The invention is in the field of wellbore inflow profile monitoring during production. More specifically, the invention is used for indicating/estimating the so-called Wellbore Pressure Drawdown, i.e. a flow-induced wellbore pressure drop curve along the borehole. This pressure drawdown is primarily caused by the friction between the flowing fluids and the borehole wall. If the pressure drawdown is estimated and linked with drawdown/velocity (i.e. pressure gradient/velocity) models, the flow velocity field along the wellbore may be estimated or better understood. From this, the inflow profile may be extracted by simple mass flow consideration.
The invention is based on the exploitation of tracer transients during the flushing out of clouds of tracer molecules or particles that are placed with full mobility in flow shunts in the production zone by mechanical injectors. The tracer cloud flushout from the flow shunt is characterized by the pressure drop along the shunt, and if the cloud is not distorted on its way to surface, its shape may be read at surface. This is then the carrier of the basic information. The monitoring may be performed both at varying and steady production rates.
Permanent tracers installed in producer wells have by the applicant Resman and others been proven for estimating “what flows where and how much”, i.e. which fluids flow in which parts of the well, and at which flow rates. Traditionally, different tracers have been placed in different influx zones to a production completion installed in a well. These tracers are normally initially immobilized, but they will release as a function of downhole properties like flow velocity, by the affinity to different fluids. Topsides sampling and analysis of the concentration curves over time of the different tracers is used to provide information on which fluids are flowing into which well zones, and may in some cases also indicate at which rates the influx occurs in those influx zones.
In the present context, a tracer carrying system (2) is an injector unit which releases tracer molecules or particles (3), such as a cylinder filled with a tracer carrying fluid and a piston that can drive out the molecules or particles (3) according to some control. By this method tracer clouds are mobile immediately after being injected and able to be transported with the fluids they are injected into. Such a tracer injection system for downhole use is described by many and U.S. Pat. No. 6,840,316 B2 is one such document where tracers are described as being injected into many different positions in well systems and where tracer concentrations are recorded somewhere downstream to enable the estimation of information related to inflow profiles. The injections are always done into parts of the main flow path of the well. What is new in this invention is that tracers are not injected directly into the main flow path of the well, but rather into flow shunts wherein the flow is a function of the main well flow and its pressure gradient. These flow shunts will have flow velocities that are different and normally lower compared to those in the main flow path. However, there should always be a deterministic relationship between the shunt flow and the main flow. Due to these facts, such shunt chambers are regularly referred to as Tracer Delay Chambers (TDC). TDCs are voids inside completions or volumes of gravel and formation where a cloud of tracer molecules or particles will have larger Residence Time Distribution (RTD) than in volumes in the main well flow path. The applicant has during 300 well installations accumulated knowledge from the usage of constantly releasing tracer carrying systems that points towards the fact that transient tracer responses from TDCs created during flow transients will represent the Residence Time Distribution (RTD) in the Tracer Delay Chambers (TDC) and therefore also the rate through it. The larger Residence Time Distribution (RTD) in the Tracer Delay Chambers (TDC) will lead to slower flush-outs of the tracers and thus longer tracer clouds travelling to surface. This is a benefit since smaller tracer clouds will more tend to be distorted by dispersion phenomena in the well hydraulics.
In this context, a base pipe is an established term for a central pipe in a production well, usually of steel, but which may be made in other materials. The Central pipe is an inner pipe into which the production fluid enters in the production zone, and which leads downstream all the way up/out to topside, although there may be some rearrangement of the piping at the wellhead.
The invention is petroleum well tracer release flow shunt chamber (1) arranged in an annulus space (20) about a base pipe (10) in a petroleum well
said flow shunt chamber (1) extending generally axial-parallel with said basepipe (10),
said flow shunt chamber (1) provided with a shunt flow passage (4) for holding a shunt chamber fluid (F3), said flow shunt chamber (1) further comprising:
a tracer carrying system (2) in said shunt flow passage (4), said tracer carrying system (2) arranged for releasing unique tracer molecules or particles (3) according to some control to said shunt chamber fluid (F3),
a first inlet aperture (6) to said flow shunt passage (4) for receiving a first fluid (F6) from outside said inlet aperture (6),
a second outlet aperture (5) from said shunt flow passage (4) arranged downstream of said first inlet aperture (6) said second outlet aperture (5) for releasing said shunt chamber fluid (F3) to a fluid (F5) outside said second outlet aperture (5),
a flow restrictor nozzle unit (70) arranged between said tracer carrying system (2) and said second outlet aperture (5), allowing a pressure gradient between said inlet and outlet apertures (6, 5) driving said shunt chamber fluid (F3) out via said flow restrictor nozzle unit (70).
