In oilfield applications, completions operations are conducted after drilling of a wellbore has been completed. During completions, a wellbore may be cased with a number of lengths of pipe in order to stabilize and enhance structural integrity of the wellbore. After placement, the casing may be secured to the surrounding earthen formation by primary cementing operations in which a cement slurry is pumped into an annulus between the casing and the surrounding formation. The cement slurry may then be allowed to solidify in the annular space, thereby forming a sheath of cement that retains the casing in position and prevents the migration of fluid between zones or formations previously penetrated by the wellbore.
During completions operations, a robust cementing job supports and protects production casing and prevents unwanted vertical movement of fluids and gases. Well-cement sheaths may encounter at least three possible failure modes: (i) shear failure due to excessive compressive stresses; (ii) radial or axial cracking due to excessive tensile stresses in the hoop (circumferential) direction; and (iii) debonding from the casing or the formation. Further details regarding stress conditions are provided in U.S. Pat. No. 6,296,057 issued on Oct. 2, 2001, which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety. Determining the appropriate type and amount of cement, as well as the waiting time before operations may begin after placement, may involve a number of variables including the variation in chemical properties of the cement and stresses induced through physical stresses as the cement cures.
Various embodiments of the present disclosure are directed to a method of designing a cementing operation for a cement body within a wellbore. The methods includes determining a stress for the cement body within the wellbore by simulating hydration of the cement body using cementing operation parameters and wellbore conditions. The hydration simulation includes calculating pore pressure for the cement body and accounting for changes in pore pressure associated with chemical shrinkage of the cement body. The method further includes designing a cementing operation using the stress for the cement body and the cementing operation parameters.
Illustrative embodiments of the present disclosure are directed to a processing system for designing a cementing operation for a cement body within a wellbore. The system includes a processor and a memory storing instructions executable by the processor to perform processes that include: (i) determine a stress for the cement body within the wellbore by simulating hydration of the cement body using cementing operation parameters and wellbore conditions, where the simulating hydration of the cement body includes calculating pore pressure for the cement body and accounting for changes in pore pressure associated with chemical shrinkage of the cement body; and (ii) design a cementing operation using the stress for the cement body and the cementing operation parameters.
In another aspect, various embodiments disclosed herein are directed to a method of performing a cementing operation for a cement sheath emplaced between casing and a formation within a wellbore. The method includes determining a stress for the cement sheath within the wellbore by simulating hydration of the cement sheath from a time of placement to a time of set using cementing operation parameters and wellbore conditions. The hydration simulation includes calculating pore pressure for the cement sheath and accounting for changes in pore pressure associated with chemical shrinkage of the cement sheath. The method further includes designing a cementing operation using the stress for the cement sheath and the cementing operation parameters. Then, the cementing operation is performed.
Other aspects and advantages of the present disclosure will be apparent from the following description and the appended claims.
The subject disclosure is further described in the detailed description that follows, in reference to the noted drawings by way of non-limiting examples of the subject disclosure, in which like reference numerals represent similar parts throughout the several views of the drawings.
The particulars shown herein are by way of example and for purposes of illustrative discussion of the examples of the subject disclosure only and are presented in the cause of providing what is believed to be the most useful and readily understood description of the principles and conceptual aspects of the subject disclosure. In this regard, no attempt is made to show structural details in more detail than is necessary, the description taken with the drawings making apparent to those skilled in the art how the several forms of the subject disclosure may be embodied in practice. Furthermore, like reference numbers and designations in the various drawings indicate like elements.
Embodiments disclosed herein are directed to methods of designing cementing treatments suitable for use in wellbore cementing applications. In some embodiments, methods may include using various modeling techniques to calculate physical stresses in a setting cement to aid in the formulation and design of a cement job that is tailored to the particular application and conditions present downhole. For example, modeling stress encountered by a cement sheath may provide guidelines as to how a cement composition will perform, and what changes should be made, if any, to the cement composition to ensure adequate performance. In some embodiments, modeling results may indicate that stress in the cement sheath exceeds a measured or known failure criteria and therefore is likely to fail (e.g., fracture, fail in shear, or develop a microannulus). Then, the cement composition may be modified by providing a cement additive or other structural modifiers to increase the durability of the final cement sheath so that it is below the failure criteria and less likely to fail.
Following the drilling of a wellbore, completions operations may involve placing a pipe string or casing to line the well. Well casings of various sizes may be used, depending upon depth, desired hole size, and geological formations encountered. The casing may serve several functions, including providing structural support to the wellbore to prevent the formation walls from caving into the wellbore. The casing may, in some instances, be stabilized and bonded in position within the wellbore by displacing a portion of the drilling fluid during a primary cementing operation in which a cement slurry is used to set the casings in place.
With particular respect to
Cement Hydration
A feature that distinguishes cements from most other structural materials is that cements undergo various chemical changes during hydration and curing that may result in the formation of distinct phases of solid cement and cement slurry during normal use. Other changes that occur during cement hydration include volume changes due to chemical shrinkage in which the volume of water decreases as it is bound into cement hydration products.
Cement begins as a powder obtained by grinding a cement clinker manufactured by firing mixtures of limestone and clay, which contains aluminate and ferrite impurities. For many cement compositions, cement clinker is then mixed with gypsum (calcium sulfate dihydrate), which is added to moderate the hydration process. After grinding together the clinker and gypsum, the cement powder is composed of multi-size, multi-phase, irregularly shaped particles that may range in size from less than a micron to tens or hundreds of microns.
