Chapter 5 Well Testing (III) : Weibo Sui PH.D, Associate Professor College of Petroleum Engineering, CUPB
Chapter 5 Well Testing (III) : Weibo Sui PH.D, Associate Professor College of Petroleum Engineering, CUPB
Weibo Sui
Ph.D, Associate Professor
College of Petroleum Engineering, CUPB
Type Curve
kh kh
pD pi p log p log pD log
141.2qB 141.2qB
0.0002637 kt 0.0002637k
tD log t log t D log
ct rw2 ct rw2
p
kh 141.2qB D
p M
0.0002637 kh 1
hct
rw2 tD
t M
Gringarten Type Curve
Bourdet’s Derivative Plot (1983)
d p d p
p t (Drawdown test)
d ln t d t
Bourdet’s Derivative Plot (1983)
Wellbore Storage Effect (WBS)
70.6qB kt
p r, t pi ln 2
kh 1688 ct r
d p 70.6qB 141.2qB
p 0.5
d ln t kh kh
which means p is a constant value.
In dimensionless pressure and dimensionless time form, we have
kh
pD pi p
141.2qB
0.0002637k
tD
ct rw2
Therefore, the dimensionless pressure change derivative is
dpD dp
pD t D D 0.5
d ln tD dtD
Combined Gringarten and Bourdet Plot
The Pressure Derivative
13
Pressure Derivative
• Wellbore Storage
• Radial Flow
• Spherical
• Linear
• Bilinear
15
Radial Flow Regimes for Vertical Wells
Top of Bottom
zone of zone
Sealing Boundary
Fracture
Fracture
Boundary
Radial flow
Pseudoradial flow
Hemiradial flow
17
Spherical Flow Regimes
18
Linear Flow Regimes
Fracture
Fracture
Boundary
e
at
st
r
Radial ea
dy
Li n
ea
Sp
st
he
do
ri c
al
eu
Ps
Radial Radial
ge e ar
a Li n
t or ar
s ne
re Li
b o ear
l Bilin
el
W
FRID Tool
Flow Region Identification
e
at
st
r
Radial nea
y
i
ad
L
te
Sp
10 -2
he
os
ric
ud
a l LTR
e
Ps
MTR
Radial Radial
WBS
10 -3
e ar
ag
10r-2 10 -1 0i
10L
ne
10 1 10 2
o ar
st
Delta-T (hr)
neWell Test Diagnostic Flow Regions
re Li
b o ear
l Bilin
el
W
Time Region Identification
2001/01/02-0000 : OIL
DP + DERIVATIVE (PSI/STB/D)
10 -2
LTR
MTR
WBS
10 -3
10 -2 10 -1 10 0 10 1 10 2
Delta-T (hr)
Well Test Diagnostic Flow Regions
22
Early and Middle Time Analysis
Drawdown Analysis
• C, k, s
– cartesian plot (C)
– semilog analysis (k, s)
– log-log derivative (C, k, s)
24
Drawdown Analysis
102/01/01-1200 : N/A
4000. 4500. 5000. 5500. 6000.
pressure PSI
20.
15.
Dp mC
DP (PSI)
Zoom
10.
Dt
5.
0.
qB qB qB
p t mC C in bbl/psi
24C 24C 24mC
Semi-log Drawdown Analysis – s
2002/01/01-0000 : OIL
4995.
4990.
P PSI
4985.
Semilog Slope, m
4980.
SLOPE
4975.
STABIL
10 -3
UNIT SLP
10 -3 10 -2 10 -1 10 0 10 1
Delta-T (hr)
Log-log Derivative Analysis
d (p ) p 2 p1
d (t ) t 2 t1
(Dt2, Dp2)
qB
log Dp C
d (p )
(Dt1, Dp1) 24
d (t )
2002/01/01-0000 : OIL
STABIL
10 -3
UNIT SLP
10 -3 10 -2 10 -1 10 0 10 1
Delta-T (hr)
Log-log Derivative Analysis
70.6qB
k , m is the level of the derivative, m=m/2.303
mh
pi pwf kt
s 1.151 log 3.23 for t in IARF
m ct rw
2
PBU Analysis
(straight line methods)
• C, k, s, p*
– cartesian plot (C)
– semilog analysis (k, s, p*)
– - log-log derivative (C, k, s, p*)
PBU Analysis
2002/01/01-1200 : OIL
4995.
pressure PSI
4985.
4975.
20.
15.
Dp mC
DP (PSI)
Zoom
10.
Zoom Dt
5.
0.
qB
C in bbl/psi
24mC
Horner PBU Analysis – k, p*
p*
Horner slope, m
4995.
4990.
P PSI
4985.
4980.
10 0 10 1 102 103
(Tp + dT)/dT
162.6qB t p t
pws pi log
kh t
162.6qB
k
mh 33
Horner PBU Analysis – s
p*
Horner slope, m
4995.
4990.
P PSI
4985.
4980.
