Wireline and While-drilling Formation-tester Sampling with Oval, Focused, and Conventional Probe Types in the Presence of Water- and Oil-base Mud-filtrate Invasion in Deviated Wells

Wireline and While-drilling Formation-tester Sampling with Oval, Focused, and Conventional Probe Types in the Presence of Water- and Oil-base Mud-filtrate Invasion in Deviated Wells

Author: Abdolhamid Hadibeik Nishaboori

Publisher:

Published: 2009

Total Pages:

ISBN-13:

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Speculation about the potential of developing new fluid sampling methods with probe-type formation testers has existed since the introduction of formation pressure testing to the drilling environment in 2002. Extending the existing wireline technology requires a new pumping system capable of removing invasion fluids and then filling single-phase sample chambers. Several technological advances are necessary before these conditions are commercially possible. Although wireline pumpout tools may require hours to retrieve representative fluid samples, spending hours obtaining samples in the drilling environment may not be considered a practical alternative. The objective of this thesis is to quantify the viability of sampling in the drilling environment by way of numerical simulations. The study considers the dynamic nature of invasion while drilling when using both new and conventional probe configurations to retrieve fluid samples. Previous studies assumed a time-constant rate of invasion that was close to that of the final stages of invasion. Furthermore, most simulations of wireline formation-tester measurements assumed that invasion ended at the time when fluid pumpout began. Both of these assumptions are optimistic for a drilling tool. To realistically simulate invasion during drilling, a mudcake model is used that continues to grow in thickness and sealing effectiveness during invasion and throughout the sampling process. Simulation results focus on scenarios in which water-base mud (WBM) and oil-base mud (OBM) invade an oil-bearing zone. In addition, the accuracy of functions used to estimate contamination is studied in an OBM environment. The base model consists of a typical probe-type tool in a vertical well wherein fluid samples are retrieved using a time-constant flow rate. Invasion time is varied from 1 hour to 48 hours to compare drilling and wireline sampling tools. We quantify mudcake sealing effectiveness, as well as the effect of borehole deviation. Oval (elongated) and focusing guard-style probes are compared to standard probe configurations for various petrophysical rock types. Simulations of fluid cleanup times for a variety of rock types and wellbore deviation angles indicate that the oval focused probe retrieves the cleanest fluid sample in the shortest period of time.


Numerical Simulation and Interpretation of Formation-tester Measurements Acquired in the Presence of Mud-filtrate Invasion

Numerical Simulation and Interpretation of Formation-tester Measurements Acquired in the Presence of Mud-filtrate Invasion

Author: Mayank Malik

Publisher:

Published: 2008

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13:

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Wireline formation testers (WFT) are widely used to measure fluid pressure, to perform downhole fluid analysis in real-time, and for estimating permeability through pressure transient testing. Formation testers can measure a range of fluid properties such as color, viscosity, density, composition, pH, optical refractive index, pressure, salinity, fractional flow, and gas-oil ratio (GOR). However, WFT measurements are influenced by the process of mud-filtrate invasion because overbalanced drilling promotes radial displacement of in-situ fluids by mud filtrate. Oil-base mud (OBM) is first-contact miscible with native oil and can lead to contaminated fluid samples, erroneous estimates of petrophysical properties, and changes of composition, viscosity, compressibility, GOR, and fluid density. The objective of this dissertation is three-fold: (1) to quantify the effect of OBMfiltrate invasion on WFT measurements, (2) to estimate in-situ petrophysical properties concomitantly from transient measurements of pressure, flow rate and GOR acquired with formation testers, and (3) to quantify petrophysical, geometrical, and fluid properties that can minimize the time of withdrawal of uncontaminated fluid samples. In order to quantify the effect OBM-filtrate invasion on WFT measurements, we develop a two-dimensional axial-symmetric compositional simulator and subsequently use a commercial adaptive-implicit compositional simulator, CMG-GEM1. History matching of three field data sets acquired with probe-type formation testers in light-oil formations accurately reproduces measurements of sandface pressure, observation-probe pressure, GOR, and flow rate. Further, we demonstrate that history matching enables the detection and diagnosis of adverse data-acquisition conditions such as plugging, noisy data, and presence of OBM-filtrate invasion. We introduce a dimensionless fluid contamination function that relates GOR to fluid-sample quality. Sensitivity analysis of simulated fluid-sample quality to petrophysical properties clearly indicates that sample quality improves in the presence of anisotropy and impermeable shale boundaries. A computationally efficient dual-grid inversion algorithm is developed and tested on both synthetic and field data sets to estimate in-situ petrophysical properties from WFT measurements. These tests confirm the reliability and accuracy of the inversion technique. Results indicate that permeability estimates can be biased by noisy measurements as well as by uncertainty in flow rate, relative permeability, radial invasion length, formation damage, and location of bed boundaries. To quantify petrophysical and geometrical factors that can optimize the time of withdrawal of uncontaminated fluid samples, we compare the performance of focused and conventional probe-type WFT in the presence of mud-filtrate invasion. Simulations indicate a significant reduction in fluid-cleanup time when using a focused probe. The specific amount of improvement depends on probe geometry, fluid composition, and petrophysical properties of the probed formation. Finally, we develop an inversion method to estimate Brooks-Corey parametric saturation-dependent functions jointly from transient measurements of fractional flow and probe pressure. Results show that estimating Brooks-Corey parameters can be nonunique if the a-priori information about fluid and petrophysical properties is uncertain. However, we show that focused fluid sampling consistently improves both the accuracy and reliability of the estimated relative permeability and capillary pressure parametric functions with respect to estimates obtained with conventional-probe measurements.


