In the oilfield, it is often desirable to drill a new borehole in close proximity to an existing well. For example, oil well blowouts can often be “killed” by intersecting the blowing well with a new borehole containing a heavy fluid. The heavy fluid flows from the new well into the existing well bore to suppress any upward flows, thereby halting the blowout and making it possible to cap the original well head. In another example, certain oilfield production techniques (e.g., steam-assisted gravity drainage) employ generally parallel boreholes that are closely spaced together. To generate this configuration, an existing well is used as a reference to guide the drilling of the new, parallel borehole. In yet another example, offshore drillers need to drill many long-reach wells from a single platform. The steering techniques employed often require surprisingly complex paths to direct the wells to the desired formations without violating bending limits of the drill string. Drillers must carefully steer new boreholes clear of the existing wells.
Various techniques have been developed for steering new boreholes relative to existing wells. The earliest approach used for this type of problem employs two separate tools in the existing well and new borehole. See, e.g., U.S. Pat. Nos. 3,406,766 (“Method and devices for interconnecting subterranean boreholes” to H. J. Keller); 4,593,770 (“Method for preventing the drilling of a new well into one of a plurality of production wells” to G. L. Hoehn Jr.); 5,343,152 (“Electromagnetic homing system using MWD and current . . . injected at a target well” to A. F. Kuckes); and 5,676,212 (“Downhole electrode for well guidance system” to A. F. Kuckes). Although this approach has been successful and used widely, it necessitates a stop in the production, so that a wireline tool can be lowered to the existing well.
Another type of approach that eliminates that requirement is to use magnetization of the target well casing such as described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,072,200 (“Surveying of subterranean magnetic bodies from an adjacent off-vertical borehole” to F. J. Morris et al.); 4,458,767 (“Method for directionally drilling a first well to intersect a second well” to G. L. Hoehn Jr.); and 6,985,814 (“Well twinning techniques in borehole surveying” to G. McElhinney). Since the source is a passive, this latter approach eliminates the requirement for a transmitter. However very strong magnetization levels at the well casing must be maintained to utilize this kind of an approach, often making it infeasible.
Yet another approach is to stop the drilling and lower a wireline tool to sense the casing remotely as in U.S. Pat. No. 4,791,373 (“Subterranean target location by measurement of time-varying magnetic field vector in borehole” to A. F. Kuckes). Although this approach is being successfully employed in the industry, it requires the drilling equipment to be pulled up, the wireline tool run down, and the drilling tool deployed back down, resulting in an undesirable loss of time. U.S. Pat. No. 4,443,762 (“Method and apparatus for detecting the direction and distance to a target well casing” to A. F. Kuckes) describes a logging while drilling tool for detecting well casings, but its construction sharply limits the range and ability to detect a wide range of orientations for the existing well.
In a nutshell, existing techniques have been found to have very limited range or to require multiple logging runs (either sequential runs in the new borehole or a run in the existing well in cooperation with a run in the new borehole). Such operations in the existing well are generally undesirable or in some cases impossible (e.g., in a blowout). Sequential runs in the new borehole undesirably disrupt and delay the drilling process. As such, existing techniques are believed to be inadequate.
A better understanding of the various disclosed embodiments can be obtained when the following detailed description is considered in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
Accordingly, there are disclosed herein various logging-while-drilling (LWD) systems and methods that provide resistivity logging coupled with deep detection of elongated anomalies at acute angles, enabling effective geosteering without disrupting drilling operations and without requiring intervention in the operations of the existing well. One LWD system embodiment employs a tool having tilted antennas as the transmitter and the receiver, where at least one of the antennas is placed in the vicinity of the bit, making it possible to detect existing wells at distances of 50-100 feet. In some cases, the detection distance is increased by enhancing the visibility of the existing well using a ferromagnetic fluid treatment on target well, either to fill the bore or to surround the well with treated cement or fluids that invade the formation.
