This invention relates generally to oilfield equipment for monitoring and controlling wells that are produced by rod pumping where subsurface fluid pumps are driven via a rod string which is reciprocated by a pumping unit located at the surface. The pumping unit may be of the predominate beam type or any other type that reciprocates the rod string.
In particular, this invention concerns using a down hole dynagraph, i.e., a pump card, with information as to the size of the down hole pump, to infer automatically the hydrocarbon production of the well.
Still more particularly, the invention concerns methods for use in a Well Monitor Controller where surface and pump cards are produced, whereby traditional well tests of a producing well can be eliminated.
2. Description of the Prior Art
Traditional Production Testing
A production test is a time-honored procedure in oil producing operations. It is involved in several activities including operation of the oilfield as a business venture, governmental regulation, well troubleshooting, and reserve estimates. With respect to its business role, it provides for division of leaseholder royalties and costs. To encourage prudent operation and enhance the stability of the nation, conservation authorities usually require periodic production tests. Also the production test is employed as a diagnostic indicator which calls attention to well problems that need to be addressed. It is important in reserve estimates, because cumulative production from each well needs to be known.
The use of the production test as a diagnostic indicator is perhaps the most recognized application among production specialists. A decline in production rate compared with a previous test can indicate a mechanical problem. The down hole pump may be worn or a tubing leak may have developed. The mechanical malfunction should be identified and remedied. The decline may also be caused by a change in reservoir conditions in the drainage area of the well. The receptivity of an offset injection well may have diminished. This may have resulted in a producing pressure decline and a decrease in production rate. The problem in the secondary recovery system should be rectified.
Conversely, an increase in productivity as measured by a well test may indicate that the well is responding to secondary recovery efforts. In this case, the well should be pumped more aggressively to obtain the increased production that is available.
The production test is a good tool for sensing that a change in the well has occurred, but it does not pinpoint the exact reason for the change. Usually a unique cause and effect relationship does not exist between a change in production rate and its cause. Because different causes may lead to the same effect, ambiguity exists. For example, a production decrease can have any number of causes such as a worn pump, a tubing leak, a failed tubing anchor, the onset of free gas production, secondary recovery deficiency, etc.
In the early years of the oil industry, each well had its own tankage and oil-gas-water separation equipment. The well was tested by measuring daily production into its tank. To decrease capital and operating costs, the handling and measurement system evolved into a centralized facility with flow lines extending from the individual wells. Production from the individual wells comes to a header. At the header a given well is placed either “on test” or has its production sent with that of other wells through a separate facility for separating and treating salable products. Ultimately the oil produced from the well(s) on test is combined with production from the remainder of the wells. The total production is then measured a final time and sold. The individual well test is used to determine the contribution of the subject well to total production from the lease. As mentioned previously, individual well tests are also used to equitably divide operating costs between the wells and to provide information for reserve estimates.
Meter malfunction is a significant problem for traditional production tests. In addition, the well test can be wrong even when the meters are working perfectly. Actual production is normally much lower than the test, primarily because of down time for equipment failures or other reasons. In principle, downtime is noted and accounted for, but down time measurement accuracy is poor. Downtime is often neglected entirely. The net effect is that traditional tests and actual production from individual wells can differ substantially, as much as from 10 to 20 percent. Accurately knowing actual production from each well is not only important for effective production operations but is also important for reservoir management.
Well test systems have evolved significantly. Automatically controlled diverting valves have replaced manual valves. Computers for scheduling well tests have been introduced. Significant improvements in the accuracy and reliability of measuring devices have also been made. Traditional production testing has come a long way since the pumper manually operated the system and recorded the results in an oily notebook with a stubby pencil.
Diagnostic Methods
As mentioned above, a production test has been used as a diagnostic tool to discover that a change has occurred in the well. The test itself does not point to the cause for the change. To determine specific cause(s) for change, diagnostic methods are employed. The best diagnostic methods are based on dynamometer analyses. Trial and error searches with the service rig (pulling unit) can also be used, but these searches are more costly to perform. Trial and error solutions require more time, and revenue is lost before the problem is identified.
