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The Flowing Gas

Material Balance
L. Mattar, R. McNeil
Fekete Associates Inc.

Abstract Classical Material Balance


The classical material balance expresses a relationship between
The traditional material balance (p/z) plot for gas pools
the average pressure in the reservoir and the amount of gas pro-
requires fully built-up reservoir pressures, obtained by shutting-
duced. When there has been no production, the pressure equals the
in the wells. The procedure described in this presentation does
initial reservoir pressure; when all the gas has been produced, the
not require shut-in of wells. Instead, it utilizes information nor-
pressure in the reservoir is zero. In the case where the reservoir
mally obtained but not usually used by reservoir engineers to
acts like a tank and there is no external pressure maintenance, the
quantify the original gas-in-placethe daily gas production
relationship between pressure and cumulative production is
rates and flowing pressures.
approximately linear. If the compressibility factor, z, is taken into
The classical pseudo-steady state analysis and its shortcom-
account, then the material balance plot (p/z versus cumulative pro-
ings are discussed. In addition, a new procedure called the
duction, Q) is a straight line going from the initial pressure, pi/z,
flowing material balance is introduced. This procedure con-
to the original gas-in-place, OGIP. Deviations from this straight
sists of a p/z plot of the flowing pressure (as opposed to the
line can be caused by external recharge or offset drainage. For the
average shut-in reservoir pressure) versus cumulative produc-
purposes of this presentation, we are only considering reservoirs
tion. A straight line drawn through the flowing pressure data and
which have straight line material balance plot of p/z versus Q. The
then, a parallel line, drawn through the initial reservoir pressure
more comprehensive material balance procedures for complex
will give the original gas-in-place. A variation of this method,
reservoirs have been treated extensively by Havlena and Odeh(1).
using wellhead pressures (tubing and casing) is discussed and a
In order to generate a traditional p/z plot, the well is shut-in at
field example is included. The method is a very practical and
several points along its producing life and the average reservoir
powerful tool for the early quantification of reserves.
pressure is obtained for each point from a properly conducted
buildup test and interpretation. The duration of the shut-in is often
not long enough to directly measure current average reservoir
Introduction pressure. Consequently, extrapolation of the build-up data and
correction of the extrapolated pressure to obtain the average reser-
The determination of gas reserves is a fundamental calculation voir pressure are required. As a result, problems with testing and
in reservoir engineering. This information is crucial for the devel- interpretation comprise some of the key causes of erratic pressure
opment of a production strategy, design of facilities, contracts and data often observed in material balance plots.
valuation of the reserves. Classically, reserves are estimated in
three ways: volumetric, material balance and production decline.
The volumetric and material balance methods estimate original Flowing Data
gas-in-place whereas production decline yields an estimate of The flow of gases through porous media can be divided into
recoverable gas. two major categoriestransient and stabilized. Transient flow
Volumetrically determined reserves can be very imprecise, behaviour is dominated by reservoir characteristics such as perme-
because the method depends upon detailed knowledge of many ability, skin, degree of heterogeneity, location of boundaries, etc.,
reservoir characteristics that are often unknown such as the areal and a complex function of time (log time). Stabilized flow, on the
extent of the pool. The material balance method uses actual reser- other hand, is dominated by reserves and a simple time function
voir performance data and therefore is generally accepted as the (t).
most accurate procedure for estimating original gas-in-place. High and medium permeability reservoirs reach stabilized flow
Once determined, the original gas-in-place can be used to reliably relatively quicklywithin a few weeksbut low permeability
forecast the recoverable raw gas reserves under various operating reservoirs can take a year or more to stabilize. When a well is in
scenarios. The production decline method also uses reservoir per- stabilized flow, its behaviour is represented by the pseudo-steady
formance data but the result is an estimate of recoverable raw gas state equations found in the well testing literature(2). At the heart
reserves under the existing operating conditions. A change in of all these equations lies the material balance equation, in one
these operations, for example a lowering of the compressor suc- form or another. The following discussion will describe several
tion pressure, can change the deliverability and the recoverable procedures for determining the original gas-in-place. All these
raw gas reserves. The original gas-in-place is therefore difficult to methods are variations of the material balance equation, with dif-
ascertain from production decline. ferent assumptions and approximations.
Because stabilized flow is dominated by reserves, it should be
It has been understood for many years that estimates of original possible to estimate the reserves in a pool, if gas rate, pressure and
gas-in-place are theoretically possible using measured gas vol- time data are available during the period of stabilized flow. Thus
umes and flowing pressures. The goal of this paper is to take the for medium and high permeability reservoirs, we have the poten-
flowing material balance from a theoretical possibility to a practi- tial to calculate the reserves from flowing pressure data without
cal reality. having to shut-in the well and lose valuable production.

