Abstract

Summary Conventional fracture injection/falloff tests, such as minifrac or diagnostic fracture injection test (DFIT), are commonly used to characterize shale and tight reservoirs. For ultralow-permeability reservoirs, a reliable DFIT requires a long falloff period after a short injection period. A long falloff observation period of weeks or months is often not economically viable. In addition, the recent economic downturn requires operators to seek cost-effective alternatives to further optimize expenditures. An alternative to a DFIT is a port-opening falloff test (POFOT). Many horizontal completions use a pressure-activated sleeve in the toe of the well to provide formation access after the casing integrity test. Most sleeves open at a pressure in excess of the formation breakdown pressure, after which the wellbore pressure declines toward reservoir pressure. This study first introduces the concept of the POFOT as a novel physical test. A new test method must demonstrate that it accesses the formation of interest and that the data obtained are applicable. A workflow is developed to demonstrate this and is applied to falloff data from POFOTs conducted in five horizontal wells completed in five formations. The results show that the fluid leaving the port is highly likely to break down both the cement sheath and the matrix and create a fracture which then closes. Observation of the well pressure after port opening resembles that from a DFIT. However, without a fixed-duration and constant-rate injection period, there is no accepted method to apply. Nevertheless, both qualitative and quantitative analyses of the falloff data provide a good estimation of reservoir pressure with a reasonable approximation of fracture closure when compared with the estimates from DFIT analysis from offset wells. The key challenges in parameter estimation, besides the development of an appropriate analysis method, are short falloff data and noisy early-time data due to wellbore resonance (WBR), low-resolution gauges, and change in sampling frequency.

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