SPE Drilling & Completion
Volume 26,
Number 3,
September 2011,
pp. 386-395
Summary
Nonequalized production influx along a horizontal or inclined wellbore is
believed to be responsible for early water/gas breakthrough in oil-production
wells. Nonequalized water-injection distribution has been recognized as a cause
of poor sweep efficiency in waterflooding. The nonequalized fluid flow is
attributed to reservoir heterogeneity and frictional pressure drop along the
wellbore. A practical means of minimizing the problem is to use inflow control
devices (ICDs) between isolation packers to adjust the production influx or
injection distribution within the isolated compartments. However, the ICDs are
passive devices (i.e., once they are set in place in a completion string, they
cannot be adjusted to ensure equalized flow when reservoir conditions change
during oil production or water injection). This paper introduces a new
technology called the multinode intelligent well system (MNIWS) that is under
development and will be soon available to the industry.
Starting with analyzing the data from an existing horizontal well with an
ICD installation, a different completion design scenario was investigated for
the well using the MNIWS. Computer modeling of well performance shows that the
MNIWS technology suite can equalize production influx and delay water
breakthrough into the horizontal wellbore more effectively than the
conventional ICD completion when the inflow condition changes during the well's
life.
© 2011. Society of Petroleum Engineers
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History
- Original manuscript received:
12 March 2010
- Meeting paper published:
9 June 2010
- Revised manuscript received:
8 March 2011
- Manuscript approved:
6 April 2011
- Published online:
23 August 2011
- Version of record:
15 September 2011