In the development of coalbed methane(CBM)reservoirs using multistage fractured horizontal wells,there often exist areas that are either repeatedly stimulated or completely unstimulated between fracturing stages,leadi...In the development of coalbed methane(CBM)reservoirs using multistage fractured horizontal wells,there often exist areas that are either repeatedly stimulated or completely unstimulated between fracturing stages,leading to suboptimal reservoir performance.Currently,there is no well-established method for accurately evaluating the effectiveness of such stimulation.This study introduces,for the first time,the concept of the Fracture Network Bridging Coefficient(FNBC)as a novel metric to assess stimulation performance.By quantitatively coupling the proportions of unstimulated and overstimulated volumes,the FNBC effectively characterizes the connectivity and efficiency of the fracture network.A background grid calibration method is developed to quantify the stage-controlled volume,effectively stimulated volume,unstimulated volume,and repeatedly stimulated volume among different stages of horizontal wells.Furthermore,an optimization model is constructed by taking the FNBC as the objective function and the fracturing injection rate and fluid volume as optimization variables.The Simultaneous Perturbation Stochastic Approximation(SPSA)algorithm is employed to iteratively perturb and optimize these variables,progressively improving the FNBC until the optimal displacement rate and fluid volume corresponding to the maximum FNBC are obtained.Field application in a typical CBM multistage fractured horizontal well in China demonstrates that the FNBC increased from 0.358 to 0.539(a 50.6% improvement),with the injection rate rising from 16 m^(3)/min to 24 m^(3)/min and the average fluid volume per stage increasing from 2490 m^(3) to 3192 m^(3),significantly enhancing the stimulation effectiveness.This research provides theoretical support for designing high-efficiency stimulation strategies in unconventional reservoirs under dynamic limits.展开更多
基金the financial support from National Natural Science Foundation of China(No.52474029)Strategic and Applied Scientific Research Project of PetroChina Company Limited(2023ZZ18,2023ZZ18YJ04).
文摘In the development of coalbed methane(CBM)reservoirs using multistage fractured horizontal wells,there often exist areas that are either repeatedly stimulated or completely unstimulated between fracturing stages,leading to suboptimal reservoir performance.Currently,there is no well-established method for accurately evaluating the effectiveness of such stimulation.This study introduces,for the first time,the concept of the Fracture Network Bridging Coefficient(FNBC)as a novel metric to assess stimulation performance.By quantitatively coupling the proportions of unstimulated and overstimulated volumes,the FNBC effectively characterizes the connectivity and efficiency of the fracture network.A background grid calibration method is developed to quantify the stage-controlled volume,effectively stimulated volume,unstimulated volume,and repeatedly stimulated volume among different stages of horizontal wells.Furthermore,an optimization model is constructed by taking the FNBC as the objective function and the fracturing injection rate and fluid volume as optimization variables.The Simultaneous Perturbation Stochastic Approximation(SPSA)algorithm is employed to iteratively perturb and optimize these variables,progressively improving the FNBC until the optimal displacement rate and fluid volume corresponding to the maximum FNBC are obtained.Field application in a typical CBM multistage fractured horizontal well in China demonstrates that the FNBC increased from 0.358 to 0.539(a 50.6% improvement),with the injection rate rising from 16 m^(3)/min to 24 m^(3)/min and the average fluid volume per stage increasing from 2490 m^(3) to 3192 m^(3),significantly enhancing the stimulation effectiveness.This research provides theoretical support for designing high-efficiency stimulation strategies in unconventional reservoirs under dynamic limits.