flow restrictor nozzle unit (70) arranged somewhere between said et aperture (6) and said outlet aperture (5), allowing a pressure gradient between said inlet and outlet apertures (6, 5) driving said shunt chamber fluid (F3) out as a function of the flow area of said flow restrictor nozzle unit (70).
The invention is also the petroleum well tracer release flow shunt chamber (1) above, for being arranged in said annulus space (20) about said base pipe (10), having the defined properties above.
The invention in another aspect is a method of estimating one or more pressure differences or gradients along a producing petroleum well with a completion with a base pipe (10) in an annulus (20) and with one or more flow shunt chambers (1) according to claim 1 with unique tracer molecules or particles (3) and arranged along part or all of said base pipe (10),
allowing well fluids to flow at a stable production flow rate, and injecting clouds of tracer molecules or particles in one or more flow shunt chambers (1), all while after some pre-estimated travel time to surface collecting a time-stamped series of fluid samples from said well fluids at a topsides sampling location,
analyzing said series of fluid samples for concentrations (c1sample(ti)), (c2sample(ti)), . . . (Cnsample(ti)),
calculating topsides tracer flux rate (ρtopside) versus time curves from said concentrations (cisample(ti)) and said flow rate for each tracer molecule (3) type,
identifying the tracer flux transient associated with each flow shunt chamber (1),
based on said tracer flux rate curves, calculating time constants (ti1/2) for each tracer flux transient for each tracer molecule (3) type for said flow shunt chambers (1),
based on said time constants (ti1/2), estimating a pressure difference between said inlet aperture (6) and said outlet aperture (1) of each flow shunt chambers (1).
Upper: This is a longitudinal section with a highly simplified illustration through a part of a producing well, this particular example showing the toe end of a producing well. Petroleum fluids seep in through the borehole wall from the surrounding reservoir rocks to the annulus space (20) and enter through perforated sections in the base pipe (10). We simply assume that the fluids are petroleum.
The lower graph is an imagined production rate versus depth (NB: not vs. time) in the above base pipe. One may have a completion with several more flow shunt chambers (1) arranged along in this manner along a base pipe (10) in a completion from toe to heel in a producing well.
The big issue is to extract transient time constant information from curves like the one in
With the present invention it is realized that that much can be gained by improving the design of such delay chambers and also by the usage of such delay chambers and the methods for utilizing such delay chambers and on interpreting tracer measurements resulting thereof. The inventor's objective is that the tracer carrier may be used so that flow information through the modulator device (=the delay chamber) is modulating the tracer flux from the delay chamber. Modulations will be tracer transients so that the information can be read after being migrated through the downstream upper completions and tiebacks of short or long distance to a fluid sampling site.
The overall purpose of the invention is to estimate the pressure difference between inlet and outlet apertures (6 and 5), and thus provide some pressure gradients along the production zone, in order to estimate a pressure profile between a “toe” and a “heel” in a production zone by integrating the pressure gradient profile.
The invention illustrated in
In an embodiment of the invention particle filters (8, 8B) are preferably inserted in one or both of outlet and inlet apertures (5) and (6) to reduce the risk of plugging the flow restrictor nozzle unit (70). Particularly it is important to have particle filter (8) installed in inlet aperture (6). The particle filter (8) may be installed just ahead of flow restrictor nozzle unit (70) in an embodiment of the invention.