52 The Journal of Canadian Petroleum Technology


FIGURE 1: Pseudo-steady state analysis. FIGURE 2: Illustration of pseudo-steady state.

Practical ApplicationAlternative but not so good in gas since it can introduce a significant degree
of error in cases where depletion (declining reservoir pressure) is
Methods occurring.
The data set used in this paper was taken from a producing well In an effort to account for the change in the gas compressibility
for which accurate wellhead pressure and gas volumes were as depletion progresses, c was calculated at an average flowing
recorded for over five months. During the first two months of this sand-face pressure of 8,500 kPa (average sand-face flowing pres-
test the well flowed at a fairly constant gas rate of approximately sure during pseudo-steady state portion of the flow period).
250 103m3/d. Tubing and casing pressures were measured daily Substituting these values in the above equation gives:
and the casing pressures were converted to sand-face pressures
using a multi-step Cullender and Smith(3) calculation. 2 10 3 250 12, 900 6 3
OGIP = 10 m = 64 10 6 m3
A review of the well test data and the core analysis indicates 1.3 10 4 780, 000 ........(2)
that this formation possesses a good permeability to gas (50 mD).
The time to stabilization (assuming a one section spacing unit) is
approximately two weeks indicating that the bulk of the produc- If the gas compressibility had been calculated at the initial pres-
tion data represents stabilized (pseudo-steady state) flow. sure of 12,900 kPa, the OGIP would have been 94 106m3.
The remainder of this paper makes use of the established per- As indicated above, the classical pseudo-steady state analysis
formance based methods to estimate the original gas-in-place and has an inherent weakness with respect to the value of gas com-
then presents several variations of the flowing material balance pressibility employed. This analysis procedure will estimate origi-
procedure as practical alternatives. nal gas-in-place optimistically unless a satisfactory method for
incorporating the impact of depletion on gas compressibility can
be developed.
Method 1: Classical Pseudo-Steady State
Analysis(PSS) Method 2: Flowing Material Balance
This is the standard method of pseudo-steady analysis (FMB)
described in the well testing literature(2,4). A plot is made of pres-
sure squared (or pseudo pressure) versus time on cartesian coordi- A clear understanding of what pseudo-steady state is can pro-
nates. A straight line is drawn through the appropriate portion of vide a new insight into calculating reserves by a procedure similar
the data (pseudo-steady state) corresponding to a constant produc- to the traditional material balance. The difference is that this
tion rate. The slope of this straight line is used to calculate the method uses the flowing pressure rather than the shut-in pressure.
gas-filled pore volume, and hence, the original gas-in-place When a reservoir is in pseudo-steady state flow, the pressure at all
(OGIP) (ERCB Guide G-3, variation of Equation 4-29 in SI locations in the reservoir declines at the same rate. This is illus-
units)(4). trated in Figure 2, which depicts pressures in the reservoir at all
locations (the wellbore on the left, and the exterior boundary of
the reservoir on the right). Each of the lines one, two and three
2.929 10 2 q 10 3 p i 288
OGIP = represents the pseudo-steady state pressure in the reservoir when
c s l o p e / 2 101.325
4 the well is flowing at a constant rate. The sketch illustrates that
the pressure decline from time one to time two, is the same
throughout the reservoir (the curves are parallel). The same is
true between curves two and three.
2 10 3 q p i 6 3
= 10 m The traditional material balance procedure would be to shut-in
cslope .....................................................................(1) the well at time one, and let the pressure in the reservoir stabilize.
This would give an average reservoir pressure pR1. Similarly, the
Figure 1 shows a plot of pressure squared (casing pressure con- pressure profile in the reservoir, at times two and three would
verted to sandface) versus time in days. The slope of this line dur- result in shut-in average reservoir pressures of pR2 and pR3. It is
ing the pseudo-steady state period is 780,000 kPa2/day. evident that the drop in pressure from pR1 to pR2 to p R3 is the same
Values for the gas rate, q, (250 103m3/d) and initial reservoir as the drop in pressure at any selected point along the curves one,
pressure, p i, (12,900 kPa) are easily obtainable. However, a value two and three (the curves are parallel). A convenient point for
for the gas compressibility, c, is more problematic. In a gas reser- pressure analysis is the pressure at the wellbore. Remembering
voir, c varies as 1/p, but the pseudo-steady state analysis procedure that curves one, two and three represent a flowing well, it
traditionally assumes the gas compressibility is constant at initial becomes evident that a plot of the flowing wellbore pressure (pwf1,
conditions. This assumption is good for an undersaturated liquid pwf2, pwf3) should be parallel to a plot of the average reservoir

