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SECTION 5
UNEXPECTED INCREASES IN WATER PRODUCTION
Sources.
Mechanical problems.
Many water entry problems are caused by poor mechanical
integrity of the casing. Holes caused by corrosion or wear and splits
caused by flaws, excessive pressure, or formation deformation can allow
unwanted reservoir fluids to enter the casing. An unexpected increase in
water production could be the result of a casing leak. Many times casing
leaks result in a pump failure or stuck pump. Most casing leaks occur in
the casing above the top of the cement. Therefore, when the leak breaks
into the wellbore, drilling mud that was left in the annulus between the
casing and open hole during primary cementing operations enters the
wellbore.
After repairing a casing leak, check the plugged back total depth and
remove or circulate out any drilling mud or other debris that may have
entered the wellbore. Often times after a casing leak, the well will
need to be re-stimulated to remove formation damage caused by the
invasion of fluids from the leak into the producing formation.
Communication problems
are classified as either near wellbore or reservoir related.19
Some problems could easily be placed in both categories. Near wellbore
problems are channels behind casing, barrier breakdowns, and completions
into or near water. Reservoir-related problems are coning, cresting,
channeling through higher permeability zones or fractures, and
fracturing out of zone.
Channels behind casing
can develop
throughout the life of a well, but are most likely to occur immediately
after the well is completed or stimulated. Unexpected water production
at these times strongly indicates a channel may
exist. Channels in the casing-formation annulus result from poor
cement/casing bonds.
Barrier breakdowns.
Even if natural barriers, such as dense shale layers, separate
the different fluid zones and a good cement job exists, shales can heave
and fracture near the wellbore. As a result of production, the pressure
differential across these shales allows fluid to migrate through the
wellbore. More often, this type of failure is associated with
stimulation attempts. Fractures break through the shale layer, or acids
dissolve channels through it.
Completions into or near water.
Completion into the unwanted fluid allows the fluid to be
produced immediately. Even if perforations are above the original
water-oil contact, proximity allows production of the unwanted fluid,
through coning or cresting, to occur more easily and quickly.
Coning and cresting.
Fluid coning in vertical wells and fluid cresting in
horizontal wells both result from reduced pressure near the well
completion. This reduced pressure draws water from an adjacent connected
zone toward the completion. Eventually, the water can
break through into the perforated or open hole section, replacing
all or part of the hydrocarbon production. Once breakthrough occurs, the
problem tends to get worse, as higher cuts of the unwanted fluid are
produced. Although reduced production rates can curtail the problem,
they cannot cure it.
Channeling through higher permeability zones or fractures.
Higher permeability streaks can allow fluid that is driving
hydrocarbon production to breakthrough prematurely, bypassing potential
production by leaving lower permeability intervals unswept. This is most
common in active water-drive reservoirs and waterfloods. As the driving
fluid sweeps the higher permeability intervals, permeability to
subsequent flow of the fluid becomes even higher, which results in
increasing water-oil ratios throughout the life of the well or project.
Fracturing out of zone.
An improperly designed or poorly performed stimulation
treatment can allow a hydraulic fracture to enter a water zone. If the
stimulation is performed on a producing well, an out-of-zone fracture
can allow early breakthrough of water. If the fracturing treatment is
performed on an injection well, a fracture that connects the flooded
interval to an aquifer or other permeable zone can divert the injected
fluid, providing very little benefit in sweeping the oil zone. As
mentioned in Section 2, many operators tag the tail end of their
proppant with radioactive tracer, so if the well does not respond as
anticipated, they can log the well to determine where the fracture went.
Methods to Identify Sources.
Chloride/TDS tests
. Production-water sampling and analysis should be conducted on a
regular basis on each producing well. Establishing a baseline water
analysis provides valuable information if production or well conditions
change suddenly. Changes in chloride or total dissolved solids (TDS)
provide insight to problems and remedial action that may need to be
taken.
Chloride concentration can be used to determine if produced water is
connate water (production water) or water introduced to the well during
stimulation or from other sources. Changes in chloride concentration can
indicate invasion of water into the well due to poor mechanical
integrity. Lower than normal chloride concentrations can
indicate a shallow casing leak. Iron concentrations can predict
the probability of formation damage from iron oxide precipitation. pH
can also indicate the probability of metal oxide precipitation. Knowing
the specific gravity of your produced water is useful in determining
bottomhole hydrostatic pressure.
