贝克休斯倾听(和倾听):声学遥测有助于深水完井

双向通信为操作员提供了更多有关井下环境的数据,使他们能够实时做出更好的决策。

虽然泥浆脉冲遥测通过向地面发送信号来提高钻井效率,但完井环境却是另一回事。很长一段时间以来,没有遥测系统可以双向发送信号——向上发送到地面并返回。

声学技术在完井环境中的应用使得分离流体和地层之间的通信成为可能。现在,使用编码声波的双向声学通信有助于提高完成工作的效率。

凭借这种能力,运营商正在寻找更多方法来利用发送到地面的大量井下数据。但贝克休斯智能服务产品线总监 Duncan Groves 表示,声学技术具有更大的前景,因为声学可用于实现完井时的井下控制。该服务公司还推出了首款声驱动尾管悬挂器。

一段时间以来,钻井作业方面已经通过泥浆脉冲遥测和其他技术实现了双向通信。格罗夫斯说,由于钻井环境中提供了所有可用的测量结果,钻井作业变得非常高效,“现在每天钻井一英里已经很常见了”。

他说,目标是在完井和干预环境中实现钻井和生产环境的长期改进。输入双向遥测系统。

他说,实现完井效率需要从正确的地方获得正确的测量结果,然后传输测量结果,以便对数据进行分析和采取行动。

与此同时,竣工工作“极具挑战性”,格罗夫斯说。“我们认为设备在孔周围撞击是很糟糕的,但在这里我们要处理的是侵蚀性完井液、支撑剂和压裂液、高压缩载荷和高压。”

过去,井下通讯是一条单行道。

随着页岩油田开始受到关注,在美国陆地钻探环境中试验声学通信,这种情况开始发生变化。但格罗夫斯说,客户希望在其他地方使用该技术。

”我们的客户对我们说,“我们有美国陆地钻探的信息。我们没有的地方是墨西哥湾深水完井项目,”他说。

因此,贝克休斯致力于使声学遥测技术能够在海上完井环境中工作所需的工程。2015 年,该服务公司开始在墨西哥湾 (GoM) 对该解决方案进行现场测试。

他说,由此产​​生的声学遥测系统 XACT 已完全商业化多年,并在墨西哥湾和英国北海使用,允许在钻井、完井和干预环境中进行双向通信。

声音技术

声学遥测可以通过其他可安装的传感器来测量井下压力、张力和扭矩。

声学传输系统中的工具会产生声波,并将这些信号向上或向下发送。信号距离信号源越远就越弱,因此沿着钻柱放置增强器或中继器工具,以将数字编码信号沿线路进一步向上或向下传播。该信号实际上是一个包含数据冗余检查的信息包,以最大限度地减少单点故障的可能性。

格罗夫斯表示,贝克休斯的 XACT 双向声波网络不会干扰钻柱的任何部件,并且地面上的任何设备都不会被修改。也就是说,网络的正常运行需要一些设备。

贝克休斯在水面放置了双向声学表面工具和电子声学接收器。水面上的笔记本电脑根据接收到的信息进行操作。

井下,声学系统的 XACT 声学遥测节点类似于钻铤,钻柱上分布有多个工具,以在声波沿管道向上或向下传播时增强信号。Groves 表示,一口 30,000 英尺的井可能会在钻柱上使用六到七个 XACT 声学遥测节点。

“这给了他们双向沟通,”格罗夫斯说。“这为他们提供了了解正在发生的事情的途径。”

他说,就完工而言,这一点从未如此重要。

在完井领域,声波遥测可用于监测井下压力、实时确认工具位置、提高故障排除效率、监测损失和涌入以及测量油管和环空以实现完全覆盖。

在该领域

在墨西哥湾,贝克休斯的一位客户在多个砂层中的储层压力不确定。由于井下净压力未知,一次对多个储层砂层进行射孔的尝试导致了延误。因此,钻井平台必须应对涌入和损失,直到油井达到平衡。客户选择进行多次射孔运行,直到找到能够提供准确实时信息的解决方案。