Some Aspects of Deep Formation Testing

Some Aspects of Deep Formation Testing

Author: Soraya Sofia Betancourt

Publisher:

Published: 2012

Total Pages: 528

ISBN-13:

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Single-probe formation testers have been used since the 1950s to measure pore pressure and estimate mobility in fluid-bearing formations penetrated by a well. They are widely used in the oil and gas industry, with tens of measurements often made in every newly drilled well as part of the formation evaluation program. Each measurement consists of placing the tool in the wellbore in direct contact with the face of the formation, extracting a small amount of fluid (from 1 to 50 cc) from the rock and analyzing the fluid pressure response of the system. Pressure interpretation is based on models that assume that temperature within the formation tester flowline remains constant during the tool operation. However, formation pressure measurement involves relatively fast volume and pressure changes within the flowline, which result in temperature changes. These temperature changes are modeled semi-analytically and their effect on pressure transients is analyzed. Temperature variations are accounted for by describing the pressure and temperature dependence of fluid density in the continuity equation, and that temperature varies with both space and time. It is considered here that once a temperature change is imposed on the system, the primary mechanism of thermal transport to achieve equilibrium is conduction. Including temperature in the analysis requires taking into account flowline geometry, and well environmental conditions during the measurement-- namely, wellbore temperature and type of drilling fluid in the wellbore, all of which are immaterial in the isothermal analysis. Arguably, pressure behavior during formation tester measurements could be influenced by several factors. All previous studies related to formation testers assume perfect tool performance and provide explanations to pressure behaviors from the reservoir point of view (e.g., Stewart and Witmmann, 1979; Phelps et al., 1984; Proett and Chin, 1996, etc.). The approach followed here is diametrically opposite. The formation is considered `perfect' from the point of view of pressure measurement, and physical phenomena (thermal transients) that may affect the measured pressure signal are studied. The focus is to understand fundamental aspects of the tool performance that can be studied analytically while minimizing, as much as possible, external parameters that add uncertainty. This dissertation was motivated by inconsistencies observed between the pressure behavior in field measurements and existing (isothermal) theory. For instance, false buildups, buildup overshoots and long time required to reach pressure equilibration, have puzzled those involved in the interpretation of formation tester pressure transients for many years. These behaviors can be reproduced in pressure computations when accounting for temperature variations. The focus of this dissertation is on modeling the tool capability to sense pressure transients associated with recompression of formation fluids several inches away from the wellbore, accounting for temperature variations during the measurement. This is relevant because it is desirable to characterize formation properties beyond the region affected by drilling mud filtrate invasion. In practice, a discrepancy is often observed between formation mobility obtained from drawdown, which depends mostly on formation properties near the wellbore, and mobility obtained from the analysis of late-time buildup pressure, which in theory depends on formation properties farther from the wellbore (Moran and Finklea, 1962). This dissertation examines the influence of late-time tool storage effects caused by thermal equilibration of the flowline fluid on the pressure equilibration and buildup mobility interpretation. It was found that in some cases such late-time storage effects could exhibit a behavior that resembles that expected from spherical flow, that is, the flow regime characteristic of single-probe formation testers; and could therefore invalidate mobility determined by isothermal transient pressure analysis. Formation tester flowline and probe design, test parameters (rate and volume), and environmental conditions during the measurement, mostly type of drilling fluid and wellbore temperature, are important variables in determining the magnitude of late-time storage effects, and hence the tool capability to detect a deep formation signal (spherical flow). Temperature variations affecting late-buildup pressure transients were observed to be more pronounced (listed in order of importance): as wellbore temperature increases; drilling fluid is oil-based mud; flowline with large radius components (e.g.> 1 cm); large flowline volume; small probe radius (


Wireline Formation Testing

Wireline Formation Testing

Author: Fikri J Kuchuk

Publisher:

Published: 2021-03-13

Total Pages: 422

ISBN-13: 9781613998434

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Wireline Formation Testing provides a comprehensive exploration of this modeling through use of hardware, advanced formation testing modules, and new interpretation techniques. Exposition of these analytical models, systematic inclusion of mixed boundary value problems, first-principle-based pressure gradient interpretation, probabilistic enumeration of radius of investigation, and system identification methods appeal to various levels of engineering expertise. This book provides a resource to experienced engineers who wish to evaluate reservoirs simultaneously with the scope of the testing results, as well as to universities that wish to provide students with this understanding through undergraduate and applied graduate courses.


