SPE Reservoir Evaluation & Engineering
Volume 15,
Number 3,
June 2012,
pp. 370-384
Summary
Many tight/shale gas wells exhibit linear flow, which can last for several
years. Linear flow can be analyzed using a square-root-of-time plot, a plot of
rate-normalized pressure vs. the square root of time. Linear flow appears as a
straight line on this plot, and the slope of this line can be used to calculate
the product of fracture half-length and the square root of permeability.
In this paper, linear flow from a fractured well in a tight/shale gas
reservoir under a constant-flowing-pressure constraint is studied. It is shown
that the slope of the square-root-of-time plot results in an overestimation of
fracture half-length, if permeability is known. The degree of this
overestimation is influenced by initial pressure, flowing pressure, and
formation compressibility. An analytical method is presented to correct the
slope of the square-root-of-time plot to eliminate the overestimation of
fracture half-length. The method is validated using a number of numerically
simulated cases. As expected, the square-root-of-time plots for these simulated
cases appear as a straight line during linear flow for constant flowing
pressure. It is found that the newly developed analytical method results in a
more reliable estimate of fracture half-length, if permeability is known. Our
approach, which is fully analytical, results in an improvement in linear-flow
analysis over previously presented methods. Finally, the application of this
method to multifractured horizontal wells is discussed and the method is
applied to three field examples.
© 2012. Society of Petroleum Engineers
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History
- Original manuscript received:
16 May 2011
- Meeting paper published:
13 June 2011
- Revised manuscript received:
14 January 2012
- Manuscript approved:
8 March 2012
- Published online:
31 May 2012
- Version of record:
12 June 2012