This invention relates to apparatus for and a method of treating wellbores, particularly treatments to reduce or prevent wellbore instability.
Various caliper tools for gauging the diameter of a borehole are known in the art. In one example, a caliper tool includes one or more bow springs coupled to a tool body. When the tool body is disposed in a borehole, the bow spring engages the borehole wall and expands and contracts as the tool body traverses the borehole and the borehole diameter changes. The motion of the bow spring can provide an indication of the borehole diameter. In this case, a sensing device can be attached to the bow spring and used to monitor the motion of the bow spring. This is taught, for example, in U.S. Pat. Nos. 2,639,512 and 7,069,775 B2. Some caliper tools further include one or more rigid arms coupled between the tool body and the bow spring. The rigid arm deflects as the bow spring expands and contracts, and the motion of the rigid arm provides an indication of the borehole diameter.
Wellbore instability takes many forms, can have several causes and may be treated in many ways. Uneven earth stresses and specific rock properties can combine to cause breakouts in a wellbore (i.e. the cross-section of the wellbore is enlarged along one axis while the rest of the borehole remains in-gauge or near to gauge). In drilling the overburden, this phenomenon can lead to major well construction problems including stuck pipe and poor zonal isolation. In a reservoir, the same problems can occur as in the overburden, but the additional inconvenience of sand production can also take place, sometimes throughout the life of the well.
Known wellbore treatment methods can be mechanical, e.g, setting a sacrificial casing string or expandable tubular, sand screen etc., chemical, e.g. injection of resins to consolidate sand, changes in the drilling fluid chemistry to prevent further instability etc., or Theological, e.g. by placing gels into the wellbore to stabilize fractured rock and similar methods.
These treatments meet with varying degrees of success, but are generally applied to the whole wellbore within a defined depth range. Preserving formation permeability can be important (for instance in a producing reservoir), but this is more often than not severely compromised by current treatments, or an additional step of perforating past the treatment is required to re-establish the wellbore-reservoir connection.
According to one aspect of the invention, there is provided an apparatus for treating a wellbore instability including a caliper with a plurality of radially extending arms which are capable of extending and retracting movement in a radial direction, a fluid supply for delivering treatment fluid from at least of the arms to the wellbore, whereby in use the ends of the caliper arms engage the wellbore, and the fluid being delivered from the arm or arms so that the fluid is applied to regions of the wellbore.
In the pre-completion phase of well construction, a caliper log can be run to give data on the depth range, magnitude and orientation of any breakouts. These data can be used to modify future drilling and completion programs. The caliper for producing a caliper log can be modified to incorporate the facility for delivering treatment fluid to any extended arms of the caliper, to put the invention into effect.
Preferably, the fluid supply includes a valve mechanism for delivering treatment fluid. More preferably, the valve mechanism allows fluid delivery from the end of an extended arm but blocks fluid delivery from a non-extended arm.
In an even more preferred embodiment the radially outer end of each caliper arm may have an outlet port for delivering the treatment fluid, and the sensing and valve mechanism may include a valve for each arm and may be operative to sense an extended condition of any arm so as to open the corresponding valve.
The treatment fluid can be held in a fluid reservoir which forms part of the calliper tool or any conveyance tool. Alternatively, the fluid may be held in a surface reservoir and delivered to the caliper at a down hole location via a tube along or within the conveyance tool. The treatment fluid itself can be for example a chemical resin or a gel.
Preferably, the caliper is mounted on a wellbore conveyance tool such as a wireline, a drill pipe or a coiled tubing. If mounted on a drill pipe or coiled tubing, the caliper tool is preferably mounted for a rotation independent of the drill pipe or coiled tubing. The caliper may have two, three, four or more extendible arms, which are more preferably equi-angularly spaced.
According to another aspect of the invention there is provided a method of treating wellbore instability, the method comprising rotating within the wellbore a caliper having a plurality of radially extending arms which are capable of extending and retracting in a radial direction as ends of the arms engage the wellbore so that any arm encountering a breakout region, where the wellbore is enlarged, is extended and tends to become located in said region, and delivering treatment fluid to the ends of any extended arm from which the fluid is applied to the breakout regions in order to stabilise the latter.
Aspects and embodiments of the present invention will now be illustrated, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying figures. In the following further aspects and embodiments of the present invention will become apparent to those skilled in the art.
The present disclosure is described in conjunction with the appended figures:
In
The wellbore 10 is shown in-gauge (i.e. at the desired diameter) in
If there is anisotropic stress in a wellbore, the resulting breakouts are often in a particular plane, and a four arm caliper will tend to orient itself such that at least one of the arms locates in the largest dimension (i.e. within the breakout) where the rock is least stable and may be continuing to fail with time. Failure of the rock could be as blocks or other large fragments or, in the case of some sandstones, as individual sand grains. Without treatment, these pieces or grains are removed from the breakouts (either by falling into the hole or being carried out by fluid flow), so there is the potential for the failed zone to continue to grow. The invention enables the failed blocks or grains to be secured in place, to stabilise the wellbore.
At the hub of the caliper is a sensing and valve mechanism 14 which is operative to sense the extension of any of the four arms and, when an extension is sensed, to direct treatment fluid (e.g. a chemical resin or gel) along the extended arm 141 as indicated by the arrows. The fluid is delivered through an outlet port 142 at the radially outermost end 15 of each extended arm 13a which may be tubular or telescopic for this purpose. The fluid is thereby injected under pressure into the regions 102, thereby stabilizing the regions 102 and preventing enlargement of the breakout. Thus, in the example of
While the invention has been described in conjunction with the exemplary embodiments described above, many equivalent modifications and variations will be apparent to those skilled in the art when given this disclosure together with the documents mentioned herein, which are all incorporated herewith by reference. Accordingly, the exemplary embodiments of the invention set forth above are considered to be illustrative and not limiting. Various changes to the described embodiments may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20080156535 A1 | Jul 2008 | US |