Like the production test, a fluid level instrument is not capable of identifying the specific cause for a change. A change in fluid level can indicate several causes. If a relatively high fluid level is found, for example, the well operator only knows that the well is not producing at capacity. More investigation with diagnostic methods is required to identify the cause: it could be a worn pump, tubing leak, secondary recovery problem or something else.
Modern diagnostic analysis with the dynamometer began in the 1960's. The epochal development was the method for inferring the down hole pump card from surface dynamometer data. It was described in U.S. Pat. No. 3,343,409 (Gibbs). The down hole pump card (hereinafter called the “pump card”) was originally introduced in 1936. It was measured directly with a dynamometer located at the subsurface pump. The measured pump card had to be retrieved by a costly process of pulling the rods and pump. By 1960, computers were available which could solve the complicated equations required to calculate the pump card from data measured at the surface of the well. To produce the pump card, solutions to the wave equation are obtained which satisfy dynamometer time histories of surface rod load and position.
Qualitative Evaluation of Down Hole Pump from the Shape of Pump Card
The pump card is very useful. Its shape reveals defective pumps, completely filled pumps, gassy or pounding wells, unanchored tubing, parted rods, etc. The pump card can also be used to compute producing pressure, liquid and gas throughput, and oil shrinkage effects. It can also be used to sense tubing leaks.
Quantitative Determination of Pump Leakage
Quantitative computation of pump leakage from pump cards was described in “Quantitative Determination of Rod-Pump Leakage with Dynamometer Techniques”, Nolen, Gibbs, SPE Production Engineering, August 1990. Prior to this work, pump mechanical condition was obtained by (1) pulling the pump or (2) comparing the production test with estimates of pump capacity or (3) qualitative eyeballing of valve leakage rates measured with the dynamometer. The quantitative methods of Nolen and Gibbs to determine leakage involved use of scaled traveling or standing valve tests and information as to the manner in which the surface unit stops when turned off and information as to the pump velocity measured from the pump card. These methods are discussed below in greater detail.
Pump Off Control Technology
Pump off control (POC) attained status as a viable method in the early 1970's. It was originally intended merely for stopping the well to prevent the mechanical damage of fluid pound and the power waste associated with operating an incompletely filled pump. From this humble beginning, the POC evolved into a distributed diagnostic system with well management capabilities. Gradually the phrase “pump off control” was replaced with terms like “Well Manager,” “Pump Rod Controller,” etc. (Lufkin Automation uses the trademark SAM to identify its Well Manager system). These new terms imply more than pump off control. The modern systems include diagnostic capability, collection and analysis of performance data and operation of the well in an economic fashion. The term WM is used below in this specification as an abbreviation for Well Manager of the type presently available through Lufkin Automation.
Over the years, POCs have used different algorithms to sense pump off. Some of these involve surface load change, motor current, motor speed, set points, dynamometer card area, and the down hole pump card. U.S. Pat. No. 5,252,031 to Gibbs describes pump off control through the use of “pump” cards. Because of its ability to sense liquid and gas throughput using the subsurface pump as a meter, POCs which use the pump card for control are desired for implementing Inferred Production (IP).
Inferred Production (IP) using a POC Well Manager (WM)
Current WMs infer production rate with considerable accuracy by using the subsurface pump as a flow meter. In other words inferred production (IP) can be determined without continuous use of traditional metering equipment. The current WM accumulates inferred fluid production with time and displays it for (1) manual recording and dissemination or (2) automatic transmittal to a central location via SCADA. A SCADA or telemetry system is helpful but not an absolute requirement. The WM always displays inferred production that can be retrieved during periodic visits by the pumper. However when a group of pumping wells is already under SCADA surveillance, IP is interfaced with SCADA for unattended telemetry of inferred production to a central collection point. The pump card based WM excels in the IP application over a SCADA produced pump card system. This is because the WM is monitoring its well continuously, stroke after stroke. The SCADA system can interrogate the well only a few times each day to retrieve dynamometer data. Therefore down hole or “pump” cards can be computed in SCADA only a few times each day. This causes errors in inferred production, particularly in wells where pump fillage varies rapidly.
