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![]() Energy and Power Engineering, 2009, 44-49 doi:10.4236/epe.2009.11007 Published Online August 2009 (http://www.scirp.org/journal/epe) Copyright © 2009 SciRes EPE Study of the Law about Water-Cut Variation for the Fractured Metamorphic Reservoir of Buried Hill with Bottom Water ——A Case study at Budate Reservoir in Beir Depression, Hailar Basin Shenggao QIN 1, Yanling SUN 2, Zhenqi JIA 1, Dagang YANG 1 1Key Laboratory of Enhanced Oil and Gas Recovery of Education Ministry, Daqing Petroleum Institute, Daqing, China 2Information Center of No.1 Oil Recovery Company, Daqing Oilfield Co. Ltd., Daqing, China Abstract: Aiming at the complex flowing environment including the buried hill of Metamorphite, the active bottom water and the fracture at Budate Reservoir within Beir Depression of the Hailar Basin, combining the laboratory studies and based on analysis of its drive mechanism, field wells’ parameters were used to analyze the effects of different conditions of the fractured metamorphic reservoir with bottom water on its law of wa- ter-cut variation and the waterflooding efficiency. The results show that for the Budate buried hill reservoir with bottom water, the gravity should be taken into consideration to determine reasonable perforation ratio and production pressure difference. And because of the acid sensitivity of the buried hill reservoir, application of proper clay stabilizer will enhance the field oil recovery to a satisfactory extent. Keywords: metamorphic reservoir, bottom water, buried hill reservoir, water-cut 1 Introduction Currently majority of the discovered buried hill reser- voirs home and abroad belong to the type of carbonate reservoir [1][2], in which there are complex types of pore canals always including solution crevice, fracture and so on. Thereby the fluid flowing inside shows the unique features. Many scholars home and abroad have made progressive advance in this area with the reservoir engineering method, numerical simulation and others [3-5]. However, Budate Reservoir in the Beir depression of the Hailar Basin is the buried hill reservoir with bot- tom water, where it is very complicated of the fluid flowing laws that have not been reported academically. So it is a new topic to perform the study of the law of fluid flowing in this kind of reservoir and the fruits ac- quired will have positive reference value for the same kind of reservoirs. 2 Reservoir Features of Budate Buried Hill Budate Reservoir lies in the bottom of the Hailar sedi- mentary basin. It developed from the Trias and was composed mainly of the carbon siltpelite, a slightly met- amorphite and the unequigranular feldspar rock-fragment sandstone. Due to the dissection of many faults, each faulted-block is a buried hill reservoir with its inde- pendent oil-water interface. Budate Reservoir has geological reserve about 1811×104t, but very poor physical properties such as the average effective porosity of 5.3%, the average gas per- meability of 0.14×10-3μm2 and water-sensitivity coeffi- cient of 0.64 which shows a bit strong water sensitivity. The fractures developed plus the pores make the forma- tion a fracture-pore reservoir. 3 Drive Mechanism of the Buried Hill Reservoir 3.1 Principle of Bottom Water Coning Because of the active energy of bottom water, when an oil well produces at a certain rate after perforation of an oil well, a pressure drop funnel would form at the bottom ![]() S. G. QIN, Y. L. SUN, Z. Q. JIA, D. G. YANG Copyright © 2009 SciRes EPE 45 Figure 1. Schematic of the water core of the well (see in Figure 1). The original horizontal oil-water interface before production transforms to the shape of a core under the well by the oil-water potential gradient. If the well produces at a certain stable rate the formed water core would stay at an certain altitude; if the production rate increases the core altitude grows until the bottom water flows into the oil well which would pro- duce water. By the difference of the core’s advance speed there are two types of bottom water drive: lifting and coning. Lifting denotes that in the process of bottom water dis- placement, the front edge of the displacing water (oil-water interface) move upwards slowly, smoothly in a big area; while coning indicates the displacing bottom water rushes into oil wells along local zones of high permeability. So lifting is favorable for oil displacement by bottom water with good oil displacement efficiency, long anhydrous production period and high ultimate field recovery; while coning which happens always near wellbores, would results in quick water breakthrough, short anhydrous production period and low ultimate field recovery. The flooding pattern of bottom water is de- pendent on two types of factors. One type corresponds to factors such as the geological features of the reservoir, the relationship between oil layers and water layers, in- terlayers’ development and distribution, physical proper- ties of the subsurface oil and water and so on, and the other corresponds to man-made development program, perforation positions and ratio, production rate and so on. Hence, it is a key technological problem to control the bottom water coning in the