Production logging
can be used for: 1) injection profile tests in waterfloods to
determine the vertical distribution of fluid flows within the wellbore
and near wellbore region, 2) finding tubing-casing leaks, 3) detecting
lost circulation zones, 4) determining if packers or bridge plugs are
leaking, 5) detecting fluid channels behind casing, 6) developing
production profiles, 7) locating gas-oil-water contacts, 8) tracing frac
fluids, and is beneficial in many other
instances.
Radioactive tracer or fluid travel surveys.
The radioactive tracer log was developed to give positive,
accurate information on fluid flow paths and rates within the wellbore.
The tool’s capabilities include detecting lost circulation, leaking
packers and bridge plugs, fluid channels behind casing, and developing
injection and production well profiles. Two types of radioactive tracer
surveys are commonly used, the velocity-shot method and the timed-run
method. The velocity-shot method is conducted by ejecting radioactive
fluid downhole with a tool that has one or two gamma counter(s) and
monitoring fluid movement with the gamma counter(s). The two-detector
method is preferred over the one-detector method because of difficulty
in accurately establishing an injection time. In this method, the tool
is stationary and the log is a function of time. This method is not
recommended in producing wells because it is not desirable to produce
radioactive fluid. Hence, its main application is in injection wells.
In the velocity-shot method, counters are positioned at proper
points, a small concentrated quantity of radioactive fluid is ejected,
and a recorder records the travel time of fluid movement past the
counters. Inside the casing, or in open hole if a caliper log is
available, a time profile and resulting velocity profile determine
injection distribution within the wellbore area. A typical procedure
with the shot method is to record one station above the perforations to
check for 100% flow and for any channeling above the perforations. The
perforations are then surveyed in one- to two-foot increments until
infinite time between counters is recorded. A second check is then made
to ensure that no further “down channeling” is occurring.
The timed-run method qualitatively detects the flow of fluids up or
down hole, either in casing or in the annulus. In this method, a large
amount of radioactive material is ejected at the bottom of the tubing
and successive runs are made with a gamma-ray tool; the times of
ejection and each run are carefully noted. Movement of the radioactive
material is traced. Primary use of this method is to detect unwanted
movement of injected water in the casing annulus.
A differential temperature survey
uses a logging tool and is a service available from most
wireline logging companies. The differential temperature log measures
temperature of the wellbore fluid under static (shut-in) or dynamic
(flowing) conditions. Temperature logs run while a well is injecting
water at stabilized rates can yield much useful information. The logging
tool responds to temperature anomalies produced by fluid flow, either
within the casing or in the casing annulus, and is very useful in
detecting the latter. Interpretations are also used to determine flow
rates and points of fluid entry or exit.
In an injection well, temperature response is a function of depth,
temperature of injected fluid, injection rate, time of injection,
formation and fluid thermal properties, and the geothermal profile in
the well. An injection well that has been taking fluid for some time can
be shut in and numerous temperature logs can be run over a period of
time to observe the temperature profile as it returns to geothermal
values. The zones that have taken the (usually) cooler injection fluid
will show a slower rate of return to the geothermal profile than the
zones that have taken no fluid. This effect can be detected in uphole
zones behind pipe that are taking injection water due to communication
problems.
The most common application is in waterflooding projects where a
foot-by-foot analysis of formation flooding is desired on injection
wells. Advantages in tracing injected fluids with the single element
differential temperature log become apparent when proper logging
interpretation techniques are used. The temperature gradient log is a
continuous recording of downhole absolute temperatures. Repeatability of
the temperature measurement is plus or minus 0.01o
F in the range of 50 to 400o F. Scales vary
from fractional increments per inch to any practical limit required. The
most commonly recorded scales are: 1, 2, 5, and 10 o F per
inch.
Logging is usually performed on the downward traverse so that well
fluids are encountered in their normal state without being previously
disturbed by passage of the line and tool. The casing collar locator is
run and recorded simultaneously, as this provides definite depth
correlation with other types of logs run in the well.
Besides being used to detect fluid communication downhole in water
injection wells, the technique is applicable for finding tubing-casing
leaks, gas communication, productive zones, lost circulation zones,
gas-oil-water contacts, production profiles, and tracing frac fluids.
Spinner (flowmeter) surveys
are used to meter fluid flow rates within cased or uncased
wells. They are useful in determining production rates, detecting thief
zones, locating lost circulation zones, finding holes in casing or
tubing, and assisting in injection and production profiles.