When the cement is mixed with an aqueous fluid, hydration reactions occur that convert the water-cement suspension into a rigid porous material that serves as the matrix phase for mortar and cement. The nominal point of hydration at which this conversion to a solid framework occurs is called the set point. The degree of hydration (represented as ξ) at any time is the volume fraction of the cement that has hydrated (reacted with water). The ratio of water to cement (w/c) in a given mixture is defined as the mass of water used divided by the mass of cement used.
Early-age cement experiences several physical and chemical changes during its hydration process, including changes in temperature due to exothermic hydration reactions, a decrease in total porosity, and pore pressure changes associated with changing pore sizes as the cement sets. Furthermore, because cement hydration products are denser than the constituent reactants from which they form, there is an internal volume reduction associated with the reaction between cement and water in hydrating cement paste. This internal volume reduction associated with the reaction between cement and water in hydrating cement paste is referred to herein as “chemical shrinkage.” The physical and chemical changes inside the curing cement can cause pore pressure changes, deformation, induced stresses, and lead to premature failure of the cement sheath depending on the surrounding environment.
With particular respect to
Depending on the structural properties of the cement sheath, as downhole stress conditions change, such as in response to temperature and pressure changes, a cement job may fail. For example and with particular respect to
With particular respect to
The matrix of this newly formed cement sheath resists axial movement, and the shrinkage of the cement is no longer converted entirely into axial deformation. As a result of fluid loss into the formation and chemical shrinkage, the pore pressure originally attributable to the self-weight of the cement slurry decreases. This decrease in pore pressure of the cement results in radial consolidation and deformation of the cement, which in turn causes the stress that the formation places on the sheath, Tform(t), to decrease and the total stress in the cement to decrease. Further deformation may be caused by thermal expansion and/or contraction resulting from heat generated from the hydration reaction and the conduction of heat from the formation to the casing. At the same time, the cement rapidly gains stiffness and loses permeability as the hydration reaction proceeds.
In one or more embodiments, methods in accordance with the present disclosure may provide a prediction of stresses that are experienced within a curing body of cement to enable an operator to optimize conditions and setting of cement to minimize the risk of failure. In some embodiments, models may be developed that permit an operator to design a cementing operation based on the demands of a given wellbore conditions by modifying cement set times or structural properties using model outputs.
Cementing Operation Design Process
In one or more embodiments, methods of the present disclosure may be directed to the design of cementing operations based on cementing operation parameters and the conditions of the wellbore. The cementing operations can be used to form a cement body within the wellbore, such as a cement sheath, as described in
As shown in the flow chart, the method involves inputting wellbore conditions (at 401). The wellbore conditions may include (i) mechanical properties of the formation, (ii) temperature of the formation, (iii) pore pressure of the formation, (iv) depth within the wellbore, (v) dimensions of the wellbore, (vi) wellbore geometry, (vii) weight of a fluid column above the cement body, and (viii) fluid pressure in the casing.
The method also includes inputting cementing operation parameters (at 401). The cementing operation parameters may include: (i) cement composition (e.g., water to cement ratio, mass fractions of the cement components, and/or volume fractions of the cement components, such as clinker components and C-S-H particles), (ii) mechanical properties of cement components (e.g., elastic moduli of clinker components and elastic moduli of C-S-H particles), (iii) casing dimensions, (iv) mechanical properties of the casing, and (iv) number of stages in the cementing operation (e.g., to reduce the length of individual stages). Further cementing operation parameters and wellbore conditions are shown in Tables 1 and 2 below.
A model of the wellbore and the cement body can be constructed using some or all of these cementing operation parameters and wellbore conditions. The method further includes simulating stress for the cement body caused by hydration of the cement (at 402) and simulating stress for the cement body caused by changes in wellbore conditions due to well operations or changes in formation stress (at 403). The hydration simulation at 402 may include calculating pore pressure for the cement body and accounting for changes in pore pressure caused by chemical shrinkage of the cement body. The stress for the cement body caused by changes in wellbore conditions (determined at 403) is added to an initial state of stress for the cement body (determined at 402) to determine the total stress. Then, the method determines whether the total stress in the cement will cause the cement body to fail (at 404).
At this point, if the total stress in the cement body is below a failure criteria of the cement, the cementing operation may proceed (at 405). The failure criteria may be a set of known values or the criteria can be experimentally determined. For example, failure experiments can be performed on particular cement compositions to measure the failure criteria. The failure criteria may include tensile strength for cracking, Mohr-Coulomb failure criterion for shear failure, and/or bond strength for debonding from casing and/or formation (e.g., microannulus formation). If it is determined that the stresses in the cement body will cause the body to fail given the selected cementing operation parameters, the operator may choose to alter the cementing operation parameters such that the formed cement body does not fail or is less likely to fail (at 406). In some embodiments, modified cementing operation parameters (e.g., modified cement composition, casing dimensions, and/or well operations) may be designed, such as by changing the type of cement, adding a hydration retarder or accelerant, adding a structural modifier (at 407). Once the modified cementing operation parameters are selected, the cementing operation may proceed or, if desired, the cementing operation parameters may be tested using the model created and repeating 402-404 to verify that the modified cementing operation parameters are below the failure criteria.
The following sections will outline individual aspects of methods in accordance with the present disclosure.
