2023 年 SPE HyFrac 会议前沿创新

来自不同公司的工程师在 HFTC 全体会议期间齐聚一堂,讨论不同的水力压裂方法,包括光纤和地热水力压裂的好处。

德克萨斯州伍德兰兹——2023 年石油工程师学会水力压裂技术会议暨展览会上,空气中弥漫着合作和创新的精神。 

在 2 月 1 日的开幕全体会议上,来自 SM Energy、Devon Energy、Hess Corp. 和 Fervo Energy 的高管和工程师讨论了项目的主要发现以及这些发展如何导致其他领域的后续业务决策。 

SM Energy 勘探、开发和 EHS 高级副总裁 Mary Ellen Lutey 表示:“需要经常说‘是’来学习[和]应用这些知识,实际上只是利用我们的关系。”

在会议期间,Lutey 阐述了合作如何带来创新,特别是在光纤的使用方面,光纤可以捕获测量结果并收集有关井下条件的信息,从而为从井中收集的数据提供更多背景信息。2020 年,SM Energy 的工程主管 Erich Kerr 向 Lutey 称赞了光纤的优势,并建议将其用于诊断性压裂注入测试。该技术可用于检测井内的应变、衰变、应力和温度等。

钻井和完井工程师 Kourtney Brinkley 表示,Devon Energy 使用光纤和其他技术将完井效率从 19% 提高到 81%。

德文郡主要在 Eagle Ford 地区工作,其家长完成情况被布林克利描述为次优。

“我们的父网络必须有一些显着的缩减,而且当我们将核心从地下拉出来时,我们实际上并没有入侵核心的整个表面。此外,我们确实发现支撑剂的样本非常稀疏,”布林克利说。

通过使用光纤、井下仪表和密封井眼监测,德文郡能够提高完井效率并在接触新岩石方面取得长足进步。 

该公司的工程师最初认为他们正在重新扩张母网络,但后来意识到他们正在地面上制造全新的裂缝。Brinkley 表示,与最初的完井方法相比,Devon 能够将其预计最终采收率从 27% 提高到 46%。

使用光纤监测地热压裂 

SM Energy 和 Devon 使用光纤进行页岩的传统水力压裂,而 Fervo Energy 则使用光纤来监测地热压裂的结果。

Fervo 首席技术官杰克·诺贝克 (Jack Norbeck) 表示:“我们正在研究一种与页岩油管理非常相似的油藏管理概念。” “我们正在使用分布式光纤进行水平钻井、多级水力压裂来监测表征。我们正在尝试做的事情和[页岩]每天所做的事情有很多相似之处。” 

地热压裂在不存在的热岩石上产生裂缝,从而可以从地球内部收集热量。需要更大的压裂塞和井套管来承受高达 425 F 的温度。 

赫斯的增强排水开发涉及从一口未增产的井中生产石油,该井是从偏移井形成的裂缝网络中生产石油的。 

“我们开始考虑所谓的增强排水开发,我们钻两个标准支管。然后我们在两者之间钻另一个支管,这些都是同时进行的,”Hess 高级完井工程师 Craig Cipolla 说道,并补充说下一步涉及通过未固结的割缝衬管进行水力压裂。

据 Cipolla 称,Hess 早在 2021 年就首次提出了这个想法,并且“不知道它是否会变成一个变革性的概念”。尽管如此,该公司正在从远场的水力压裂中获得创纪录的产量,并且发现这个想法很有前途,因此在 2022 年以这种方式又钻了两口井。

原文链接/hartenergy

Innovation at Forefront of 2023 SPE HyFrac Conference

Engineers from different corporations gathered during the HFTC Plenary Session to discuss different approaches to fracking, including the benefits of fiber optics and geothermal fracking.

THE WOODLANDS, TEXAS – The spirit of collaboration and innovation was in the air at the 2023 Society of Petroleum Engineers Hydraulic Fracturing Technology Conference and Exhibition. 

During the Feb. 1 opening plenary session, executives and engineers from SM Energy, Devon Energy, Hess Corp. and Fervo Energy discussed key findings from projects and how these developments led to follow-up business decisions in other fields. 

“We need to say ‘yes’ more often to learning [and] applying that knowledge, really just using our relationships,” said Mary Ellen Lutey, senior vice president of exploration, development and EHS at SM Energy.

During the session, Lutey illustrated how working together can lead to innovation, especially in the use of fiber optics, which can capture measurements and gather information about downhole conditions to provide more context to the data being gathered from the well. In 2020, Erich Kerr, engineering supervisor at SM Energy, extolled the benefits of fiber optics to Lutey and suggested it could be used for diagnostic fracture injection tests. The technology can be used to detect strain, decay, stress and temperature, among other things within the well.

Devon Energy’s use of fiber optics and other technologies raised their completion efficiency from 19% to 81%, said Kourtney Brinkley, drillings and completions engineer.

Working primarily in the Eagle Ford region, Devon experienced parent completions that Brinkley described as suboptimal.

“We had to have some significant drawdown in our parent networks, and we weren't actually invading the entire face of the core as we were pulling it out of the ground. Additionally, the samples where we did find proppant were pretty sparse,” Brinkley said.

Through the use of fiber optics, downhole gauges and sealed wellbore monitoring, Devon was able to raise its completion efficiency and make strides with contacting new rock. 

After initially believing they were re-dilating parent networks, the company’s engineers realized they were making completely new fractures in the ground. Devon was able to increase its estimated ultimate recovery from 27% to 46% in comparison to the original completion approach, said Brinkley.

Using fiber optics to monitor geothermal fracking 

While SM Energy and Devon are using fiber optics for traditional hydraulic fracturing in shale, Fervo Energy is using fiber optics for monitoring the results of geothermal fracking.

“We're working on a reservoir management concept that is very similar to what’s done in shale,” Fervo CTO Jack Norbeck said. “We’re doing horizontal drilling, multi-stage hydraulic fracturing using distributed fiber optics for monitoring characterization. There's a lot of similarities about what we're trying to do and what [shale] does every day.” 

Geothermal fracking makes cracks in hot rocks where none existed, allowing heat to be harvested from Earth's interior. Larger frac plugs and well casings are required to survive temperatures reaching as high as 425 F. 

Hess’ augmented drainage development involves producing oil from an unstimulated well that produces from the fracture network created by the offset wells. 

“We are starting to look at something called augmented drainage development, where we drill two standard laterals. And then we drill another lateral in between it—these are all at the same time,” said Craig Cipolla, senior completions engineer at Hess, adding that the next step involves fracking through the uncemented slotted liner.

Hess first introduced this idea back in 2021 and has “no idea whether it’s going to turn into a transformational concept at all,” according to Cipolla. Nevertheless, the company is getting record production from hydraulic fractures in the far-field, and finding the idea promising, drilled two more wells in that fashion in 2022.