8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 1/58 Fracturing Basics • Damage Bypass • Stimulation 8/25/2015 1 George E. King Engineering GEKEngineering.com
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 1/58
Fracturing Basics
• Damage Bypass
• Stimulation
8/25/2015 1George E. King EngineeringGEKEngineering.com
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 2/58
8/25/2015 2George E. King EngineeringGEKEngineering.com
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 3/58
Prod Improvement from Stimulations
0
1
2
3
45
6
7
8
1 10 100 1000 10000
Increased well radius/init well radius
J / J o
re/rw=625
re/rw=1250
re/rw=2500
re/rw=5,000
re/rw=10,000
Hydraulic
FracturingAcid Breakdowns
8/25/2015 3George E. King EngineeringGEKEngineering.com
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 4/58
8/25/2015 4George E. King EngineeringGEKEngineering.com
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 5/58
Optimizing Fracture Length by Reservoir Studies & Costs
8/25/2015 5George E. King EngineeringGEKEngineering.com
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 6/58
Efficient fracture half lengths for various
permeabilities.
8/25/2015 6George E. King EngineeringGEKEngineering.com
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 7/58
8/25/2015 7George E. King EngineeringGEKEngineering.com
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 8/58
8/25/2015 8George E. King EngineeringGEKEngineering.com
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 9/58
8/25/2015 9George E. King EngineeringGEKEngineering.com
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 10/58
8/25/2015 10George E. King EngineeringGEKEngineering.com
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 11/58
8/25/2015 11George E. King EngineeringGEKEngineering.com
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 12/58
8/25/2015 12George E. King EngineeringGEKEngineering.com
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 13/58
8/25/2015 13George E. King EngineeringGEKEngineering.com
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 14/58
8/25/2015 14George E. King EngineeringGEKEngineering.com
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 15/58
8/25/2015 15George E. King EngineeringGEKEngineering.com
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 16/58
8/25/2015 16George E. King EngineeringGEKEngineering.com
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 17/58
Fracture Gradient
• Ranges from about 0.5 psi/ft to over 1 psi/ft.
• Highly affected by regional and local stresses,
rock types, wellbore access to the reservoir,
deviation, plane of the perfs respective to the
frac direction, “tortuosity”, etc.
8/25/2015 George E. King EngineeringGEKEngineering.com
17
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 18/58
8/25/2015 18George E. King EngineeringGEKEngineering.com
Usually a low
viscosity fluid
Usually a
high
viscosity frac
fluid.
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 19/58
8/25/2015 19George E. King EngineeringGEKEngineering.com
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 20/58
8/25/2015 20George E. King EngineeringGEKEngineering.com
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 21/58
8/25/2015 21George E. King EngineeringGEKEngineering.com
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 22/58
8/25/2015 22George E. King EngineeringGEKEngineering.com
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 23/58
8/25/2015 23George E. King EngineeringGEKEngineering.com
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 24/58
8/25/2015 24George E. King EngineeringGEKEngineering.com
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 25/58
8/25/2015 25George E. King EngineeringGEKEngineering.com
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 26/58
8/25/2015 26George E. King EngineeringGEKEngineering.com
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 27/58
8/25/2015 27George E. King EngineeringGEKEngineering.com
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 28/58
Proppant Permeabilities
-12 / +20 mesh 450+ darcies
-20 / +40 mesh 120 darcies
-40/ +60 mesh 60 darcies-70/ +140 mesh 0.6 darcies
These perms are without stress and are for cleanproppant packs.