Determination of Cementing Operation Parameters
In one or more embodiments, methods in accordance with the present disclosure may include a model of a wellbore that includes inputs of various physical parameters of a potential cementing operation. In some embodiments, parameters may include geometric measurements of the cased wellbore such as the diameter and thickness of the casing and the open hole diameter; mechanical properties such as the elastic constants of the casing material and the shear modulus of the formation; and chemical properties of the cement composition such as the mass fractions of the constituent phases of the cement and the permeability of the cement. Additional wellbore parameters that may be considered include wellbore conditions such as the total vertical depth of the wellbore, the formation permeability and initial pore pressure, wellbore temperature, and other indicia of stresses on a formed cement body such as the height and density of the fluid column above the cement slurry or set cement body.
Simulating Cement Hydration using Macroscopic Poroelastic Relationships
In one or more embodiments, methods in accordance with the present disclosure may include simulating the hydration of a cement slurry to form a cured cement body. The hydration of cement is a dynamic chemical process, and chemical shrinkage and fluid transfer to or from the formation may induce a change in the pore pressure of the cement, which may, in turn, cause deformation and stress on the formed cement. The stress caused by hydration of the cement and exchange of fluid with the formation acts as an initial state of stress, to which increments of stress caused by changes in wellbore conditions are added.
This initial state of stress within the newly set cement determines how close the cement is to failure before the cement body is subjected to additional loads imposed by changes in wellbore conditions. Considering the large hydrostatic compressive stresses present at large depths at the time of cement placement, when the cement is in liquid form, in many cases, there may be a sizable compressive stress remaining at the time of set, which may protect against radial fracture and debonding in some cases. In one or more embodiments, methods in accordance with the present disclosure incorporate nonlinear models that account for the changing properties of a curing cement based on known properties of constituents of cement, including hydraulic cements such as Portland cement. In some embodiments, methods may calculate the state of stress in the cement at the time of set and prior to the initiation of further wellbore operations such as a pressure test or fluid swap. For example, methods may simulate hydration of a cement body, including calculating pore pressure for the cement body and accounting for changes in pore pressure associated with chemical shrinkage of the cement body.
In some embodiments, methods may include determining volume fractions for a number of phases within the cement body as a function of degree of hydration. The volume fractions may include the volume fraction of unreacted water (or free water), the volume fraction of clinker, the volume fraction of hydration product, and/or the volume fraction of chemical shrinkage of the cement paste. Methods may also include a determination of a number of poroelastic properties for the cement body as a function of degree of hydration using the volume fractions for the phases in some embodiments.
Cement paste, or cement slurry, is a mixture of water and unhydrated cement clinker. Cement paste is a multi-phase material in which the volume fraction of each phase varies as a function of time. Once mixed, a chemical reaction occurs between the cement grains and water causes calcium-silicate-hydrate (C-S-H), a substantial contributor to the total hydration product, to form on the surface of the cement particles. The solid C-S-H particles are nanoscale in size and are assumed to possess a layered, porous sheet structure with water physically adsorbed to each sheet. Other hydration products form as well, typically in lower amounts.
The structure of a hydrating cement grain may be subdivided on the basis of pore size of the structure and level of water contained within. In regions having very small pores (leas than 2.5 nm), water trapped in the pores is considered to be non-evaporable and part of the C-S-H solid. In other regions having porosity on the scale of about 2.5 to 30 nm, also termed “gel porosity,” intra-granular water can exist within the hydration product. The remaining unreacted water in the cement paste exists in pores larger than 30 nm, which are termed “capillary pores.”
The extent of the completion of the hydration reaction for a given cement is described by the degree of hydration (ξ) as shown in Equation 1:
where mcem is the mass of unhydrated cement in the paste after some period of time and m0cem is the initial mass of unhydrated cement. When the initial water to cement ratio (w/c) may be less than about 0.45 in some embodiments, the water in the capillary pores will be eventually converted into non-evaporable or gel pore water.
At a fixed degree of hydration, the elastic deformation of cement can be modeled by the Biot Poroelastic theory, which describes the linked interaction between fluids and deformation in porous media. For a hydrating cement, the components of the macroscopic stress in the cement Tij are a function of the components of the small strain tensor E, the volumetric strain Ev, and the pore pressure p as shown in Equation 2:
(Tij)ξ=2
where
Material parameters and porosity defined at the macroscopic level of the cement paste are indicated with an overline.
where
As the cement hydrates, the poroelastic properties evolve because the volume fractions of each phase of the cement vary over time. Changes in volume fractions of the phases within the cement in turn causes variations in strain and pore pressure that occur on a time scale that corresponds to the kinetics of the hydration reaction. Therefore, Equations 2 and 3 may be linearized in order to calculate the change in macroscopic stress and macroscopic porosity over a time increment during which the degree of hydration is approximately constant (e.g., on the order of minutes). The increment of macroscopic stress then becomes a function of the increments of strain and pore pressure as shown in Equation 4.
dT
ij=2
In one or more embodiments, sources of macroscopic stress may include changes in casing pressure from wellbore operations; radial, tensile, and axial stresses generated from the hydrating cement composition; and axial stress generated from the weight of a fluid column above a hydrating cement composition.
