This invention relates to the oil and gas industry, more specifically, to the development of heavy oil and natural bitumen fields.
The growth of hydrocarbon prices and the inevitable depletion of light oil resources have recently caused increasing attention to development of heavy oil and asphaltic bitumen deposits. Among the existing methods of developing high viscosity hydrocarbon deposits (e.g., mining, solvent injection etc.), thermal methods (hot water injection, thermal-steam well treatment, thermal-steam formation treatment etc.) are known for their high oil recovery and withdrawal rate.
A thermal-steam gravity treatment method (SAGD) is known which is currently one of the most efficient heavy oil and asphaltic bitumen deposit development methods (Butler R., “Horizontal Wells for the Recovery of Oil, Gas and Bitumen,” Calgary: Petroleum Society of Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1994: pp. 171-194.). This method creates a high-temperature ‘steam chamber’ in the formation by injecting steam into the top horizontal well and recovering oil from the bottom well. In spite of its worldwide use, this deposit development method requires further improvement, i.e., by increasing the oil-to-steam ratio and providing steam chamber development control.
One way to increase the efficiency of SAGD is process control and adjustment based on permanent temperature monitoring. This is achieved by installing distributed temperature measurement systems in the wells. One of the main problems related to thermal development methods (e.g., steam assisted gravity drainage) is steam (hot water, steam/gas mixture) breakthrough towards the production well via highly permeable interlayers. This greatly reduces the heat carrier usage efficiency and causes possible loss of downhole equipment. Steam breakthrough response requires repair-and-renewal operations that in turn cause loss of time and possible halting of the project. This problem is especially important for the steam assisted gravity development method due to the small distances (5-10 m) between the production and the injection wells.
A method of active temperature measurements of running wells is known (RU 2194160). The known invention relates to the geophysical study of running wells and can be used for the determination of annulus fluid flow intervals. The technical result of the known invention is increasing the authenticity and uniqueness of well and annulus fluid flow determination. This is achieved by performing temperature vs. time measurements and comparing the resultant temperature vs. time profiles during well operation. The temperature vs. time profiles are recorded before and after short-term local heating of the casing string within the presumed fluid flow interval. Fluid flow parameters are determined from temperature growth rate.
A method of determining the permeability profile of geological areas is known (RU 2045082). The method comprises creating a pressure pulse in the injection well and performing differential acoustic logging and temperature measurements in several measurement wells. Temperature is measured with centered and non-centered gages. The resultant functions are used to make a judgment on the permeability inhomogeneity of the string/cement sheath/formation/well system, and thermometer readings are used to determine the permeability vector direction. Disadvantages of this method are as follows:
The object of the method described herein is to broaden its application area and provide the possibility of quantifying a permeability profile of a heavy-oil bearing formation along a well bore, thereby increasing efficiency of a heat carrier usage and reducing equipment losses during reservoir development.
This object is achieved by using a new sequence of measurements and steps, and applying an adequate mathematical model of a process.
Advantages of the method described herein are the possibility of characterizing high viscosity oil and bitumen saturated rocks and using standard measurement tools. Moreover, the sequence of steps described herein does not interrupt the process of thermal development works.
The method for determining a permeability profile of a heavy-oil bearing formation comprises pre-heating of the formation by circulation of steam in a well, creating an excessive pressure inside the well during the pre-heating stage, stopping circulation of steam in the well, measuring temperature along a well bore of the well using distributed temperature sensors, wherein the measuring is performed from a moment at which steam circulation stops until a thermally stable condition is achieved, creating a conductive heat exchange model relating a quantity of steam penetrated into the formation to a local permeability of the formation, the model being created using the temperature measurement results of the pre-heating stage for solving an inverse problem, and determining the formation permeability profile from the created model.
The invention will be exemplified below with drawings where
The method described herein requires distributed temperature measurements over the whole length of the portion of interest at a preheating stage. At that stage (
To solve an inverse problem, this method provides an analytical model satisfying the following properties and having the following boundary conditions:
The boundary of the oil/water front can be determined using the following equation:
where
The value of the parameter cq≈0.5÷1.5 can be estimated from a numeric simulation/field experiments to consider the following specific features that can hardly be incorporated into a purely analytical model:
Thus, a radius of the oil/water front is determined by the following parameters:
The steam/water front boundary position is determined by energy and weight balance equations and can be found as follows:
is a mass rate of steam condensation,
is a maximum rate of condensation, ρw is a density of water, φ is a porosity of the formation, λfw is a thermal conductivity of a water-saturated reservoir, cw is a heat capacity of water, Cs is a heat capacity of steam, a is a thermal diffusivity of the formation, L is a heat of evaporation, tc is a duration of injection and Tc is a temperature of steam condensation.
A temperature profile at the steam injection phase is as follows:
Temperature restoration after stopping steam circulation can be described with a simple conductive heat exchange model that does not consider phase transitions.
Example of permeability K distribution estimation based on temperature restoration rate measurements is shown in
Thus, the method of determining the formation permeability profile suggested herein allows quantification of the permeability profile along the well bore at an early stage of steam-assisted gravity drainage or another heat-assisted well development method. The resultant permeability profile can be used for the preventive isolation of highly permeable formations before the initiation of the main development stage and allows avoiding steam breakthrough towards the production well. The permeability profile along the whole well bore length is determined by measuring the non-steady-state thermal field with a distributed temperature measurement system.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2006104892 | Feb 2006 | RU | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/RU2007/000056 | 2/6/2007 | WO | 00 | 7/29/2010 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2007/094705 | 8/23/2007 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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2739475 | Nowak | Mar 1956 | A |
3864969 | Smith, Jr. | Feb 1975 | A |
4120355 | Knepper et al. | Oct 1978 | A |
6618677 | Brown | Sep 2003 | B1 |
20070068672 | Jalali et al. | Mar 2007 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
2397648 | Jul 2004 | GB |
1819323 | May 1993 | RU |
2045082 | Sep 1995 | RU |
2139417 | Oct 1999 | RU |
2151866 | Jun 2000 | RU |
2194160 | Dec 2002 | RU |
665082 | May 1979 | SU |
1395819 | May 1988 | SU |
2005035944 | Apr 2005 | WO |
Entry |
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Yamschikov, “Mining Process Control,” Nedra, Moscow, 1989: pp. 66-69. |
Examination Report of Canadian Patent Application No. 2,642,589 dated Mar. 9, 2010: pp. 1-3. |
Office Action of Chinese Patent Application Serial No. 200780009498.6 dated May 16, 2012: pp. 1-4. |
International Search Report of PCT Application No. PCT/RU2007/000056 dated Jun. 28, 2007: pp. 1-2. |
Butler, “Chapter 11: Thermal Recovery Using Horizontal Wells,” Horizontal Wells for the Recovery of Oil, Gas and Bitumen, Calgary: Petroleum Society of the Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1994: pp. 171-194. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20100288490 A1 | Nov 2010 | US |