8/25/2015 28George E. King EngineeringGEKEngineering.com
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 29/58
Proppant Conductivity
Conductivity
12/20 NW sand 4,500 md-ft
16/20 Naplite 15,000 md-ft
Resin coated 16/20 Naplite 15,000 md-ftResin coated 16/20 Carbolite 15,000 md-ft
Re-cycled 16/20 Naplite 3,500 md-ft
Conditions: Frac fluid is YF130LGD, Temp =
195 F, Closure Stress: 4000 psi (Valhall data)
8/25/2015 29George E. King EngineeringGEKEngineering.com
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 30/58
8/25/2015 30George E. King EngineeringGEKEngineering.com
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 31/58
8/25/2015 31George E. King EngineeringGEKEngineering.com
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 32/58
Fracturing as a Means of Sand Control
• Frac and Pack
• Screenless Fracs
8/25/2015 32George E. King EngineeringGEKEngineering.com
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 33/58
Perforating for Fracs
• Size - typically BH
• Orientation
– usually 60 degrees to 120 degrees
– 180 degree for screenless
• along frac direction?
8/25/2015 33George E. King EngineeringGEKEngineering.com
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 34/58
Proppant
• Type -
– conductivity is most important
– strength is less important
– fines invasion?
– Other forms of damage
• paraffin
• asphaltenes
• scales
8/25/2015 34George E. King EngineeringGEKEngineering.com
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 35/58
Fluids
• Non damaging
– look at clays
– look at water saturation
• Transport important
– must transport up to 16 ppga
• Efficiency critical
– building width is first step
8/25/2015 35George E. King EngineeringGEKEngineering.com
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 36/58
Formation Permeability Ranges
• Low perm (<1 to 50), length is important
• High perm - conductivity critical
– get past the damage
– how long? - few meters
– how tall - ??
8/25/2015 36George E. King EngineeringGEKEngineering.com
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 37/58
Maximizing Conductivity
• TSO Design (tip screen-out)
• maintaining conductivity
8/25/2015 37George E. King EngineeringGEKEngineering.com
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 38/58
Application
• Pad - design from minifrac
• Slurry (1 to 12 ppga)
• Flush
8/25/2015 38George E. King EngineeringGEKEngineering.com
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 39/58
Importance of Screenout
• Critical to make conductivity
– widths?
• normal frac = 0.1 to 0.3”
• TSO = 0.5 to >1”
• Screenout is usually seen as a pressure spike
near the end - can see it coming by watchingpressures
8/25/2015 39George E. King EngineeringGEKEngineering.com
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 40/58
Tip Screen Out (TSO) FracturingScreen area open to flow =6% to >10%
Perf area open 6 to 10%
Skin = -3 to 10
Advantages
stimulation
links across layers and low vertical k
highest reliability sand control methodgood flow in moderate to higher kh
Disadvantages
usually most expensive
harder to design and apply
frac capacity vs. perm contrast critical
height growth uncertainty?
some proppant stability problem at depth
8/25/2015 40George E. King EngineeringGEKEngineering.com
Step 1 - Sequence of Pumping a Tip-Screenout (TSO) Frac
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 41/58
8/25/2015 41George E. King EngineeringGEKEngineering.com
Step 2- Start pad – no prop – breaks formation down & initiates fracture
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 42/58
?
What is happening? - fracture breakdown, width development, length growth, probably
height growth – AND – fluid loss from frac to the formation.
8/25/2015 42George E. King EngineeringGEKEngineering.com
Step 3 End of the pad – prop is coming – fracture width is created
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 43/58
What is happening? - moderate frac width sufficient to admit proppant, sufficient length
and height to create width – AND – fluid loss from frac to formation with some fluid loss
control.
8/25/2015 43George E. King EngineeringGEKEngineering.com
Step 4 – Start of first prop stage – usually about 2 lb/gal
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 44/58
What is happening? – Proppant is entering the
frac, and the pad, although diminished in
volume due to leakoff, is still increasing thefrac length and height (and width?). The
proppant is becoming more concentrated by
fluid leakoff as it travels down the fracture.
8/25/2015 44George E. King EngineeringGEKEngineering.com
Fluid lost to the formation from the fracture steadily increases the proppant concentration of
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 45/58
the slurry in the fracture.
8/25/2015 45George E. King EngineeringGEKEngineering.com
Step 5 – end of 2 lb/gal stage – start of 4 lb/gal stage
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 46/58
What is happening?