The increment of porosity for the cement hydration follows similarly, but an additional porosity term is included in order to capture the change in porosity of the cement caused by the chemical reaction alone. The total increment in porosity is the sum of the poroelastic porosity change (ξ is constant) and the chemical porosity change (E, p are constant) as shown in Equation 5:
where d
With particular respect to
The mass balance equation defines the rate of change of free water, mf, in the cement paste. From the mass balance equation and the equation of state for the free water in a cement paste, Equation 5 may be rewritten to solve for the increment in total fluid content dζ as shown in Equation 6:
where kw is the bulk modulus of water, ρw is the density of capillary pore water, and {dot over (m)}f→s is the rate per unit reference volume of cement paste at which capillary water is converted to non-evaporable water. Here, the water is designated as a solid using the subscript “s” because the water is entrained within the solid mass of the cement hydrated and no longer in fluid contact with the remaining water in the capillary pores and gel pores.
The sum of the last two terms in Equation 6 is a positive quantity that typically causes the increment in fluid content to increase under drained conditions (dp=0) and causes the pore pressure to decrease under sealed conditions (dξ=0). This expression exists because of the chemical shrinkage of the cement in which the hydration product of cement is denser than the weighted average densities of the reactants.
Microporomechanics of Hydrating Cement Paste
The technique of microporomechanics is used to determine the macroscopic poroelastic properties of the cement paste as a function of the degree of hydration by quantifying the properties and volume fraction of each constituent phase. For example, the cement paste can be conceptualized as a multiscale and three-level composite with porosity at two different scales: gel porosity and capillary porosity. In this approach, each level contains two phases, and the homogenized properties at one level become the properties of a single phase at the next level. With particular respect to
At Level I the hydration product is composed of gel pores and C-S-H solid particles, with increments of local stress as defined by Equation 7:
dσ
ij
I=2GhpdεijI+(Khp−2/3Ghp)dεvIδij−bhpdp (7)
and local porosity given by Equation 8:
where the poroelastic properties are not a function of the current degree of hydration. At Level I in
The increments of local stress and local porosity at this level can be written as:
where the poroelastic properties are a function of the current degree of hydration.
The macroscopic level (the level at which Equations 4-6 are written) adds capillary pores to a matrix of the Level II material to construct the complete cement paste with macroscopic porosity as shown in Equation 11.
At the macroscopic level of
In one or more embodiments, methods may also include determining elastic moduli of a cement or cement sheath. For example, methods in accordance with embodiments of the present disclosure may include determining elastic moduli of the cement from one or more properties such as: (i) elastic moduli for a hydration product, (ii) elastic moduli for clinker components, (iii) mass fractions for clinker components, (iv) capillary porosity, and (v) a set of hydration functions that characterize volume fraction for a plurality of phases within the cement.
Well-known composite homogenization schemes may be used to calculate the drained elastic properties at each level described in
At the macroscopic level, the self-consistent method is used once more to calculate the macroscopic drained elastic moduli of the cement paste
The drained elastic bulk moduli at each level are then used to calculate the remaining poroelastic constants. At Level-I, the Biot-Willis coefficient and the Biot tangent modulus are defined by Equation 12.
At Level II, these properties are derived as shown in Equation 13:
At the macroscopic level of the cement paste, corresponding to Equations 4-6, the poroelastic properties are calculated as shown in Equation 15:
The preceding equations are general and could be used to model any cement paste for a given w/c ratio.
The remaining inputs are: (i) the elastic moduli of the clinker grains and the C-S-H particles; and (ii) the volume fraction of each phase as a function of the degree of hydration. The elastic moduli of the C-S-H particles and the clinker particles have been well characterized by numerous nanoindentation studies. Typical results are ks=40.5 GPa and gs=24.3 GPa and Kcl=105.2 GPa and Gd=4.8 GPa. The method to determine the volume fraction of each phase of the cement paste is described in the following section.
Determining the Volume Fractions of Phases of a Hydrating Cement Paste
In one or more embodiments, the volume fraction of each phase in a hydrating cement paste can be predicted from the initial composition of the cement through experimental determinations of water content and specific volume of the various cement phases determined for specific initial cement compositions. The total volume of a cement paste hydrating with access to water remains approximately constant during the hydration process described by Equation 17:
V
tot(ξ)=VW(ξ)+Vcl(ξ)+Vhp(ξ)+Vsh(ξ)≈1 (17)
where at the macroscopic level, VW (ξ) is the volume fraction of unreacted water or free water excluding any water added to the cement paste, Vcl( ξ) is the volume fraction of clinker, Vhp ( )is the volume fraction of hydration product, and Vsh (ξ) is the volume fraction of chemical shrinkage of the cement paste. Chemical shrinkage occurs because the hydration products occupy a smaller volume than the unreacted components, and chemical shrinkage is manifested predominantly in the form of internal shrinkage and not a bulk volume change.
Under saturated conditions and initially high pore pressures, such as in a cement sheath downhole, the volume fraction of chemical shrinkage is primarily converted to capillary water porosity. Therefore, the volume fraction of capillary pores can be defined as shown in Equation 18.
ƒcp(ξ)≡VW(ξ)+Vsh(ξ) (18)
Hydration functions can be derived to characterize the macroscopic volume fraction of each phase in the cement paste as a function of the initial water to cement ratio (w/c).
In one or more embodiments, the set of hydration functions may include (i) a hydration function for volume fraction of unreacted water, (ii) a hydration function for volume fraction of clinker components, (iii) a hydration function for volume fraction of hydration product, and (iv) a hydration function for volume fraction of chemical shrinkage. In some embodiments, the volume fractions be calculated using the hydration functions of Equations 19-22 from the current degree of hydration of the cement.
free water:
clinker:
hydration product:
chemical shrinkage:
In the Equations 19-22, n0 is the initial volume fraction of water, wr=wn+wgp is the mass fraction of reacted water (non-evaporable water plus gel pore water) per mass of hydrated cement, vcl , vw, and Vr are the specific volumes of each phase.