The flow shunt chamber (1) is arranged for extending generally axial-parallel with said basepipe (10). This is also parallel with and a desired basepipe flow (F1) if established, or at least with a desired annulus space (20) flow. The fluid (F5) is in the base pipe (10) or annulus space (20) and is transported directly or indirectly downstream for eventually being sampled and analyzed for tracer molecules or particles (3). The fluid (F6) is in the base pipe (10) or in the annulus space (20). One must have control over the total fluid flow out of the well at any time, and the concentration of tracer molecules or particles (3) in samples taken at a topsides sampling site. The term “base pipe” (10) used here is to be understood as the inner pipe in the production zone, also called the “central pipe” into which the production fluid flows and through which the production fluid flows downstream, usually at least to the wellhead or further topsides past the wellhead, such as to a production platform.
The invention illustrated in
a tracer carrying system (2) in the shunt flow passage (4), the tracer carrying system (2) designed for releasing shots of unique tracer molecules or particles (3) at controlled times to said shunt chamber fluid (F3). The reason for using unique tracer molecules or particles is due to the fact that one may then simultaneously monitor tracer flux from several different flow shunt chambers arranged along the completion in a well.
a first inlet aperture (6) to said flow shunt passage (4) is arranged for receiving a first fluid (F6) from outside said inlet aperture (6), i.e. upstream fluid from the base pipe, from the annulus space, or both.
a second outlet aperture (5) from said shunt flow passage (4) arranged downstream of said first inlet aperture (6) said second outlet aperture (5) for releasing said shunt chamber fluid (F3) to a fluid (F5) outside said second outlet aperture (5), which also may be to the base pipe, the annulus space, or both.
a flow restrictor nozzle unit (70) arranged between said tracer carrying system (2) and said second outlet aperture (6), allowing a pressure gradient between said inlet and outlet apertures (6, 5) driving said shunt chamber fluid (F3) out via said flow restrictor nozzle unit (70). The flow restrictor nozzle unit (70) may be a selectable plug with a pinhole or a plug with a screw adjustable hole, which may be arranged in the workshop during assembly of the flow shunt chamber or during calibration of the flow shunt chamber.
The petroleum well tracer release flow shunt chamber (1) of claim 1, said tracer carrying system (2) designed for releasing shots of unique tracer molecules or particles (3) at controlled times into said surrounding shunt chamber fluid (F3).
In an embodiment of the invention illustrated The petroleum well tracer release flow shunt chamber (1) of any of the preceding claims, said flow shunt chamber (1) provided with a first particle filter (8) in said flow shunt passage (4) between inlet aperture and said flow restrictor nozzle unit (70). In an embodiment of the petroleum well tracer release flow shunt chamber (1) of the invention, the inlet aperture (6) is provided with said first particle filter (8). The petroleum well tracer release flow shunt chamber (1) may also be provided with a second particle filter (8A) between said flow restrictor nozzle unit (70) in said flow shunt passage (4) and said second, outlet aperture (5). The second outlet aperture (5) may also be provided with said second particle filter (8A).
In general, said first inlet aperture (6) is directly fluid communicating via said shunt flow passage (4) and said flow restrictor nozzle unit (70) to said second outlet aperture (5). The flow shunt chamber may in an embodiment be provided with a check valve (40) to allow fluids to flow through the shunt chamber in one direction only; from the inlet aperture (6) end towards the outlet aperture end (5).
In the illustrated and preferred embodiment of the invention said flow shunt chamber (1) is placed in said annulus (20) formed outside of said base pipe (10) in said petroleum well. The illustrations show a shunt chamber (1) mounted at the outer wall of the base pipe, with appropriate apertures towards the base pipe, the annulus, or both. A barrel-like array such as the one in
In an embodiment of the invention illustrated in
In an embodiment illustrated in
In and embodiment of the invention said outlet aperture (5) is arranged downstream of said inlet aperture (6) and one or more of said apertures (5, 6) are apertures through a pipe wall (21) of said base pipe (10).
In and embodiment of the invention said outlet aperture (5) is arranged downstream of said inlet aperture (6) and one or more of said apertures (5, 6) are fluid communication apertures for said flow (F) between said shunt flow passages (4) and said annulus space (20).
In an embodiment of the invention one has a combinations of the two above described embodiments.
Advantages and principles of these embodiments are further described below.
