A New Evaluation Method of Recoverable Reserves and Its Application in Carbonate Gas Reservoirs

ACS OMEGA(2024)

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Abstract
The propagation pattern of pressure drawdown effectively reflects the recoverable reserves range around the gas well and serves as a crucial basis for development strategies. However, it is not easy to detect the pressure propagation boundary near the producing well, especially in low-permeability reservoirs where the drainage radius is small. Physical simulation experiments can serve as a crucial method as the whole pressure profile and gas rate can be obtained in real time. Using long core plugs with permeabilities of 2.300 mD, 0.486 mD, and 0.046 mD, physical simulation experiments were carried out under varying initial water saturation (Swi) conditions of 0%, 20%, 40%, and 55% to observe the dynamic variations in pressure profiles of the core plugs during pressure depletion. Based on the material balance equation and pressure profile characteristics of the core plugs, a method for evaluating recoverable reserves within a well-spacing radius through laboratory experiments was proposed and performed. Mechanism analysis was conducted based on mercury injection tests, and suggestions for enhancing gas recovery were presented. Research findings indicate that lower permeability, higher initial water saturation, and higher abandonment gas rates result in reduced reserve utilization range and degree. Under abandoned gas rate conditions, for type I and II rocks, the pore radius is primarily distributed between 0.1 and 1 mu m, the pressure drawdown can reach the well-spacing radius of 600 m, and the ultimate recovery efficiencies are more than 70.6%. For type III rocks, the pore radius mainly falls below 0.1 mu m, the drainage radius is smaller than 10 m with Swi greater than 40%, and the ultimate recovery is below 10%. This paper provides an experimental method for recoverable reserves evaluation while formulating gas reservoir development strategies before well testing.
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