Prediction of Pressure Increase during Waste Water Injection to Prevent Seismic Events
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Research Gaps and Objectives
3. Research Methodology
3.1. Mechanisms of Injection-Caused Seismicity
3.2. Analytical Modeling of Injectivity Decline
- The rock is homogeneous and no fines migration happens in the injection process;
- The oil droplets and pore throats are log-normally distributed;
- Oil droplet is the only contaminant, there are no solid particles in the injection water;
- Oil droplets are stable and their sizes are constant in the water before being injected into the rock;
- The oily water is injected into the rock at a constant flow rate;
- No oil is generated or disappeared in the process.
3.3. Skin Factor of Injectivity Decline
3.4. Geomechanical Model of Rock Failure
4. Case Study
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions
- All the studies show that injection of oily water would cause a rapid initial increase of pressure due well’s injectivity decline when an equilibrium oil saturation develops in the near-wellbore region. In the Entrada formation, even a low oil concentration of 500 ppm in the injection water would generate a positive skin factor in less than 30 days;
- The strong effect of excessive oil concentration on early pressure increase could only be controlled by reducing the rate of injection to assure continuing long-time operation as is the case in the M field. This may be important in designing a water disposal system in oilfields with a large volume of produced water where the number and cost of designated injection wells have to be weighed against the frequency (and cost) of well stimulations needed to control injectivity damage;
- Formations with high initial permeability (>3000 mD [3.0 × 10−12 m2]) are favorable for oily water injection. A loss of 30% water injectivity caused by oily water injection may not harm the overall injection performance;
- Water injection is not likely to induce seismic events when the injected formation has high permeability and high fracturing pressure, especially when injectors are far away from faults. However, for formations with low permeability (<25 mD [2.5 × 10−14 m2]) assuming the other properties are the same as shown in Table A1 even a small injection rate (300 bpd [48 m3/d]) could trigger a series of seismic events string with rock fracture due to rapid injection pressure increase in the near-wellbore region and possibly followed by slippage of the nearby fault or unstable strike-slip rock structure.
- The case studies show different long-time patterns of injection pressure increase: a flat pattern with practically no pressure increase in the Entrada formation, and a progressive–pattern with continuous pressure increase in the M and the Nebo-Hemphill oilfields–particularly at higher injection rates. The two patterns may result from different mechanisms of oil capture inside the rock with the flat pattern representing local near-well permeability damage due to local oil capture, and the progressive pattern indicating radial expansion of oil capture–as implied by Equation (20).
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. Field Data for Case Study
Parameter | Value | Unit | Value | Unit |
---|---|---|---|---|
Water injection rate () | 2000~10,000 | bpd | 318~1590 | m3/d |
Absolute permeability () | 256 | mD | 2.5 × 10−13 | m2 |
Porosity () | 0.212 | fraction | 0.212 | fraction |
Well radius () | 0.292 | ft | 0.089002 | m |
Formation radius () | 1000 | ft | 304.8 | m |
Formation depth () | 5914 | ft | 1797 | m |
Formation thickness () | 15 | ft | 4.572 | m |
Formation pressure () | 2560 | psi | 17,656 | kpa |
Formation fracturing pressure () | 4334 | psi | 29,882 | kpa |
Oil density () | 7.18 | lbm/ft3 | 860 | kg/m3 |
Water viscosity () | 1 | cp | 1 | cp |
Oil viscosity () | 6.11 | cp | 6.11 | cp |
Water relative permeability exponent () | 4 | dimensionless | 4 | dimensionless |
Oil relative permeability exponent () | 6 | dimensionless | 6 | dimensionless |
Connate water saturation () | 0.068 | fraction | 0.068 | fraction |
Residual oil saturation () | 0 | fraction | 0 | fraction |
Oil concentration () | 500 | ppm | 500 | ppm |
