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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Pre-Loading Depleted Parent Wells to Avoid Frac-Hits: Some Important Design Considerations

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TLDR
Zheng et al. as mentioned in this paper developed a fully implicit, 3D, parallelized, poroelastic, compositional, reservoir-fracture simulator to seamlessly model fluid production/injection (water or gas) in the parent well and model propagation of multiple fractures from the child well.
Abstract
Mitigating the negative impact of frac-hits on production from parent and child wells is challenging. In this work, we show the impact of parent well depletion and repressurization on the child well fracture propagation and parent well productivity in different US shale reservoirs. By repressurizing the parent well, we do not imply repressurization of the entire depleted reservoir. By repressurizing the parent well, we imply pressurization of only the near fracture regions. Our goal is to develop a method to better manage production/injection in the parent well and stimulation operations in the child well to minimize frac-hits and improve oil and gas recovery. We have developed a fully implicit, 3-D, parallelized, poroelastic, compositional, reservoir-fracture simulator to seamlessly model fluid production/injection (water or gas) in the parent well and model propagation of multiple fractures from the child well (Zheng et al., 2019a; Manchanda et al., 2019a). This simulator implicitly solves for the reservoir deformation and pressure, fracture pressure and injection/production rate to quantify the stress changes due to production/injection, and also the propagation of child well fractures resulting in parent-child well interactions. Component mass balance equations and equation of state-based flash calculations are coupled with the implicit solver to account for the phase behavior in different reservoir fluids and also during the injection process. We have analyzed the effects of drawdown rate and production time in three shale plays: Permian (oil), Eagle Ford (volatile oil/gas condensate) and Haynesville (dry gas) reservoirs. The results show that different reservoir fluids and drawdown strategies for the parent wells result in different stress distributions in the depleted zone and this affects the child well fracture propagation. We studied different strategies to repressurize the parent well by varying the injected fluids (gas vs. water), pre-load fluid volumes, etc. It was found that frac-hits can be avoided if the fluid injection strategy is designed appropriately. In some poorly designed pre-loading strategies, frac-hits are still observed. Lastly, we analyzed the impact of pre-loading on the parent well productivity. When water was used for pre-loading, we observed water blocking in the reservoir that caused damage to the parent well. However, when gas was injected for pre-loading, the oil recovery of the parent well was observed to increase. We present, for the first time, fully compositional geomechanical simulations of child well fracture propagation around depleted parent wells. We study the impact of parent well production reservoir fluid, etc. on child well fracture propagation. Fluid injection (pre-loading) strategy in the parent well and subsequent avoidance of frac-hits is also modeled. Such simulations of parent-child well interactions provide much-needed quantification to predict and mitigate the damage caused by depletion and frac-hits.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Fracture Hits in Unconventional Reservoirs: A Critical Review

TL;DR: In this article, an exhaustive literature survey was performed on fracture hits to identify key factors affecting the fracture hits and suggest different strategies to manage fracture hits, and different strategies proposed to minimize the negative impact of fracture hits are simultaneous lease development, thus avoiding parent/child wells; repressuring or refracturing parent wells; using far-field diverters and high-permeability plugging agents in the child-well fracturing fluid; and optimizing stage and cluster spacing through modeling studies and field tests.
Journal ArticleDOI

Selection of hydrocarbon gas for huff-n-puff IOR in shale oil reservoirs

TL;DR: Zheng et al. as discussed by the authors presented simulation results focused on the impact of phase behavior on the injection of single component gases such as; N2, CO2, C1 and C2, and a combination of hydrocarbon gases with varying C1, C2 and C3 compositions, as the basis for selecting an injectant, that is more effective than CO2 for cyclic gas injection.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

An Integrated Equation-of-State Compositional Hydraulic Fracturing and Reservoir Simulator

Abstract: In this paper, we present an integrated equation-of-state based compositional hydraulic fracturing and reservoir simulator. The goal of this research is to develop a general simulator that can simulate the lifecycle of wells, which includes hydraulic fracturing treatment using water-based or energized fracturing fluid, post-frac shut-in and flowback with fracture closure and proppant settling, primary production with proppant embedment and fluid reinjection in a multiple well pad. This simulator fully couples the reservoir, fracture, and wellbore domains with multiple physics in each domain. The rock deformation, porous flow and temperature change in the reservoir domain, fluid and proppant transport in the fracture domain, and wellbore slurry flow and fluid/proppant distribution among clusters are fully coupled together and solved fully implicitly using the Newton-Raphson method. The phase behavior of hydrocarbon phases is modeled using Peng-Robinson Equation-of-state. The fracture propagation is modeled by mesh topology change (dynamic remeshing and local refinement) and the propagation direction is evaluated using the stress intensity factors. This simulator has been fully parallelized using MPI. We show two applications of this simulator for lifecycle analysis in US unconventional oil reservoirs on frac-hits and CO2 fracturing. In the first field application, we simulate a multi-well fracture diagnostics. We used the parent well to monitor the child well fracture growth. Child well fracture growth is correctly interpreted using the monitoring data. In the second field application, we perform lifecycle analysis of hydraulic fracturing treatment using hybrid CO2-slick water-crosslinked gel fracturing fluids and 100/30-50 mesh proppants and the following production phase from a well in the Bakken formation. We successfully match the complex surface treating pressure data from the field. We also successfully matched the cumulative production of oil, gas and water and explained the long-term CO2 flowback phenomenon in the field. The novelty of this simulator comes from its unique modeling capability in the well lifecycle analysis. Fully coupled reservoir-fracture-wellbore framework allows accurate modeling of hydraulic fracture propagation in multiple well pads using multiple fracturing fluids and proppants, fracture closure during shut-in, primary production, refracturing, and pre-loading for parent well protection, and huff-n-puff improved oil recovery, all in one simulation. This simulator can be used as a reliable and efficient tool by operators in well lifecycle analysis.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

The Effects of Geomechanics, Diffusion and Phase Behavior for Huff-n-Puff IOR in Shale Oil Reservoirs

TL;DR: In this article, the impact of geomechanical effects during injection and fracture closure during production, injection rate effect during huff-n-puff processes, timing effect in huff n-puff process, phase behavior effects for huffn-puff oil recovery, and impact of soak time on oil recovery.
References
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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Imbibition and Water Blockage in Unconventional Reservoirs: Well Management Implications During Flowback and Early Production

TL;DR: In this article, a well may undergo weeks to months of shut-in following hydraulic-fracture stimulation in an unconventional setting, and the authors demonstrate that a well resting period improves early productivity while reducing water production.
Journal ArticleDOI

A block-coupled Finite Volume methodology for linear elasticity and unstructured meshes

TL;DR: The current article presents a fully coupled cell-centred Finite Volume solution methodology for linear elasticity and unstructured meshes that is faster than comparable Finite Element and Finite volume methods.
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