Even in its incomplete state, the present system of gathering production data has the advantage of providing continuous well tests. This decreases the time lag between discovery and remediation of problems that affect production. Traditional well tests are often brief in duration (4 hours or less). In many cases these are not representative of true production rate. If the test system is serving a large number of wells, the traditional tests are infrequent, maybe only monthly. This acts to increase the time lapse between problem discovery and remediation.
It is important to identify the assumptions upon which a production test is inferred with a current prior art system.
A rod string 36 of sucker rods hangs from polished rod 32 within a tubing 38 located in a casing 40. Tubing 38 can be held stationary to casing 40 by anchor 37. The rod string 36 is connected to a plunger 42 of a subsurface pump 44. Pump 44 includes a traveling valve 46, a standing valve 48 and a pump barrel 50. In a reciprocation cycle of the structure, including the walking beam 24, polished rod 32, rod string 36 and pump plunger 42, fluids are lifted on the upstroke. When pump fillage occurs on the upstroke between the traveling valve 46 and the standing valve 48, the fluid is trapped above the standing valve 48. A portion of this fluid is displaced above the traveling valve 46 when the traveling valve moves down. Then, this fluid is lifted toward the surface on the upstroke. A schematic description of pump valve operation is illustrated in
As shown in
A well manager unit 52 (see
A current Inferred Production System can be described by reference to
The volume of the liquid and low pressure free gas in the incompletely filled pump is shown in
In most cases the shut-down criterion for pump off control is based on liquid fillage of the pump. Fillage is defined as
in which Φ is fillage percentage. The term fillage is defined by equation 1, and is commonly used and understood by practioners of rod pumping. The shut down percentage is chosen by the well technician and causes the WM 54 to stop the unit 10 when the calculated fillage drops below a preset value. For example a cut-off fillage of 90 percent causes the unit to shut down when liquid fillage drops below 90 percent of the full barrel volume. The digital computer in the WM is programmed to recognize when the traveling valve 46 opens, and this helps define the net liquid stroke Sn.
Using the subsurface Pump as a Meter
The subsurface pump can be used as a meter to measure liquid and gas volumes. On a given stroke, the liquid volume (oil and water) passing through the pump is
in which ΔVl is measured in cubic inches and d is the diameter of the pump measured in inches. Equation 2 is the formula for computing the volume of a cylinder of diameter d and height Sn. If the unit 10 is turned off by the WM 52, the liquid volume is
ΔVl=0
The prior art WM 52 is programmed to obtain an estimate of liquid production passing through the pump in an interval of time. Stroke after stroke the WM derives the liquid stroke (i.e., Sn from
in which Td and Tp are the accumulated downtimes and pumping times during the day, expressed in seconds. The coefficient 8.905 converts cubic inches per second into barrels per day. The integrated volume of liquid passing through the pump, stroke after stroke, is the sum, ΣΔVl.
Equation (3a) defines define the prior art method for Inferred Production IP of liquids using the WM 52 or unit 10. Such equation, as described above, is based on assumptions of
(1) negligible pump leakage,
(2) anchored tubing,
(3) negligible free gas volume in pump at time of traveling valve (TV) opening, and
(4) oil shrinkage effects are negligible.
The prior art method for determining liquid volume daily production rate RIP (equation 3a) has been to provide a “k” factor to account for differences between measured production and inferred production using the pump as a meter. But when any of the basic assumptions above are not correct, the accuracy of the IP method decreases. The prior art “k” factor is
in which Rt is the daily production rate measured in a traditional well test and RIP is the unadjusted inferred daily liquid rate. The k factor is multiplied by the unadjusted inferred daily liquid rate (determined from eq. 3a) to estimate the actual daily liquid rate of the well without actually measuring it by a traditional well test. The formula is,
Rt=k RIP, (5)
where Rt is the adjusted value that is taken to be equivalent to the traditional well test. Ideally, the k factor is just below 1.0, for example in the range of 0.85 to 0.9. This factor accounts for the fact that the fundamental assumptions above are not always correct. All pumps leak, at least slightly. Tubing is not always anchored at or near the pump. A small volume of free gas is often present in the pump at the instant of traveling valve opening. If pressure in the pump is relatively high (the well is not completely pumped-off), the volume of free gas in the pump may not be small at all. Finally, most oil shrinks as gas evolves from it while passing up the tubing to the stock tank. Ideally the combined effect of these departures from the assumptions is small such that the k factor is slightly less than one as mentioned above.
