History of Well Shooting
Oil and gas wells have been stimulated with
high-energy explosives since the late 1800's. It appears, however, that
the term "well shooting" originated many years before this in days
when a water well was sometimes rejuvenated by shooting a rifle down the
well. Well shooting as discussed herein refers to any rapid release of
energy from a chemical reaction in a wellbore for the purpose of stimulating
production, presumably by fracturing the reservoir rock. This includes
explosives (solid, liquid, and gas) and propellants that deflagrate rather than
explode. In a broad sense, well shooting has been applied in several
geotechnical fields; e.g., preparation of oil shale beds for true in situ
processing, preparation of underground mineral deposits for solution mining,
etc.
Problems of wellbore damage, safety hazards, and unpredictable
results have reduced the relative number of wells stimulated by high-strength
explosives. In recent years hydraulic fracturing has been favored, and
sophisticated techniques, equipment, fracturing fluids, and proppant have been
developed to optimize the hydraulic fracturing process.
Unfortunately, similar efforts toward general understanding and
process optimization have been lacking for well shooting. However, recent
finding have shed new light on the process of dynamic wellbore fracturing.
These findings indicate that vast improvements are achieved using
"tailored-pulse" loading techniques.
Several tailored-pulse concepts rely on the use of propellants
which deflagrate rather than detonate. Unlike explosives, the burn front
in these materials travels slower than the sound speed, and the burning rate can
be varied over a wide range. Pressure-time behavior of propellants differ
from explosives in that peak pressures are lower, and burn times are
longer. These concepts are more fully described in SPE/DOE
8934 which is a detailed technical paper written about tailored-pulse well
shooting studies conducted by Sandia National Laboratories.