10 0 10 1 102 103
(Tp + dT)/dT
ENDWBS
DP + DERIVATIVE (PSI/STB/D)
10 -2
10 -3 10 -2 10 -1 10 0 10 1
Delta-T (hr)
Log-log Derivative Analysis
35
2002/01/01-0000 : OIL
STABIL
10 -3
UNIT SLP
10 -3 10 -2 10 -1 10 0 10 1
Delta-T (hr)
Log-log Derivative Analysis
d (p ) p 2 p1
(Dt2, Dp2) d (t ) t 2 t 1
log Dp qB
C
d ( p )
(Dt1, Dp1) 24
d ( t )
36
2002/01/01-0000 : OIL
DP + DERIVATIVE (PSI/STB/D)
10 -2
STABIL
10 -3
UNIT SLP
10 -3 10 -2 10 -1 10 0 10 1
Delta-T (hr)
Log-log Derivative Analysis
70.6qB
k , m is the level of the derivative
mh
p k t p t
s 1.151 ws
log 3.23 log log t
m cr 2 t
w p
for pws , t in IARF, where pws pws pwf ( t p )
37
p, p’, psi Finite Conductivity Hydraulic Fracture
Time, hrs
e
at
st
r
Radial nea
dy
Li
ea
Sp
st
he
do
r ic
al
eu
Dp, Dp’, psi
Ps
Radial Radial
e r
ag i nea
r L
s to ea
r
e Li n Linear Flow (1/2 slope)
bor ear
l Bilin
el
W
Bilinear Flow (1/4 slope)
Time, hrs
Time, hrs
Drawdown
Closed Boundary – PSS Flow
In a closed system, after the pressure wave has reached the outer boundary
p
const
t
Based on the material balance and compressibility definition,
1 dV p 1 0.234qBdt
ct
V p dpwf Vp dpwf
where V p is the pore volume of the reservoir, Vp Ah .
ct is in psi 1 , V p is in ft 3 , q is in STB/d, B is in bbl/STB, t is in hr, pwf is in psi.
0.234qB
pwf t
V p ct
d pwf 0.234qB
pwf t
d ln t V p ct
vs. log t is a straight line with unit slope (m=1).
Thus we know log pwf
Dp, Dp’, psi
Time, hrs
Drawdown
Rectangular Drainage Area
Boundary Models – Single Sealing Fault
The pressure drop can be simulated using the image well method,
pi pwf p1 p2
t
pi m lg
1688rw2
m lg t pi m lg
1688rw2
Boundary Models – Single Sealing Fault
948 ct 2 L 2
After the fault has been felt by the well, i.e. Ei 0,
kt
the p2 cannot be omitted any longer.
948 ct 2 L
2
θ = 60⁰
q = 30o
Time Region Analysis
• Early-time analysis
– wellbore storage
– skin factor
• Middle-time analysis
– reservoir model (IARF, hydraulic fractured, natural fractured r
eservoir)
– reservoir properties (permeability etc.)
• Late-time analysis
– outer boundary
Well Testing Analysis Procedures
• Data plots
– prepare log-log plots of pressure change and pressure change deri
vative vs. elapsed time during the test.
– prepare special plots of the data (semi-log plot etc.)
• Qualitative type-curve analysis
– identify the appropriate reservoir model
– identify any characteristic flow regime that can be analyzed
with special analysis techniques
• Semi-log or specialized analysis
– estimate formation properties
• Quantitative type-curve analysis
– confirm or complement specialized analysis results
Cutting-Edge Well Testing Technique
• Pressure-Transient-Analysis Software
– Initialization
– Test design
– Loading/editing data
– Diagnostic tools
– Modeling capability
• Model selection, parameter estimation, numerical model
– Optimization
– Report generation
Permanent Downhole Gauge
In-Class Exercise
3. The following table gives measured data for a buildup test for a finite-ac
ting well. Before shut-in for buildup, the well pressure was declining line
arly at 0.431 psi/hr. Use this information to determine the following para
meters.
(1) Reservoir pore volume, Vp
(2) Permeability-thickness product, kh
Reservoir Parameters
qBo, RB/D 333.3
ct, psi-1 8×10-6
μ, cp 2
m*, psi/hr -0.431
t p t p
(hours) (psia) (hours) (psia)
1 3138.65 15 3165.94
2 3146.75 16 3166.30
3 3151.31 17 3166.62
4 3154.42 18 3166.89
5 3156.73 19 3167.13
6 3158.54 20 3167.33
7 3160.01 21 3167.50
8 3161.22 22 3167.64
9 3162.24 23 3167.75
10 3163.11 24 3167.85
11 3163.85 25 3167.92
12 3164.49 26 3167.97
13 3165.04 27 3168.00
14 3165.52 28 3168.02
In-Class Exercise
4. A well is opened to flow at 150 STB/day for 24 hours. The flow rate is the
n increased to 360 STB/day and lasted for another 24 hours. The well flo
w rate is then reduced to 310 STB/day for 16 hours. Calculate the pressu
re drop in a shut-in well 700 ft away from the well given:
=15% h 20ft k 100md o 2cp
Bo 1.2bbl/stb rw 0.25ft pi 3000psi ct 12 106 psi 1