53 The Journal of Canadian Petroleum Technology


FIGURE 3: Flowing material balance. FIGURE 4: Flowing material balance (casing pressures).

pressure (pR1, pR2, pR3). potential of the well or wells is used most commonly. It allows
The above discussion illustrates that a material balance plot forecasting of the gas deliverability at any given flowing pressure,
using the flowing wellbore pressures (pwf), should be parallel to or conversely, the flowing pressure at a given gas rate. Such a pro-
the material balance plot using the average static reservoir pres- gram was used to model the flowing wellhead pressure for various
sure (pR). This procedure, referred to as the flowing material magnitudes of gas-in-place. The flow rate was set to a constant
balance, consists of a plot of pwf/z, where pwf is the flowing 250 10 3m3/d and the decline in wellhead flowing pressure plotted
sand-face pressure at the wellbore (or for that matter it could be for various original gas-in-place estimates. The results are sum-
any location in the reservoir) versus cumulative production. A marized in Figure 5 with the best match to the measured data
straight line drawn through the flowing sandface pressure data and found to occur using an original gas-in-place of 76 106m3. The
then extrapolated parallel from the initial reservoir pressure gives range of trial OGIP estimates used to generate the match was from
the original gas-in-place, OGIP. The flowing material balance 70 106m3 to 90 106m3.
performed on this example (Figure 3) using flowing sandface
pressures calculated from casing pressure measurements results in Method 4: Approximate Wellhead Material
an OGIP = 71 106m3. Since the well was flowing through tubing Balance(AWMB)
the calculation from surface casing pressure to sandface pressure
could be done using a static column of gas. It is not always recognized that the change in the compressibili-
It is evident from Figures 1 and 3 that a plot for casing well- ty factor, z, in material balance calculations is often small (it can
head pressures has a similar trend to the sand-face pressures. be of the same order of magnitude as the errors in the data!). If z
Thus, a flowing material balance plot can also be constructed is ignored, a material balance calculation (plot of flowing sand-
using the casing pressures (instead of sand-face pressures) yield- face pressure, pwf, versus cumulative gas production, Q) can give
ing, in this case, an OGIP of 72 106m3 as shown in Figure 4. a very reasonable approximation of the OGIP. The initial point p
When using casing pressure data to estimate OGIP, the line drawn = p i and end point p = 0 are correct, but theoretically, since z is
parallel to the data must pass through the initial wellhead pres- ignored, the line joining them is not necessarily straight. If it is
sure not the initial reservoir pressure. further recognized that wellhead pressure measurements are repre-
sentative of bottomhole conditions (no fluid influx into the well-
Method 3: Tank Model bore), a procedure similar to Method 2, but ignoring z, can be
used to generate a reasonable wellhead material balance calcula-
In gas deliverability forecasting, a tank reservoir model tion. A line drawn through the data and then a line parallel
incorporating the material balance equation and deliverability through the initial static wellhead pressure will give an estimate of

FIGURE 5: Simulated flowing pressure decline using tank model. FIGURE 6: Approximate wellhead Flowing material balance.

