Periodic changes in wellbore temperature and pressure caused by the cyclic injecting and producing of gas storage wells affect wellbore integrity. To explore the distribution and influencing factors of wellbore temperature and pressure during gas storage well injection-production processes, based on energy conservation, momentum theorem, and the transient heat transfer mechanism of the wellbore, a temperature and pressure coupling model for gas storage injection-production wellbores was established, and a piecewise iterative method was used to solve the model equations. Compared with the field data, the predicted relative errors of the wellhead temperature and pressure were 2.30% and 2.07%, respectively, indicating that the coupling model has a high predictive accuracy. The influences of the injection-production conditions, tubing diameter, and overall heat transfer coefficient on the wellbore temperature and pressure distributions were analyzed through an example. When the gas injection flow rate increased by 1.5 times, the bottomhole temperature decreased by 37%. Doubling the overall heat transfer coefficient resulted in a 10% rise in the bottomhole temperature. An increase of 0.3 times in the gas injection pressure led to a 31% increase in bottomhole pressure. With a 1.5-fold increase in the gas production flow rate, the wellhead temperature rose by 28%, and the wellhead pressure dropped by 20%. The research in this paper can serve as a guide for the optimization design and safe operation of gas storage wells.
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