Litcius/Paper detail

Sand production due to chemical-rock interaction. A review

Ebikapaye Peretomode, Gbenga Oluyemi, Nadimul Haque Faisal

2022Engineering Failure Analysis18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Oilfield chemicals are utilized in treating reservoir formations, wellbore completions, wellbore drilling, and to enhance reservoir productivity, which exerts pressure on the formation. Pressure from these processes cause the formation rock to weaken, and the weakened rock begins to detach, thereby producing formation sand as well as reservoir fluid (petroleum). In petroleum industry, sanding poses major challenges with significant financial consequences. The negative financial implications of sand production make it crucial to reduce sand production at the same time as optimizing reservoir fluid production and maintaining facility integrity. An effective way to manage sand production depends on several factors, so a methodical approach is needed. The paper discusses sand production from oilfield chemicals-rock interactions, models that are used to forecast sand production, personnel safety, and maintaining production facilities. In addition to determining sanding onset, some models can detect the rate or quantity of sand produced, which can help with sand management.

Topics & Concepts

Petroleum engineeringWellboreProduction (economics)DrillingProductivityProduction ratePetroleumOil sandsPetroleum reservoirPetroleum industryGeologyMining engineeringEnvironmental scienceEngineeringEnvironmental engineeringProcess engineeringMacroeconomicsAsphaltEconomicsCartographyGeographyPaleontologyMechanical engineeringHydraulic Fracturing and Reservoir AnalysisDrilling and Well EngineeringReservoir Engineering and Simulation Methods