Preliminary spinner surveys are generally made with the tool being
withdrawn from the hole at a steady rate to permit selection of various
station levels for observation of absolute flow rate as related to
spinner revolutions per minute. The flowmeter can be run into or out of
the well at a constant speed to obtain a continuous flow profile versus
depth. It can be stopped at various depths within the wellbore to record
the total volume of flow at a preselected interval.
The flowmeter unit contains a low inertia impeller to measure the
movement of borehole fluids as they pass through the impeller blades.
Movement of the impeller rotates a small magnet that actuates a magnetic
switch. Fluid flow rotates the impellers, generating
a square wave pulse, with frequency proportional to number of
impeller revolutions per second. A flowmeter module that supplies power
to the spinner unit also couples the
signal into the rate meter that processes the signal for the recorder.
Types of fluid flowing through a spinner have a pronounced influence
on its operation. Dirty fluids foul the impeller movement and gaseous
fluids overspin the impeller. Surveys performed in fluid having
viscosity higher than water result in optimistic apparent flow volume
values. Surveys made in lower viscosity fluids result in pessimistic
flow volume values.
Some spinners are limited to certain ranges of flow rates. Therefore,
before doing a survey, check with the appropriate service company to
verify that the spinner will work within the flowrate ranges of the well
in question.
Cased Hole Formation Resistivity (CHFR) Tool.
20 The ability to measure formation resistivity directly
through casing in monitoring wells allows
the measurement of water saturation further away from the wellbore.
Advances in digital electronics have
made it possible to produce the sufficiently accurate and stable
downhole sensors required to measure formation resistivity through steel
casing.
The main purpose of CHFR is reservoir monitoring. During the
production life of a reservoir, through-casing formation resistivity
data may help understand fluid flow
and recovery processes in several ways:
- Evaluation of reservoir
fluid saturation changes with time, including the identification of
swept zones, potential flow barriers, and bypassed oil.
- Monitoring of movement in
oil/water contacts.
- Identification
of take-off
rate-induced water coning, by repeat logging at different take-off
rates, allowing time to re-establish
stable conditions.
- Estimating residual oil
saturation to a waterflood or a combined water-alternating-gas (WAG)
flood. Measuring formation resistivity through
casing allows the evaluation of residual oil saturation
further away from the wellbore than open hole logs or sponge
cores.
The CHFR tool can also be used for primary evaluation of reservoirs
where no logs could be acquired in open hole, due to operational
problems where open-hole logging is too risky. Wells with old or faulty
logs can also be re-examined.
Measurements are taken while the tool is stationary. The CHFR injects
current into the casing through a centralizer at the top of the tool
that returns to the surface. Slight variations in current loss through
the casing are related to current leaking into the formation and can be
calibrated to formation resistivity. Voltages investigated by the tool
are in the nanovolt range, requiring exceptionally stable and low-noise
electronics downhole. Frequency is limited to about 1 Hz to avoid
polarization associated with a DC-measurement and skin effects caused by
a higher frequency. Casing current loss is measured through 4 rings of 3
electrodes attached to caliper-like arms that open up and establish
contact with the steel casing at each station. Good electrical contact
is essential; wells with scale or corrosion inside the casing create
problems. In double-cased intervals the CHFR will read only the
resistivity of the cement between casings.
Downhole tool calibration is achieved by comparing cased-hole
measurements to open-hole logs.
Mechanical integrity tests
(MIT).
A well is considered to have mechanical integrity if there are
no significant leaks in the tubing, casing, or packer and no fluid
movement into fresh or useable water. Any fluid coming into the wellbore,
from production or injection, remains in the wellbore until it is
produced or leaves the wellbore in the interval(s) approved for
injection or disposal. Mechanical integrity can be determined by
pressure testing or by casing inspection logs. In some instances an
acoustic fluid level shot can assist in
locating a leak in the casing.
Pressure testing
is commonly used to perform mechanical integrity tests. An MIT
is required periodically on injection and disposal wells by State
regulatory agencies. This is conducted by pressuring up the
tubing-casing annulus and observing whether the pressure holds or not.
Pressure testing to isolate casing leaks is typically
conducted using a retrievable bridge plug (RBP) and packer. The
goal is to isolate the leaking interval as quickly as possible. The
majority of casing leaks occur where there is no cement behind the
casing. One common technique is to run the packer and RBP into the well
and set the RBP just into the top of the cement interval behind
casing. Pressure test the RBP and move the packer up and down the
hole, pressure testing both through the tubing and on the annulus at
different packer settings until the leak is isolated. Once a long
section of casing passes the pressure test, the RBP can be moved and
reset if desired. Be sure to use fluid to pressure test that is
compatible with the producing formation, as each time the RBP is
released the fluid will be dumped downhole. Different circumstances
dictate how narrowly the leaking interval needs to be isolated. If the
casing is in poor condition over a long interval, it is possible to
further damage the casing by setting the packer and RBP in these bad
intervals.
