mud pressure
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2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yanhui Han ◽  
Shengli Chen ◽  
Younane Abousleiman

Abstract In wellbore drilling, the drilling mud density needs to be carefully selected such that the mud pressure inside the wellbore will not exceed formation breakdown pressure to avoid wellbore fracturing and extensive mud losses. However, in the hydraulic fracturing treatment, the lesser the value of the formation breakdown pressure the more optimal is the operation. We found out in this study that the pumping schedule (e.g., pumping duration and pumping rate) are factors in optimizing the breakdown pressure. In addition, this work investigates the effects of the finite length between packers on the magnitude of the breakdown pressure in various geological formations. The time-dependent evolving stresses around the wellbore are solved in the framework of time-dependent poroelasticity theory. The breakdown pressure is predicted from the evolution of the circumferential effective stresses. The effects of injection rate, formation properties, borehole diameter and length, and pumping duration on the breakdown pressure are presented in the form of engineering charts, for representative in-situ stress.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuriy Zhulay ◽  
Olexiy Nikolayev

Sonic drilling is a soil penetration technique that strongly reduces friction on the drill string and drill bit due to liquefaction, inertia effects and a temporary reduction of porosity of the soil. Modern studies to assess the effect of the vibration frequency of the drill bit on the rock fragmentation in experimental and theoretical works on drilling various rocks by the sonic method have shown that vibration frequencies of ~ 1.4 kHz are the most beneficial for ensuring the maximum drilling speed in hard rocks. The above frequencies of excitation of vibrations of the drill bit can be achieved by using a cavitation hydrovibrator. The cavitation hydrovibrator is the Venturi tube of special geometry that converts a stationary fluid (flushing mud) flow into an oscillatory stalling cavitation flow and hydrovibrator structure longitudinal vibrations. The drill bit vibration accelerations are realized in such a drill string, leading to the destruction of rock. Efficient removal of rock particles from the bottomhole is achieved due to high-frequency shock self-oscillations of mud pressure exceeding the steady-state pressure at the generator inlet. The cavitation hydraulic vibrator lacks the main disadvantages of submersible hydraulic hammers.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuelin Shen ◽  
Sameer Bhoite ◽  
Zhengxin Zhang ◽  
Wei Chen ◽  
Sylvain Chambon ◽  
...  

Abstract It is common to have measured depth exceeding 20,000 ft for unconventional oil and gas wells. To ensure the pressure pulse can be detected on the surface, many MWD tools have been designed to generate mud pressure pulse with very large amplitude. While the large pressure pulse solved the problem of sending the measured information up to the surface, it creates significant impact on drilling system energy variation and downhole drilling dynamics. This paper focuses on understanding the effects using big data and drilling system modeling. When a commonly used MWD tool generates mud pulse sequence, it chokes the flow path at designed patterns. This creates mud flow variation in the mud motor below the MWD tool. It also generates axial force variations due to pressure changes, which affect WOB. These changes cause the motor and the bit to experience significant rpm variations. The combined rpm variation and WOB variation often excite more severe axial and lateral shock and vibration. These effects are quantified by thousands of high-frequency downhole datasets and advanced numerical modeling. In the high-frequency downhole datasets, some of them are obtained from BHAs with MWD tools generating large mud pressure pulse, and some of them are obtained from BHAs with MWD tools generating smaller mud pressure pulse or transmitting the measurements using electromagnetic signal. Statistics of rpm variation and axial and lateral shock and vibrations are compared. It clearly shows that the BHAs utilizing large mud pressure pulse experience more severe torsional, axial, and lateral vibrations. When looking into specific datasets, it showed that mud pressure pulse could cause the motor to lose more than half of its rpm during the flow choking phase. Typical datasets indicate that mud pressure pulse correlates to severe high-frequency torsional oscillation (HFTO) in motorized rotary steerable BHA. An advanced transient drilling dynamics model was built to simulate the whole drilling system subjecting to mud pressure pulse incurred loading conditions. It was found that large-magnitude mud pressure pulse induced more stick/slip and axial and lateral vibrations as recorded in downhole high-frequency data. The increased rotational, axial, and lateral vibrations correspond to more loading variations in the mud motor components and PDC cutters on the drill bit. These variations could cause accelerated damage to the drill bit and downhole tools. In summary, large mud pressure pulse utilized by some MWD tools introduces significant rpm variation and shock and vibration, which is quantified by big data and further demonstrated by drilling system modeling. The information could help make decisions on BHA design and tool selection to achieve improved drilling performance and reduce the risk of premature tool failure.


Geofluids ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 ◽  
pp. 1-14
Author(s):  
Wei Liu ◽  
Hai Lin ◽  
Hailong Liu ◽  
Chao Luo ◽  
Guiping Wang ◽  
...  

An elaborate poro-elastoplastic numerical model has been developed in this paper to explore the stability characteristics of wellbore in shallow sediments of deepwater oil/gas wells. The combined Drucker-Prager/cap plasticity model is employed to characterize the mechanical behavior of the weakly consolidated or unconsolidated shallow sediments, by which both plastic compaction deformation and plastic shear deformation can be considered. Possible penetration of drilling fluid into the formation and its coupling to deformation have also been accounted for in the model. Using this model, deformation, stress evolution, and failure characteristics of the formation around the wellbore are analyzed in detail. Results presented in this paper demonstrate the necessity of considering the plastic compaction capability of the formation during the wellbore stability analysis of shallow sediments in deepwater. For mud pressures lower than the in situ horizontal stress, excessive wellbore shrinkage may occur if the mud pressure is too low, which, however, can be effectively mitigated through properly increasing the mud pressure even fluid penetration into the near-wellbore region may occur. It is also evidenced that, if penetration of drilling fluid into the formation is prevented, fracturing of the wellbore will not occur even the mud pressure is very high. Instead, the wellbore will expand substantially due to plastic compaction, and the deformed wellbore radius could be several times larger than the original value. However, if drilling fluid can penetrate into the formation, high pore pressure will develop within the near-wellbore region, resulting in tensile hoop stress at the wellbore and thus fracturing of the wellbore along the radial direction. The numerical results and implications in this paper are anticipated to be beneficial for the drilling operation in the shallow portion of deepwater oil/gas wells.