The constants of Equations 19-22 were determined from experimental results and used to develop the following expression for the non-evaporable water content as a function of the mass fractions, pi, for the major compounds of Portland cement as shown below in Equation 23:
w
n=0.257pC
where the major compound abbreviation C3S is tricalcium silicate, C2S is dicalcium silicate, C3A is tricalcium aluminate, and C4AF is tetracalcium aluminoferrite.
Using a least squares fit to a subset of published data the reacted water content may be calculated to give Equation 24, where pC
(wr)P−B=0.334pC
Equation 24 and the fit of wn to published data can then be used to calculate the gel pore ratio, and thus the gel pore water content in Equation 25:
and the reacted water content, wr=wn+wgp. Published results for the specific volume of each category of water can be used to calculate the specific volume of the reacted water, vr+(wnvn+wgpvgp)/wr, and the gel porosity of the hydration product, ƒgp=wgpvgp/(vcl+wrvr). The hydration functions can then be computed as shown in Equations 19-22. The hydration functions for a typical Portland cement are shown in
The hydration functions, together with the elastic moduli of the C-S-H particles and the clinker particles, permit the macroscopic elastic moduli of the cement paste to be calculated from the water to cement ratio and the mass fractions of the compounds of the clinker.
With particular respect to
Modeling the Hydration Reaction
The terms in Equations 5 and 6 describing the chemical reaction can also be determined from the hydration functions defined in the preceding section. The derivative of the macroscopic porosity (Equation 5) with respect to the degree of hydration is shown below in Equation 26.
By conducting experiments with boundary conditions of approximately constant strain (dEv=0) and constant pressure (dp=0), the change in macroscopic porosity is assumed to be due entirely to the chemical reaction, and Equation 26 can be equated to the total rate of change of porosity predicted by the hydration functions as shown in Equation 27.
Similarly, the rate of consumption of water, defined as the rate at which water becomes chemically bound within the C-S-H particles, can be expressed in terms of the hydration functions as shown in Equation 28.
Inserting the preceding two equations into the expression for the increment in fluid content (Equation 6), produces the following relationship defined in Equation 29:
where the constrained specific storage coefficient is introduced in Equation 30.
may also be estimated from the stoichiometry of the chemical reaction.
Simulating Deformation and Stress in a Wellbore Cement Sheath
Methods in accordance with the present disclosure may also include the step of simulating mechanical loading on a formed cement sheath. First, at a specified depth, the hydrostatic stress in the cement at the time of placement is calculated. This hydrostatic stress is caused by the self-weight of the cement at that depth and the weight of any fluid column above the cemented section of the annulus. The increment of stress caused by hydration of the cement is then added to this hydrostatic stress to calculate the initial stress in the cement sheath (the stress in the cement before any mechanical loading is imposed on the cement sheath). Mechanical loading may include expansion or contraction of the casing due to changes in well pressure (pressure test, fluid swap, stimulation, production) and changes in formation stress caused by creep or subsidence. These mechanical loads place an additional increment of stress upon the cement sheath. At a specified depth, the increment of stress caused by mechanical loading is added to the initial stress in order to determine the total stress in the cement sheath. The total stress may then be compared with failure criteria for the cement to determine if the mechanical loading will cause the cement sheath to fail.
For example, methods of determining one or more stresses of an annular cement sheath of a wellbore may include determining volume fractions for a number of phases within the cement sheath as a function of degree of hydration; determining one or more poroelastic properties for the cement sheath as a function of degree of hydration; and determining the pore pressure of the cement body as a function of degree of hydration. In some embodiments, one or more stresses within the cement sheath may then be calculated using (i) the poroelastic properties for the cement sheath, (ii) pore pressure of the cement sheath, (iii) a mechanical property of the casing, (iv) geometry of the casing, (v) geometry of the wellbore, and (vi) wellbore conditions (e.g., depth, temperature, formation pore pressure, elastic properties of the formation, and fluid column weight).
In the preceding sections, the constitutive relation (Equation 4) and the increment in fluid content (Equation 29) of the cement paste has been derived. These equations, together with the balance laws and the expression for the fluid seepage velocity, determine the partial differential equations (PDEs) governing the deformation and pore pressure of the solid. In this section, a finite element technique for solving these coupled PDEs for the geometry and boundary conditions of a cement body is described, such as a well-cement sheath.
For the isothermal case and assuming small and quasi-static deformations, the appropriate balance laws are the Cauchy equilibrium equation and the fluid continuity equation. The equilibrium equation is shown below in Equation 31:
T
ij,
+F
i=0 (31)
where the macroscopic stress in the cement Tij is calculated by adding the increment of stress in equation 4 to the hydrostatic stress in the cement at the time of placement and Fi is the body force, if present (e.g., gravity).
The fluid continuity equation for small spatial variations in both porosity and density and without any source densities is written as shown in Equation 32:
where qi,i are the components of the fluid flux vector, q.
