Abstract

The study of reservoir rock damage induced by gas injection is of great significance to the design of reservoir stimulation and the improvement of oil and gas recovery. Based on an example horizontal well in the Hudson Oilfield of the Tarim Basin and considering the multi-physics coupling effects among high-pressure fluid, rock deformation, and damage propagation during CO 2 injection, a three-dimensional finite element model for CO 2 injection in deep reservoir considering seepage-stress-damage coupling was developed. The evolution of reservoir rock damage under different CO 2 injection conditions was systematically investigated. The results show that tensile damage and shear damage are concentrated in the vertical direction and the horizontal maximum compressive principal stress direction, respectively, and the tensile damage is the main damage mode. At higher CO 2 injection rate and pressure, the damaged areas near the wellbore are mainly distributed in the direction of the maximum compressive principal stress, and the development of the damaged area near the wellbore will be inhibited by the formation and evolution of far-field damage. CO 2 injection aggravates the extension of tensile damage, but inhibits the initiation of shear damage, and eventually leads to the gradual transition from shear damage to tensile damage. Under the same injection conditions, CO 2 injection has superior performance in creating rock damage compared with the injection of nitrogen and water. The results in this study provide guidance for enhanced oil recovery in deep oil and gas reservoirs with CO 2 injection.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call