The invention generally relates to a technique and apparatus to deploy a cement plug in a well.
A cement plug may be deployed in a subterranean oil or gas well for a variety of different reasons. For example, a cement plug may be placed in the well to seal off a lost circulation zone, kick off a side track or initiate directional drilling. Additionally, a cement plug may be set in the well to temporarily seal and protect a formation or seal the well for abandonment.
Plug cementing typically includes communicating a predetermined amount of cement slurry into a wellbore through a drill string and allowing the cement slurry to set. Mechanical or fluid spacers may be pumped before and after the cement slurry through the drill string for purposes of isolating the cement slurry from drilling fluid. Uncertainties associated with the plug cementing operation, such as imprecise knowledge of the volume of cement slurry pumped and the exact wellbore volume into which the cement slurry is pumped, may adversely affect the plug cementing operation and the quality of the plug.
In one aspect, a technique that is usable with a well includes deploying a sensing device on a drill string and communicating with the sensing device during a plug cementing operation over a wired infrastructure of the drill string. The technique includes controlling the plug cementing operation in response to the communication.
In another aspect, a system that is usable with a well includes a pump system, a drill string that includes a wired infrastructure and a sensing device. The drill string includes a passageway to communicate fluids in connection with a plug cementing operation. The sensing device communicates a signal over the wired infrastructure during the plug cementing operation, and the signal is indicative of a state of the plug cementing operation.
In yet another aspect, an apparatus that is usable with a well includes a drill string that includes a wired infrastructure and a sensing device. The sensing device communicates a signal over the wired infrastructure during a plug cementing operation, and the signal is indicative of a state of the plug cementing operation.
Advantages and other features of the invention will become apparent from the following drawing, description and claims.
Referring to
In general, the drill string 30 includes a larger diameter upper section 31 and a smaller diameter lower section, or tail pipe 50. During the plug cementing operation, a surface pump system 94 pumps the cement slurry through the central passageway of the drill string 30, and the cement slurry exits the drill string 30 at or near the tail pipe's lower end 52. For purposes of isolating the cement slurry from drilling fluid, the pump system 94 may pump fluid spacer layers into the string's central passageway, which precede and follow the cement slurry. Additionally, as further described below, the pump system 94 may pump drilling fluid downhole through the central passageway of the drill string 30 behind the fluid spacer and cement slurry layers to position the plug.
As a more specific example, the drill string 30 is initially positioned so that the lower end 52 of the tail pipe 50 is located in the targeted region 70. At this point, the wellbore 20 and the central passageway of the drill string 30 may be filled with drilling fluid. A viscous or reactive pill may be pumped down through the central passageway of the drill string 30 for purposes of providing a base for the cement plug to prevent its downward migration.
Next, the pump system 94 introduces a train of layers involved in the plug cementing operation. First, the pump system 94 introduces a first fluid spacer layer into the drilling string's central passageway. The first spacer fluid layer forms an isolation barrier to prevent the cement slurry, which follows the spacer fluid, from mixing with drilling fluid that is present in the drill string 30 and wellbore 20. The cement slurry follows the first spacer fluid layer, and a second spacer fluid layer is introduced into the central passageway of the drill string 30 behind the cement slurry. The pump system 94 then pumps drilling fluid into the drill string's central passageway to pump the train of spacer fluids and cement slurry downhole until the cement-spacer fluid interfaces are at the appropriate downhole positions, as further described below.
As described herein, for purposes of accurately controlling the plug cementing operation, such as detecting when the cement-spacer fluid interfaces are at the appropriate downhole positions, the drill string 30 has downhole sensors 60 and 66 and a wired infrastructure 84. The sensors 60 and 66 acquire downhole measurements that are indicative of the particular state of the plug cementing operation, and the measurements are communicated uphole over the wired infrastructure 84, which allows the plug cementing operation to be controlled in real time.
