专业化学提高了传统水力压裂的可持续性

Newpark 的耐盐水增产液允许使用含盐量更高的压裂水,而不会出现操作或环境问题。 

Newpark 的过渡增产液是在充分了解岩石与流体相互作用的基础上设计的。(来源:Newpark 流体系统)

提出者:

勘探与生产标志

编者注:本文出现在新的 E&P 时事通讯中。请在此处订阅勘探与生产通讯 


过去二十年来,石油和天然气行业发生了巨大变化。随着定向钻井和水力压裂技术的创新,从非常规页岩中高效生产碳氢化合物的能力已成为现实,使该行业的可采储量又延长了至少 50 年。  

从传统油藏与非常规页岩油藏生产碳氢化合物的主要区别之一是需要将岩石打碎以形成碳氢化合物流入钻井的流动路径。如果没有储层岩石的破裂,这些地层就不会产生石油。直到大约 20 年前,页岩岩还被认为是常规油藏的“填海岩石”,因此没有人会想到该行业能够有效地生产蕴藏在其中的碳氢化合物储量。

水力压裂页岩的过程涉及以高速率和高压泵入大量水,以在岩石中产生和扩展裂缝或裂缝,同时用沙子或支撑剂填充这些裂缝,以保持裂缝张开以进行长期生产。  

例如,直到大约五年前,德克萨斯州西部的一口大型非常规页岩井还需要大约 10 MMgal 的水才能沿水平井眼放置 30 组裂缝(即阶段)。这一水量相当于填满约 15 个奥林匹克规模的游泳池所需的水量。如今,新墨西哥州特拉华盆地的许多页岩井使用约 20 毫米加仑的水来压裂每口井。  

用于支持美国页岩井完井的水量是天文数字。迄今为止,大部分使用的水是取自河流、湖泊和浅水含水层的淡水。  

这种做法显然是不可持续的。但为什么该行业在这些应用中使用淡水而不是含盐的采出水呢?原因是大多数用于水力压裂的标准化学物质与这些产生的咸盐水不相容。这些不兼容性会限制压裂过程中的泵送效率,并可能促进损害机制,从而阻碍生产,从而影响油井的财务可行性。

在水力压裂过程中用于促进高泵送水速率的主要化学物质称为减阻剂 (FR),其目的是降低在尝试以高速率泵送大量水时产生的压力。相对较小的管道。它通过减少高速泵送过程中沿管壁产生的摩擦力来完成这项工作。  

市场上的标准阻燃剂并非设计用于与盐水兼容,因为它们是为处理饮用水而创建的。在大多数情况下,这些化学品的设计并没有改变,因为制造工厂为了大批量生产不同的分子而需要进行重组成本。当这些基于旧设计的化学品被注入盐水中时,可能会导致不兼容的挑战。这些不兼容性问题可能导致设备在工作期间堵塞地面、无法达到设计的泵速和/或泵送压力极高,超出了泵送设备安全运行的最大允许值。

增产液系统

当 Newpark 正在考虑一种方法来使其增产液产品线在美国市场上脱颖而出时,一种方法是开发流体系统,使该行业能够利用含盐量较高的采出水进行水力压裂,而不会出现任何操作问题。  

除了解决美国土地上的环境挑战之外,这种方法还适用于淡水稀缺或昂贵商品地区(例如中东和非洲)未来非常规页岩压裂的增长。如果这些设计能够完成,这些阻燃剂应该能够在海水中有效运行,而海水在其中一些地区也更容易获得。

除了技术性能目标之外,成功实现这些功能的能力也将有助于实现另一个目标——帮助客户提高 ESG 分数。与大量淡水相比,勘探与生产客户能够在压裂作业中使用更多的回收盐水,从而降低其作业对环境的影响,并帮助改善其 ESG 状况。

案例分析

经过一年半的开发并于 2020 年第四季度与美国客户进行现场试验,Newpark 获得了在西德克萨斯州利用其耐盐水压裂技术进行的第一组连续背靠背压裂作业。  

该项目有两个目标:

