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Collecting single-phase retrograde gas samples at near-dewpoint reservoir pressure in carbonates using a pump-out formation tester with an oval pad

Proceedings Title : Proc. Indon. Petrol. Assoc., 32nd Ann. Conv., 2008

Collecting representative, single-phase retrograde gas samples from heterogeneous fractured carbonate formations is challenging, especially for cases in which the reservoir pressure narrowly exceeds the dewpoint. Conventional wireline probe/packer assemblies are undesirable in this situation because their small diameter probes increase the pressure drawdown, compared to other available intake configurations. Furthermore, the likelihood of establishing hydraulic communication with an open fracture or vug is low with a ½-in. diameter probe, compared to setting straddle packers spanning a 1-m formation interval. The straddle packer intake geometry reduces the drawdown pressure required to establish flow, thus maintaining the flowing pressure above the dewpoint and preventing the onset of unwanted condensation. Inflatable straddle packers can be run with pumpout test tools, but they have temperature, pressure, and operational limitations. The new Oval Pad* (A mark of Halliburton Energy Services) design, an elongated oval-shaped probe/pad assembly, possesses many of the advantages of dual packers without their limitations. Like a straddle packer, the Oval Pad tool is effective when testing thinly laminated and tight formations as well as fractured or vuggy carbonates. The oval shape enables the pad to encompass a significant vertical length of the borehole while establishing a pressure seal with the formation. A retrograde gas reservoir is contained within the vuggy carbonates in the Jambi Merang area of South Sumatra. Here the reservoir pressure narrowly exceeds the dewpoint. Pressure must be maintained above the dewpoint during sampling operations to prevent unwanted phase separation. The RDT pump-out tester was fitted with Oval Pad and nitrogen-charged sample bottles to collect single-phase samples and to keep the phase intact until PVT properties can be analyzed in the laboratory. These samples were necessary to determine laboratory PVT properties and to define a production strategy. This paper presents the details and challenges of the successful collection of single-phase samples in this environment.

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