Development of a successful chemical treatment of gas wells with condensate or water blocking damage

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Date

2007-12

Authors

Bang, Vishal, 1980-

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Abstract

During production from gas condensate reservoirs, significant productivity loss occurs after the pressure near the production wells drops below the dew point of the hydrocarbon fluid. Several methods such as gas recycling, hydraulic fracturing and solvent injection have been tried to restore gas production rates after a decline in well productivity owing to condensate and/or water blocking. These methods of well stimulation offer only temporary productivity restoration and cannot always be used for a variety of reasons. Significant advances have been made during this study to develop and extend a chemical treatment to reduce the damage caused by liquid (condensate + water) blocking in gas condensate reservoirs. The chemical treatment alters the wettability of water-wet sandstone rocks to neutral wet, and thus reduces the residual liquid saturations and increases gas relative permeability. The treatment also increases the mobility and recovery of condensate from the reservoir. A nonionic polymeric fluoro-surfactant in a glycol-alcohol solvent mixture improved the gas and condensate relative permeabilities by a factor of about 2 on various outcrop and reservoir sandstone rocks. The improvement in relative permeability after chemical treatment was quantified by performing high pressure and high temperature coreflood experiments on outcrop and reservoir cores using synthetic gas mixtures at reservoir conditions. The durability of the chemical treatment has been tested by flowing a large volume of gas-condensate fluids for a long period of time. Solvents used to dissolve and deliver the surfactant play an important part in the treatment, especially in the presence of high water saturation or high salinity brine. A screening test based on phase behavior studies of treatment solutions and brines has been used to select appropriate mixtures of solvents based on reservoir conditions. The adsorption of the surfactant on the rock surface has been measured by measuring the concentration of the surfactant in the effluent. Wettability of treated and untreated reservoir rocks has been analyzed by measuring the USBM and Amott-Harvey wettability indices to evaluate the effect of chemical treatment on wettability. For the first time, chemical treatments have also been shown to remove the damage caused by water blocking in gas wells and for increasing the fracture conductivity and thus productivity of fractured gas-condensate wells. Core flood experiments done on propped fractures show significant improvement in gas and condensate relative permeability due to surface modification of proppants by chemical reatment. Relative permeability measurements have been done on sandstone and limestone cores over a wide range of conditions including high velocities typical of high rate gas wells and corresponding to both high capillary numbers and non-Darcy flow. A new approach has been presented to express relative permeability as a function three non-dimensionless terms; capillary number, modified Reynolds Number and PVT ratio. Numerical simulations using a compositional simulator have been done to better understand and design well treatments as a function of treatment volume and other parameters. Injection of treatment solution and chase gas and the flow back of solvents were simulated. These simulations show that chemical treatments have the potential to greatly increase production with relatively small treatment volumes since only the near-well region blocked by condensate and/or water needs to be treated.

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