Some disclosed geosteering system embodiments include a multi-component electromagnetic logging tool, a position and orientation tracking module, and a processing system. The processing system inverts the logging tool measurements to estimate, not only the position, but also the orientation of the existing well. At least one inversion method demonstrates improved performance by separating the inversion of formation parameters from the inversion of parameters specifying distance, direction, and orientation of a line representing the existing well.
Some of the disclosed geosteering method embodiments include: drilling a borehole with a steerable drilling assembly; collecting multi-component electromagnetic logging tool measurements; processing the measurements to determine a position and orientation of a line representing an existing well; and steering the drilling assembly based at least in part, on said position and orientation. Depending on the circumstances, the steering may include directing the drilling assembly along a path towards, away from, or parallel to the existing well. The measurement processing may include isolating the effect of the formation on the measurements, removing that effect to obtain measurements relating to the elongated anomaly, and inverting the elongated anomaly measurements to obtain estimates of the anomaly's distance, direction, and orientation.
The disclosed EM-guidance systems and methods are best understood in the context of the larger systems in which they operate. Accordingly, an illustrative geosteering environment is shown in
The drill bit 14 is just one piece of a bottom-hole assembly 24 that includes a mud motor and one or more “drill collars” (thick-walled steel pipe) that provide weight and rigidity to aid the drilling process. Some of these drill collars include built-in logging instruments to gather measurements of various drilling parameters such as position, orientation, weight-on-bit, borehole diameter, etc. The tool orientation may be specified in terms of a tool face angle (rotational orientation), an inclination angle (the slope), and compass direction, each of which can be derived from measurements by magnetometers, inclinometers, and/or accelerometers, though other sensor types such as gyroscopes may alternatively be used. In one specific embodiment, the tool includes a 3-axis fluxgate magnetometer and a 3-axis accelerometer. As is known in the art, the combination of those two sensor systems enables the measurement of the tool face angle, inclination angle, and compass direction. Such orientation measurements can be combined with gyroscopic or inertial measurements to accurately track tool position.
Also included in bottom hole assembly 24 is a telemetry sub that maintains a communications link with the surface. Mud pulse telemetry is one common telemetry technique for transferring tool measurements to surface receivers and receiving commands from the surface, but other telemetry techniques can also be used. For some techniques (e.g., through-wall acoustic signaling) the drill string 8 includes one or more repeaters 30 to detect, amplify, and re-transmit the signal. At the surface, transducers 28 convert signals between mechanical and electrical form, enabling a network interface module 36 to receive the uplink signal from the telemetry sub and (at least in some embodiments) transmit a downlink signal to the telemetry sub. A data processing system 50 receives a digital telemetry signal, demodulates the signal, and displays the tool data or well logs to a user. Software (represented in
The measurements needed for geosteering can be gathered using an electromagnetic logging tool that makes multi-component measurements.
Moran and Gianzero, in “Effects of Formation Anisotropy on Resistivity Logging Measurements” Geophysics, Vol. 44, No. 7, p. 1266 (1979), noted that the magnetic field h in the receiver coils can be represented in terms of the magnetic moments m at the transmitters and a coupling matrix C:
h=Cm (1)
In express form, equation (1) is:
where MX, MY, and MZ are the magnetic moments (proportional to transmit signal strength) created by transmitters TX, TY, and TZ, respectively, HX, HY, HZ are the magnetic fields (proportional to receive signal strength) at the receiver antennas RX, RY, and RZ, respectively.
In the antenna configuration of
The tool's motion adds a layer of complexity to the system. As shown in
During drilling operations, the logging tool rotates and gradually progresses along the length of the borehole. Internal instruments track the tool's position and rotational orientation, enabling the each of the tool's coupling matrix measurements to be associated with a corresponding bin. As die tool can make many measurements for each bin, some tool embodiments will combine the measurements in each bin to obtain an average measurement for the bin. It may be these combined measurements that are inverted to obtain formation resistivity and distance, direction, and orientation information relative to the existing well.
