Field
This invention relates to the production of minerals, more specifically, to the production of hydrocarbons, by hydraulic fracturing of the rock, and can be used for the optimization of formation fracturing crack processing conditions.
Background
Hydraulic fracturing is currently the main method of increasing well delivery by producing new or expanding the existing highly permeable cracks initiating from the well bore to the reservoir bulk.
The standard hydraulic fracturing comprises, as the first step, pumping the working fluid at high pressure and pumping rate into the rock until a crack is initiated in the rock. The second stage comprises pumping the propping agent into the hydraulic fracturing crack so produced. After the fluid pressure is reduced at the end of the overall procedure, the propping agent particles delivered to the crack form a uniform pack and prevent the crack for complete closure.
The permeability of a propping agent packed crack is higher than that of the country rock. Although this method has been known and widely used for many years now, there situations where further increasing the permeability of the propping agent pack to above that provided by the standard technology would provide for a serious economic advantage.
Various well delivery increasing methods are known today.
Known (SU Inventor's Certificate 467173) is a bottomhole formation zone heat treatment method. Under said known method, the bottomhole zone heat treatment procedure comprises pumping a highly heat conductive heat carrier into the formation, such heat carrier being a granulated material, for example, metallic powder acting as the propping agent. The grain size and distribution of said metallic powders are selected based on their pumping efficiency and penetrability into the formation cracks. The prepared suspensions do not penetrate into the pore channels but fill the existing and pumping initiated cracks in the bottomhole formation zone. After a system of granulated metallic powder filled cracks has been produced in the formation, an electric heater is lowered into the well to heat the bottomhole zone.
Said method is complex in implementation because in fact it comprises two stages, i.e. first hydraulic fracturing and then metallic powder pumping into the cracks. Its low efficiency is predetermined by the fact that in order for metallic powder into the cracks, low forces are used that are developed by the volume expansion of the bottomhole zone fluid during heating; therefore heating penetrates to small distances inward the formation.
Known also (U.S. Pat. No. 6,114,410) is a method of increasing the permeability of the formation hydraulic fracturing crack. According to said known method, adhesion of corrosion capable particles are introduced into the propping agent. Said adhesive particles may have a vulcanized resin coating. Said adhesive particles come in contact with similar adhesive particles to form a stable and strong matrix that produces propping agent structures in the crack. This increases, though slightly, the crack permeability and generally improves the efficiency of hydraulic treatment.
However, the efficiency of said method is low.
The technical task to be achieved by the invention disclosed herein is to provide a new method of propping agent delivery to the bottomhole formation.
The technical result to be achieved by the invention disclosed herein is to increase well delivery.
Said technical result can be achieved by using the method of propping agent delivery to the well developed herein. In accordance with said method, propping agent is delivered at a variable rate, wherein the main stream of the propping agent suspension in the fluid at the mixer output is split into at least two flows having different volume delivery rates, and before the delivery to the hydraulic fracturing zone said flows are commingled. Different volume delivery rates of the flows passing between the propping agent mixer and the hydraulic fracturing fluid can be achieved by using different delivery pumps for pumping said flows, different diameters of the pipelines over which said flows are pumped, as well as different flow pumping pipeline lengths.
The technical solution considered herein is a method of optimizing the pumping of propping agent batches aimed at improving the parameters of the nonuniform propping agent pack in the hydraulic fracturing crack.
The technical solution developed herein is a method providing for alternating delivery of propping agent containing and not propping agent containing fluid into the well with adjusting the size of the batches and obtaining batches of pure fluid the size of which is smaller than the maximum allowed size provided by the wellhead equipment. The method is based on delivering a batch of propping agent containing fluid through different routes on the surface (through hydraulic fracturing delivery pumps and pipelines). Propping agent suspension batches are pumped through different routes by splitting the main stream into smaller flows that are further commingled before the final pumping into the well. Controlled choice of batch delivery time delays in each system pipeline combined with a correct choice of propping agent containing fluid batch length allows reducing the intervals of pure fluid pumping into the well.