  1. 有效减少作业摩擦,同时使用更高比例的盐水完成二叠纪盆地油井的压裂;
  2. 通过能够在盐水中增加粘度来承载高负载的支撑剂。 

截至目前,由于缺乏管理压裂中淡水使用的正式法规,只有新墨西哥州的特拉华盆地作业使用 100% 盐水,尽管许多客户不断尝试使用更高比例的盐水并减少对淡水的依赖。

纽帕克压力泵
Newpark 的方法是评估其所有 FR 和 HVFR 的潜在裂缝导流能力损害,并设计适当的缓解解决方案。(来源:Newpark 流体系统)

耐盐水高粘度阻燃剂

Newpark 的一些 Transition 耐盐水高粘度 FR (HVFR) 经设计可在总溶解固体盐含量高达 300,000 ppm 的盐水中工作,其含盐量约为典型海水的 7.5 倍。 

除了在使用盐水压裂时控制泵送压力的能力外,它们还可以将更高浓度的支撑剂带入所形成的裂缝中,从而使客户能够更大程度地支撑裂缝,从而获得更高的速率这些井的碳氢化合物产量。  

此后,Newpark 与一家大型压力泵送公司完成了另一个 99 级泵站,该公司不仅在设计中运行了高比例的采出水和高支撑剂负载,而且还使用 Newpark 的 Transition HVFR 以高达 150 桶/分钟的速率进行泵送。   

这些成功加上 Transition 系列中的一些产品也被设计为具有自破性,具有高断裂回弹导率,已获得美国陆地上最大的压力泵之一的批准。

根据 Newpark 客户的说法,迄今为止使用 Transition HVFR 完成的工作生产率高于预期,在某些情况下高达预期生产率的两倍。Newpark 的耐盐水 HVFR 在美国的市场渗透率正在提高,所有迹象都表明,随着非常规页岩油田的水力压裂在全球范围内扩展,这可能只是一个开始。


相关内容:

2021 年 5 月 28 日:  UPP 的可持续智能化学提高了完成效率

2021 年 3 月 25 日:  ProPetro 利用新的改良酸技术进行二叠纪盆地的水力压裂作业

2021年1月26日:水力压裂技术展示

原文链接/hartenergy

Specialized Chemistry Increases Sustainability of Traditional Hydraulic Fracturing

Newpark’s brine-tolerant stimulation fluids allow the utilization of saltier fracking water without operational or environmental problems. 

Newpark’s Transition stimulation fluids are engineered with a sound understanding of rock-fluid interactions. (Source: Newpark Fluids System)

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Editor's note: This article appears in the new E&P newsletter. Subscribe to the E&P newsletter here.


The oil and gas industry has changed substantially in the last two decades. With the introduction of directional drilling and innovations in hydraulic fracturing techniques, the ability to efficiently produce hydrocarbons from unconventional shale rock has become a reality that has extended the recoverable reserves attainable by the industry by at least another 50 years.  

One of the major differences between producing hydrocarbons from conventional reservoirs versus unconventional shale reservoirs is the need to break the rock open to create flow paths for the hydrocarbons to flow into the drilled well. Without this fracturing of the reservoir rock, there would be no production from these formations. Up until about 20 years ago, shale rock was considered to be “capping rock” for conventional reservoirs, so no one would have guessed that the industry would be able to efficiently produce the hydrocarbon reserves trapped inside.

The process of hydraulically fracturing shale rock involves pumping large amounts of water at a high rate and pressure to create and propagate cracks or fractures in the rock, while simultaneously filling these cracks with sand or proppant to keep the fractures open for long-term production.  

For example, until about five years ago, a large unconventional shale well in West Texas would have required about 10 MMgal of water to place 30 sets of fractures (i.e., stages) along the horizontal wellbore. That amount of water is equivalent to the amount needed to fill about 15 Olympic-sized swimming pools. Today, many shale wells in the Delaware Basin in New Mexico use about 20 MMgal of water to fracture each well.  

The amount of water used to support the completion of U.S. shale wells is astronomical. Thus far, most of the water being used is freshwater taken from rivers, lakes and shallow-water aquifers.  