Introduction to Permanent Plug and Abandonment of Wells

Introduction to Permanent Plug and Abandonment of Wells

Author: Mahmoud Khalifeh

Publisher: Springer Nature

Published: 2020-01-27

Total Pages: 285

ISBN-13: 3030399702

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This open access book offers a timely guide to challenges and current practices to permanently plug and abandon hydrocarbon wells. With a focus on offshore North Sea, it analyzes the process of plug and abandonment of hydrocarbon wells through the establishment of permanent well barriers. It provides the reader with extensive knowledge on the type of barriers, their functioning and verification. It then discusses plug and abandonment methodologies, analyzing different types of permanent plugging materials. Last, it describes some tests for verifying the integrity and functionality of installed permanent barriers. The book offers a comprehensive reference guide to well plugging and abandonment (P&A) and well integrity testing. The book also presents new technologies that have been proposed to be used in plugging and abandoning of wells, which might be game-changing technologies, but they are still in laboratory or testing level. Given its scope, it addresses students and researchers in both academia and industry. It also provides information for engineers who work in petroleum industry and should be familiarized with P&A of hydrocarbon wells to reduce the time of P&A by considering it during well planning and construction.


Formation Evaluation with Pre-Digital Well Logs

Formation Evaluation with Pre-Digital Well Logs

Author: Richard M. Bateman

Publisher: Elsevier

Published: 2020-02-08

Total Pages: 287

ISBN-13: 0128202335

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Formation Evaluation with Pre-Digital Well Logs covers the practical use of legacy materials for formation evaluation using wireline logging equipment from 1927 until the introduction of digital logging in the 1960s and '70s. The book provides powerful interpretation techniques that can be applied today when an analyst is faced with a drawer full of old "E logs." It arms the engineer, geologist and petrophysicist with the tools needed to profitably plan re-completions or in-fill drilling in old fields that may have been acquired for modern deeper and/or horizontal drilling. - Includes more than 150 figures, log examples, charts and graphs - Provides work exercises for the reader to practice log analysis and formation evaluation - Presents an important source for academia, oil and gas professionals, service company personnel and the banking and asset evaluation teams at consultancies involved in reserve and other property evaluation


Well Completion Design

Well Completion Design

Author: Jonathan Bellarby

Publisher: Elsevier

Published: 2009-04-13

Total Pages: 726

ISBN-13: 0080932525

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Completions are the conduit between hydrocarbon reservoirs and surface facilities. They are a fundamental part of any hydrocarbon field development project. The have to be designed for safely maximising the hydrocarbon recovery from the well and may have to last for many years under ever changing conditions. Issues include: connection with the reservoir rock, avoiding sand production, selecting the correct interval, pumps and other forms of artificial lift, safety and integrity, equipment selection and installation and future well interventions. - Course book based on course well completion design by TRACS International - Unique in its field: Coverage of offshore, subsea, and landbased completions in all of the major hydrocarbon basins of the world - Full colour


Understanding Oil and Gas Shows and Seals in the Search for Hydrocarbons

Understanding Oil and Gas Shows and Seals in the Search for Hydrocarbons

Author: John Dolson

Publisher: Springer

Published: 2016-06-15

Total Pages: 498

ISBN-13: 3319297104

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This book explains in detail how to use oil and gas show information to find hydrocarbons. It covers the basics of exploration methodologies, drilling and mud systems, cuttings and mud gas show evaluation, fundamental log analysis, the pitfalls of log-calculated water saturations, and a complete overview of the use of pressures to understand traps and migration, hydrodynamics, and seal and reservoir quantification using capillary pressure. Also included are techniques for quickly generating pseudo-capillary pressure curves from simple porosity/permeability data, with examples of how to build spreadsheets in Excel, and a complete treatment of fluid inclusion analysis and fluid inclusion stratigraphy to map migration pathways. In addition, petroleum systems modeling and fundamental source rock geochemistry are discussed in depth, particularly in the context of unconventional source rock evaluation and screening tools for entering new plays. The book is heavily illustrated with numerous examples and case histories from the author’s 37 years of exploration experience. The topics covered in this book will give any young geoscientist a quick start on a successful career and serve as a refresher for the more experienced explorer.