For sufficiently slow flow rates and small spatial variations of permeability, substitution of Darcy's law and using equation 29 with vw=vgp provides the diffusion equation for the pore pressure shown in Equation 33:
where
At the boundaries of the finite element mesh of the cement sheath, the displacement or the traction is prescribed for each displacement degree of freedom, and the pore pressure or the fluid flux is prescribed for each pore pressure degree of freedom. At the inner radius of the sheath, the casing is explicitly modeled with linear elastic finite elements, and the fluid flux is zero in the absence of debonding. At the outer radius, for an axisymmetric annulus and a linear elastic formation, the traction vector is a function of the shear modulus of the formation, Gform, and the radius of the hole as shown in Equation 34:
which is the analytic solution for an internally pressurized cylindrical hole in a semi-infinite elastic body.
The fluid flux at the outer radius of an actual cement sheath is a complex function of the cement pore pressure, the formation pore pressure, the formation permeability, and the properties of the cake skin of cement and mud that forms during placement of the cement. Here, the effects of these variables can be lumped into two skin parameters, κskin and tskin, calculating the flux as shown in Equation 35:
where the formation pressure is approximated to remain constant at the time scale of several days. The finite element method may also be used to model the fluid flow in the cake skin and the formation when given accurate measurements of the permeability of each material.
In order to integrate the governing equations, the current degree of hydration may be determined for each time increment in some embodiments. The rate of hydration can be measured, for example, by isothermal calorimetry tests conducted at different temperatures. A fit of the normalized chemical affinity A(ξ) and the activation energy Ea to the calorimetry data determines the Arrhenius equation describing the hydration reaction shown below in Equation 36,
where the chemical affinity is given by an expression of the form shown in Equation 37.
A(ξ)=aξb(1−ξ)c (37)
Equation 36 is then integrated over each time increment in order to determine the current degree of hydration of a cement sheath.
Predicting Total Stress on a Formed Cement Sheath
In one or more embodiments, methods in accordance with the present disclosure may include a step of predicting total stress in a formed cement sheath, including the stress contributions from hydration, which determine the initial state of stress, and the stress contributions to mechanical loading, and determining whether such stresses are sufficient to cause the cement sheath to fail. For example, compressive stresses within a cement sheath can be caused by an increase of wellbore pressure or formation stress, placing the cement at risk of shear failure. Further, tensile stresses in the tangential (or hoop) direction, caused by an increase in cement pore pressure or wellbore pressure, for example, can cause the cement to fracture in the radial or axial direction.
Other sources of stress include tensile stress in the radial direction produced, for example, from a decrease in fluid pressure within the wellbore or decreases in temperature of fluid within the wellbore or cement, may cause the cement sheath to debond from the formation and/or the casing, forming a microannulus.
In one or more embodiments, predictions of the total stress on a formed cement sheath may include a determination of one or more of the maximum tensile effective stress, the maximum compressive stress, and the radial stress at the inner radius and outer radius of the cement sheath. Further, the maximum values for the stress modes may be calculated based on the wellbore conditions and results of simulating the hydration of the cement composition.
The total stress for the cement sheath can be determined using various different methodologies. For example, a finite element technique, as shown in the Examples section below can be used to determine total stress for the cement sheath. The inputs to the finite element technique can be the cement material properties, geometry of the wellbore, wellbore conditions, formation conditions, the equilibrium equation defined in Equation 31, and the diffusion equation for the pore pressure of the cement defined in Equation 33. Other methodologies for determining total stress include finite difference techniques and/or analytic methods.
Selection of a Cement Composition
In one or more embodiments, methods in accordance with the present disclosure may include a step of designing or redesigning a cementing operation to modify a cement composition such that the structural properties of the final cement sheath approach, meet, or fall below a predetermined failure criteria. For example, methods may include inputting cement operation parameters based on a selected cement composition, using modeling techniques to determine cement sheath failure based on the given wellbore conditions, and designing the cementing operation in order to prevent the predicted failure mode.
In some embodiments, when a cement sheath is predicted to fail a cement operation may be engineered to include a cement with a lower elastic modulus or higher compressive strength. For example, if the cement sheath is predicted to fail by fracture, a cement composition with a lower elastic modulus or higher tensile strength may be used, or formation supports may be added as reinforcement. In another example, if the cement sheath is predicted to fail by debonding from the casing or formation, cement compositions modified to reduce chemical shrinkage may be used, such as a cement that incorporates an expanding agent or inert components that compensate for the shrinkage of the cement component.
Other approaches to strengthen a cement job may include reducing the load placed on the cement sheath by changes of well pressure by increasing the weight (thickness) of the casing, or reducing the range of allowable pressures within the wellbore. In some embodiments, wellbore costs may be a consideration and cement compositions may be selected such that the cement sheath properties are near the failure criteria, or below the criteria for a predetermined period of time in which operations may be completed before anticipated failure, in order to reduce expenses associated with specialty cements or cement additives.
Cement compositions in accordance with the present disclosure may include hydraulic cement compositions that react with an aqueous fluid or other water source and harden to form a barrier that prevents the flow of gases or liquids within a wellbore traversing an oil or gas reservoir. In one or more embodiments, the cement composition may be selected from hydraulic cements known in the art, such as those containing compounds of calcium, aluminum, silicon, oxygen and/or sulfur, which set and harden by reaction with water. These include “Portland cements,” such as normal Portland or rapid-hardening Portland cement, American Petroleum Institute (API) Class A, C, G, or H Portland cements, sulfate-resisting cement, and other modified Portland cements, high-alumina cements, and high-alumina calcium-aluminate cements.
