Abstract

Summary Water blocking caused by invasion of completion fluids has been suspected to reduce gas well deliverability.1–5 However, this effect has not been quantified. We report results of a laboratory program to measure the water-blocking effect in core samples from a gas field. These data were mapped to a wellbore model to make deliverability predictions. The laboratory data consist of gas flow rate as a function of injected gas pore volume for various liquids (brine, methanol, toluene, isopropyl alcohol, and brine-methanol mixtures) at two saturation states (fully saturated with liquid, and containing liquid and trapped gas). We injected over 10,000 PV of gas in each test to mimic near-wellbore conditions. The data showed that the liquid displacement regime was followed by a mass transfer regime. The wellbore model had a time varying skin to account for the cleanup of the fluid invaded ("water-blocked") region. Cleanup occurs as gas flows past this high liquid-saturated region and removes liquid by displacement and mass transfer. We used the laboratory data to relate the reduced permeability of this region to pore volumes of gas throughput. We find that any loss in gas well deliverability recovers in two phases. The first phase corresponds to fluid displacement ("flowback period") and lasts for a few days at most. The second phase is slower and can last several months. Here, evaporation causes the deliverability to slowly increase. It is in this regime that adding volatile fluids, such as methanol, to the completion brines has advantages.

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