Analysis of Erosion and Failure in the Sudden Expansion Fracturing Tubing of Deep Gas Wells

Author(s):  
Yan Xu ◽  
Zunce Wang ◽  
Sen Li ◽  
Fengxia Lv ◽  
Yuejuan Yan ◽  
...  

With the increasing of flow rate during fracturing in deep gas well, the erosion of fracturing tubing is an issue of immense concern to the industry. Based on the Euler-Euler two–fluid theory, the numerical simulations have been performed to predict the flow field in the sudden expansion fracturing tubing. The velocity distributions and sand concentration profiles are obtained, and the simulation results show that separation and reflux come into being in the sudden expansion fracturing tubing when pumping sand slurries at high rate, and the sand concentration increases at some regions. The erosion and failure of the fracturing tubing are relevant to the sand concentration, the velocity and the impact angle. The erosion model was established with the erosion experiment, and the numerical simulation results were used to describe the erosion rate of sudden expansion fracturing tubing according to the established erosion models. The mainly erosion region obtained through the simulation is basically agree with the failure region of tubing during fracturing in deep gas wells.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mauricio Espinosa ◽  
Jairo Leal ◽  
Ron Zbitowsky ◽  
Eduardo Pacheco

Abstract This paper highlights the first successful application of a field deployment of a high-temperature (HT) downhole shut-in tool (DHSIT) in multistage fracturing completions (MSF) producing retrograde gas condensate and from sour carbonate reservoirs. Many gas operators and service providers have made various attempts in the past to evaluate the long-term benefit of MSF completions while deploying DHSIT devices but have achieved only limited success (Ref. 1 and 2). During such deployments, many challenges and difficulties were faced in the attempt to deploy and retrieve those tools as well as to complete sound data interpretation to successfully identify both reservoir, stimulation, and downhole productivity parameters, and especially when having a combination of both heterogeneous rocks having retrograde gas pressure-volume-temperature (PVT) complexities. Therefore, a robust design of a DHSIT was needed to accurately shut-in the well, hold differential pressure, capture downhole pressure transient data, and thereby identify acid fracture design/conductivity, evaluate total KH, reduce wellbore storage effects, properly evaluate transient pressure effects, and then obtain a better understanding of frac geometry, reservoir parameters, and geologic uncertainties. Several aspects were taken into consideration for overcoming those challenges when preparing the DHSIT tool design including but not limited to proper metallurgy selection, enough gas flow area, impact on well drawdown, tool differential pressure, proper elastomer selection, shut-in time programming, internal completion diameter, and battery operation life and temperature. This paper is based on the first successful deployment and retrieval of the DHSIT in a 4-½" MSF sour carbonate gas well. The trial proved that all design considerations were important and took into consideration all well parameters. This project confirmed that DHSIT devices can successfully withstand the challenges of operating in sour carbonate MSF gas wells as well as minimize operational risk. This successful trial demonstrates the value of utilizing the DHSIT, and confirms more tangible values for wellbore conductivity post stimulation. All this was achieved by the proper metallurgy selection, maximizing gas flow area, minimizing the impact on well drawdown, and reducing well shut-in time and deferred gas production. Proper battery selection and elastomer design also enabled the tool to be operated at temperatures as high as 350 °F. The case study includes the detailed analysis of deployment and retrieval lessons learned, and includes equalization procedures, which added to the complexity of the operation. The paper captures all engineering concepts, tool design, setting packer mechanism, deployment procedures, and tool equalization and retrieval along with data evaluation and interpretation. In addition to lessons learned based on the field trial, various recommendations will be presented to minimize operational risk, optimize shut-in time and maximize data quality and interpretation. Utilizing the lessons learned and the developed procedures presented in this paper will allow for the expansion of this technology to different gas well types and formations as well as standardize use to proper evaluate the value of future MSF completions and stimulation designs.


2013 ◽  
Vol 397-400 ◽  
pp. 397-400
Author(s):  
Xing Liang ◽  
De Hui Liu ◽  
Jia Zhang Gui ◽  
Yun Min Xie ◽  
Jin Guang Huang

A mathematical model of hydropower units shaft is established to characterize the rotor motion with coupling faults which compose of mass eccentricity fault, parallel misalignment fault and angle misalignment fault, and then the simulation results is employed to analyze the impact weight of faults above for vibration and rubbing based on orthogonal test. The research showed that: the major-minor order of impact factors are mass eccentricity, parallel misalignment and angle misalignment. Additionally, the rotating rate is also related to the rotor vibration, and the high rate is easy to induce the rubbing under coupling faults.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Azraii Fikrie Azraii ◽  
Adhi Naharindra Adhi ◽  
Thian Hui Chie Hui Chie ◽  
Claire Chang Claire ◽  
Ridzuan Shaedin Ridzuan ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Jun Liu ◽  
Jianlong Tian

