Industrial Minerals - Solution Extraction of Salt Using Wells Connected by Hydraulic Fracture

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
C. A. Bays W. C. Peters M. W. Pullen
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
12
File Size:
3631 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1961

Abstract

During the past three and a half years considerable improvement in the techniques of solution extraction of salt has been made by the use of wells which are cross-connected by hydraulic fracture at the base of the salt. Fracture is initiated by the application of hydraulic pressure. Underreaming and perforating techniques are used to control initiation. The fracture is then extended by continuous pumping until a pressure communication is obtained. Pressure communication is followed by washing-through to obtain a low-pressure connection. Well construction using non-shrinking cements that will bond with the salt and with associated strata is essential to the process. The connecting procedure described permits solution to attack the salt deposit from its base upward, thereby permitting greater recovery, fewer well repairs, better saturation of brine, and overall economy of development and operation. The fracture method of cross-connection requires special pumping of the fluid and is limited by present experience to initial well spacings up to about 1200 feet. The method has been used in bedded salts and is applicable for wells in salt domes. Since spring of 1956, new developnents in salt extraction wells have followed procedures substantially different from those in prior use. Although multiple well systems, connected either by the natural consequence of the solution process or by undercutting under protective pads, have been used previously, the past three and a half years have brought about new designs and new operation procedures based on cross-connection of the wells using hydraulic fracture. To date these techniques have been applied largely in the bedded salt deposits of Michigan, Ontario, Ohio, West Virginia, and New York. To the writers' knowledge they have not been used in salt dome wells. The methods have not yet been in use for a sufficient period to permit any statistical comparison with the older methods. It is evident from experience to date that the methods result in higher recoveries, lower capital and operating costs, better saturation of produced brine, reduced well maintenance and repair, and in considerably fewer production units to insure
Citation

APA: C. A. Bays W. C. Peters M. W. Pullen  (1961)  Industrial Minerals - Solution Extraction of Salt Using Wells Connected by Hydraulic Fracture

MLA: C. A. Bays W. C. Peters M. W. Pullen Industrial Minerals - Solution Extraction of Salt Using Wells Connected by Hydraulic Fracture. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1961.

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