Detecting and Characterizing Fluid Leakage Through Wellbore Flaws Using Fiber-Optic Distributed Acoustic Sensing

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
العنوان: Detecting and Characterizing Fluid Leakage Through Wellbore Flaws Using Fiber-Optic Distributed Acoustic Sensing
المؤلفون: Ishtiaque Anwar, Bill Carey, Paul Johnson, Carly Donahue
المصدر: All Days.
بيانات النشر: ARMA, 2022.
سنة النشر: 2022
الوصف: ABSTRACT: A primary concern associated with the utilization of subsurface systems is that there may be pathways for fluid leakage from the resource storage, or disposal reservoir. Leakage of any fluid can contaminate groundwater, cause geo-environmental pollution, generate hazardous surface conditions, and potentially compromise the functionality of the subsurface system. A low-cost, innovative technique to detect and characterize fracture leakage that is functional over many years is needed for applications such as geothermal reservoirs, CO2 sequestration wells, deep borehole storage of nuclear waste, and strategic petroleum reserve caverns. In this experimental study, we investigate the use of fiber-optic distributed acoustic sensing (DAS) to measure dynamic strain changes caused by acoustic signals induced by fluid flow with an eventual goal of developing instrumentation and analytical techniques to detect and characterize the movement of fluids through leaky wellbores. In the first phase of the experiments reported here, we conducted fluid flow tests in a porous medium as an analog to a fracture filled with comminuted material. The measured effective permeability is then compared with the signals generated by the fiber-optic cable. The study indicated that acoustic signals generated from fluid flow through porous media could be effectively captured by the fiber-optic cable DAS technology. 1. INTRODUCTION Wellbores are used for gaining access to various subsurface systems such as underground fluid reserve (Miyazaki, 2009), CO2 sequestration (Watson and Bachu, 2008; Zhang and Bachu, 2011), geothermal energy development (Shadravan, Ghasemi, & Alfi, 2015), waste disposal, oil and gas exploration (Davies et al., 2014), etc. A primary concern associated with the utilization of subsurface systems is that there may be pathways for fluid leakage from the resource storage, or disposal reservoir through the wellbore flaws. Leakage of any fluid from a leaky wellbore can contaminate groundwater, cause geo-environmental pollution (Davies et al., 2014; Ingraffea, Wells, Santoro, & Shonkoff, 2014; Jackson, 2014), generate hazardous surface conditions, and potentially compromise the functionality of the subsurface system (Gasda, Celia, Wang, & Duguid, 2013). Researchers has identified different potential leakage pathways, including fractures in the cement or micro annuli from de-bonding at the cement-casing or cement-formation interface (Celia, Bachu, Nordbotten, Gasda, & Dahle, 2005; Theresa L Watson & Bachu, 2009) or the casing corrosion product (Anwar, Chojnicki, Bettin, Taha, & Stormont, 2019; Beltrán-Jiménez et al., 2021).
URL الوصول: https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_________::4faaa5bc9d77e45972a1fa396e7fe20b
https://doi.org/10.56952/arma-2022-0264
رقم الأكسشن: edsair.doi...........4faaa5bc9d77e45972a1fa396e7fe20b
قاعدة البيانات: OpenAIRE