Submarine landslides are perhaps the most significant geohazard on the deep water oil and gas developments, especially on the pipelines. The impacted forces of submarine landslides on pipelines are usually expressed in terms of drag factors within a fluid mechanics framework. The drag factors mainly depend on an equivalent Reynolds number for the non-Newtonian debris material. In this paper, Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) numerical analysis was employed to analyze the impact forces of submarine landslides on free span pipelines. In these numerical simulations, influences on impact forces of debris material composition, attack angles and velocity of debris flow were discussed in detail. Based on the simulation results we find that the impact angle also has apparent influence on normal drag factors, but has little influence on longitudinal drag factors. Prediction formula are improved to better estimate normal and axial impact forces on pipelines at any attack angle within the fluid mechanics framework.


2020 ◽  
Vol 213 ◽  
pp. 02001
Author(s):  
Quan Hua Huang ◽  
Hong Jun Ding ◽  
Xing Yu Lin

At present, multiphase flow productivity calculation requires many parameters, and most of them only consider oil and gas two-phase flow, which is complicated and limited. Therefore, a reasonable productivity formula of condensate gas reservoir with producing water is needed. The three-zone model of condensate gas reservoirs is generally applied to the physical model for inferring productivity. On this basis, an improved model is established, which includes that different seepage characteristics are considered for different zones. Moreover, the effects of inclined angle and water production on gas wells are regarded as pseudo-skin factors and additional-skin factors. In addition, Zone I considers the effects of high-speed nonDarcy effect(HSND), starting pressure gradient, stress sensitivity, inclined angle and water production; Zone II is the same way excepting starting pressure gradient and stress sensitivity ; Zone III only considers the effects of inclined angle and water production. As a result, a productivity equation with multiple factors for condensate gas wells is established. Through analysing cases and influences in H gas reservoir X1 well, the HSND, starting pressure gradient, stress sensitivity and water production have a negative impact on gas well productivity, but the inclined angle is opposite. Founded that the starting pressure gradient impacts on productivity is less than the HSND because of the limited radius of Zone I; the impact of the HSND on productivity increases with the decreasing of bottom hole pressure; the impact of water production on gas well productivity is much higher. When the angle is over 60°, the effect of gas


2022 ◽  
pp. 1-19
Author(s):  
S. Liu ◽  
B. Yan ◽  
R. Liu ◽  
P. Dai ◽  
J. Yan ◽  
...  

Abstract The cooperative guidance problem of multiple inferior missiles intercepting a hypersonic target with the specific impact angle constraint in the two-dimensional plane is addressed in this paper, taking into consideration variations in a missile’s speed. The guidance law is designed with two subsystems: the direction of line-of-sight (LOS) and the direction of normal to LOS. In the direction of LOS, by applying the algebraic graph theory and the consensus theory, the guidance command is designed to make the system convergent in a finite time to satisfy the goal of cooperative interception. In the direction of normal to LOS, the impact angle is constrained to transform into the LOS angle at the time of interception. In view of the difficulty of measuring unknown target acceleration information in real scenarios, the guidance command is designed by utilising a super-twisting algorithm based on a nonsingular fast-terminal sliding mode (NFTSM) surface. Numerical simulation results manifest that the proposed guidance law performs efficiently and the guidance commands are free of chattering. In addition, the overall performance of this guidance law is assessed with Monte Carlo runs in the presence of measurement errors. The simulation results demonstrate that the robustness can be guaranteed, and that overall efficiency and accuracy in intercepting the hypersonic target are achieved.


Author(s):  
Gianandrea V. Messa ◽  
Irene Ingrosso ◽  
Stefano Malavasi

The erosion of a surface caused by the impact of solid particles dragged by a fluid is a serious concern in the oil&gas industry. At present, the erosion prediction is performed using algebraic erosion models which express the volume of eroded material per impact as a function of the mass of the abrasive particles as well as of fluid dynamic parameters (such as the impact velocity and the impact angle of the eroding particle) and properties of the materials involved in the process. The fluid dynamic parameters are, in turn, evaluated using Eulerian-Lagrangian CFD models which interpret the fluid phase as a continuous mean and follow the trajectories of all the particles. However, the huge computational burden makes it difficult, or even precludes, to adopt this approach in many flows of engineering interest. An innovative methodology is proposed for estimating the parameters required as input by the erosion models using computationally cheaper Eulerian-Eulerian CFD models which solve for the average properties of the ensamble of particles. The good results obtained when predicting the erosion caused the by impingement of an abrasive jet against a surface make the application of this methodology to more complex flows very promising.


