Abstract

Hydrocarbon reservoirs’ formation damage is one of the essential issues in petroleum industries that is caused by drilling and production operations and completion procedures. Ineffective implementation of drilling fluid during the drilling operations led to large volumes of filtrated mud penetrating into the reservoir formation. Therefore, pore throats and spaces would be filled, and hydrocarbon mobilization reduced due to the porosity and permeability reduction. In this paper, a developed model was proposed to predict the filtrated mud saturation impact on the formation damage. First, the physics of the fluids were examined, and the governing equations were defined by the combination of general mass transfer equations. The drilling mud penetration in the core on the one direction and the removal of oil from the core, in the other direction, requires the simultaneous dissolution of water and oil flow. As both fluids enter and exit from the same core, it is necessary to derive the equations of drilling mud and oil flow in a one-dimensional process. Finally, due to the complexity of mass balance and fluid flow equations in porous media, the implicit pressure-explicit saturation method was used to solve the equations simultaneously. Four crucial parameters of oil viscosity, water saturation, permeability, and porosity were sensitivity-analyzed in this model to predict the filtrated mud saturation. According to the results of the sensitivity analysis for the crucial parameters, at a lower porosity (porosity = 0.2), permeability (permeability = 2 mD), and water saturation (saturation = 0.1), the filtrated mud saturation had decreased. This resulted in the lower capillary forces, which were induced to penetrate the drilling fluid to the formation. Therefore, formation damage reduced at lower porosity, permeability and water saturation. Furthermore, at higher oil viscosities, due to the increased mobilization of oil through the porous media, filtrated mud saturation penetration through the core length would be increased slightly. Consequently, at the oil viscosity of 3 cP, the decrease rate of filtrated mud saturation is slower than other oil viscosities which indicated increased invasion of filtrated mud into the formation.

Highlights

  • Underbalanced drilling operations (; UBD) is considered as one of the drilling procedures in the drilling of hydrocarbon wells

  • As porosity is one of the crucial parameters to define the fluid flow mobilization in the porous media, it is necessary to provide a sensitivity analysis on this parameter to nurture a better understanding of filtrated mud saturation in different porosities

  • At the porosity of 0.2, the filtrated mud saturation decrease is slower than other porosities, which resulted in the capillary pressure reduction when the drilling fluid

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Summary

Introduction

Underbalanced drilling operations (; UBD) is considered as one of the drilling procedures in the drilling of hydrocarbon wells. In this process, the wellbore pressure is fewer than the formation of static pressure [1,2,3,4,5]. Fluid flow through the porous media has been increased, and the hydrocarbon could flow to the surface via wellbore annulus. Mathematics 2020, 8, 1057 where formation pressures are high enough, the wellbore pressure will be reduced by the utilization of low-density mud. There are some disadvantages to this technique which should be taken into consideration during the reservoir studies and optimization procedures

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