The prior art method of using the subsurface pump as a meter for liquid volume inferred production (IP) is illustrated in the examples below.
A 1.5 inch subsurface pump is being used to infer production with typical full fillage and fluid pound pump cards shown in
Determine:
(1) The incremental volume of liquid handled by the pump on the complete liquid fillage stroke of
(2) The incremental volume of liquid handled by the pump on the fluid pound stroke of
Solution:
(1) From
(2) From
Equation 3a is used with the ΔVl values so calculated to infer liquid production. Example 2.
A rod pumping well 10 is being monitored with a pump card WM 52. Unadjusted inferred production is 289 BFPD. A traditional well test during the same period is 263 BFPD. A month later, a larger unadjusted inferred production of 310 BFPD is noticed. The well is in a water flood.
Determine:
(1) The k factor.
(2) The inferred production rate one month later.
(3) The possible causes for the production increase.
Solution:
(1) The k factor is
(2) Inferred production one month later is,
Rt=k RIP=0.91(310)=282 BFPD (see eq. 5)
(3) Since the well is in a water flood, possible causes for the production increase are (a) further response to secondary recovery efforts, and (b) effect of a rod part in an offset producer and the attendant down time of that well.
The k factor is a useful but imperfect concept. One disadvantage is that it is not constant. For example, as the subsurface pump wears, the k factor decreases. Indeed if any of the quantities assumed to be negligible change, the k factor changes. Most significant of all, it would not be possible to compute the k factor if the traditional well test were to be entirely eliminated in favor of Inferred Production methods (see eq. 5 again).
3. Identification of Objects of the Invention
A primary object of this invention is to use a Well Manager in combination with a rod pumping unit to infer liquid production and gas production of a well with high accuracy.
Another object of the invention is to entirely eliminate traditional well tests for a rod pumped well by inferring liquid and gas production with high accuracy with a Well Manager Unit in combination with a rod pumping unit.
Another object of the invention is to remove limiting assumptions of negligible pump leakage, anchored tubing, negligible free gas and negligible oil shrinkage effects from prior art methods of inferring production when using a well manager with a rod pumping unit.
Another object of the invention is to provide inferred production methods that do not have timing and administrative problems inherent with traditional well testing.
The objects identified above along with other advantages and features are provided by a method and system in which pump leakage determinations are incorporated in the Well Manager, unanchored tubing determinations are incorporated in the Well Manager, and free gas remaining in the pump at TV opening are measured for each pump cycle. Furthermore, a method for inferring the rate of free gas production through the tubing is provided. Such measurements are incorporated in Inferred Production determinations such that accuracy is achieved which makes traditional well testing of the well unnecessary.
As was discussed above, the prior art includes a method for inferring the liquid volume (oil and water) passing through the pump. Refer to equations (2) and (3a) above.
Inferred Measurement of Gas Production
One aspect of this invention concerns a method for measuring gas production. See
The volume of gas passing through the pump on the stroke in question is
Gas volume, like liquid volume (equation 2 of the prior art method), is also measured in cubic inches. To obtain gas volume in standard cubic feet, gas pressure and temperature must be known. Similarly when the WM 52 has the unit 10 turned off,
ΔVg=0.
Similar to the derivation of inferred liquid production of the prior art of equation (3a), a method has been developed for inferring the daily rate of free gas production, GIP, (SCF/day) through the tubing,
where Ps, zs, and Ts are standard pressure (14.65 psia), gas compressibility factor at standard pressure, and standard temperature of 250 deg R, respectively. The same quantities subscripted i are evaluated at pump intake pressure and pump temperature. The factor 50 converts cubic inches per second into cubic feet per day.