2012 ◽  
Vol 455-456 ◽  
pp. 395-399 ◽  
Author(s):  
Min Yang ◽  
Yu Ma ◽  
Shi Gui Li

Three-high gas well is High-production gas well, High-temperature gas well and High-sulfur gas well.In the mining process of three-high gas wells, due to the impact of the role of the fluid and the tubing string fluctuations lead to severe vibration, the role could easily lead to severe vibration column damage. Based on the high gas flow during the mining shaft and column structural characteristics, taking into account the weight of the tubing string, the packer constraints impact characteristics of steel tubing, pre-stressing, the fluid pressure force on the tubing string's vibration characteristics. Established a tubing string vibration equation, and the establishment of the corresponding mass matrix obtained, the stiffness matrix and damping matrix. Lanczos algorithm with inherent characteristics of the pipeline parameters. The modal superposition method to analyze vibration characteristics of the tubing string, to ensure that the calculation speed in the case met the approximate solution of engineering precision, For the three-high gas wells safe, efficient production of effective technical support.


2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sultan Salim Al Shoaibi ◽  
Juan Chavez Florez ◽  
Shaima Al Farsi ◽  
Adnan Al Hinai ◽  
Alvaro Nunez ◽  
...  

Abstract This paper discusses the first fiber-optic (FO) installation in a vertical high-pressure high-temperature deep gas well in PDO, Oman. A specially designed fiber-optic cable was successfully installed and cemented behind the production casing, which was subsequently perforated in an oriented manner without damaging the cable. This paper also describes how the fiber-optic cable was used afterwards to acquire Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) and Distributed Temperature Sensing (DTS) data for the purpose of hydraulic fracturing diagnostics. Fiber-optic surveillance is becoming an increasingly important activity for well and reservoir surveillance. The added complexity of the fiber-optic installation will affect the well design, which is one of the elements that requires focused attention, especially when the fiber is installed behind casing. The impact on casing design, wellhead design, perforation strategy, and logging requirements will all be discussed. In order for a well to be completed with a permanent fiber-optic cable, a few critical procedures need to be followed, including: –modifying the wellhead design to include feedthrough ports for the cable;–optimizing the cement design;–imposing strict procedures to ensure the cable is installed behind the casing without getting stuck;–changing the perforation phasing to avoid damaging the cable;–mapping the location of the cable to allow the gun string to be oriented away from the cable. The fiber-optic cable itself needed to be designed to be protected in such a way that it would not be damaged during installation and completion (perf/frac) activities. Furthermore, the cable was also optimized to improve its detectability, to aid the oriented perforation. In deep gas wells, much more than in conventional shallow water injectors or oil producers, the well integrity aspect should be given special attention. Specifically, any risks related to unwanted gas leaks, either through the control line, poor cement, or because of other design errors should be avoided. In deep gas wells, high temperature and pressure will also play a big role in the expected lifespan of the cable. Finally, the well was hydraulically fractured in four stages, using the "plug-and-perf" technique, during which DAS and DTS data were acquired continuously and across all depths of the well. The data provided valuable information on the effectiveness of each of the frac stages, it could be used to analyze screen-outs and detect out-of-zone injection, and recommendations for the optimizations of future hydraulic frac designs could be derived. The fiber-optic data were also integrated with other open-hole data for improved understanding of the reservoir performance. The next step will be to acquire repeated time-lapse DAS and DTS data for production profiling, to gain more insights of how the long-term production performance is affected by the hydraulic frac operations.


Author(s):  
R. J. K. Wood ◽  
T. F. Jones ◽  
J. Ganeshalingam

Swirl inducing pipes are proposed for the alleviation of problems of poor particle distribution and sliding wear, particularly at downstream bends and elbows. In a well-designed conventional pipeline, the mean axial velocity to assure good dispersion of particles is much greater than the velocity required to merely transport the slurry. This gives the impetus to design swirl-inducing pipes which allow for reduced pumping power, and reduced erosion, while efficiently maintaining suspension at strategic points. This paper covers research that has been aimed at producing good distribution of particles at relatively low velocities, by applying swirl induction. Computational models for the impact velocity and impact angle in a bend have been successfully applied to the flow field and validated by experiments in a perspex flow loop including electrical resistance tomography (ERT) to confirm the placement of particle burdens. Particle impact parameters from this work have been used as inputs to erosion models to predict wall wastage rates in bends and the location of damage from well distributed and swirling particulate flows.


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