Generally, the method developed herein comprises the following steps:
Said technical solution can be used for, but not limited to, the designing of a single network of highly conductive channels in a formation crack. Said channels are produced by heterogeneous filling of the cracks with the propping agent that finally leads to an increase in hydrocarbon inflow through the nonuniform structure crack produced by pumping the propping agent containing working fluid.
In some well treatment situations, alternating delivery of fluid batches with different properties (density, viscosity and addition content), i.e. the so-called propping agent stage and the no propping agent stage. For example, the method of heterogeneous crack filling with a fracturing filler developed herein comprises alternating delivery of pure hydraulic formation fracturing fluid and propping agent containing fluid. After propping agent containing zones are formed in the crack as a result of alternating pumping, said zones keep the crack open. However, if the size of the not propping agent containing fluid batch is greater than the critical one (the minimum critical batch size depends on formation properties), the efficiency of the crack heterogeneously filled with the propping agent may reduce drastically. This is accounted for by the large distance between adjacent columns of the propping agent supports leading to crack closure and crack permeability reduction in the direction from the crack initiation point towards the well.
The propping agent stage as a term used for the purposes of said technical solution means a batch of hydraulic fracturing fluid containing a specific concentration of propping agent particles. It is assumed that in the batches delivered before or after said batch the propping agent concentration is close to zero or, to be more specific, the propping agent concentration in the fluid before or after said batch is far lower than during said batch delivery (the no propping agent stage). The delivery of said propping agent batch (i.e. the cyclic schedule of propping agent concentration variation) can be achieved using the following available method:
All the methods listed above are limited by the minimum size of a propping agent containing fluid batch (or a not propping agent containing fluid batch). For example, if method 2 is used, the batch size cannot be smaller than a specific level determined either by the capacity of the vortex agitator in said mixer or the product of the ready mixture delivery volume rate and the time required for opening/closing the container valve. A hydraulic fracturing expert can estimate the minimum allowed propping agent containing (or not propping agent containing) batch size obtained suing the second method as follows: at an about 8 m3/min delivery rate this volume is about 0.8 m3.
As noted above, the main application of said technical solution is to optimize the design and propping agent preparation and pumping procedure for increasing the efficiency of a nonuniform propping agent structure crack. The importance of said technical solution for the optimization of the parameters of nonuniform pumping agent packs has been confirmed by studies that have shown: the efficiency of hydraulic fracturing with a heavily nonuniform propping agent filling pattern depends on the possibility of achieving relatively small propping agent containing fluid batches and, more importantly, not propping agent containing fluid batches. The required not propping agent containing fluid batch size is usually smaller than the minimum fluid batch size achievable with the equipment used for standard approaches (e.g. periodical closure of the propping agent containing output).
Thus, said technical solution discloses a method of reducing the size of not propping agent containing fluid (pure fluid) batches at the mixer and a method of arranging the hydraulic fracturing wellhead equipment system. To illustrate the method developed herein we will below consider the simplest case (
Importantly, the number of fluid delivery routes can be in practice greater than two and be arbitrary in a general case. The invention disclosed herein is not limited by the use of two fluid delivery routes.
If different length routes are used for the wellhead equipment and pipeline configuration, the concentration profiles of the initially split delivery batches are superimposed (
Thus, the shift between the different fluid delivery profiles is determined by options of fluid transporting over the different routes. There are many options of achieving such time shift. Some of these options will be considered before for the example of a two different length routes situation. Initially, one should determine the time shift as the time difference between the working fluid delivery durations over the different routes as follows:
where L is the pipeline length and v is the flow rate.
The flow rate is the following function of the difference in pressure, route length, pipeline diameter and fluid viscosity:
where q is the delivery volume rate, A is the pipeline section, r is the pipeline radius, ΔP is the pressure difference at the length L and η is the fluid viscosity.
