SPE Production & Operations
Volume 25,
Number 3,
August 2010,
pp. 275-284
Summary
Gas-well liquid loading occurs when gas production becomes insufficient to
lift the associated liquids to surface. When that happens, gas production
becomes intermittent and eventually stops. In depleting gas reservoirs, the
technical abandonment pressure and ultimate recovery are typically governed by
liquid loading. To date, most methods for predicting liquid loading have
followed Turner et al. (1969), who describe liquid loading as the point where
the liquid droplets suspended in the gas flow start moving downward rather than
upward. This paper presents (offshore) liquid-loading field data that exceed
the Turner predicted values by an average of 40%, and analyzes the sensitivity
of the liquid-loading gas rate for different well parameters. It subsequently
presents the results of steady-state and transient multiphase-flow modeling,
carried out to identify the influence of the same well parameters. A modified
Turner expression is proposed that best fits the liquid-loading field data and
broadly agrees with the results of a multiphase-flow model that uses a modified
version of the Gray outflow correlation. The results of transient-flow modeling
support the flow-loop observation that liquid loading occurs because of
liquid-film-flow reversal rather than droplet-flow reversal. The impact of
these findings on gas-well deliquefication is explored.
© 2010. Society of Petroleum Engineers
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History
- Original manuscript received:
21 May 2009
- Meeting paper published:
8 September 2009
- Revised manuscript received:
16 November 2009
- Manuscript approved:
27 January 2010
- Published online:
13 May 2010
- Version of record:
11 August 2010