Controlling excess water production in fractured carbonate reservoirs: chemical zonal protection design

Abstract Fractured carbonate reservoirs are prone to premature water cut production at the early stage of recovery. Conventionally completed long horizontal wells, suffering from high water cut through fracture networks, need reliable and cost-effective treatment solutions to control water entry, wi...

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Main Authors: Bisweswar Ghosh, Samhar Adi Ali, Hadi Belhaj
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2020-01-01
Series:Journal of Petroleum Exploration and Production Technology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1007/s13202-020-00842-3
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spelling doaj-57970831bdee4b85bd60a9d6d9cd15dd2021-01-31T16:11:22ZengSpringerOpenJournal of Petroleum Exploration and Production Technology2190-05582190-05662020-01-011051921193110.1007/s13202-020-00842-3Controlling excess water production in fractured carbonate reservoirs: chemical zonal protection designBisweswar Ghosh0Samhar Adi Ali1Hadi Belhaj2Petroleum Engineering Department, Khalifa UniversityPetroleum Engineering Department, Khalifa UniversityPetroleum Engineering Department, Khalifa UniversityAbstract Fractured carbonate reservoirs are prone to premature water cut production at the early stage of recovery. Conventionally completed long horizontal wells, suffering from high water cut through fracture networks, need reliable and cost-effective treatment solutions to control water entry, without damaging oil-saturated segments. Protection of oil flow channels from polymer gel invasion could be a challenge in complex fractured reservoirs because of the enormity of the number of zones that may require damage protection. In this work, a chemical package system is developed, comprising three different chemical solutions. The first fluid is designed to protect the low-permeable oil-saturated zones by creating an impermeable barrier while keeping the water conductive fractures open, followed by a gelant, designed to invade, solidify, and seal off the water conductive fractures. The third treatment is designed for a complete dissolution of the protective barrier created by the first fluid. The effectiveness of this process is evaluated through a set of four core flood studies at reservoir conditions. It was observed that whereas the effective brine permeability could be reduced by 74–91%, oil effective permeability is reduced by 12–17% depending on the fracture aperture. The paper also discusses the key parameters to be addressed for successful field implementation of this technology.https://doi.org/10.1007/s13202-020-00842-3Water shutoffFractured reservoirHigh water cutPolymer gelFormation damage
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bisweswar Ghosh
Samhar Adi Ali
Hadi Belhaj
spellingShingle Bisweswar Ghosh
Samhar Adi Ali
Hadi Belhaj
Controlling excess water production in fractured carbonate reservoirs: chemical zonal protection design
Journal of Petroleum Exploration and Production Technology
Water shutoff
Fractured reservoir
High water cut
Polymer gel
Formation damage
author_facet Bisweswar Ghosh
Samhar Adi Ali
Hadi Belhaj
author_sort Bisweswar Ghosh
title Controlling excess water production in fractured carbonate reservoirs: chemical zonal protection design
title_short Controlling excess water production in fractured carbonate reservoirs: chemical zonal protection design
title_full Controlling excess water production in fractured carbonate reservoirs: chemical zonal protection design
title_fullStr Controlling excess water production in fractured carbonate reservoirs: chemical zonal protection design
title_full_unstemmed Controlling excess water production in fractured carbonate reservoirs: chemical zonal protection design
title_sort controlling excess water production in fractured carbonate reservoirs: chemical zonal protection design
publisher SpringerOpen
series Journal of Petroleum Exploration and Production Technology
issn 2190-0558
2190-0566
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Abstract Fractured carbonate reservoirs are prone to premature water cut production at the early stage of recovery. Conventionally completed long horizontal wells, suffering from high water cut through fracture networks, need reliable and cost-effective treatment solutions to control water entry, without damaging oil-saturated segments. Protection of oil flow channels from polymer gel invasion could be a challenge in complex fractured reservoirs because of the enormity of the number of zones that may require damage protection. In this work, a chemical package system is developed, comprising three different chemical solutions. The first fluid is designed to protect the low-permeable oil-saturated zones by creating an impermeable barrier while keeping the water conductive fractures open, followed by a gelant, designed to invade, solidify, and seal off the water conductive fractures. The third treatment is designed for a complete dissolution of the protective barrier created by the first fluid. The effectiveness of this process is evaluated through a set of four core flood studies at reservoir conditions. It was observed that whereas the effective brine permeability could be reduced by 74–91%, oil effective permeability is reduced by 12–17% depending on the fracture aperture. The paper also discusses the key parameters to be addressed for successful field implementation of this technology.
topic Water shutoff
Fractured reservoir
High water cut
Polymer gel
Formation damage
url https://doi.org/10.1007/s13202-020-00842-3
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AT samharadiali controllingexcesswaterproductioninfracturedcarbonatereservoirschemicalzonalprotectiondesign
AT hadibelhaj controllingexcesswaterproductioninfracturedcarbonatereservoirschemicalzonalprotectiondesign
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