development process of this kind of reservoirs. For the field, to control coning of the bottom water to extend the anhydrous production period a reasonable production rate should be adopted; for a single well the output should not overcome a special number which is called critical yield. Finally the detailed regulatory measures for the yield, production pressure difference and the perforation ratio should be used to control the bottom water coning. And to control the yield should be realized by the variables as perforation ratio and production pressure difference, which are the major measures to control bottom water coning to displace the overall reservoir upwards in the type of lifting. Because the displacement energy source underlies the oil reservoir, at the oil-water interface below, the bottom water should firstly overcome the gravity itself then to displace crude oil bottom-up. In this process the action of gravity should be taken into consideration. 3.2 Mathematical Model of the Water-Cut Varia- tion In the development program of bottom water reservoir, perforation is always done at the top of the reservoir to avoid early water breakthrough. In contrast with the total reservoir thickness, the fluid flowing in the porous media could be presumed as the combination of the horizontal flowing at the top layers perforated and the vertical flowing in the sub-layers [7][8]. Hen the equation about the water-cut variation could be derived as following: ' rw ww w rw ro ow wo K Q f K K QQ (1) ' ' 125 ln 0.5 wo w e w H p H R R (2) 4 Analysis of Law on Water-Cut Variation at Budate Buried Hill Reservoir Now take well D112-227, D108-229 and B28-1 as exam- ples for Budate Reservoir to appraise the laws of water variation with different parameters that are listed at Table 1. ![]() S. G. QIN, Y. L. SUN, Z. Q. JIA, D. G. YANG Copyright © 2009 SciRes EPE 46 Table 1. Parameters from three wells of Budate Reservoir Well μw(mPa.s) μo(mPa.s) γw γo h(m)H(m)x Re(m) Rw(m) α D112-227 0.65 4.68 1 0.7761176 155 0.1193300 0.1 0.97 D108-229 0.65 4.32 1 0.745 110.495.60.1341300 0.1 0.97 B28-1 0.65 4.32 1 0.745 64 8.4 0.8688300 0.1 0.97 4.1 Effects of Reservoir Thickness, Perforation Ratio and Production Pressure Difference on Water-Cut Curves The Water-cut Variation curves under several produc- tion pressure differences are shown in Figure 3 for well D112-227. We could recognize that at the Block-faulted reservoir of buried hill with bottom water, the gravity would have great influence on the law of Water-cut Variation as: Considering strong water sensitivity of the Beir Depres- sion, in the lab three groups of relative permeability curves were measured as in Figure 2, one displacing fluid is water, the others are two kinds of clay stabilizer solutions(CS-05 and CS-07). 1) If gravity unconsidered (β=1), the calculated wa- ter-cut will increase more quickly than that in the case of gravity considered along with the change of water satu- ration. That’s if gravity considered, during early period of low water saturation, the curves are steeper with slower rate of oil production and less oil recovery; dur- ing the later period of high water saturation, more oil can be produced and the residual oil retained by water dis- placement should be developed by the tertiary oil recov- ery technologies. 0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 Sw Kr Krw_w Kro_w Krw_5 Kro_5 Krw_7 Kro_7 2) If gravity considered, the water-cut increases along the rise of water saturation slowly. This phenomenon could be explained that the gravity of the bottom water itself that are displacing oil upwards decreases the water breakthrough or fingering, so as to slow the rising veloc- ity of water-cut. Figure 2. Relative permeability curves measured by different displ- acing agent 0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 Sw fw Δp=11 Δp=8 Δp=6 Δp=4 Δp=2 β=1 3) If gravity considered, the sizes of production pres- sure differences have obvious influence on the law of Water-cut Variation. The less production pressure differ- ence, the slower rising velocity of water-cut along with the increase of water saturation, so is its reduced extent. This phenomenon could be explained that the action of gravity becomes less along with the increase of produc- tion pressure differences and at a certain big value of production pressure differences the action of gravity could be neglected. Figure 3. Water-cut curves versus production pressure difference (D112-227) For well D108-229 the Water-cut Variation curves un- ![]() S. G. QIN, Y. L. SUN, Z. Q. JIA, D. G. YANG Copyright © 2009 SciRes EPE 47 der several production pressure differences are shown in Figure 4 which shows same law as discussed above. For well B28-1 the Water-cut Variation curves under several production pressure differences are shown in Figure 3. From table 1 while other parameters are nearly the same, the perforation ratios for well D112-227, D108-229 and B28-1 are x=0.1193, x=0.1341 and x=0.8688, respectively. Such conclusions could be drawn as: 1) Along with the increase of perforation ratio, the ef- fect of gravity on reducing the rising velocity of wa- ter-cut becomes less. This case will be the nearly the same as that while gravity unconsidered. 