Summary
Frac packs are increasingly being used for sand control in injection wells
in poorly consolidated reservoirs. This completion allows for large injection
rates and longer injector life. Many of the large offshore developments in the
Gulf of Mexico and around the world rely on these completions for waterflooding
and pressure maintenance. The performance of these injectors is crucial to the
economics of the project because well intervention later in the life of the
field is expensive and undesirable.
For the first time, we present a model for water injection in frac-packed
wells. The frac pack and the formation are plugged because of the deposition of
particles from the injected water, and their effective permeability to water is
continuously reduced. However, as the bottomhole pressure (BHP) reaches the
frac-pack widening pressure, the frac-pack width increases and a channel that
accommodates additional injected particles is created.
Injectivity depends on the interstitial velocity of the injected water in
the frac pack, volume concentration of the solids in the injected water,
injection rate, injection-water temperature, size of proppants in the frac
pack, width and length of the frac pack, and the initial minimum horizontal
stress. In case of frac packs with large proppant size and high injection
rates, the plugging of the frac pack is found to be negligible except in the
building of a filter cake at the frac-pack walls. In the case of narrow frac
packs with small proppant, significant plugging is expected, which leads to
sharp permeability decline of the frac pack and a rapid rise in the BHP. The
long-term injectivity of a frac-packed injector depends primarily on the
filtration coefficient value of the frac pack, solids concentration in the
injected water, and the injection rate. Frac packs are expected to maintain
higher injectivities compared to any other completions such as openhole,
cased-hole, perforated, or gravel packs.
© 2010. Society of Petroleum Engineers
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History
- Original manuscript received:
3 August 2007
- Meeting paper published:
11 November 2007
- Revised manuscript received:
27 October 2009
- Manuscript approved:
31 October 2009
- Published online:
8 June 2010
- Version of record:
22 June 2010