Practical Applications of Water Hammer Analysis from Hydraulic Fracturing Treatments

Author:

Dung Nguyen1,David Cramer1,Tom Danielson1,Jon Snyder1,Nico Roussel1,Annie Ouk1

Affiliation:

1. ConocoPhillips Company

Abstract

Abstract Water hammer is oscillatory pressure behavior in a wellbore resulting from the inertial effect of flowing fluid being subjected to an abrupt change in velocity. It is commonly observed at the end of large-scale hydraulic fracturing treatments after fluid injection rate is rapidly reduced or terminated. In this paper, factors affecting treatment-related water hammer behavior are disclosed, and field studies are introduced correlating water hammer characteristics to fracture intensity and well productivity. A simulator based on fundamental fluid-mechanics concepts was developed to model water hammer responses for various wellbore configurations and treatment characteristics. Insight from the modeling work was used to develop an optimal process of terminating fluid injection to obtain a consistent, identifiable oscillatory response for evaluating water hammer periodicity, decay rate, and oscillatory patterns. A completion database was engaged in a semi-automated process to evaluate numerous treatments. A data screening method was developed and implemented for enhancing interpretation reliability. Derived water hammer components were correlated to fracture intensity, well productivity and in certain cases, loss of treatment confinement to the intended treatment interval. Using the above process, thousands of hydraulic fracturing treatments were evaluated, and the results of that work are included in this study. The treatments were performed in wells based in Texas, South America, and Canada and completed in low permeability and unconventional reservoirs. The water hammer decay rate was determined to be a reliable indication of the system friction (friction in the wellbore and hydraulic fracture network) that drains energy from the water hammer pulse. In unconventional reservoirs characterized by small differences in the minimum and maximum horizontal stresses, high system friction correlated positively with fracture intensity/complexity and well performance. Results were constrained with instantaneous shut-in pressure (ISIP) and pressure falloff measurements to identify instances of direct communication with previously treated offset wellbores. The resulting analyses provided: – identification of enhanced-permeability intervals – indications of hydraulic fracture geometry – assessment of treatment modifications intended to enhance fracture complexity – identification of loss of treatment confinement to the intended interval – location of associated points of failure in the wellbore Topics covered in the paper include: Introduction  Joukowsky Equation  Period and Boundary Conditions Review of Prior Work on Water Hammer Analysis Shut-In Pressure Data, Analysis, and Model  Data collection frequency  Data issues and requirements  Water Hammer Analytical Method  Water Hammer Model Effects on Water hammer signature  Fluid properties  Step-down rate change and duration  Perforation friction Applications  Identification of Boundary Condition  Identification of Treatment Stage Isolation  Identification of Casing Failure Depth  Identification of Excess Period (Excess Length) Case Study – Water Hammer Data in an Unconventional Reservoir  Interpretation of frac geometry and friction in the fracture  Relationship to well productivity

Publisher

SPE

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