Hydrocarbon fluids such as oil and natural gas are obtained from a subterranean geologic formation, referred to as a reservoir, by drilling a well that penetrates the hydrocarbon-bearing formation. When drilling the well, a viscous drilling fluid (or drill mud) with certain increased shear strength characteristics is often used to maximize removal of drill cuttings to be transported out of the well. Still, settlement of drill cutting particles must be expected. Another purpose of the drill mud is also to provide a filtercake along the wellbore to prevent fluid loss into the formation. To save rig time, a screen completion is often installed in this drilling mud. This drilling mud containing particles from the drilling phase may to some extent be removed by circulating fresh or conditioned mud into the well or be displaced by a clean completion fluid such as brine. In any case, the well bore may be covered by a filtercake. Once the well is completed, the filtercake may be removed to produce the well. To remove this filtercake, a certain differential pressure is required across the filtercake (i.e., the formation pressure on the formation side of the filtercake must be higher than the pressure on the borehole side of the filtercake to break the filtercake off of the borehole wall).
When the well is to be put on production, the drilling fluid system (including the filtercake) must flow back through the sand screens. If the screen completion becomes long (for example, in the range beyond 300 m to 500 m), it may be a challenge to remove the fluid system properly along the whole interval. Also, a certain pressure drop is required to initiate the flow of reservoir fluid. This is both (1) because of the required differential pressure to lift off the filter cake and (2) to break circulation as the drilling fluid starts flowing in various tortuous paths of the screen completion. In addition, pressure increases along the tubing in long horizontal wells makes it more difficult to achieve the needed liftoff pressure because as you move upstream in the tubing, the pressure increases. Thus the differential pressure between the formation and the tubing decreases as you move from the heel of the well to the toe of the well (also called the heel-toe effect). As explained herein, this decrease in differential pressure will contribute to the difficulty of removing the filtercake along the upstream portions of the wellbore. As the first part (typically high-permeable zones) of the well starts flowing, the required pressure may no longer be available in the remaining part of the well. Consequently, the cleanup process will in many cases stop before the whole well is cleaned up and can contribute.
Accordingly, the flow performance of long, screen-based completions may be a challenge due to problems related to well cleanup.
In the following description, numerous details are set forth to provide an understanding of the present invention. However, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that the present invention may be practiced without these details and that numerous variations or modifications from the described embodiments may be possible.
With respect to
In order to break filtercake 30, it is necessary that the pressure drop across the filtercake (i.e., from the formation to the annulus 45 outside the lower completion 40) is above a threshold level. In practice, as is shown in
One way to ensure an even flow across the entire formation is the use of inflow control devices (ICD) as part of the lower completion. An exemplary ICD is shown in U.S. Pat. No. 7,419,002, incorporated herein by reference. Without the use of an inflow control device, most screen-based completions provide sufficient flow capacity over just a few joints of screened tubing. As discussed above, the inflow in the first few upstream joints has two effects. First, it increases the pressure within the tubing of the completion. Second, it decreases the formation draw down pressure in the areas adjacent to the area that is producing. This means that there is limited differential pressure across the remaining filter cake (i.e., further down into the well). Because of this limited pressure differential, the filtercake in areas downstream of the producing portion of the formation may not be broken and removed. Consequently, the downstream areas of the formation are not able to be produced. This failure to produce the downstream areas of the formation may lead to reduced overall production and premature water coning or other problems.
Two primary types of ICDs are available to the market—(1) the tube/channel type ICD (such as shown in U.S. Pat. No. 5,435,393), which provides a friction pressure drop as fluid is flowing, and (2) the nozzle-based type ICD (such as shown in U.S. Pat. No. 7,419,002), which provides a pressure drop as pressure is transferred into velocity and then absorbed downstream of the nozzle.
In general, embodiments of the present invention include a method to design a required pressure drop and a system to make it possible to apply this pressure drop to effectively clean the well of drill mud. This pressure drop is a function of the fluid system (e.g., drill mud) and the reservoir properties. The pressure drop can be determined either by calculations or practical experiments. The pressure drop through the formation is normally described by the Darcy law which may be describe as:
When assuming to different zones 1 and 2, each of them having homogenous properties within each zone and zone 1 being cleaned up and zone 2 not, the below equations describes to flow and pressure in the system. In this example, the following assumptions are made: no annular flow between the zones, and no pressure drop inside the tubing between the two zones.
Δp=Δp1=Δp2=Δpr1+Δpi1=Δpf<Δpfc
By setting
Δpi1=Δpfc−Δpr1
This assumes no pressure drop or threshold pressure through a non flowing ICD. The drilling fluid commonly used when drilling a well has Bingham type properties, meaning that a certain differential pressure has to be exceeded to initiate flow. The pressure required to initiate a flow is proportional to the wetted area of a given flow channel divided by its cross section areas. This may result in a threshold pressure to initiate flow, particularly through narrow openings. This means a nozzle based ICD having short nozzles more in the shape of an orifice has a short length giving a very small wetted area. A tube/channel based ICD on the other hand has a much larger wetted area in the flow tube/channel which may result in a significant threshold pressure. The ICD is in most cases connected to a sand screen. The screen design itself may also add to this threshold pressure. As an example, a mesh type screen can have a fairly tortuous path through the filter media compared to a wire wrapped screen having a well defined slot opening more in the shape of an orifice. Further, the drainage layer under the screen section leading to the ICD housing should be designed with proper cross section area to reduce the threshold pressure to a minimum.