According to an embodiment of the invention illustrated in
In an embodiment illustrated in
In the embodiment illustrated in
The invention is also a petroleum well completion comprising a base pipe (10) with an annulus space (20) in a petroleum well please see
In an embodiment of the invention, two or more flow shunt chambers (1) with the same unique tracer molecule (3) type are arranged about a circumference of said base pipe (1) at a location along said base pipe (1), in order to strengthen the concentration of the released tracer, particularly in case of high fluid flow past said flow shunt chambers (1) locally, for obtaining a significantly detectable tracer concentration topsides arising from that location.
In an embodiment of the invention, the base pipe (10) comprises one or more screen portions (17) or perforations upstream or downstream of one or more of said tracer release chambers (1). This may balance the flow between the base pipe (10) and the annulus (20), but anyway also balance out any longitudinal pressure differences, and thus release according to pressure difference.
The invention is a method of estimating one or more pressure differences or gradients along a producing petroleum well with a completion with a base pipe (10) in an annulus (20) and with one or more flow shunt chambers (1) according to the above description, having unique tracer molecules or particles (3) for each depth along the base pipe (10) and arranged along part or all of said base pipe (10), particularly at least through the relevant influx zones of the well,
allowing well fluids to flow at a stable production flow rate, and injecting a shot of tracer molecules or particles in the flow shunt chamber, all while collecting a time-stamped series of fluid samples from said well fluids at a topsides sampling location,
analyzing said series of fluid samples for concentrations of said tracer molecules or particles (3),
calculating topsides tracer flux rate versus time curves from said concentrations and said flow rates for each tracer molecule (3) type,
identifying tracer flux transients associated with the shot injection,
based on said tracer flux rate curves, calculating time constants for each tracer flux transient for each tracer molecule or particle (3) type for said flow shunt chambers (1),
based on said time constants, estimating a pressure difference between said inlet aperture (6) and said outlet aperture (1) of each flow shunt chamber (1).
In an embodiment of the invention one estimates the relative pressure differences of two or more flow shunt chambers (1) based on ratios between their corresponding calculated time constants. In order to achieve this one needs to know the relative release properties of the compared flow shunt chambers as a function of pressure difference, of which chambers the flow has passed.
In an embodiment of the invention, one may estimate absolute pressure differences over one or more flow shunt chamber (1) based on a calibration of said flow shunt chamber's (1) time constant for one or more known pressure differences between said inlet aperture (6) and said outlet aperture (5). Each said flow shunt chamber (1) is arranged with a first, inlet aperture (6) for outside fluid (F6) to enter a flow shunt passage (4) with a unique tracer carrying system (2) (for that particular depth) exposed to and arranged for releasing tracer molecules or particles (3) according to some control to a shunt chamber fluid (F3), and with a second, outlet aperture (5) from said shunt flow passage (4) arranged downstream of said first inlet aperture (6), for releasing said shunt chamber fluid (F3) to a fluid (F5) outside said second outlet aperture (5). In practice, arranging said flow shunt chamber (1) extending generally axial-parallel with said basepipe (10). The flow shunt chamber (1) is provided with a flow restrictor nozzle unit (70) between said tracer carrying system (2) and said second outlet aperture (6), allowing a pressure gradient between said inlet and outlet apertures (6, 5) to drive said shunt chamber fluid (F3) through said flow restrictor nozzle unit (70).
The flow shunt chamber may in an embodiment of the invention advantageously be calibrated before installation of the completion in the well, but may also be calibrated by measuring in-site pressure differences with other pressure meters arranged in parallel with the flow shunt chamber installed. The calibration of said flow shunt chamber (1) may be conducted by measuring the time constant for a given, known flow shunt chamber geometry with a known flow restrictor nozzle unit (70) under a known pressure difference in the laboratory (or in the well). During such calibration one should use petroleum fluids of known viscosity and composition and temperature. The flow restrictor nozzle unit (70) in the shunt flow passage (4) is literally the bottleneck of the flow shunt chamber (1), please see
In practice, we are arranging said flow shunt chamber (1) extending generally axial-parallel with said basepipe (10).
Optionally, if it is allowed to partly block the passage in the base pipe (10), we may arrange the flow shunt chamber (1) on the inner wall of the base pipe (10) or in a side pocket mandrel (10S).
In an embodiment of the method of the invention, it is used a tracer carrying system (2) arranged for releasing said tracer molecules or particles (3) at a steady time release rate into the surrounding shunt chamber fluid (F3).