The triad antenna configuration shown in
The drill bit shown in
LWD assembly 155 includes one or more logging tools and systems capable of recording data as well as transmitting data to the surface via the telemetry sub 159. As specifically discussed below, the LWD assembly 155 includes a resistivity tool having antennas 156, 157 that work cooperatively with (optional) antennas near the bit to determine azimuthal resistivity measurements helpful for geosteering. Because of the length of the mud motor, the resistivity tool sensors located in the LWD section are at least 15 feet from the drilling bit, which would normally imply that the azimuthal resistivity measurements available to the driller apply to a drill bit position at least 15 feet behind the current drill bit position. However, with the cooperation of the at-bit loop antennas, the driller can be provided information applicable to the current drill bit position, making it possible to steer the drilling assembly much more precisely than before.
Tool 611 has several variations including those shown in
It is further noted that in each of these embodiments, the roles of transmitter and receiver can be exchanged without affecting the operation of the tool. Any of the illustrated resistivity logging tools can be operated cooperatively with an at-bit antenna to provide deep measurements near the bit.
The control system can take the form of a computer that includes a chassis 50, a display 56, and one or more input devices 54, 55. Located in the chassis 50 is a display interface 62, a peripheral interface 64, a bus 66, a processor 68, a memory 70, an information storage device 72, and a network interface 74. Bus 66 interconnects the various elements of the computer and transports their communications. The network interface 74 couples the system to telemetry transducers that enable the system to communicate with the bottom hole assembly. In accordance with user input received via peripheral interface 54 and program instructions from memory 70 and/or information storage device 72, the processor processes the received telemetry information received via network interface 74 to construct formation property logs and/or geosteering signals and display them to the user.
The bottomhole assembly control module 191 operates in accordance with one or more programs stored in internal memory. Similarly, processor 68 (
Control module 202 may process the amplitude and phase shift measurements to obtain compensated measurements and/or measurement averages, or such processing can be performed by control module 191 (
Besides these four geometrical parameters (d,φ,θr,θφ), a complex-valued parameter C indicating the magnitude and phase of the currents induced in the existing well is also included. C is mainly based on the local or material properties of the anomaly such as diameter, thickness and conductivity. Also included is the formation resistivity Rh. In at least some embodiments, the tool measurements are inverted to obtain parameters Rh, C, d, φ, θr and θφ using the approach illustrated in
Pattern-matching inversion (
Iterative inversion (
Inversion algorithms in
For an anomaly that follows a linear shape in the locality where the tool exists, the voltage Va due to the anomaly can be written as
Here cT is a complex-valued coefficient based on Rh and C. rT and rR are the vectors connecting the closest point on the anomaly
Substituting (4) into (3), we can observe that
As it can be seen in (5), an eigenvalue-eigenvector decomposition of
Find
and
S22,S33=0, ∀m=1, . . . , N
Due to low dimensional nature of this inversion problem, it can be solved with nearly any generic optimization algorithm, so details will not be included here.
After the inversion of formation voltage and parameters as expressed in equation (6) is complete, the anomaly voltage can be obtained by subtracting the formation voltage from the total voltage
{circumflex over (m)}T=({circumflex over (r)}T×{circumflex over (n)})
{circumflex over (m)}R=({circumflex over (r)}R×{circumflex over (n)})
{circumflex over (m)}T=Ū1 (7)
{circumflex over (m)}R=
where W=(U−1)T
Here {circumflex over (m)}T and {circumflex over (m)}R coincide with unit vectors that are normal to the planes that contain the anomaly and transmitter, and the anomaly and receiver, respectively. By applying geometrical methods and finding the intersection between these planes, it is possible to determine the line associated with the anomaly axis (see
Calculation of parameters d, φ, θr and θφ from {circumflex over (n)} and
The tool's range can be improved by providing a high contrast between the electromagnetic parameters of the elongated anomaly and the formation. If the existing well is uncased, it could be filled with a contrast fluid, e.g., a fluid having conductive, inductive, or magnetic properties that contrast with the formation. Ferromagnetic fluids may be particularly suitable. Ferromagnetic fluids comprised of suspended magnetic particles in a carrier medium offer extraordinary electromagnetic properties. In particular, specific ferromagnetic fluids can provide very high magnetic susceptibility values to create a high contrast with respect to the surrounding medium, even in the presence of casing. If desired, the contrast fluid can be placed in a limited portion of the existing well to create a target region. This can be achieved, for example, by using the contrast fluid in well completion. The contrast fluid can penetrate deep into the formation to form a wide cylindrical zone of high contrast.