2021 ◽  
Vol 260 ◽  
pp. 01024
Author(s):  
Henghui Liang ◽  
Zhipeng Shi ◽  
Xiaodong Ni ◽  
Songjie Chen ◽  
Qiankun Zeng

In order to solve the problems of grouting diffusion and invisible formation process in shield slurry film forming test, transparent soil and transparent slurry were introduced to carry out shield mud film test based on shield grouting model. Using laser imaging combined with CCD camera (high-speed industrial camera) rapid capture photography technology, through a series of visible physical model tests of slurry diffusion and mud film development under different working conditions, the temporal and spatial conditions of slurry diffusion were observed and recorded in real time to explore the slurry diffusion law and the formation mechanism of mud film in slurry shield excavation face.The phenomenon shows that the smaller the grouting pressure is, the more favorable the formation of mud film is.The mud penetration distance is generally proportional to the grouting pressure.The infiltration distance of the grout increases with time, and the infiltration distance of the grout is similar at each moment under the same grouting pressure. The leachate volume and time show a quadratic function roughly under the same density and mud pressure, and the increase rate of the leachate volume begins to slow down with time.


Georesursy ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 22 (3) ◽  
pp. 69-78
Author(s):  
Alexander V. Seryakov ◽  
Maxim Yu. Podberezhny ◽  
Oleg B. Bocharo ◽  
Marat A. Azamatov

The paper considers borehole wall stability in a junction zone of coaxial wells where a borehole of bigger diameter connects with a smaller one. To determine the shapes and character of rock destruction, 3D poroelastic modeling of the stressed state of the rock around the coaxial junction with account for mudcake formation was performed. The geomechanical model considers the anisotropy of the medium’s deformation properties that are characteristic for the coastal-marine reservoirs of Western Siberia. The rock failure is estimated based on the Mohr-Coulomb criterion with account for tensile destruction condition. The paper considers cases of vertical and inclined junctions of a well drilled at a depth of 2 km in sandstone productive pay with known poroelastic anisotropic properties. The stress and pore pressure analysis has been performed for a mud pressure drop range from 1 to 70 atm and coaxial junctions with different combinations of borehole diameters. The safe mud pressure window has been determined for vertical and inclined junctions. It has been found that the rock failure pattern for junction of bigger diameters is, in general, similar to that for smaller diameters with some insignificant differences in the destruction areas shapes. It has also been demonstrated that in vertical junctions, the bottom holes of smaller diameter are more stable to reduced drilling-mud pressure than the mainboreholes, while in the inclined junction it is the mainwellbore that is more stable to increased drilling-mud pressure than the bottom hole.


2020 ◽  
Vol 4 (2 (106)) ◽  
pp. 82-94
Author(s):  
Andrii Lahoida ◽  
Vasyl Boryn ◽  
Georgiy Sementsov ◽  
Vasyl Sheketa

SPE Journal ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 25 (05) ◽  
pp. 2319-2340
Author(s):  
Jiajia Gao ◽  
Hon Chung Lau ◽  
Jin Sun

Summary Conventional drilling design assumes that the porous rock is fully saturated with a single fluid and therefore tends to inaccurately predict the mud weight needed for borehole stability because the pore space of the porous rock may actually have two or more fluids. This paper provides a new semianalytical poroelastic solution for the case of an inclined borehole subjected to nonhydrostatic stresses in a porous medium saturated with two immiscible fluids: water and gas. The new solution is obtained under plane-strain condition. The wellbore loading is decomposed into axisymmetric and deviatoric cases. The time-dependent field variables are obtained by performing the inversion of the Laplace transforms. On the basis of the expansion of the Laplace-transform solution, we derive the unsaturated poroelastic asymptotic solutions for early times and for a small radial distance from an inclined wellbore. Sensitivity analyses are performed on different ratios of bulk modulus of two fluid phases to pore pressures of the unsaturated case. In addition, the comparative analyses of pore-pressure differences are made between the unsaturated and saturated cases. The impact of the unsaturated poroelastic effect on pore pressure, stresses, and borehole stability is investigated. Our results show that the excess pore pressure caused by the poroelastic effect is generally higher for the saturated case (water) than the unsaturated case because of the large difference between the compressibility of fluid phases (water and gas). The time dependency of the poroelastic effect causes the safe-mud-pressure window of both the unsaturated and saturated cases to narrow and approach the long-time poroelastic one with increasing time. The safe-mud-pressure window narrows with increasing initial gas saturation. Contrary to the unsaturated case, the saturated case that assumes the formation to be saturated by one fluid (e.g., water) tends to optimistically predict a wider safe-mud-pressure window required for borehole stability. This new semianalytical poroelastic solution enables the drilling engineer to more accurately estimate the time-dependent stresses and the pore pressure around a borehole, thus allowing a mud weight design that will ensure borehole stability.


Author(s):  
V.N. Esaulenko ◽  
◽  
V.I. Kantemirov ◽  
V.F. Chikhotkin ◽  
◽  
...  

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