Journal of Canadian Petroleum Technology
Volume 51,
Number 4,
July 2012,
pp. 283-289
Summary
Traditional ideology on the upper temperature limits of life suggest that
extreme temperatures such as those observed in the Horn River Basin shale-gas
formation (i.e., up to 175°C) should alleviate microbiologically influenced
corrosion and souring concerns associated with hydraulic-fracturing procedures.
The present case history investigates the accuracy of this theory. Horn River
basin wells currently in the flowback or production stage and the source water
used to fracture these wells were studied for the presence and identity of
viable bacteria. The effectiveness of two biocides (one glutaraldehyde-based
and the other cocodiamine-based) in eradicating these bacteria in both the
field and the laboratory was also studied. The results show that source ponds
are highly contaminated with bacteria. Furthermore, the high-temperature,
high-pressure downhole conditions in this region are not sufficient for
eradicating bacteria introduced during the fracturing process. These bacteria
survive and establish viable, proliferating communities. Biocide, applied
continuously "on the fly" during fracturing, was effective at mitigating the
downhole bacteria concern. Laboratory studies further showed that
more-established bacterial communities were much more resistant to biocidal
treatment. Therefore, early mitigation strategies will likely be key in the
prevention of microbiologically induced corrosion and souring.
© 2012. Society of Petroleum Engineers
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History
- Original manuscript received:
21 January 2011
- Meeting paper published:
20 October 2010
- Revised manuscript received:
7 December 2011
- Manuscript approved:
15 December 2011
- Published online:
1 June 2012
- Version of record:
1 July 2012