In accordance with the foregoing disclosure,
In block 804, the logging tool initializes the transmitter index before entering a loop. In block 806, the index is updated and a corresponding transmitter is selected. In block 808, the tool uses the selected transmitter to transmit an electromagnetic signal into the formation. The tool further measures the induced response of each receiver and associates the measurements with the current position and orientation of the tool. In block 810, the tool (or the control unit for the bottomhole assembly) incorporates the new measurement values into the overall measurement for the bin associated with the current tool position and orientation. In block 812, the logging tool determines whether each of the transmitters has been fired and if not, the tool loops back to block 806.
After the measurement cycle has been completed, the tool (or control unit for the bottomhole assembly) optionally combines opposed transmitter-receiver pair measurements to obtain compensated measurements in block 814. In any event, the tilted-antenna measurements are used to compute the orthogonal antenna coupling strengths in block 816. In block 818, the formation parameters are found through inversion, and in block 820 the direction, distance, and orientation of the elongated anomaly are estimated. The user can be kept informed by updating a display with the latest information in block 822. In block 824, the formation and anomaly information can be used as the basis of a steering decision when directing the drilling process. Thus, depending on the circumstances, the new borehole can be steered to intersect, avoid, or parallel the existing well. A check occurs in block 826 to determine whether the drilling process is complete, and if not, the process returns to block 806. While some or all of the operations represented by blocks 816-820 and 824 can be performed downhole, it is expected that most system embodiments would use a surface data processing system to perform these operations.
In various simulations that were performed to demonstrate the workability of this tool, certain tool configurations were employed. In at least some instances, the transmitter-to-receiver separation was 25 feet, and a four inch mandrel radius was assumed. Each of the (orthogonal) transmitter and receiver antennas were assumed to have 200 turns. The tool was spaced along the X-axis at varying distances from a well having different orientations. With conservative noise levels, the detection depth was found to be 42 feet for a parallel well in a formation having a resistivity of 1 Ωm, but decreasing to 28 feet for a perpendicular well. If the transmitter-receiver separation were increased from 25 feet to 100 feet, the detection range for a parallel well increased to 95 feet. When fluid treatments were employed in the target well to provide post-treatment resistivity values of 0.01 Ωm or 0.001 Ωm in a 3-foot radius around the well, signal enhancements of 1.5× (for 0.01 Ωm) and 2× (for 0.001 Ωm) were observed. For a formation resistivity of 20 Ωm, both fluid treatments provided about a 1.5× enhancement. The detection depth was increased to about 66 foot, but there is some indication that further range increases may be available with the use of higher signal frequencies (e.g., above 3500 Hz). In a simulated comparison of treating a 6-foot well section with ferromagnetic fluid versus water (to a 3-foot invasion radius), the ferromagnetic fluid provided 100× greater signal strength than water. Some comparisons of the use of a magnetic fluid treatment to the omission of the treatment showed a near doubling of the detection distance.
Simulations also confirmed the tool's responsiveness to boundaries between formation layers of different resistivities. With signal frequencies in the range of 2-4 kHz, the tool was able to detect boundaries between 1 Ωm and 20 Ωm beds at distances of 33 feet.
It can be seen from
Numerous variations and modifications will become apparent, to those skilled in the art once the above disclosure is fully appreciated. For example, the foregoing disclosure assumes the use of coil antennas, but suitable measurements can also be obtained using other types of sensors including toroids, magnetometers, and electrodes. It is intended that the following claims be interpreted to embrace all such variations and modifications.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US2010/040447 | 6/29/2010 | WO | 00 | 7/12/2012 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2012/002937 | 1/5/2012 | WO | A |
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20130105224 A1 | May 2013 | US |