Factors Controlling Fluid Migration and Distribution in the Eagle Ford Shale

被引:1
|
作者
Ramirez, John F. [1 ,2 ]
Aguilera, Roberto [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Calgary, Schulich Sch Engn, Calgary, AB T2N 1N4, Canada
[2] DeGolyer & MacNaughton Canada Ltd, Calgary, AB, Canada
基金
加拿大自然科学与工程研究理事会;
关键词
FLOW; RESERVOIRS; GAS; OIL;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
TE [石油、天然气工业]; TK [能源与动力工程];
学科分类号
0807 ; 0820 ;
摘要
Production of shale and tight oil is the cornerstone of the United States race for energy independence. According to the US Energy Information Administration, approximately 90% of the oil-production growth comes from six tight-oil plays. The Eagle Ford is one of these plays, and it accounts for 33% of the oil-production growth with a contribution of 1.3 million B/D. This is outstanding. However, oil recoveries as a percentage of the original oil in place (OOIP) are extremely low. This must be improved. A geological challenge in the Eagle Ford shale is the understanding of unconventional fluids distribution over geologic time: Shallower in the structure, there is black oil; deeper and to the south; condensate appears; and at the bottom, dry gas can be found. Differences in burial depth, temperature, and vitrinite reflectance are used to explain this unique distribution. A similar fluid distribution occurs in other unconventional reservoirs (e.g., Duvernay shale in Canada). The low oil recovery and the unusual distribution of fluids led to the key objective of this paper-to identify the main factors that control fluid migration (caused by buoyancy of gas in oil) from one zone to another through geologic time. This was performed by constructing a conceptual cross-sectional compositional simulation model with northwest/southeast orientation that allowed the study of fluid migration, fluid distribution, and fluid contacts throughout 1 million years while maintaining computational time within reasonable limits. The controlling parameters studied were porosity, permeability, pore-throat aperture (r(p35)), and spacing between natural fractures. Results show that fluids in the matrix remained with approximately the same original distribution (i.e., approximately the same dry-gas/condensate contact and approximately the same condensate/oil contact). These fluids are the target of an ongoing research project with the ultimate goal of improving oil recovery from tight reservoirs by means of enhanced oil recovery (EOR) (Fragoso et al. 2015). There is, however, some gas migration through natural fractures to the top of the structure. This migration is interpreted in this study to be responsible for higher initial gas production in some oil wells in the top of the structure. Some operators indicate, however, that rapid gas/oil-ratio increases in the updip oil region are the result of low reservoir pressures and the rapid onset of two-phase flow. It would probably take geochemical evidence to support this conclusion.
引用
收藏
页码:403 / 414
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Multiscale study of CO2 impact on fluid transport and carbonate dissolution in Utica and Eagle Ford shale
    Elkady, Youssef
    Kovscek, Anthony R.
    JOURNAL OF PETROLEUM SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING, 2020, 195
  • [32] Stress-Dependent In Situ Gas Permeability in the Eagle Ford Shale
    Bhandari, Athma R.
    Flemings, Peter B.
    Hofmann, Ronny
    Polito, Peter J.
    TRANSPORT IN POROUS MEDIA, 2018, 123 (01) : 1 - 20
  • [33] Unconventional-asset-development work flow in the eagle ford shale
    1600, Society of Petroleum Engineers (SPE) (66):
  • [34] Production Decline Curves of Tight Oil Wells in Eagle Ford Shale
    Henrik Wachtmeister
    Linnea Lund
    Kjell Aleklett
    Mikael Höök
    Natural Resources Research, 2017, 26 : 365 - 377
  • [35] Eagle Ford viewed among top US shale gas plays
    不详
    OIL & GAS JOURNAL, 2009, 107 (17) : 54 - 54
  • [36] Completion Optimization Under Constraints: An Eagle Ford Shale Case Study
    Okeahialam, Ikenna
    Yang, Mei
    Shinde, Dnyaneshwar B.
    Sahai, Vivek
    Araque-Martinez, Aura
    Rai, Rakesh
    SPE PRODUCTION & OPERATIONS, 2017, 32 (02): : 128 - 136
  • [37] Impact of Water Chemistry on Element Mobilization from Eagle Ford Shale
    Wang, Lin
    Fortner, John D.
    Giammar, Daniel E.
    ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERING SCIENCE, 2015, 32 (04) : 310 - 320
  • [38] Proppant Diagenesis in Carbonate-Rich Eagle Ford Shale Fractures
    Elsarawy A.M.
    Hisham A.
    El-Din N.
    SPE Drilling and Completion, 2020, 35 (03): : 465 - 477
  • [39] EOG sees Eagle Ford shale as major US oil discovery
    不详
    OIL & GAS JOURNAL, 2010, 108 (14) : 35 - 35
  • [40] Modeling the effects of microscale fabric complexity on the anisotropy of the Eagle Ford Shale
    Ren, Qi
    Spikes, Kyle T.
    INTERPRETATION-A JOURNAL OF SUBSURFACE CHARACTERIZATION, 2016, 4 (02): : SE17 - SE29