2) Along with the increase of perforation ratio, the ef- fect of production pressure difference on the increase of water-cut becomes less, even disappears. When the oil layers are completely perforated, that’s x=1, the fluid in the whole reservoir flows in the radial direction. Then the bottom water will drive the oil at the least efficiency and its energy will make the oil well drought. Such laws discussed above are in accordance with the actual development cases for block-faulted reservoir with bottom water. 4.2 Effect of the Clay Stabilizers The water sensitivity index of the core samples from Budate Reservoir fall into the range of 0.60~0.67 (a bit strong water sensitivity). Besides the oil and water rela- tive permeability curve measured, in the lab other two relative permeability curves were also measured with clay stabilizer CS-5 and CS-7 (see in Table 2). Then the effects of clay stabilizers on relative permeability curves and on the law of Water-cut Variation are analyzed to provide reference for the optimization of clay stabilizers at Budate Reservoir. Based on the parameters from well D108-229 (see in Table 1), three curves of Water-cut Variation of water, CS-5 and CS-7 are shown in Figure 5 for gravity uncon- sidered and in Figure 6 for gravity considered in Figure 7. 0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 Sw fw Δp=11 Δp=8 Δp=6 Δp=4 Δp=2 β=1 Figure 4. Water-cut curves versus production pressure differences (D108-229) 0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1 0.3 0.5 0.7 Sw fw Δp=11 Δp=8 Δp=6 Δp=4 Δp=2 β=1 Figure 5. Water-cut curves versus production pressure differences (B28-1) 0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1 0.3 0.5 0.7 0.9 Sw fw water CS-5 CS-7 Figure 6. Water-cut curves versus different clay stabilizers (gravity unconsidered) 0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1 0.30.50.70 Sw fw .9 water CS-5 CS-7 Figure 7. Water-cut curves versus different clay stabilizers (gravity considered) ![]() S. G. QIN, Y. L. SUN, Z. Q. JIA, D. G. YANG Copyright © 2009 SciRes EPE 48 Table 2. Feature values of relative permeability curves measured at lab Core No. Kg (10-3μm2) φ (%) Swi (%) Sor (%) Krw at Sor (%) Anhydrous Recovery (%) Ultimate Recovery (%) Range of oil-water phases (%) Sw at point of two curves’s intersection (%) Clay stabilizer C166-1 119.21 23.19 39.21 33.43 29.3018.31 45.01 27.36 49.20 水 C166-2 114.01 22.92 40.17 28.72 30.0025.71 52.00 31.11 53.80 5 C166-4 186.56 23.05 34.30 30.88 28.5032.47 53.00 34.82 50.75 7 Conclusions could be drawn as: 1) Using clay stabilizers can reduce the rising velocity of water-cut at the stage of low water saturation, that’s oilfield can recovery more oil at the stage of low water saturation than that in the case of water flooding. 2) Using clay stabilizer CS-5 makes the point of water breakthrough later than that the case of water flooding. 3) Using clay stabilizer CS-7 makes the rising velocity of water-cut smooth and makes the oil recovery at the low water saturation the biggest number but with earlier point of water breakthrough. 4) Using clay stabilizers makes the flowing range of two phases wider. The anhydrous oil recovery efficiency and the ultimate number both obviously larger than that of the case of water flooding. 5 Conclusions 1) Gravity has great influence on the law of Water-cut Variation for the Block-faulted reservoir of buried hill with bottom water: if gravity considered, the water-cut increases along with the rise of water saturation slowly at the stage of low water saturation. The less production pressure difference, the slower rising velocity of wa- ter-cut along with the increase of water saturation, so is its reduced extent. At a certain big value of production pressure differences the action of gravity could be ne- glected. 2) Both the perforation ratio and the production pres- sure difference have great influence on the law of Wa- ter-cut Variation for the Block-faulted reservoir of buried hill with bottom water. Along with the increase of perfo- ration ratio, the effect of gravity on reducing the rising velocity of water-cut becomes less. This water-cut curve will be the nearly the same as that while gravity uncon- sidered. Along with the increase of perforation ratio, the effect of production pressure difference on the increase of water-cut becomes less, even disappears. 3) Clay stabilizers can reduce the rising velocity of water-cut at the stage of low water saturation and make the anhydrous oil recovery efficiency and the ultimate number both obviously larger than that of the case of water flooding. 6 Nomenclature Krw — relative permeability water, dimensionless; Kro — relative permeability oil, dimensionless; μw — water viscosity, mPa•s; μo — oil viscosity, mPa•s, mPa•s; γw — relative density of water, dimensionless; γo — relative density of oil, dimensionless; H — thickness to avoid water in a oil well, m; α' — Reservoir pressure coefficient, dimensionless; Re — well spacing, m; Rw — wellbore radius, m; Sw — water saturation; Kg — gas permeability, 10-3μm2; φ — porosity, dimensionless; Swi— irreducible water saturation, dimensionless; Sor — residual oil saturation, dimensionless. ![]() S. G. QIN, Y. 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