More specifically, as one example, the wired infrastructure 84 includes wire segments 85 and various repeaters 90 (one repeater 90 being shown in
As one example, the wired infrastructure 84 and the downhole sensors 60 and 66 may be used to monitor and control a balanced plug setting operation. The fluids and material associated with the different stages of the balanced plug setting operation are illustrated in
Drilling fluid is pumped into the drill string 30 for purposes of forcing the second spacer layer 100 and tubing cement slurry layer 105 in a downward direction and forcing the annulus cement slurry layer 104 and first spacer fluid layer 108 in an upward direction. One of the final stages of the balanced plug cementing operation involves withdrawing the tail pipe 50 from the cement slurry, and ideally, when the tail pipe 50 is withdrawn, a cement-spacer fluid interface 103 (the interface between the tubing cement slurry layer 105 and the second spacer fluid layer 100) inside the string 30 is at the same position as a corresponding cement-spacer fluid interface 101 (the interface between the annulus cement slurry layer 104 and the first spacer fluid layer 108) outside of the drill string 30. In other words, the cement-spacer fluid interfaces 101 and 103 are ideally aligned when the tail pipe 50 is withdrawn, which prevents contamination of the cement slurry. Contamination of the cement slurry (such as mixing of the drilling fluid and cement slurry) may significantly degrade the mechanical properties of the cement plug and may cause the plug to fail.
The above-described stage of the plug cementing operation in which the cement-spacer fluid interfaces 101 and 103 are aligned (i.e., are at the same vertical position) is depicted in
When the cement-spacer fluid interfaces 101 and 103 align and hydrostatic balance is achieved, the tail pipe 50 may be withdrawn above the interfaces 101 and 103. When this occurs and if done at an appropriately slow rate (as further described), the cement slurry sets to form a cement plug 120 that is depicted in
A difficulty arises in determining when alignment of the cement-spacer fluid interfaces 101 and 103 (see
Referring to
The other sensors 66 of the drill string 30 may likewise perform measurements outside and/or inside the tail pipe 50 to detect the position of the cement-spacer fluid interface 101, detect other layers and detect whether contamination of the cement slurry has occurred. Each of the sensors 66 may communicate its acquired measurements to the surface of the well via the wired infrastructure 84. As specific examples, the sensors 60 and 66 may be constructed to detect one or more of the following, which may be used to identify the fluid layers/materials: a density, a conductivity, a pressure, a radioactivity, a radio frequency (RF) tag (for scenarios in which particular layers or materials may contain RF tags that identify the layer/material), an optical property, and an acoustic property.
To summarize,
The pumping continues until one or more of the downhole sensors indicate (diamond 220) the arrival of the second cement-spacer fluid interface 103. Upon this occurrence, referring to
If no mixing is indicated by the downhole sensors, then a determination is made (diamond 236) whether the sensor(s) indicate that the tail pipe 50 is above the cement slurry. Thus, the fluid composition that is indicated by the sensor(s) may be monitored until none of the sensors detect presence of the cement slurry. At this point, the tail pipe 50 is withdrawn (block 240) a predetermined distance (a distance of 100 feet, for example) above the top of the cement. Next, any residual cement in the drill string 30 is circulated out of the string 30, pursuant to block 244.
As an example, the sensor 60, 66 may have an architecture that is depicted in
As an example, the telemetry interface 258 may also establish a bi-directional interface, in that the telemetry interface 258 may receive signals communicated over the wired infrastructure 84 from the surface of the well. In this regard, as an example, the controller 92 may communicate commands downhole to instruct the various sensors regarding when and how to conduct the measurements.
Additionally, the sensor 60, 66 may include a controller 262 (one or more microprocessors and/or microcontrollers, as non-limiting examples), which may be constructed to coordinate the overall activities of the sensor 60, 66 as well as pre-process the measurement that is sensed by the sensing element 250, before the measurement is communicated uphole by the telemetry interface 258. Thus, many variations are contemplated and are within the scope of the appended claims.
While the present invention has been described with respect to a limited number of embodiments, those skilled in the art, having the benefit of this disclosure, will appreciate numerous modifications and variations therefrom. It is intended that the appended claims cover all such modifications and variations as fall within the true spirit and scope of this present invention.