Introduction
Subsurface production of hydrocarbon has to do with the movement of fluid from the
reservoir through the wellbore to the wellhead. This fluid movement is divided into
two as depicted in Fig. 9.1.
The flow of fluids (hydrocarbons) from the reservoir rock to the wellbore is
termed the inflow. The inflow performance represents fluid production behavior of
a well’s flowing pressure and production rate. This differs from one well to another
especially in heterogeneous reservoirs. The Inflow Performance Relationship (IPR)
for a well is the relationship between the flow rate of the well (q), average reservoir
pressure (Pe) and the flowing pressure of the well (Pwf). In single phase flow, this
relationship is a straight line but when gas is moving in the reservoir, at a pressure
below the bubble point, this is not a linear relationship.
A well starts flowing if the flowing pressure exceeds the backpressure that the
producing fluid exerts on the formation as it moves through the production system.
When this condition holds, the well attains its absolute flow potential.
The backpressure or bottomhole pressure has the following components:
• Hydrostatic pressure of the producing fluid column
• Friction pressure caused by fluid movement through the tubing, wellhead and
surface equipment
• Kinetic or potential losses due to diameter restrictions, pipe bends or elevation
changes.
The IPR is often required for estimating well capacity, designing well completion, designing tubing string, optimizing well production, nodal analysis calculations, and designing artificial lift.
Factors Affecting IPR
Factors influencing the shape of the IPR are the pressure drop, viscosity, formation
volume factor, skin and relative permeability across the reservoir.
There are several existing empirical correlations developed for IPR. This are:
9.3 Straight Line IPR Model
When the flow rate is plotted against the pressure drop, it gives a straight line from
the origin with slope as the productivity index as shown in the figure below.
Steps for Construction of Straight Line IPR
Step 1: Obtain a stabilize flow test data
Step 2: Determine the well productivity
Step 3: Assume different pressure value to zero in a tabular form
Step 4: Calculate the rate corresponding to the assume pressure
Step 5: Make a plot of rate versus pressure
9.4 Wiggins’s Method IPR Model
Wiggins (1993) developed the following generalized empirical three phase IPR
similar to Vogel’s correlation based on his developed analytical model in 1991:
For Oil
Klins and Majcher IPR Model
Based on Vogel’s work, Klins and Majcher (1992) developed the following IPR that
takes into account the change in bubble-point pressure and reservoir pressure.
Standing’s MethodThe model developed by Standing (1970) to predict future inflow performance
relationship of a well as a function of reservoir pressure was an extension of Vogel’s
model (1968).
Vogel’s Method
Undersaturated Oil Reservoir
An undersaturated reservoir is a system whose pressure is greater than the bubble
point pressure of the reservoir fluid. For the fact that the pressure of the reservoir is
greater than the bubble point pressure does not mean that as production increases for
a period of time, the pressure will not go below the bubble point pressure. Hence,
careful evaluation will lead to a right decision and vice versa.
Since the reservoirs are tested regularly, it means that the stabilized test can be
conducted below or above the bubble point pressure. Thus, for:
Case: pressure above bubble point
From stabilized test data point, the productivity index is:
Vogel IPR Model for Saturated Oil ReservoirsThis is a reservoir whose pressure is below the bubble point pressure of the fluid. In
this case, we calculate the maximum oil flow rate from the stabilized test and then
generate the IPR model. Mathematically
Fetkovich’s Model
According to Tarek (2010), the model developed by Fetkovich in 1973 for undersaturated and saturated region, was an expansion of Muskat and Evinger (1942)
model derived from pseudosteady-state flow equation to observe the IPR nonlinear
flow behavior.
9.8.1 Undersaturated Fetkovich IPR Model
Saturated Fetkovich IPR Model
Cheng Horizontal IPR Model
Cheng (1990) presented a form of Vogel’s equation for horizontal wells that is based
on the results of a numerical simulator. The proposed expression has the following
form
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