SPE Journal
Volume 17,
Number 3,
September 2012,
pp. 742-751
Summary
Recent developments in the deployment of distributed-pressure-measurement
devices in horizontal wells promise to lead to a new, low-cost, and reliable
method of monitoring production and reservoir performance. Practical
applicability of distributed-pressure sensing for quantitative-inflow detection
will strongly depend on the specifications of the sensors, details of which
were not publicly available at the time of publication. Therefore, we
theoretically examined the possibility of identifying reservoir inflow from
distributed-pressure measurements in the well. The wellbore and near-wellbore
region were described by semianalytical steady-state models, and a
gradient-based inversion method was applied to estimate the specific
productivity index (SPI) as a function of along-well position. We employed the
adjoint method to obtain the gradients, which resulted in a computationally
efficient inversion scheme. With the aid of two numerical experiments (one of
which was based on a real well and reservoir), we investigated the effects of
well and reservoir parameters, sensor spacing, sensor resolution, and
measurement noise on the quality of the inversion results. In both experiments,
we generated synthetic measurements with the aid of a high-resolution
reservoir-simulation model and used these to test the semianalytical inversion
algorithm. In the first experiment, we considered a 2000-m horizontal well
passing through two 300-m high-permeability streaks in a background with a
permeability that was 10 times lower. The location of the streaks and the SPIs
along the well were detected with fair accuracy using 20 unknown parameters
(SPI values) and 20 pressure measurements. Decreasing the number of
measurements resulted in a poorer detection of the streaks and their SPIs. The
detection performance also decreased for increasing noise levels and
deteriorated sensor resolution, though the negative effect of random
measurement noise was cancelled out primarily by stacking multiple
measurements. The detrimental effects of measurement noise and low sensor
resolution were strongest in areas where the inflow was lowest (usually close
to the toe). The second experiment concerned a high-rate near-horizontal well
with slightly varying inclination that intersected a dipping package of
formations with strongly variable permeabilities. Additionally, a satisfactory
detection of SPIs was obtained even though the heterogeneities were no longer
perpendicular to the well as in the first experiment. As a result of using the
simple semianalytical forward model and the adjoint method, the inversions
typically required less than 90 seconds on a standard laptop. This offered the
opportunity to extend the algorithm to multiphase flow and dynamic applications
(pressure-transient testing), while still maintaining sufficient computational
speed to perform the inversion in real time.
© 2012. Society of Petroleum Engineers
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History
- Original manuscript received:
1 July 2010
- Meeting paper published:
20 September 2010
- Revised manuscript received:
8 November 2011
- Manuscript approved:
11 November 2011
- Published online:
24 May 2012
- Version of record:
12 September 2012