Improvements in Inferred Production
This invention also concerns improvements in the methods and apparatus described above by which a Well Manager (WM) in combination with a rod pumping unit infers production from a well. The improvements allow for determination of Inferred Production of the well by eliminating assumptions of the prior art technique, thereby allowing measurement of the production with information from the down hole pump and obviating the need for periodic traditional well testing.
The description of the invention presented below uses relationships measured in common English measurements such as inches, cubic inches, barrels, etc. The invention can be used with measurements expressed in other measurement systems such as the metric system. The use of the English measurement system is not intended to limit the invention, but merely to show units consistency among the variables presented.
The first improvement concerns adding a method which can be practiced by software in the WM by which the assumption of negligible pump leakage is eliminated. In other words, existing WM determination of inferred production of a rod pumped well, liquid production according to equations 3a and a new determination of gas determination according to equation 3b described above, are automatically augmented with techniques of the August 1990 SPE Production Engineer publication described above.
This method uses the pump card and pump velocity to determine the critical point at which upward displacement rate equals leakage rate. The method applies when the pump card shape shows abnormal pump leakage.
When a severe traveling valve (or plunger) leak exists, the characteristic pump card shows a delayed load pickup and a premature load release. The standing valve opens when the upward lifting rate (measured in BPD) begins to exceed the downward slippage rate (BPD). The lifting rate depends on pump diameter and pump velocity. Pump velocity is derived from the pump card by numerical differentiation. The formula for TV/plunger slippage rate is
LTV=6.99 d2CpVcrit (7)
in which Cp is a coefficient derived from the pump card, Vcrit is the critical pump velocity (in/sec) at standing valve opening (Cp is sometimes taken to be 0.5), and d is the pump diameter (inches). See Appendix A for a derivation of Cp. Pump diameter is the only additional parameter needed over and above those already required for computing the pump card. The pump card method for evaluating pump leakage works best for severely worn pumps. For the example shown in
The computer program in WM is written to estimate the point of standing valve opening and closing and traveling valve opening and closing. See
Referring to
Another method for sensing pump leakage is shown in
Referring to
In deep wells pump velocity is no longer approximately equal to surface velocity. This results from greater rod stretch and time lag of traveling waves which are significant in deep wells. An analogous method uses pump velocity and load (instead of surface velocity and load) can be derived from the wave equation.
Another quantitative method for deriving pump leakage is shown in
The maximum load loss rate occurs at point 1 in
For automatic application of the maximum load loss rate method of
is found for application in equation 8.
Automatic sensing of pump leakage is a great improvement to the methods of the prior WM. The equation,
where
As illustrated in
d shows a pump card with full liquid fillage and unanchored tubing. The card has a rhombus shape rather than a rectangular shape. According to the invention, tubing stretch St is automatically determined so that a net liquid stroke Sn can be determined. For full liquid fillage and unanchored tubing Sn=Sg−St as
where, St is tubing stretch in inches, Lf is the fluid load read from the pump card (lb), Dp is the pump setting depth (ft), Et is the modulus of elasticity of the tubing (psi) and At is the cross sectional area of the tubing (in2). The factor 12 converts tubing stretch from feet to inches.
Eliminating the Assumptions of Free Gas and Oil Shrinkage
Sl=Sn−Sgas (10)
in which Sl is the liquid stroke (in) and Sgas is the stroke corresponding to the volume of free gas remaining in the pump at TV opening (Assumption 3). Sn remains the distance traveled by the pump from TV opening to the bottom of the stroke. When Sgas is negligibly small, the liquid stroke is simply Sn.
The prior art has obtained pump intake pressure for many years in equipment as in
where Pi is the pump intake pressure (psi), Pa is the pressure above the pump plunger caused by tubing head pressure and hydrostatic effects of oil-gas-water in the tubing (psi), Lf is the fluid load which is derived from the pump card (lb) and confirmed with valve checks, and Ap is the area of the plunger (in2).