Other cements may include phosphate cements and Portland cements containing secondary constituents such as fly ash, pozzolan, and the like. Other water-sensitive cements may contain aluminosilicates and silicates that include ASTM Class C fly ash, ASTM Class F fly ash, ground blast furnace slag, calcined clays, partially calcined clays (e.g., metakaolin), silica fume containing aluminum, natural aluminosilicate, feldspars, dehydrated feldspars, alumina and silica sols, synthetic aluminosilicate glass powder, zeolite, scoria, allophone, bentonite, and pumice.
In some embodiments, cements may include Sorel cements such as magnesium oxychloride (MOC) cement, magnesium oxysulfate (MOS), magnesium phosphate (MOP), and other magnesium-based cements formed from the reaction of magnesium cations and a number of counter anions including, for example, halides, phosphates, sulfates, silicates, aluminosilicates, borates, and carbonates.
In one or more embodiments, the set time of the cement composition may be controlled by, for example, modifying the amount of water in the cement composition, varying the particle size of the cement components, or varying the temperature of the composition. The ratio of water to cement (w/c) ratio may be used in some embodiments to control the setting time and the final hardness of a cement composition. For example, increasing the water concentration may reduce cement strength and increase set times, while decreasing water concentration may increase strength, but may reduce the workability of the cement.
Cement Additives
In some embodiments, the rigidity of the final cement may be modified by including various additives such as polymers that increase the stability of the cement suspension during delivery, and may modify physical properties such as compressive strength. Cement compositions may also contain setting accelerators, retarders, or air-entraining agents that modify the density of the final cement.
In one or more embodiments, cement compositions may contain one or more hydration retarders known in the art to increase the workable set time of the resulting cement. Hydration retarders in accordance with the present disclosure may delay setting time and take into account increased temperatures encountered in many subterranean formations, allowing greater control of cement placement in a number of varied formations and conditions. Hydration retarders may also increase the durability of a cement composition in some embodiments by reducing reaction kinetics and encouraging thermodynamic crystallization of cement components, minimizing crystal defects in the final cement product.
Hydration retarders in accordance with the present disclosure may serve several purposes such as adjusting the set profile of a cement composition and/or improve strength and hardness of the cement. Without being limited by a particular theory, retarders may operate by interacting with cement components through ionic interactions that prevent the cement components from agglomerating and incorporating into the matrix of the setting cement. Other possible chemical mechanisms may include reducing the rate of hydration by physically coating the unhydrated cement particles with hydration retarders and preventing water access.
In one or more embodiments, hydration retarders may include polymeric crystal growth modifiers having functional groups that stabilize cement components in solution and slow the formation of the cement matrix. For example, hydration inhibitors may include natural and synthetic polymers containing carboxylate or sulfonate functional groups, polycarboxylate polymers such as polyaspartate and polyglutamate, lignosulfonates, and polycarboxylic compounds such as citric acid, polyglycolic acid. Other suitable polymers may include sodium polyacrylates, polyacrylic acid, acrylic acid-AMPS-methylpropane sulfonic acid copolymers, polymaleic acid, polysuccinic acid, polysuccinimide, and copolymers thereof.
Hydration retarders may also include compounds that interrupt cement hydration by chelating polyvalent metal ions and forming hydrophilic or hydrophobic complexes with cement components. In one or more embodiments, hydration retarders may include one or more polydentate chelators that may include, for example, ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA), diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid (DTPA), citric acid, nitrilotriacetic acid (NTA), ethylene glycol-bis(2-aminoethyl)-N,N,N′,N′-tetraacetic acid (EGTA) , 1,2-bis(o-aminophenoxy)ethane-N,N,N′,N′-tetraaceticacid (BAPTA), cyclohexanediaminetetraacetic acid (CDTA), triethylenetetraaminehexaacetic acid (TTHA), N-(2-Hydroxyethyl)ethylenediamine-N,N′,N′-triacetic acid (HEDTA), glutamic-N,N-diacetic acid (GLDA), iminodisuccinic acid, ethylene-diamine tetra-methylene sulfonic acid (EDTMS), diethylene-triamine penta-methylene sulfonic acid (DETPMS), amino tri-methylene sulfonic acid (ATMS), ethylene-diamine tetra-methylene phosphonic acid (EDTMP), diethylene-triamine penta-methylene phosphonic acid (DETPMP), amino tri-methylene phosphonic acid (ATMP), salts thereof, and mixtures thereof.
In other embodiments, hydration retarders may include sulfonated phenolic and polyphenolic compounds such as lignosulfonates and sulfonated tannins, organophosphates, amine phosphonic acids, hydroxycarboxylic acids, and sulfonated and/or carboxylated derivatives of carbohydrates and sugars. Other hydration retarders may include boric acid, borax, sodium pentaborate, sodium tetraborate, and proteins such as whey protein.
In some embodiments, cement compositions may include hydration accelerators that increase the temperature of the hydrating cement through exothermic reactions (e.g., magnesium oxide, calcium oxide), and thereby increase the rate of setting or hardening of the composition.
Cement compositions in accordance with the present disclosure may also include an inert agent selected from a variety of inorganic and organic fillers that may become entrained as the cement composition sets. Inert agents may modify the density, plasticity, and hardness of the final cement and may include, for example, saw dust, wood flour, cork, stones, marble flour, sand, glass fibers, mineral fibers, carbon fibers, and gravel.