By determining the required pressure drop required to initiate the flow of the fluid system in the well through the ICD system and eventually also the connected screen, the total pressure drop can be determined. This pressure drop is the combination of the pressure drop across the formation to remove the filtercake and the pressure drop required to initiate the fluid flow through the ICD.
The design of the completion and the total flow rate has a significant impact on the pressure drop available to lift off the filter cake and break the circulation. In most cases the maximum flow rate is limited, thus the completion design must be optimized to achieve the desired cleanup over the whole completion interval.
The method to design the ICDs and thereby the method to cleanup the well is as follows:
(1) Determine the required pressure to lift off the filter cake. This can be done by performing laboratory tests on representative core plugs with the given fluid system from the well. A commonly used method is to apply a filter cake on the core plug and apply a pressure through the core plug towards the backside of the filtercake and measure the required pressure drop to initiate flow.
(2) Determine the required pressure to initiate flow through the ICD screen. This depends on the screen design. For a nozzle based ICD with wire wrapped screen and sufficient drainage area under the wrapping and into the ICD housing, the pressure required to initiate flow will in most cases be close to zero. For other designs, this threshold pressure can be significant. To determine this pressure, a flow test in the actual mud system may be carried out.
(3) Take benefit of the fact that the pressure drop through an ICD is small when fluid is not flowing through it and high when fluid is flowing. This means that zones or sections not cleaned-up will basically be exposed to the differential pressure from the formation into the tubing. The tubing pressure will be kept at a lower level due to the added pressure drop through the ICDs in the flowing zones.
(4) Calculate the ICD setting that will provide sufficient pressure drop in the flowing zones or sections to reduce the tubing pressure to a level whereby non cleaned up sections gets exposed to the required differential pressure. This ICD setting can be calculated based on the equation above (Δpi1=Δpfc−Δpr). The ICD setting is directly associated with ct (nozzle or turbulent mode) or cla (tube/channel based ICD in laminar mode):
Ct1=(Δpfc−cr1×q1)/q1̂2
Cla1=(Δpfc−cr1×q1)/q1
As can be seen from the nozzle or turbulent case, the denominator is squared with flow rate compared to the laminar case. This result in a relatively smaller pressure drop required through the ICDs along the well to achieve the cleanup.
The above calculations are based on simplified conditions. In a real well, the conditions are more complex and numerical models may be needed to solve the equations and determine the appropriate ICD setting. This may be done according to the work flow listed below.
(5) ICDs may be used along the whole length of the completion to ensure that the whole completion interval can take benefit of the pressure regulating effect.
By use of the method outlined above, the minimum pressure drop setting for the ICDs can be calculated. If the calculations are associated with uncertainties, the pressure drop setting for the ICDs can be increased to accommodate for this uncertainty. Consequently, a method is available whereby the control of the flow path and the setting of the ICDs as flow dependent pressure drop elements can ensure that the required pressure drop is applied to the required locations on the wall of the well bore and to the completion itself to make it possible to achieve a proper well cleanup.
The design of the ICD and the connected screen can have a significant impact on the required pressure drop to initiate the flow. There are two main screen designs available to the market—(1) the surface type wire wrapped screens, and (2) the depth filter mesh screen (typically built up of a metal weave on a drainage layer and surrounded by a protective shroud). As the flow path becomes more tortuous, a higher pressure is required to break the shear strength of the fluid and initiate the flow of formation fluid. When using a tube/channel type ICD, a higher pressure drop is required to initiate the flow than by using a nozzle based ICD. This is due to the long and narrow flow channels. To break the circulation of a fluid that has a certain shear strength, a differential pressure proportional to the channel length and inverse proportional to the channel length is required. The use of a depth filter type screen will have the same effect. The tortuous path requires higher pressure to overcome the shear strength of the fluid. Additionally, a depth filter type screen may get packed with drill solids settled at the bottom of the well. This means that a wire wrapped screen with a drainage layer providing proper flow cross section area may be more beneficial.
The effect of the limited pressure drop that can be applied in long horizontal well is illustrated in
As a further embodiment, it may be desirable, in an injector well, to initially put the wellbore into production (as outlined above) in order to clean up the filtercake. Once the desired amount of filtercake removal is effected, the well may then be used to inject liquid or gas into the formation.
Additionally, it may be desirable to run the ICD completion described herein with or without a sand screen associated with the completion.
While the invention has been disclosed with respect to a limited number of embodiments, those skilled in the art will appreciate numerous modifications and variations therefrom. It is intended that the appended claims cover such modifications and variations as fall within the true spirit and scope of the invention.
This application claims priority to provisional U.S. patent application Ser. No. 60/989,468 filed on Nov. 21, 2007 and incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
60989468 | Nov 2007 | US |