Groves 表示,客户选择了贝克休斯的 XACT 双向遥测系统,因为该系统易于调动,实施所需的钻机时间最短,并使他们能够快速微调完井液重量以安全起下钻。

“他们只是改变了油井的风险状况。这为他们节省了五天的钻机时间。”格罗夫斯说。

他说,现在,在油管输送射孔作业期间运行实时数据已成为运营商的标准配置,该运营商的作业水深为 6,000 英尺至 10,000 英尺。

在墨西哥湾的其他地方,客户正在处理狭窄的地层裂缝,导致储层压力窗口崩溃。虽然可以通过控制压力钻井来钻探该井,但理想的完井系统被认为风险太大而无法实现。客户选择使用不同的完井系统,这可能会导致生产寿命缩短或干预时间缩短。

客户部署了 XACT,并将实时压力数据集成到初始井的决策中。

“井下数据完全改变了他们要做的事情,”他说。

基于对系统性能的信心,客户将完井类型从独立筛管切换为砾石充填,并使用实时井下数据来管理安装和压力泵送操作。

客户能够利用实时数据将井下压力保持在极其严格的窗口内。多口井已成功进行砾石充填,客户还计划在最初被认为无法完成的油田中打其他井。格罗夫斯表示,因此,大量新生产将在现有生产设施上上线。

邓肯·格罗夫斯、贝克·休斯
(来源:贝克休斯)

“井下数据完全改变了他们要做的事情。”——邓肯·格罗夫斯,贝克休斯

在另一个案例中,客户希望对深水压裂充填井进行更好的操作控制,这需要在几个关键位置之间操纵井下服务工具。挑战:工具必须上下移动几英尺,但距离控制参数的表面有 30,000 英尺。对井下发生的情况的错误解释可能会导致次优压裂组件的延误和生产不良。

Groves 表示,客户使用 XACT 系统来了解整个压裂充填过程中的井下重量、压力和温度。井下数据提供了清晰、简洁的可见性,因此可以有效地做出决策。他说,还确定了其他可能的效率和风险降低方法,可以在一次运行中完成更多阶段,并缩短完成时间。

声学驱动

格罗夫斯说,通过双向通信,可以在完井环境中启动井下设备。他指出,声学系统无需加压或下降致动工具即可运行。

新的声学 Sonus Liner Hanger 系统仍在等待现场试验,多个客户正在讨论运行它。贝克休斯正在评估下一个驱动工具系统,并将于 2023 年启动该项目。

原文链接/hartenergy

Baker Hughes Listens Up (and Down): Acoustic Telemetry Aids Deepwater Completions

Bi-directional communications give operators more data about the downhole environment, allowing them to make better decisions in real-time.

While mud pulse telemetry produced efficiencies in drilling by sending signals to the surface, the completions environment was a different story.  For a long time, no telemetry system could send signals in both directions — up to the surface and back down.

The application of acoustic technology in the completions environment makes it possible to decouple communication from fluids and the formation. Now, bi-directional acoustics communications using encoded sound waves has helped make completions more efficient.

With that capability, operators are finding more ways to take advantage of the wealth of downhole data being sent up to the surface. But acoustic technology holds even more promise, according to Duncan Groves, product line director for smart services at Baker Hughes, because acoustics can be used to enable downhole control in completions. The service company is also coming out with its first acoustic-actuated liner hanger.

For some time, the drilling side of operations has had the luxury of bi-directional communications through mud-pulse telemetry and other technologies. As a result of all the measurements available in the drilling environment, drilling operations have become so efficient that “drilling a mile a day is a common thing now,” Groves said.

The goal was to make the long-established improvements in the drilling and production environments possible in the completions and intervention environments, he said. Enter the bi-directional telemetry system.

Achieving completions efficiencies requires getting the right measurements from the right places— then transmitting measurements so that data can be analyzed and acted upon, he said.

At the same time, completions are “extremely challenging operations,” Groves said. “We think drilling is bad with equipment banging around the hole, but here we’re dealing with aggressive completion fluids, proppants and frac fluids, high compressional loads, high pressures.”

In the past, downhole communication was a one-way street.

That began to change as acoustic communications were experimented with in the U.S. land drilling environment as shale plays started gaining traction. But clients wanted to have access to the technology in other places, Groves said.

“Our clients said to us, ‘We have information in U.S. land drilling. Where we don’t have it is deepwater Gulf of Mexico completions,’” he said.

So Baker Hughes worked on the engineering necessary to enable acoustic telemetry to work in the offshore completion environment. In 2015, the service company started field testing the solution in the Gulf of Mexico (GoM).