Casing inspection logs.
Casing inspection methods include
multi-fingered caliper logs, electrical potential logs, electromagnetic
inspection devices, and borehole televiewers. Of these, the majority
measures the extent to which corrosion has taken place. Only the
electrical potential log indicates where corrosion is currently
occurring. With the exception of caliper logs, all the devices require
that tubing be pulled before running the survey, since most
are designed to inspect casing rather than tubing and all are large
diameter tools.
Remedial Actions.
Cement squeeze techniques.
Too often, the
injection of cement slurries into the casing/wellbore annular space,
through casing perforations or splits in damaged sections, is performed
without sufficient basic understanding of the placement process.21
Regardless of the technique used, cement squeezing is basically a
filtration process. Cement slurries subject to differential pressure
against a filter of permeable rock lose part of their mix water, leaving
a cake of partially dehydrated cement particles. The rate of cake
buildup is a function of formation permeability, differential pressure
applied, time, and capacity of the slurry to lose fluid.
Low fluid loss slurries, when squeezed against low permeability
formations, dehydrate slowly, making the operation excessively long.
High fluid loss slurries lose water to high permeability rocks too fast,
bridging off channels that otherwise would have accepted cement. The
ideal slurry should be able to control the rate of cake growth so that a
uniform filter cake will build up over all permeable surfaces. The only
procedure that makes the dehydration of small quantities of cement into
perforations or formation cavities possible is intermittent application
of pressure, separated by a period of pressure leakoff caused by the
loss of filtrate into the formation. This procedure is referred to as a
hesitation squeeze. Squeeze cementing is classified
depending on the way the cement is placed behind casing.
Low pressure squeezing
is when the cement slurry is forced through the opening in the
casing below the formation fracturing pressure. The aim of this
operation is to fill cavities and interconnected voids near the wellbore
with dehydrated cement. The volume of cement is relatively small, since
no slurry is actually pumped into the formation. When squeezing in
depleted formations, spotting the total volume of cement in front of the
perforations may be the only way to
prevent the formation from fracturing as a result of hydrostatic
pressure.
High pressure squeezing.
There are some cases where low pressure squeezing will not
accomplish the job. Channels behind the casing might not be directly
connected to the perforations; small cracks or microannuli may permit
the flow of water but not a cement slurry. High pressure squeezing
places the cement slurry behind the casing by breaking down formations
at or close to the perforations. Fluids ahead of the slurry are
displaced into fractures, allowing cement to fill the desired spaces.
Further application of the hesitation technique dehydrates the slurry
against the formation walls leaving all the channels, from fractures to
perforations, filled with cement cake.
Two things to consider when
performing high pressure squeezing: 1) The location and orientation of
the generated fracture cannot be controlled; and 2) A properly performed
job should leave the cement as close to the wellbore as possible.
Placement techniques.
There are two general ways of
performing a squeeze job, with
a packer or a bradenhead squeeze.
The main objective of the packer squeeze is isolation
of the casing and wellhead while
high pressure is applied downhole. Retrievable packers with different
design features are available. The ones used in squeeze cementing,
compression or tension set packers, have a bypass valve to allow the
circulation of fluids during the running in and once the packer is set.
This feature permits cleaning of tools after the job and reversing out
of excess cement without excessive pressures, and prevents a piston or
swabbing effect during running in and out of the hole.
Cement retainers (mechanical or wireline set) are used instead of
packers to prevent backflow when no cement dehydration is expected or
when high negative differential pressures may disturb the cement cake.
Retainers are also used when potential communication with upper
perforations makes use of the packer a risky operation and squeezing can
be carried out without waiting for the cement to set. Cement retainers
are drillable packers provided with a two-way valve that prevents flow
in either or both directions. The valve is operated by a stinger at the
end of the tubing string.
Drillable bridge plugs or cast iron bridge plugs are normally used to
isolate the casing below the zone to be treated. Of similar design to
the cement retainers, they can be wireline or mechanically run. Bridge
plugs do not allow flow through the tool. Retrievable bridge plugs (RBP)
are easily run and operated tools with the same function as drillable
bridge plugs. They can be run in one trip with the packer and retrieved
after the cement has been reversed or drilled out. Most operators dump
one or two sacks of frac sand on top of the RBP before the job to
prevent settling of cement over the releasing system.