Equation (11) is solved in a software system called PIP provided in WM 52 of
It then determines total gas (as SCF) passing through the pump by adding free and solution gas volumes. This establishes the tubing GLR (gas/liquid ratio). If multiphase flow considerations at this GLR do not produce a Pa which satisfies eq. 11, Pi is increased and the process is repeated. This process eventually defines the Sgas needed to determine the correct Sl. Oil shrinkage can be found from the Nolen correlation once Pi is calculated.
According to the invention, the volumes of free gas and oil shrinkage are determined by running a PIP analysis for each generation of a pump card. A more direct iterative procedure based on Newton's method can be employed.
Using the WM to Infer Production Without the Need for Well Tests
As described above, assumptions which limit the accuracy of using the rod-driven down hole pump as a flow meter have been removed. According to the invention, the rod-driven down hole pump can accurately infer well production by removing prior assumptions, thereby eliminating the need for traditional well tests. Two examples are presented below which show the accuracy of inferred production according to the invention.
A new production test of 400 BFPD (35 BOPD plus 365 BWPD) was obtained on a well having a Well Manager System with an Inferred Production IP System. In a manual mode, IP indicated a production rate of 524 BFPD based on a previously determined k factor of 0.9. The difference of 124 BPD had to be explained. WM indicated that the well pumps continually, i.e. does not pump off. The dynamometer data used by WM for control was exported to a program named DIAG for extracting information from the pump card. The pump card re-created by DIAG is shown in
LTV=6.99 d2CpVcrit=6.99(2.25)2(0.53)(3.41)=64 BPD .
The pump card shows no evidence of a standing valve leak. The fluid load and net and gross strokes were measured from the pump card and the PIP program was run. A pump intake pressure (see Equation 11) of 890 psi was indicated. An oil shrinkage factor of 1.234 was computed which means that the 35 BOPD of stock tank oil occupies a volume of 43 (35×1.234) BOPD at pump intake pressure. The accounting of fluid through the pump is then
Gross pump capacity: 595 BPD (from the pump card)
Pump leakage: 64 BPD (from eq.8)
Oil at pump conditions: 43 BPD (shrinkage effect computed by PIP)
Free gas: 0 BPD (no gas interference noted on pump card)
Produced water: 488 BPD (obtained by difference).
This accounting leads to a stock tank volume of 523 BFPD (35 BOPD plus 488 BWPD). Water shrinkage is not considered since gas does not dissolve appreciably in water. As a result of this investigation, the oil operator examined the metering equipment and found that the water measurement was incorrect and should have been 493 BWPD instead of 365 BWPD as reported. The new well test should have been 528 BFPD (35+493) which compares to the IP value of 524 BFPD based on a k factor of 0.9. Thus the IP system was within 4 BFPD of the actual measured production. It would be justified to adjust the k factor (where using the manual method) slightly to a new value of
But when the pump leakage and PIP routines are run automatically in WM, the k factor method of intermittently running a well test can be totally eliminated. In other words, complete determination of well production can be made without the need for traditional well tests.
The previous example shows, among other things, the uncertainties caused by an inaccurate well test and a severely worn pump. This example shows how the prior IP system can be improved for a gassy well with a good oil cut and a high pump intake pressure.
Gross pump capacity: 457 BPD (from the pump card)
Net liquid (oil plus water): 395 BPD (from the pump card and Assumption 3, Sn=110.7
Free gas production: 62 BPD (by difference or eq. 4 extended to 24 hours).
Based on a reported well test of 277 BPD, a k factor of 0.7 would be indicated. This low factor, which is much less than 1, is a tip-off that the limiting assumptions are hurting the accuracy of IP.
The PIP program when incorporated into IP according to the invention yields a better accounting.
Gross pump capacity: 457 BPD (from the pump card)
Pump leakage: 10 BPD
Unanchored tubing: 5 BPD
Net liquid (oil plus water): 329 BPD (based on Sl of 92.2 inches)
Free gas production: 113 BPD (by difference). Assumption 3 is eliminated.