If the flow restrictor nozzle unit (70) is obeying Darcy's law (narrow tubes, porous media) the relationship between flow and pressure difference becomes (linearly) proportional, and thus it is possible to calibrate the flow shunt chamber (1).
One may assume in a simplified model of the fluid flows through the flow shunt chamber (1) and the base pipe (10) that fluid flow (Φchamber) through the shunt flow passage (4) is proportional or linearly related to the fluid flow (Φbasepipe) through the base pipe (10), given that the pressure difference (P6-P5) over the same distance along them are the same. The fluid flow rates (Φchamber), (Φbasepipe), (Φannulus) are denoted in volume per time unit; litres/s.
Depending particularly on the flow restrictor nozzle unit (70), the proportional or otherwise linearly related ratio of fluid flow per time unit distributed between the flow passage (4) and the base pipe (10), (Φchamber)/(Φbasepipe) may be determined or calibrated before installation of the basepipe and completion section component with the shunt flow chamber (1).
Similarly, the ratio of fluid flow per time unit distributed between the flow passage (4) and the annulus (20) (Φchamber)/(Φannulus), or between the flow passage (4) and the combined flow through base pipe (10) and the annulus (20), may be calibrated in the laboratory before installation of the completion. The desired calibration depends on which flows the first and second apertures (6, 5) are adjacent to.
The flow of molecules or particles from said shunt chamber fluid (F3) is released to the basepipe flow (F5) further out of outlet aperture (5) where it mixes into the outside flow (F5) and is eventually picked up topsides where samples may be taken from the basepipe flow for being analyzed for concentration. What is here called the “outside flow” (F5) depends on whether the second, downstream aperture (5) is to the base pipe directly, to the annulus flow directly, or to a screen between the two.
A continuous measurement of production flows of oil, water and gas topsides must of course be recorded. Samples are taken at desired points in time depending on the progress of the method according to the invention. The samples are analyzed for the presence of each of the installed tracer carriers' (2) molecule (31, 32, . . . , 3n) types installed in the flow shunt chambers (1) along the base pipe. The samples are collected as a function of time, as mentioned above. The topsides concentrations (c1sample(ti)), (c2sample(ti)), . . . (cnsample(ti)) are registered as function of (ti) for i=1 to m. Further, each concentration (c1sample(ti)) must, for the method to work, be corrected for the instantaneous topsides production flow (Φtopside) when the sample is taken, in order to calculate the topside tracer flux (ρtopside) for each tracer molecule (3) type: (ρ1topside), (ρ2topside), . . . , (ρntopside) for (ti) for i=1 to m. Then one arrives at curves which should resemble
For the situations illustrated and described in connection with
The first inlet aperture (6) is at a relatively higher pressure than the downstream second outlet aperture (5). This may be due to said first inlet aperture (6) being in fluid communication with an upstream part of said base pipe (10) or said annulus (20) or both, and said outlet aperture (5) being in fluid communication with a downstream part of said base pipe (10) or said annulus (20) or both. The pressure decreases in a downstream direction generally; this is why fluids flow through the base pipe (10) or annulus (20), and in particular through the passage (4) of the device of the present invention. The pressure difference (or gradient) drives a flow through the passage (4) from the inlet aperture (6) through the outlet aperture (5). Which parameters that control, restrict or brake the flow of the shunt chamber fluid (F3) through the passage (4) are:
inertia (negligible),
fluid friction (parallel flow or turbulent flow),
the fluid restrictor (7),
viscosity,
temperature, and
possible clogging at the inlet aperture (6).
In general, without the fluid restrictor (7), the flushout time from the passage (4) through flow shunt chamber (1) would be rather short, and the flow through would be large, and the release time for the shunt chamber fluid rather short compared to the flushout time downstream through the production tubing and the tie-back to the petroleum platform. Thus it could be difficult to obtain a well detectable tracer flux pulse peak. The fluid restrictor (7) (which may be integrated with the outlet aperture (5) or arranged in the passage (4) between the tracer carrying system (2) and the outlet aperture (5), may be designed as the “bottleneck” controlling component of the passage (4) as illustrated in
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/NO2015/050044 | 2/27/2015 | WO | 00 |