Tese
Aplicação combinada de fraturamento hidraúlico e acidificação para estimulação de depósitos de gás não convencionais da Bacia do São Francisco
Fecha
2022-08-25Autor
Humberto Almeida Oliveira
Institución
Resumen
The production of oil and gas reservoirs is not something so simple as it appears.
Simply drilling a well through the reservoir is not a sufficient condition to put the well
into production. Most reservoirs need to be stimulated after the drilling phase,
especially in the case of low permeability reservoirs also known as unconventional
reservoirs. Brazil, besides, China, USA and Argentina, has one of the largest
unconventional gas reservoirs in the world; and this is of significative importance
since the gas is the transition element between oil and renewable energy sources in the
world’s energy matrix.
There are two possible ways to stimulate a hydrocarbon reservoir: hydraulic
fracturing (mechanical stimulation) and acidizing (chemical stimulation). In hydraulic fracturing a fluid carries proppant (solid beads) with enough hydraulic pressure to
crack open the rock in the reservoir. The proppant grains fill the void of the open
fracture preventing it from closing, and the permeability of the proppant pack creates
a permanent access channel between the hydrocarbon formation and the well. Acidizing methods are less known than hydraulic fracturing and they are mainly used in
carbonate formations. Acidizing is divided into matrix acidizing and acid fracturing.
Matrix acidizing is performed when the reservoirs permeability is sufficiently high to
allow fluid injection into the rock matrix - the acid percolates through the pores increasing the overall pore communication and permeability. On the other hand, acid
fracturing is performed when the permeability is so low (unconventional) that in order
to inject acid into the reservoir it is necessary to fracture the rock applying hydraulic
pressure.
Unconventional carbonate reservoirs can be stimulated by hydraulic fracturing or
acid fracturing (but not matrix acidizing as they do not have sufficient permeability to
allow acid injection below the frac gradient).
In hydraulic fracturing the proppant grains fill the fracture preventing it from
closing, and in acid fracturing the acid reaction creates uneven patterns or asperities
on the walls of the fracture that also prevent the fracture closure. Even though it is
easier to achieve long fracture extensions with acid fracturing, the asperities created
in the rock by the acid reaction cannot withstand high closure pressures as well as
proppants do, and the acidized fractures are often short lived when compared to the
propped fractures. Someone may ask then: why not combine the two methods (hydraulic fracturing and acid fracturing) into a single method to maximize the
stimulated reservoir’s volume?
The combination of proppant (hydraulic fracturing) with acid is still a taboo
in the oil and gas industry. The reason for this is the assumption that the acid
reaction would produce a neo-layer in the walls of the fracture soft and thick
enough to cause proppant embedment and fracture closure.
The primary objective of this work is to investigate the presence of neolayers resulting from the acidizing process and provide evidence that a combined
fracturing method (proppant + acid) is feasible for specific types of
unconventional reservoirs. In order to do so, acidized samples of a unconventional
carbonate formation in Brazil, the Sete Lagoas Formation which is considered by
the Brazilian Petroleum Agency (ANP) one of the main unconventional gas
reservoirs in Brazil, were characterized. And for a secondary objective, an
original acid system appropriate for deep carbonate stimulation was proposed and
developed.