This approach is obviously not sustainable. But why has the industry been using freshwater for these applications as opposed to salty produced water? The reason is that most of the standard chemistry used for hydraulic fracturing is incompatible with these salty produced brines. These incompatibilities can limit pumping efficiency during the fracturing process as well as potentially promoting damage mechanism that would impede production and as a result the financial viability of the well.

The main chemical used to facilitate the high-pumping rates for the water during hydraulic fracturing is called a friction reducer (FR), and its purpose is to reduce the pressure that builds up while trying to pump large volumes of water at a high rate through a relatively small pipe. It does that job by reducing frictional forces that develop along the pipe wall during the high-rate pumping.  

The standard FRs in the market are not designed to be compatible with salty brines because they were created for the treatment of potable water. For the most part, the design of these chemicals has not changed because of retooling cost at the manufacturing plants to make different molecules in such high volumes. When these chemicals based upon older designs are injected into salty brine, they can cause incompatibility challenges. These incompatibility issues can result in equipment plugging on surface during the job, inability to achieve pump rates as designed and/or extremely high-pumping pressures that flirt with the maximum allowable for the safe operation of the pumping equipment.

Stimulation fluid systems

When Newpark was considering a way to differentiate its stimulation fluids product line in the U.S. market, one approach was to develop fluid systems that would allow the industry to utilize saltier, produced water for fracking without any operational problems.  

In addition to addressing this environmental challenge on U.S. land, this approach would also find applicability to the future growth of unconventional shale fracturing in areas where freshwater is a scarce or expensive commodity, such as in the Middle East and Africa. If these designs could be completed, these FRs should be able to function efficiently in seawater, which is also more readily available in some of these regions.

Besides the technical performance targets, the ability to successfully achieve these features would also help to accomplish another goal—to assist customers in improving their ESG score. The ability to use more recycled brine in fracturing operations as opposed to large volumes of freshwater allows E&P customers to lower the environmental impact of their operations and help achieve improvement to their ESG profile.

Case study

After a year and a half of development and conducting field trials with customers in the U.S. in fourth-quarter 2020, Newpark was awarded its first set of consistent back-to-back fracturing jobs using its brine tolerant FR technology in West Texas.  

This project had two goals:

  1. Provide efficient friction reduction to operations while using higher percentages of salty brine to complete fracturing of wells in the Permian Basin; and
  2. Carry a high loading of proppant by being able to build viscosity in the brine. 

As of today, due to the lack of formal regulations governing freshwater use in fracturing, only New Mexico’s Delaware Basin operations use 100% salty brine, although many customers are constantly trying to use higher percentages of brine and lessen their dependence on freshwater.

Newpark pressure pumping
Newpark’s approach is to evaluate potential fracture conductivity damage of all its FRs and HVFRs and design mitigation solutions as appropriate. (Source: Newpark Fluids System)

Brine-tolerant high-viscosity FRs

Some of Newpark’s Transition brine-tolerant high-viscosity FRs (HVFRs) are engineered to work in brines with salt content upward of 300,000 ppm total dissolved solids, which is about 7.5 times saltier that typical seawater. 

In addition to their ability to control pumping pressures when using salty brine for fracturing, they are also engineered to carry higher concentrations of proppant into the fractures created, allowing customers to prop their fractures open to a greater degree, which in turn gives a higher rate of hydrocarbon production from these wells.  

Newpark has since completed another 99-stage pad with a major pressure pumping company that not only ran high percentages of produced water and high-proppant loadings in their design but also pumped at rates up to 150 bbl/min using Newpark's Transition HVFRs.   

Those successes coupled with the fact that some of the products within the Transition series are also engineered to be self-breaking, giving high fracture regain conductivity, has resulted in approval with one of the largest pressure pumpers on U.S. land.

Jobs completed so far using Transition HVFRs are producing at higher than expected rates according to Newpark customers and in some cases up to twice the predicted rates. Market penetration in the U.S. is improving for Newpark's brine-tolerant HVFRs, and all indications are that this could be just the start, as hydraulic fracturing of unconventional shale plays expand throughout the globe.


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Jan. 26, 2021: Hydraulic Fracturing Technology Showcase