February 1998, Volume 37, No. 2 54


Conclusion
The original gas-in-place determined from the flowing data
(pressure and production) is approximately 71 106m3. This is sig-
nificantly different from the volumetric original gas-in-place cal-
culation of 500 106m3 assuming a one section spacing and indi-
cates the pool has a much smaller areal extent than one section.
The procedure presented in this paper provides a very practical
tool for estimating gas-in-place using data generally available in
normal production operations. In addition, production losses can
be minimized by not having to shut-in wells.
It is possible to determine original gas-in-place with reasonable
certainty when shut-in pressures are not available.

NOMENCLATURE
c = gas compressibility, 1/kPa
OGIP = Original Gas-In-Place, 106m3
pi = initial reservoir pressure, kPa
pwf = sandface flowing pressure, kPa
FIGURE 7: Gas rate decline. Q = cumulative production, 106m3
q = gas rate, 103m3/d
the original gas-in-place. For the data used in this example, the slope = kPa2/day
approximate wellhead material balance plot is shown on Figure 6 T = temperature, K
and gives an OGIP = 71 106m3. z = compressibility factor
This is a simplified material balance plot based on wellhead
pressures (rather than reservoir pressures) and it ignores z factor. REFERENCES
Our experience with this type of analysis indicates that it is a very 1. H A V L E N A , D. and O D E H, A.S., The Material Balance as an
practical and acceptable procedure. Equation of a Straight Line; Journal of Petroleum Technology,
August 1963.
Method 5: Production Decline 2. EARLOUGHER, R.C., Advances in Well Test Analysis; Monograph
Vol. 5, SPE AIME, 1977.
A traditional production decline plot is shown in Figure 7 for 3. CULLENDER, M.H. and R.V. SMITH, Practical Solution of Gas
the example case. For the first two months, the rate was restricted Flow Equations for Well and Pipelines with Large Temperature
at approximately 250 103m3/d after which production from the Gradients; Trans. AIME, Vol. 207, p. 281.
well began to decline. This decline can be used to extrapolate to 4. E.R.C.B, Gas Well TestingTheory and Practice; Energy Resources
raw recoverable reserves not OGIP. The raw recoverable reserves Conservation Board, Alberta, Canada, 1979, Fourth Edition.
estimated for this case are 37 106m3 which is consistent with the
P r o v e n a n c e Original Petroleum Society manuscript, T h e
estimated OGIP reflecting a recovery factor of approximately
Flowing Gas Material Balance, (95-77), first presented at the
50% under present operating conditions.
46th Annual Technical Meeting, May 14-17, 1995, in Banff,
Alberta. Abstract submitted for review January 17, 1995; editorial
comments sent to the author(s) May 2, 1997; revised manuscript
Practical Observations received June 23, 1997; paper approved for pre-press June 24,
The practical application of this procedure requires that certain 1997; final approval September 4, 1997.
conditions be met. First, flowing pressures in the reservoir must
have reached pseudo-steady state. Second, the well must be
choked such that production is independent of line pressure and it Authors Biographies
must be flowing at relatively constant gas rates. Although pseudo-
steady state theory requires a constant gas rate, practice has shown Louis Mattar is president of Fekete
it does not necessarily have to be enforced when flowing pressure Associates Inc. He has co-authored 28 pub-
is plotted versus cumulative production. Third, once the well lications including the ERCB guide G-3
begins to track gathering system line pressures, it begins its termi- (Gas Well TestingTheory and Practice).
nal gas rate decline and the procedure is no longer valid. He is a member of APEGGA, SPE and The
Application of this procedure seems to work best for good per- Petroleum Society. He graduated from the
meability gas reservoirs not affected by external drive sources. University of Calgary with a M.Sc. degree
in 1973.

Summary
Several methods are presented for estimating the original gas- Ralph McNeil is senior engineer with
in-place without shutting in a well. The calculated values for this Fekete Associates Inc. specializing gas
particular case are summarized below: gathering system modelling and reservoir
OGIP engineering. He graduated from the
(106m3) Technical University of Nova Scotia in
1980 with a bachelor of engineering in
Method 1 (PSS) 64
chemical engineering.
Method 2 (FMB) Reservoir 71
(FMB) Wellhead 72
Method 3 (Tank) 76
Method 4 (AWMB) 71
Average 71

55 The Journal of Canadian Petroleum Technology

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