Abstract

Summary Matrix acidizing is the commonly used method to enhance permeability of a damaged zone around the well. Acid injection will dissolve the rock, creating narrow, high-permeability channels, called wormholes, to bypass the damaged zone. The pattern of wormhole generation indicates the efficiency of the well stimulation process. Although the injection rate has the most important role in this process, there are other factors such as rock properties, presence of an immiscible phase, and temperature variation that could also affect the dissolution pattern. A few studies have considered the simultaneous effects of all phenomena involved in the acidizing process. We have developed a two-phase heat transfer model coupled with a two-scale continuum model considering capillary and gravity forces for the first time, to simulate the wormhole dissolution pattern. It could be used to analyze the dissolution phenomenon of carbonate rock. A new two-phase relative permeability model is implemented to take the effect of dissolution on relative permeability curves into account. The influence of acid-rock temperature difference, reaction heat, nonisothermal condition, phase saturation, formation porosity, intrinsic permeability and heterogeneity on dissolution pattern, and number of injected pore volumes (PVs) before acid breakthrough is investigated in the developed model. The simulation results show that both optimum injection rate and required PV of acid to breakthrough are strongly dependent on acid and rock temperatures. High formation temperature increases both the optimum injection rate and the optimum number of injected PVs before breakthrough. Injection of acid at lower temperatures will decrease both the optimum injection rate and the optimum number of injected PVs to break through. Simulation results show that the optimum number of injected PVs to break through is 8% higher when reaction heat is considered. Formation properties and degree of heterogeneity influence the number of required injected PVs to breakthrough. Low porosity formations with high heterogeneity correspond to the lowest number of injected PVs to breakthrough. The results indicated that formations with higher permeability will have a higher optimum number of injected PVs to break through and an optimum injection rate. Simulated results show that increasing the initial water saturation will increase the volume of acid to breakthrough. Variation in initial water saturation has a minor effect on wormhole shape, but it does not change the dissolution regime.

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