Abstract

Drilling in the naturally fractured formations always encounters severe mud loss, which endangers the drilling safety. In oil & gas layers, a larger quantity of mud loss has great adverse effects on later oil and gas production. Therefore, it makes the knowledge of mud loss very important, and after that, it is instructive to control the mud loss in the oil layer. In this paper, we first consider the mud loss process using a two-phase flow model. A discrete fracture network model is employed to describe the fluid transfer between fractures and matrix pores. And different relative permeability curves and capillary pressure functions are used in matrix pores and natural fractures. The finite element method and “upwind” scheme are employed to deduce the numerical discretized formulas. The correctness of our model is verified with the published literature. Then a sensitivity analysis is performed to study the laws of mud loss in naturally fractured oil-wet formation. Compared with single-phase flow models, the mud loss rate of two-phase flow model is lower. The two-phase flow model is used to identify the most influential factors on mud loss and predict the distribution of water saturation in oil formation during the drilling process. We find that: since the pressure increase zone is much larger than the water saturation increase zone, the size of the water invasion zone is unknown in the single-phase flow model. The most important influential factors of mud loss in the oil layer are fracture connection, drilling fluid density and matrix permeability. Once the natural fractures are connected to the wellbore, the mud loss rate is much higher than that when the natural fractures are not connected to the wellbore. The capillary pressure has little effect on the mud loss. The larger the capillary pressure, and the lower the mud loss rate. The model in this paper is instructive to learn the law of mud loss and contamination range of drilling fluids in oil layers.

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