The bradenhead squeeze technique is used mainly when low pressure
squeezing is practiced and there are no doubts about the casing’s
capacity to withstand squeeze pressures. There are no special tools
involved besides the bridge plug to isolate downhole formations.
Open-ended tubing is run to the bottom of the zone to be cemented. The
wellhead is packed off or the blow out preventer rams are closed over
the tubing and the injection test carried out as usual. The cement
slurry is subsequently spotted in front of the perforations or opening.
Once the cement is in place, the tubing is withdrawn to a point above
the cement top, the preventers are closed and the hesitation technique
applied through the tubing. Reversing or washing down is carried out as
normal.
Polymer squeezes.
In
some circumstances, polymer gels can be used successfully as an
alternative to cement, or in combination with cement, to squeeze casing
leaks. The type of polymer and process used depends on the location and
severity of the leak, and whether or not the squeeze will be required to
hold a solid pressure or simply block encroachment of foreign water in a
producing well. The advantage of using polymer is two-fold. Polymer can
be washed out of the wellbore after a leak is squeezed, preventing
costly rig time involved in drilling out cement. Second, since polymer
solutions exert a much lower hydrostatic pressure than a cement slurry,
there is less possibility of breaking down the formation and losing the
squeeze. On difficult leaks, such as in salt sections where multiple
cement jobs are often attempted before the leak is successfully squeezed
off, a small slug of polymer can be run ahead of the cement as a buffer
to prevent the cement from "running away" or washing out the
section you are trying to squeeze. Since the polymer continues to adsorb
or bond to the formation and the
bulk gel fills the larger voids, it is often enough to slow down the
coasting of the cement and give it something to squeeze against.
Four
basic polymer gel systems are in use today in casing leak squeeze
operations. Different service vendors have different names for these
systems, but the basic systems are: 1)
acrylic monomer grout, 2) high concentration low molecular-weight
polymer (HCLM), 3) high molecular-weight polymer, and 4) cement/polymer
combination.
Acrylic
monomer grout
is a non-toxic system that is most effective on tight casing
leaks and pressure leakoff situations such as leaks that bleed off
pressure but cannot be pumped into. This system pumps as a water-thin
fluid, then sets up into a tough, ringing gel. Gel times can be
controlled from 10 minutes to 2 hours, depending on temperature.
Treatment sizes typically range from 10-25 bbl. This is an excellent
application for disposal and injection wells that fail MITs because of
slight pressure leakoff.
High
concentration low molecular-weight polymers
are useful for leaks ranging from tight pressure leakoff
situations to moderate leaks that can be pumped into under pressure.
This system can be crosslinked using standard metallic crosslinkers, or
a low-toxicity organic crosslinking system can be used in
environmentally sensitive areas or leak intervals.
High
molecular-weight polymers
are most effective in larger leaks, to correct channeling
behind pipe, and for some lost circulation applications. The primary
benefit of using this system is the ability to economically block the
flow of foreign water into the wellbore or block
the outflow of produced fluids to thief zones.
Cement/polymer
combination
squeezes are used in severe casing leaks that require
mechanical integrity and are unlikely to be successfully sealed using
either cement or polymer alone. In most cases, a small (25-50 bbl) slug
of high molecular-weight crosslinked polymer is injected ahead of the
cement. The polymer acts as a filler/buffer, filling larger voids and
coating formation surfaces, preventing water loss and cement
contamination by formation fluids. The polymer also acts as a pad,
holding cement in the near wellbore area where it is most effective.
This process blocks foreign water from the wellbore and can allow pressure integrity to be
obtained more cost-effectively than would be possible with cement or
polymer alone.
Liner/casing patches.
Various types of
liners and/or casing patches on the market may
assist in solving certain types of casing leak problems. They
typically come in different lengths and can be permanently installed in
the casing or incorporated as part of the tubing string.
Be aware that many liners or patches
that are permanently installed will restrict the internal diameter of
the casing across the interval where they are located. This can
eliminate running certain types of tools through this interval in
the future. If problems occur below this interval, it may be
inaccessible for repair with standard tools.
Some patches that are run on tubing string incorporate sealing
elements attached to the string at depths that will isolate the leaking
interval. Some of these patches have vent tubes between the sealing
elements to allow annular access for gas or treating fluids to pass
through the patched interval; others do not.
When considering special equipment designed to assist
with casing leak problems, consider the potential risk associated with
running these tools in the hole. Also consider
future uses or operations of the well and how these tools could have an
effect.
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