The IP system according to the invention produces a report of liquid production at stock tank conditions comprising
158 BWPD
129 BOPD (based on the shrinkage factor of 1.266 computed by PIP)
287 BFPD total liquid.
This refined accounting, which does not include a k factor, compares with the traditional well test of 277 BFPD. The well test may or may not be exceedingly precise. This illustration shows that consideration of oil shrinkage is important in wells with a good oil cut and high producing pressure. It also shows the importance of computing (not neglecting) the volume of free gas in the pump when the traveling valve opens in wells with high producing pressure.
This example 2 illustrates the IP process as implemented by the invention incorporated in the PIP program.
The gross stroke in Table I below is taken to be 128.3 inches as also illustrated in
The procedure according to an embodiment of the invention is to subtract stroke segments representing unanchored tubing and leakage from the gross stroke. Then the pump intake pressure, shrinkage factor, and oil, water, and gas volumes in the pump on that stroke are determined. Finally, shrinkage is considered to compute stock tank oil and water volumes on that stroke.
Similarly CSV expresses the difference of pressure and time of application across the standing valve. Algebraic manipulation of eqs. 1, 2, and 3 provides that
CTV+CSV=1 4
when it is recognized that
As seen above, a generic coefficient Cp is used for CTV. To save computer time by eliminating the need for calculating CSV the term (1−Cp) is used when standing valve leakage is being computed. The sum of coefficients being unity results from the fact that both valves can not be open at the same time. The valves are frequently closed at the same time. An open valve can not leak, but a closed valve can. A closed valve leaks at a rate which is proportional to the pressure difference across it. The leakage coefficients defined above acknowledge the fact that a valve is closed part of the time and the pressure difference across it varies continually.
Pump intake pressure is an important quantity in operating a rod pumped well. If this pressure is high, more production is available. If the pressure is low, little additional production is available at the present pump depth. Pump intake pressure also governs the volume of free gas in the pump and the amount of dissolved gas remaining in the oil. The quantity of dissolved gas affects the amount of shrinkage that the oil suffers in traveling up the tubing to the stock tank.
Using a wave equation derived pump card, the pump intake pressure in a well can be calculated with acceptable precision. The PIP procedure is described in the following stepwise procedure. The procedure determines Pi subject to pressure balance considerations, multiphase flow concepts, and pressure-volume-temperature (PVT) characteristics of the produced oil, water and gas. Along with Pi the PIP procedure computes oil shrinkage and liquid and gas passing through the pump.
Step 1. From multiphase flow (oil-water-gas) considerations, determine Pa (psi) as a function of tubing gas/liquid ratio (GLR in SCF/bbl of liquid). Denote this relationship as Table 1. SCF denotes gas in cubic feet at standard conditions of 14.65 psi and 520 deg R.
Step 2. Obtain a downhole pump card using the wave equation. Identify fluid load Lf (lbs), gross pump stroke Sg (inches), net pump stroke Sn (inches) and tubing stretch St (inches) from the pump card.
Step 3. Using processes described herein, determine pump leakage (bpd). Convert pump leakage to equivalent inches of stroke,
in which
Step 4. Determine the adjusted gross stroke,
Sg adj=Sg−St−Sleakage B-2
Step 5. Conceptually, construct the pressure balance relationship between Pi and Pa,
where
Step 6. Assume a low trial Pi.
Step 7.
Step 8. Using Table 1 created in Step 1, determine Pa corresponding to trial Pi using the GLR computed above in Step 7. Conceptually plot this Pa (which corresponds to the trial Pi) as point 1 on
As the trial Pi is increased, the corresponding Pa will decrease. This results because more gas is computed to be entering the tubing which diminishes the hydrostatic pressure effect, hence Pa. The line drawn through trials points 1, 2, 3, . . . will intersect the pressure balance line to reveal the true Pi. The convergence process can be sped up using Newton's Method to select new trial Pi values. The process described herein uses trial Pi values spaced equal pressure increments apart.
After the pump intake pressure Pi has been finally determined use non-dimensional curves of
Step 9. Determine stock tank liquid and tubing gas production increments using the oil shrinkage factor, BOPD, BWPD, free and dissolved gas volumes corresponding to the true Pi found in Step 8.