Abstract

This article, written by JPT Technology Editor Chris Carpenter, contains highlights of paper SPE 203374, “Is My Completions Engineer Provided With the Correct Petrophysical and Geomechanical Properties Inputs?” by Philippe Gaillot, Brian Crawford, and Yueming Liang, SPE, ExxonMobil, et al., prepared for the 2020 Abu Dhabi International Petroleum Exhibition and Conference, Abu Dhabi, held virtually 9–12 November. The paper has not been peer reviewed. To simulate the performance of unconventional wells effectively, incorporating sufficient geological complexity is essential to allow for realistic variability in the petrophysical and mechanical properties controlling the productivity of the effective stimulated rock volume (ESRV). The complete paper presents an integrated work flow to model mechanical properties at sufficiently high resolution (centimeter scale) to accurately honor rock fabric and its height and complexity effects on hydraulic fracturing and, therefore, on production. Once upscaled, outputs of this work flow enable a more-realistic borehole view of reservoir quality, fluid-flow units, and geomechanical stratigraphy, all information key to optimal asset development. Introduction Simulating hydraulic fractures with pre-existing natural mechanical discontinuities remains an important challenge. In most cases, the trend is to include more details in the simulations and apply more computational power to solve the problem. While these complex numerical simulations allow simultaneous interaction between multiple phenomena, the validity of the predicted hydraulic fractures, and thus ESRV productivity, may be questionable if inputs to the hydraulic-fracturing and production models do not capture the effective fine-scale complexity of the formation properties, namely the minimum in-situ horizontal stress contrast between layers, the changing layer properties, and the mechanical and flow properties of the interfaces. The complete paper presents a seven-step work flow wherein core poroelastic anisotropies derived from quantitative mineralogy and well-established micro-mechanical theory are integrated into a high-vertical-resolution multiphysics petrophysical model able to capture the centimeter-scale level of heterogeneity observed from cores. The resulting high-vertical-resolution well frame-work enables a detailed well-scale calibration and recognition of facies and stacking patterns; an accurate and core-calibrated geochemical, petrophysical, and geomechanical characterization of individual beds; and an identification and characterization of the interfaces between beds.

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