Thus, the time shift equation is as follows:
For a more than one routes situation, the time shift should be described for each pair of routes; for the routes 1, 2 and 3 this will be the combination of pipeline pairs 1 and 2, 2 and 3, and 1 and 3, and the time shift will be Shift12, Shift13, Shift23. Equation (3) can be used for calculating the time shift between propping agent concentration profiles.
Equation (3) can also be used for optimizing the final propping agent concentration profile at the well input. To this end, said equation should be added with equations of propping agent concentration in hydraulic fracturing fluid batches, its time duration and pure solution batch delivery length.
Analysis of Eq. (3) suggests three possible methods of achieving a time difference between the concentration profiles:
Generally, this invention discloses a method of reducing the not propping agent containing fluid batch (pure fluid batch) delivery duration. Said goal can be achieved by combining the following approaches:
Generally, this technical solution is aimed at increasing the efficiency of a nonuniform propping agent structure hydraulic fracturing crack by pumping batches of propping agent containing fluid. The method disclosed in this invention can also be used for achieving short not propping agent containing fluid batch intervals if this is required for other technical purposes.
To check the abovementioned statements we designed a hydraulic fracturing arrangement for heterogeneous propping agent content in the crack. In according to the well treatment schedule, 5 sec long gel batches had to be alternated with 15 sec propping agent containing fluid batches. However, the minimum possible not propping agent containing fluid (pure fluid) batch length is 10 sec for the existing equipment.
We therefore chose a specific wellhead equipment configuration for reducing the not propping agent containing fluid batch length (
This is a divisional application of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/602,217, now U.S. Pat. No. 8,960,293, entitled, “METHOD OF PROPPING AGENT DELIVERY TO THE WELL,” filed May 11, 2010, and which is a national stage application based on PCT/RU2007/000282, filed on May 30, 2007. This application claims the priority to the prior applications and incorporates both disclosures by reference in their entirety.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3490654 | Fischer | Jan 1970 | A |
3592266 | Tinsley | Jul 1971 | A |
3850247 | Tinsley | Nov 1974 | A |
4029149 | Perkins | Jun 1977 | A |
4176064 | Black | Nov 1979 | A |
4569394 | Sweatman et al. | Feb 1986 | A |
4726219 | Pearson et al. | Feb 1988 | A |
4802141 | Stegemoeller | Jan 1989 | A |
4930576 | Berryman et al. | Jun 1990 | A |
5014218 | Crain et al. | May 1991 | A |
5411091 | Jennings, Jr. | May 1995 | A |
5415232 | Johnson et al. | May 1995 | A |
5441340 | Cedillo et al. | Aug 1995 | A |
6114410 | Betzold | Sep 2000 | A |
6328105 | Betzold | Dec 2001 | B1 |
6439310 | Scott, III et al. | Aug 2002 | B1 |
7090017 | Justus et al. | Aug 2006 | B2 |
7451820 | Albers et al. | Nov 2008 | B2 |
8960293 | Medvedev | Feb 2015 | B2 |
20040024463 | Thomas et al. | Feb 2004 | A1 |
20040193158 | Lim et al. | Sep 2004 | A1 |
20040261995 | Nguyen et al. | Dec 2004 | A1 |
20050006089 | Justus et al. | Jan 2005 | A1 |
20050051330 | Nguyen | Mar 2005 | A1 |
20050080425 | Bhatnagar et al. | Apr 2005 | A1 |
20050126780 | Todd et al. | Jun 2005 | A1 |
20050130848 | Todd et al. | Jun 2005 | A1 |
20050274523 | Brannon et al. | Dec 2005 | A1 |
20060048943 | Parker et al. | Mar 2006 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
2253856 | Jun 2005 | RU |
791950 | Dec 1980 | SU |
2005000993 | Jan 2005 | WO |
2009005387 | Jan 2009 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20160024903 A1 | Jan 2016 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 12602217 | US | |
Child | 14628998 | US |