Journal of Canadian Petroleum Technology
Volume 51,
Number 5,
September 2012,
pp. 403-410
Summary
This paper presents a numerical model to study the onset and rate of sand
production and compares its predictions against physical-model testing data on
Salt Wash South (SWS) sandstone. A reliable sand-prediction tool is essential
in sand-production management. It enables engineers to improve well-completion
design, with the aim of maximizing well productivity without compromising well
integrity.
A sanding test on a weakly consolidated sandstone sample was numerically
simulated using a finite-difference-based numerical model. The model is based
on erosional mechanics in which coupling between fluid flow and mechanical
deformation captures some of the key mechanisms that are involved in sand
production. Sand is assumed to be produced when the material is fully degraded
and hydrodynamic forces are high enough to remove the particles.
The outcome of the numerical model shows a reasonable agreement against
perforation-test results in terms of the onset and rate of sand production. The
model shows that sand production initiates from the perforation tip and
propagates to the top and sides of the perforation cavity. The sanding rate
increases at higher flow rates. Furthermore, the model predicts external
deformations of the sample, which are in close agreement with the experimental
observations.
© 2012. Society of Petroleum Engineers
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History
- Original manuscript received:
29 March 2011
- Revised manuscript received:
22 September 2011
- Manuscript approved:
17 December 2011
- Published online:
17 July 2012
- Version of record:
5 September 2012