Abstract

In this paper, numerical simulations of fractured vertical well in low-permeable oil reservoir are carried out and two issues: threshold pressure gradient (TPG) in reservoir matrix and proppant distribution in hydraulic fractures are focused on. A physical definition of effective fracture length (EFL) is presented to evaluate the fracture effectiveness due to uneven proppant distribution. In terms of numerical processing for TPG, based on the subsurface Darcy's flow module in COMSOL Multiphysics, an effective numerical simulation method is adopted by substituting the gravitational acceleration vector in Darcy's law (Liu et al., 2019b). The simulation results show that, proppant distribution has great influence on fracture effectiveness. Unappealing proppant distribution can reduce effective fracture length by 49.6%, which is negative for low-permeable oil reservoir development. TPG in reservoir matrix mainly affects the moving boundary and pressure-disturbed area in reservoir. When TPG in matrix reduces from 0.02 MPa/m to 0 MPa/m, the distance of moving boundary at 300 days could increase for almost double and pressure-disturbed area enlarged drastically for around 74%. Furthermore, a heterogenous low-permeable oil with secondary fracture networks is designed to study the joint effect of TPG and proppant distribution. If we neglect these two factors, cumulative oil rate will be greatly overestimated by 38.6% at 1000 days. At the same time, the existence of natural fractures could also affect the streamline distribution in low-permeable oil reservoir and contribute to fluid flow in reservoir.

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