Equilibrium oil saturation () | 0.08 | fraction | 0.08 | fraction |
Oil-water interfacial tension () | 35 | dyne/cm | 35 | dyne/cm |
Critical capillary number () | 10−4 | dimensionless | 10−4 | dimensionless |
Bump rate constant () | 5 | dimensionless | 5 | dimensionless |
Size ratio () | 0.152 | dimensionless | 0.152 | dimensionless |
Poison’s Ratio (v) | 0.311 | dimensionless | 0.311 | dimensionless |
Vertical principal stress | 5914 | psi | 40,775 | kPa |
Horizontal maximum principal stress | 5396 | psi | 37,204 | kPa |
Horizontal minimumprincipal stress | 3997 | psi | 27,558 | kPa |
1200 | psi | 8273 | kPa | |
Friction coefficient | 0.6 | dimensionless | 0.6 | dimensionless |
Parameter | Value | Unit | Value | Unit |
---|---|---|---|---|
Water injection rate () | 2000~7000 | bpd | 318–1113 | m3/d |
Absolute permeability () | 1218 | mD | 1.2 × 10−12 | m2 |
Porosity () | 0.28 | fraction | 0.28 | fraction |
Well radius () | 0.292 | ft | 0.089002 | m |
Oil zone thickness () | 65.6 | ft | 20 | m |
Aquifer radius () | 1000 | ft | 304.8 | m |
Aquifer depth () | 1345 | ft | 410 | m |
Aquifer thickness () | 295 | ft | 90 | m |
Drainage completion length () | 20 | ft | 6 | m |
Injection completion length () | 20 | ft | 6 | m |
Aquifer outer boundary pressure () | 582.5 | psi | 4016 | kpa |
Formation fracturing pressure () | 986 | psi | 6798 | kpa |
Oil density () | 58.68 | lbm/ft3 | 940 | kg/m3 |
Water viscosity () | 0.7 | cp | 0.7 | cp |
Oil viscosity () | 230 | cp | 230 | cp |
Water relative permeability exponent () | 7 | dimensionless | 7 | dimensionless |
Oil relative permeability exponent () | 5 | dimensionless | 5 | dimensionless |
Connate water saturation () | 0.224 | fraction | 0.224 | fraction |
Residual oil saturation () | 0 | fraction | 0 | fraction |
Oil concentration () | 500 | ppm | 500 | ppm |
Equilibrium oil saturation () | 0.34 | fraction | 0.34 | fraction |
Oil-water interfacial tension () | 50 | dyne/cm | 50 | dyne/cm |
Critical capillary number () | 10−4 | dimensionless | 10−4 | dimensionless |
Bump rate constant () | 5 | dimensionless | 5 | dimensionless |
Size ratio () | 0.5 | dimensionless | 0.5 | dimensionless |
Parameter | Value | Unit | Value | Unit |
---|---|---|---|---|
2000~5000 | bpd | 318–795 | m3/d | |
3500 | mD | 3.5 × 10−12 | m2 | |
0.3 | fraction | 0.3 | fraction | |
) | 0.292 | ft | 0.089002 | m |
) | 18 | ft | 5.486 | m |
) | 850 | ft | 259 | m |
) | 2000 | ft | 607.6 | m |
) | 64 | ft | 19.5 | m |
) | 12 | ft | 3.66 | m |
) | 12 | ft | 3.66 | m |
) | 866 | psi | 5971 | kpa |
) | 1466 | psi | 10108 | kpa |
) | 58.058 | lbm/ft3 | 930 | kg/m3 |
) | 1 | cp | 1 | cp |
) | 17 | cp | 17 | cp |
) | 7 | dimensionless | 7 | dimensionless |
) | 4 | dimensionless | 4 | dimensionless |
) | 0.2 | fraction | 0.2 | fraction |
) | 0 | fraction | 0 | fraction |
) | 500 | ppm | 500 | ppm |
) | 0.29 | fraction | 0.29 | fraction |
) | 30 | dyne/cm | 30 | dyne/cm |
) | 10−4 | dimensionless | 10−4 | dimensionless |
5 | dimensionless | 5 | dimensionless | |
) | 0.4 | dimensionless | 0.4 | dimensionless |
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Time | Category | ||
---|---|---|---|
Oil, Million bbl/yr (Million m3/yr) | Gas, Million cf/yr (Million m3/yr) | Water, Million bbl/yr (Million m3/yr) | |
2007 | 1750 (278) | 24,374,000 (69,016) | 20,195 (3211) |
2012 | 2264 (360) | 29,730,220 (841,868) | 21,181 (3368) |
2017 | 3405 (541) | 35,005,078 (991,235) | 24,395 (3878) |
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Jin, L.; Wojtanowicz, A.K.; Ge, J. Prediction of Pressure Increase during Waste Water Injection to Prevent Seismic Events. Energies 2022, 15, 2101. https://doi.org/10.3390/en15062101
Jin L, Wojtanowicz AK, Ge J. Prediction of Pressure Increase during Waste Water Injection to Prevent Seismic Events. Energies. 2022; 15(6):2101. https://doi.org/10.3390/en15062101
Chicago/Turabian StyleJin, Lu, Andrew K. Wojtanowicz, and Jun Ge. 2022. "Prediction of Pressure Increase during Waste Water Injection to Prevent Seismic Events" Energies 15, no. 6: 2101. https://doi.org/10.3390/en15062101
APA StyleJin, L., Wojtanowicz, A. K., & Ge, J. (2022). Prediction of Pressure Increase during Waste Water Injection to Prevent Seismic Events. Energies, 15(6), 2101. https://doi.org/10.3390/en15062101