The resulting acoustic telemetry system, XACT, has been fully commercial for years and is in use both in the GoM and the U.K. North Sea, allowing for bi-directional communication in the drilling, completions and interventions environments, he said.

Sound technology

Acoustic telemetry can measure downhole pressures, tension and torque with other sensors available for installation.

A tool within the acoustic transmission system creates sound waves and sends those signals up or down the line. The signal weakens the further away it gets from the source, so booster or repeater tools are placed along the drillstring to propagate the digitally-encoded signal further up or down the line. The signal is actually a packet of information complete with data redundancy checks to minimize the chance for single points of failure.

Groves said Baker Hughes’ XACT Bi-Directional Acoustic network doesn’t interfere with any component of the drillstring, and no equipment is modified at the surface. That said, there are a few pieces of equipment needed for the network to, well, work.

At the surface, Baker Hughes places the bi-directional acoustic surface tool and the electronic acoustic receiver.A laptop at the surface acts on information received.

Downhole, the acoustic system’s XACT Acoustic telemetry nodes resemble a drill collar, and multiple tools are spaced on the drillstring to boost the signal as it propagates the sound wave up or down the pipe. Groves said a 30,000-ft well might use six or seven XACT acoustic telemetry nodes on the drillstring.

“That gives them bi-directional communication,” Groves said. “It gives them a pathway to see what’s going on.”

And that’s never been more important when it comes to completions, he said.

In the world of completions, acoustic telemetry can be used to monitor downhole pressure, confirm tool position in real-time, improve troubleshooting efficiency, monitor losses and influx and measure tubing and annulus for complete coverage.

In the field

In the GoM, one of Baker Hughes’ clients had uncertain reservoir pressures in multiple sands. Attempts to perforate the multiple reservoir sands in one run had caused delays since the net downhole pressure was unknown. As a result, the rig had to deal with influxes and losses until the well could be brought into balance. The client elected to make multiple perforation runs until it found a solution that would provide accurate real-time information.

Groves said the client chose Baker Hughes’ XACT bi-directional telemetry system because it was simple to mobilize, required minimal rig time to implement and enabled them to rapidly fine-tune completion fluid weights to trip safely.

“They just changed the risk profile of the well. That saved them five days of rig time,” Groves said.

Now, he said, running real-time data during tubing-conveyed perforating operations is standard with the operator, which has operations in 6,000 ft to 10,000 ft water depth.

Elsewhere in the GoM, a client was dealing with a narrow formation fracture to collapse pressure window in the reservoir. While the well could be drilled with managed pressure drilling, the ideal completion system was deemed too risky to be achievable. The client elected to use a different completion system that could have led to a shorter production life or shorter time to intervention.

The client deployed XACT and integrated real-time pressure data into decision-making on the initial wells.

“The downhole data completely changed what they were going to do,” he said.

Based on confidence in the system performance, the client switched the completion type from standalone screens to a gravel pack and used real-time downhole data to manage the installation and pressure pumping operations.

The client was able to keep the downhole pressures within an extremely tight window using the real-time data. Multiple wells were successfully gravel packed, and the client plans other wells in a field that was initially deemed as unable to be completed. As a result, significant new production will be brought online to an existing production facility, according to Groves.

Duncan Groves, Baker Hughes
(Source: Baker Hughes)

“The downhole data completely changed what they were going to do.” – Duncan Groves, Baker Hughes

In another case, a client wanted better operational control on deepwater frac pack wells, which require manipulation of downhole service tools between several critical positions. The challenge: tools have to be moved up and down several feet — but are 30,000 ft away from the surface where the parameters are being controlled. An incorrect interpretation of what happened downhole can lead to delays and poor production from a suboptimal frac pack.

Groves said the client used the XACT system to understand downhole weight, pressures and temperatures during the entire frac pack process. The downhole data provided clear and concise visibility so decisions could be made efficiently. He said other possible efficiencies and risk reductions were identified that could enable more stages to be completed in a single run with a reduced completion time.

Acoustical actuation

With bi-directional communication, Groves said, it is possible to actuate downhole equipment in the completions’ environment. The acoustic system operates without the need to pressure up or drop actuation tools, he noted.

A new acoustic Sonus Liner Hanger System is still awaiting field trial with multiple clients in discussion to run it. Baker Hughes is evaluating what the next actuated tool system will be and are kicking that project off in 2023.