Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10142712 | Journal of Natural Gas Science and Engineering | 2018 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
Light hydrocarbons produced from unconventional tight shale reservoirs with matrix permeability in nano-Darcy range accounts for more than half of the petroleum production in the United States in the past several years. This has been enabled mainly by the drilling of long horizontal wells coupled with extensive hydraulic fracturing. A typical fracturing job for a horizontal well requires two to five million gallons of water which imposes significant challenges in many areas of the world that lack water resources. In addition, treatment and disposal of produced fracturing fluids can be expensive and may negatively impact the environment. Here we show a 'water-free' stimulation method to produce light hydrocarbons from the extremely tight reservoirs using electromagnetic (EM) waves to heat the formation and elevate pore-water pressure. We demonstrated in the laboratory that microwave heating pulverized shales and other tight rocks without confinement and generated extensive fractures within shales with 15â¯MPa isotropic confinement pressures. Our calculation indicates that for typical shale reservoirs pore-water pressure can increase to 90â¯MPa or higher that is sufficient to stimulate the formation for production with a less than 100â¯Â°C temperature increase of the reservoir. Using a simplified coupled model of EM heating and thermal diffusion, we estimated that with practically reasonable amount of power input the EM heating can stimulate a sufficiently large volume of tight reservoirs to produce light hydrocarbons.
Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Earth and Planetary Sciences (General)
Authors
Jin-Hong Chen, Daniel T. Georgi, Hui-Hai Liu,