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Co-written by a world-renowned petroleum engineer, this breakthrough new volume teaches engineers how to configure, place and produce horizontal and multilateral wells in geologically complicated reservoirs, select optimal well spacings and fracture separations, and how to manage factors influencing well productivity using proven cost-effective and user-friendly simulation methods.
Charged in the 1990s with solving some of petroleum engineering's biggest problems that the industry deemed "unsolvable," the authors of this innovative new volume solved those problems, not just using a well-published math model, but one optimized to run rapidly, the first time, every time. This not only provides numerical output, but production curves and color pressure plots automatically. And each in a single hour of desk time.
Using their Multisim software that is featured in this volume, secondary school students at the Aldine Independent School District delivered professional quality simulations in a training program funded by some of the largest energy companies in the world. Think what you, as a professional engineer, could do in your daily work. Valuable with or without the software, this volume is the cutting-edge of reservoir engineering today, prefacing each chapter with a "trade journal summary" followed by hands-on details, allowing readers to replicate and extend results for their own applications.
This volume covers parent-child, multilateral well, and fracture flow interactions, reservoir flow analysis, many other issues involving fluid flow, fracturing, and many other common "unsolvable" problems that engineers encounter every day. It is a must-have for every engineer's bookshelf.
Auteur
Wilson C. Chin, PhD, is an experienced petroleum engineer with over twenty books published by Wiley-Scrivener and other leading publishers and over a hundred articles published in scientific journals. He holds four dozen domestic and international patents and has received five major awards with the United States Department of Energy. Mr. Chin's interests include reservoir simulation, measurement while drilling, borehole electromagnetics, managed pressure drilling, formation testing, downhole vibrations, and drilling and cementing rheology. Xiaoying Zhuang has almost a decade of experience in borehole rheology and reservoir fluid mechanics. From 2009 to 2011, she served as Co-Investigator for the United States Department of Energy in their sponsored research into well control, leading to a well-received book appearing in English and Chinese on the subject. "Jenny" has co-authored ten papers in her areas of technical interest.
Contenu
Preface xi
Acknowledgements xv
1 Parent-Child, Multilateral Well and Fracture Flow Interactions 1
Additional questions raised 1
Problem identified 2
Why call them frac hits? 5
Is a frac hit model possible? 5
1.1 Reference 7
2 Reservoir Flow Analysis Concise and Rigorous Summary 9
2.1 Governing Equations and Numerical Formulation 9
Steady flows of liquids 10
Difference equation formulation 10
The iterative scheme 12
Modeling well constraints for liquids 13
Steady and unsteady nonlinear gas flows 15
Steady gas flows 16
Well constraints for gas flows 18
Transient, compressible flows 19
Compaction, consolidation and subsidence 22
Boundary conforming grids 23
Stratigraphic meshes for layered media 24
Modeling wellbore storage 25
2.2 References 27
3 Reservoir Simulation Strengths, Limitations and Strategies 28
Deficiencies affecting all simulators 28
3.1 Rectangular versus Curvilinear Coordinates 29
3.2 Fracture Simulations and Analytical Subtleties 33
Aerodynamic analogies 33
3.3 A Digression Advances in Geometric Modeling 35
3.3.1 Airfoil and three-dimensional wing flows 35
3.3.2 Two dimensional planar reservoir flows 36
3.4 Formulation Errors in Commercial Simulators 40
Commingled reservoirs 40
Unit mobility flow 40
Well constraints, pressures and rates, kh products 40
Upscaling methods and averaging 41
Geometric gridding 42
Input/output issues and 3D color graphics 42
Matrix solvers and numerical inversion 42
Meaning of farfield boundary conditions 43
Grid density 43
Simulator design philosophy 44
3.5 References 45
4 Parent-Child Well and Fracture Flow A Simple Steady-State Example 46
4.1 A Simple Example Steady Flow Parent-Child Well and Fracture Interactions 46
Reference examples 47
More interesting calculations 47
Closing remarks 53
4.2 Two Reference Single-Well Analyses 54
Reference Example A 54
Reference Example B 57
4.3 Detailed Two-Well and Fracture Flow Analyses 59
Run 1 Two wells, different pressure constraints, homogeneous medium 59
Run 2 Two wells, identical pressure constraints in homogeneous isotropic medium 81
Run 3 Return to Run 1 well constraints, with Wells 1 and 2 joined using uniform fracture 84
Run 4 Incomplete fracture penetration at Well 1 91
Closing remarks 96
4.4 References 96
5 Hydraulic Fracture Flow for Horizontal Wells in Anisotropic Media 97
5.1 Horizontal or Multilateral Wells Intersected by General Hydraulic Fractures in Fully Transient Flow 97
Run 1 99
Runs 2, 3 and 4 101
5.2 Detailed Software Analysis 105
5.2.1 Run 1. No fractures along vertical-to-horizontal well (for reference baseline comparisons) 105
5.2.2 Run 2. Horizontal well intersected by a single hydraulic fracture 142
5.2.3 Run 3. Horizontal well intersecting two fracture planes 147
5.2.4 Run 4. Horizontal well intersecting three fractures 149
5.2.5 Runs 5-6. Effects of anisotropy and fracture orientation 153
Run 5 153
Run 6 155
5.3 References 157
6 Cube Models in Reservoir Development 158
6.1 Well Spacings, Parent-Child Effects and Reservoir Strategy in Modern Drilling 158
6.1.1 Basic optimization problems 158
6.1.2 Reservoir flow simulation versus statistical modeling approaches 160
6.1.3 Cube model set-up and computed results 161
6.1.4 Reservoir optimization and cost effectiveness 166
6.1.5 Closing remarks 168
6.1.6 References 169
6.2 Detailed Software Analysis 170 6.3 A More Optim...