In one or more embodiments, cement compositions in accordance with methods described herein may include one or more expanding agents such as magnesium oxide, calcium oxide, calcium trisulfoaluminate hydrate, and other compounds that react with water to form hydrates with greater volume that the starting solid reactant. Other expanding agents may include low-density porous additives, and expandable polymeric materials that swell in response to contact with aqueous or non-aqueous fluids (depending on the chemistry of the selected polymeric material).
Other additives may include those that modify the mechanical properties of a formed cement sheath such as the elasticity and ductility of the cement. In one or more embodiments, mechanical modification of the cement sheath may include adding one or more rubber components such as natural rubber, acrylate butadiene rubber, polyacrylate rubber, isoprene rubber, choloroprene rubber, butyl rubber (IIR), brominated butyl rubber (BIIR), chlorinated butyl rubber (CIIR), chlorinated polyethylene (CM/CPE), neoprene rubber (CR), styrene butadiene copolymerrubber (SBR), styrene butadiene block copolymer rubber, sulphonated polyethylene (CSM), ethylene acrylate rubber (EAM/AEM), epichlorohydrin ethylene oxide copolymer (CO, ECO), ethylene-propylene rubber (EPM and EDPM), ethylene-propylene-diene terpolymer rubber (EPT), ethylene vinyl acetate copolymer, fluorosilicone rubbers (FVMQ), silicone rubbers (VMQ), poly 2,2,1-bicyclo heptene (polynorbrneane), alkylstyrene, and crosslinked substituted vinyl acrylate copolymers.
This section demonstrates an embodiment in accordance with the present disclosure in which a model was used to predict the results of homogeneous experiments on a class G Portland cement. Further, the model may be used to simulate the hydration and subsequent loading of a cement sheath downhole. The model uses a cement permeability that decreases exponentially with increasing degree of hydration, as shown in
With particular respect to
The model was also used to predict the change in the pore pressure of the cement caused by the hydration reaction. For example, in
The apparatus includes a chamber 1300 submerged in an oil bath in which the cement composition 1302 hydrates. As the cement hydrates, the radial component of the stress Trr remains constant and pore pressure with the cement composition is measured using a pore pressure sensor 1304. In
With particular respect to
The total drop in pressure was estimated by summing the pressure oscillations as shown in
Next, with particular respect to
With particular respect to
With particular respect to
With particular respect to
With particular respect to
In one or more embodiments, methods in accordance with the present disclosure may also be extended to (i) simulation of temperature changes and gradients caused by heat of hydration and conduction through the casing and formation, (ii) cases of debonding of the cement sheath from the casing and formation, (iii) cases of non-symmetric annular geometries, and (iv) cases of non-linear formation response.
Any of the equations, algorithms, and processes described herein, such as (i) determining a stress for a cement body, (ii) determining volume fractions for phases within the cement body as a function of degree of hydration, (iii) determining poroelastic properties for the cement body as a function of degree of hydration, (iv) determining pore pressure of the cement body as a function of degree of hydration, (v) determining a stress of an annular cement sheath of a wellbore, and (vi) determining elastic moduli of cement, may be performed by a processing system.
The term “processing system” should not be construed to limit the embodiments disclosed herein to any particular device type or system. The processing system may be a computer, such as a laptop computer, a desktop computer, or a mainframe computer. The processing system may include a graphical user interface (GUI) so that a user can interact with the processing system. The processing system may also include a processor (e.g., a microprocessor, microcontroller, digital signal processor, or general purpose computer) for executing any of the methods and processes described above (e.g. processes (i)-(vi)).
The processing system may further include a memory such as a semiconductor memory device (e.g., a RAM, ROM, PROM, EEPROM, or Flash-Programmable RAM), a magnetic memory device (e.g., a diskette or fixed disk), an optical memory device (e.g., a CD-ROM), a PC card (e.g., PCMCIA card), or other memory device. This memory may be used to store, for example, the model described herein, inputs for the model, and outputs for the model.
Any of the methods and processes described above, including processes (i)-(vi), as listed above, can be implemented as computer program logic for use with the processing system. The computer program logic may be embodied in various forms, including a source code form or a computer executable form. Source code may include a series of computer program instructions in a variety of programming languages (e.g., an object code, an assembly language, or a high-level language such as C, C++, or JAVA). Such computer instructions can be stored in a non-transitory computer readable medium (e.g., memory) and executed by the processing system. The computer instructions may be distributed in any form as a removable storage medium with accompanying printed or electronic documentation (e.g., shrink wrapped software), preloaded with a computer system (e.g., on system ROM or fixed disk), or distributed from a server or electronic bulletin board over a communication system (e.g., the Internet or World Wide Web).
In some embodiments, the processing system may include discrete electronic components coupled to a printed circuit board, integrated circuitry (e.g., Application Specific Integrated Circuits (ASIC)), and/or programmable logic devices (e.g., a Field Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGA)). Any of the methods and processes described above can be implemented using such logic devices.
The processes and methods described herein are not limited to designing cementing operations for cement bodies within wellbores. For example, the processes and methods described herein can be used to design cementing operations for surface applications, such as cementing operations for large cement or concrete structures, such as dams, bridges, walls, and foundations.
Although only a few examples have been described in detail above, those skilled in the art will readily appreciate that many modifications are possible in the examples without materially departing from this subject disclosure. Accordingly, all such modifications are intended to be included within the scope of this disclosure.
This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/968719, filed Mar. 21, 2014, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US15/21829 | 3/20/2015 | WO | 00 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61968719 | Mar 2014 | US |