steam per hour at an exit velocity of about 1,384 feet per second.
At the multi-year producing life of the well, the injection rate is 11.1 million BTU's per hour of steam. The final producing rate is about 71 barrels of hydrocarbon per day and about 820 barrels of water per day. The final individual nozzle flow rate is about 865 pounds per hour with a steam emission velocity of about 1,334 feet per second.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4397612 | Kalina | Aug 1983 | A |
4640355 | Hong et al. | Feb 1987 | A |
4787450 | Andersen et al. | Nov 1988 | A |
5016709 | Combe et al. | May 1991 | A |
5215149 | Lu | Jun 1993 | A |
5289881 | Schuh | Mar 1994 | A |
5607018 | Schuh | Mar 1997 | A |
5782261 | Becker et al. | Jul 1998 | A |
5826655 | Snow et al. | Oct 1998 | A |
5931230 | Lesage et al. | Aug 1999 | A |
6073696 | Ellis | Jun 2000 | A |
6708763 | Howard et al. | Mar 2004 | B2 |
20020096332 | De Almeida | Jul 2002 | A1 |
20030159828 | Howard et al. | Aug 2003 | A1 |
20050150657 | Howard et al. | Jul 2005 | A1 |
20060076145 | Lembcke et al. | Apr 2006 | A1 |
20060213652 | Shaposhnikov et al. | Sep 2006 | A1 |
20070107902 | Jelsma | May 2007 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20080011484 A1 | Jan 2008 | US |