1 The small amount of pad remaining is at the
edges of the growing frac, but is being lost to fluid
leakoff;
2. The 2 lb/gal pad is losing liquid volume,
concentrating the proppant;
3. The 4 lb/gal pad has entered the fracture,
driving the other fluids in front of it and slowing
losing some of its volume to leakoff.
8/25/2015 46George E. King EngineeringGEKEngineering.com
The proppant steadily concentrates in the remaining fracture fluid as leakoff into the walls of the
f
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 47/58
4 lb/gal Was 4 lb/gal,
now 6 lb/gal,Was 2, now 6
fracture continues.
Proppant concentration may begin as low as 1 to 2 lb/gal and increase to 12 or more lb/gal at
the very end of the fracture treatment.
8/25/2015 47George E. King EngineeringGEKEngineering.com
Steps 6 and 7 – pumping stages of increased proppant concentration
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 48/58
What is happening?
1. Pumping sequential stages of 2, 4, 6,8, and 12 lb/gal.
2. The fluid leakoff is steadily increasing
the proppant concentration.
3. When the proppant concentration at
the tip of the fracture approaches 16
lb/gal, the slurry is no longer
pumpable.
8/25/2015 48George E. King EngineeringGEKEngineering.com
Proppant concentration reaches a maximum at 16 lb/gal near the tip of at a highly permeably
i d h d h f l h i
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 49/58
section and the proppant screens out and the frac length stops growing.
8/25/2015 49George E. King EngineeringGEKEngineering.com
Last stage of proppant – continues until the job screens out
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 50/58
8/25/2015 50George E. King EngineeringGEKEngineering.com
Last Step – as pressure indicates that the tip screenout is forming, increase pressure at the
f d f h t ibl i t th f t Thi t t idth d
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 51/58
surface and force as much proppant as possible into the fracture. This creates extra width and
proppant loading at the wellbore – this means higher flow capacity.
Final proppant loading near the
wellbore may be 14 lb/ft2 or more.
8/25/2015 51George E. King EngineeringGEKEngineering.com
Ob i DW F P k
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 52/58
Observations – DW Frac Pack• Frac Pack process very similar on every well
– Hard to evaluate ‘job quality’ from DIMS as data notreported
• Average sand placed is 84% of sand pumped
– Without 2 lowest jobs average is 89%
• Frac Screenout reported on 9 wells
• Annular Pack Processes Variable
– 6 wells with 8 BPM final rate
– 4 wells with less than 2 BPM final rate• 1 well reported 0.5 BPM to get annular pack
• Loss rate Post-Frac pack on 7 wells reported at less
than 25 BPH losses (13 reported losses, 7 did not)Dan
Gibson
8/25/201552
George E. King EngineeringGEKEngineering.com
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 53/58
Fracturing Disasters
• Too little proppant
• damaged or poor quality proppant
• reactive base fluids (formation damage)
• too few/too small perfs
• perf phasing way out of frac plane
•
over-flushing the treatment• fracturing out of zone
8/25/2015 53George E. King EngineeringGEKEngineering.com
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 54/58
Minifracs
• Calibration Treatment
– 10 to 20% of frac volume
– same frac fluid at frac rate
• To Evaluate
– leakoff
– height growth
– frac geometry
• Procedure
8/25/2015 54George E. King EngineeringGEKEngineering.com
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 55/58
Fracs in Horizontals and M-Ls
• Isolation is the key.
8/25/2015 55George E. King Engineering
GEKEngineering.com
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 56/58
Spacing on Fractures
• spacing related to drainage area
• permeability
• intersecting natural fractures
8/25/2015 56George E. King Engineering
GEKEngineering.com
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 57/58
Concerns
Spacing
Frac directionIsolation
8/25/2015 57George E. King Engineering
GEKEngineering.com
8/20/2019 Fracturing Basics
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/fracturing-basics 58/58