SPE 23980
Pressure
Transient Digital Data Acquisition and Analysis from Acoustic Echometric
Surveys in Pumping Wells
J.N. McCoy, Echometer Co.; A.L. Podio, U. of Texas; and
Dieter Becker, Echometer Co. SPE Members
This paper was prepared for presentation at the 1992
SPE Permian Basin Oil and Gas Recovery Conference held in Midland, Texas,
March 18-20. 1992.
Increased efficiency in production operations requires
that the formation and completion characteristics be well defined and
analyzed before committing funds to stimulation and/or workover
operations. Such information is generally obtained from analysis of
pressure transient data measured with wireline recorders. Until recent
times, these measurements have been seldom made in pumping wells, due to
the time required to trip the rods and pump out of the tubing in order to
run the wireline pressure recorders. This need spurred the development of
techniques for calculation of transient bottomhole pressure from surface
measurements.
This paper describes the design and application of a
fully digital system for automatic calculation of bottomhole pressure from
echometric surveys of the annular fluid level. This portable system
integrates specially designed high resolution A/D conversion and
conditioning with advanced signal processing and digital filtering
techniques. This results in very accurate determination of the depth to
the fluid level, even in the presence of background noise caused by
gaseous liquid columns.
Automatic signal generation and recording is
undertaken by the software at predetermined, operator selected frequency
so as to maximize the quality of the pressure transient data. Surface
pressure and temperature measurements are used in conjunction with gas
gravity and gas acoustic velocity to determine the pressure at the
gas/liquid interface and the pressure at the sandface.
Graphic displays allow the operator to monitor the
progress of the transient test by plotting in real time the current status
of the well, the acoustic signals and the calculated pressures. Data that
has been acquired at that point can be plotted as standard transient
analysis graphs ( Horner, MDH, Log-Log etc.) Data files can be exported to
other analysis programs.
Copyright 1992, Society of Petroleum
Engineers Inc.
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