钻井技术掀起新浪潮

新设计、自动化和航空航天灵感能否提高钻井效果?

(来源:Shutterstock)

新技术——从工程设计创新到利用自动化和人工智能的力量——提高了钻井的一致性和精度。

Patterson-UTI,钻井方面的部分重点是尖端钻头技术、受航天工业启发的井眼引导系统和自动化平台。

大约一年前,Ulterra 推出了 WaveCut 钻头,它可以错开切割表面,这样刀具就不会同时撞击岩石。

Ulterra 产品开发经理 Chris Gooch 告诉 Hart Energy:“它们中的每一个都在切割自己的弧线,并且它们在彼此不同的时间遇到​​地层,这有助于分配能量。” “这一切都与钻头表面的能量分布有关。”

该公司表示,这种能源分配正在加快钻探速度。据该公司称,在米德兰盆地,使用 12 英寸 WaveCut 钻头的运营商平均钻探深度为 6,848 英尺,机械钻速为 185 英尺/小时。最快的 12 英寸中间运行是 6,060 英尺的部分,实现了 258 英尺/小时的 ROP。

WaveCut 的设计灵感来自于压碎发动机缸体的滚轮。

“这些事情是巨大的,”古奇说。“我真的用这些波浪形的牙齿来粉碎它们,分离并移动能量。”

他说,WaveCut 的设计师看到了改变钻头能量分布的可能性。

“这不是一项硬摇滚技术,但如今这并没有真正打折很多。” 但对于全球 95% 的钻井应用来说,WaveCut 都适用,”他说。

他说,该公司每年运行约 25,000 个钻头,WaveCut 目前占该数字的 10% 至 15%。

自动化焦点

索尔·马丁内斯
Saul Martinez,Patterson-UTI 钻井优化工程师(来源:Patterson-UTI)

自动化日益推动钻井过程。Patterson-UTI 的钻井优化工程师 Saul Martinez 告诉 Hart Energy,其Cortex 自动化软件正在帮助提高钻井作业的效率和一致性。

“一些一直在使用我们软件的客户,他们肯定可以看到我们“触底”的方式具有更多的一致性,”他说。

他补充说,重要的是要避免无意中损坏 BHA 或由于不正确的底部标记程序而导致过早跳闸。马丁内斯说,该软件有助于减轻其中一些风险,如果没有 Cortex 一部分的 Slips to Weight 软件,标记底部时间可能会“到处都是”,一个连接发生得很快,另一个连接则发生得较慢,马丁内斯说。

二叠纪盆地的一名操作员平均手动标记底部时间为 2.13 分钟。使用 Slips to Weight 软件将平均时间缩短至 1.4 分钟。根据 Patterson-UTI 的数据,Haynesville 页岩油运营商的平均手动时间为 2.99 分钟,但自动化平均时间为 2.22 分钟。

“这个软件可以帮助缓解很多这样的情况,”他说。“我们并不是每次都试图打破体重记录。我们要追求一致性。”

位置感知

井眼定位受到广泛关注,因为运营商希望确保井眼到达他们想要的位置。

“运营商在预算规划上花费了大量资金来开发水库。因此,当我们钻井时,我们希望尽可能具有成本效益。速度是关键,经济性也是关键,但如果您的井筒没有最佳地放置在您想要如何排水的计划间距内,您将无法获得您所预测的欧元,”Ryan Kirby Superior QC 运营副总裁告诉 Hart Energy。

瑞恩·科比
Ryan Kirby,Superior QC 运营副总裁(来源:Patterson-UTI)

该公司的 Hi-Fi Guidance 井眼定位流程基于航空航天技术,从故障检测、隔离和恢复算法开始。他说,Hi-Fi Nav 为钻井团队提供了额外的输出,例如提高了钻头精度。

“实时计算电机产量,包括有效产量和最大产量,”他说,并补充说,旋转趋势也会实时输出,以便为钻井工程师提供有关底部钻具组合如何与地层相互作用的更多信息。

柯比说,该公司的导向平台旨在最大限度地提高导向间隔在钻井窗口内井眼中的位置。 

“为了最大限度地提高效率,我们希望尽可能多地旋转,因为这在大多数情况下速度更快,并且更少的滑动和更少的转向会产生更少的狗腿,”他说。“我们认为通过使用这些井眼安置服务和技术产品可以提高井眼质量。”

该公司表示,HiFi Nav 的高密度轨迹估计能够指出二叠纪盆地一对井中的井眼位置错误,并能够重新导向以避免侧钻。第一口井的水平误差为 70 英尺,TVD 误差为 33 英尺,而第二口井的水平误差为 120 英尺,TVD 误差为 50 英尺。

原文链接/hartenergy

Drilling Tech Rides a Wave

Can new designs, automation and aerospace inspiration boost drilling results?

(Source: Shutterstock)

New technology—from innovating on engineering designs to invoking the powers of automation and AI—is increasing drilling consistency and precision.

At Patterson-UTI, part of the focus on the drilling side has revolved around cutting-edge bit technology, wellbore guidance systems inspired by the space industry and automated platforms.

About a year ago, Ulterra introduced its WaveCut drill bits, which stagger the cutting surface so the cutters don’t all hit the rock at the same time.

“Each of these is cutting their own individual arc, and they’re encountering the formation at different times from each other, and that helps to distribute the energy,” Chris Gooch, product development manager for Ulterra, told Hart Energy. “It’s all about energy distribution across the face of the drill bit.”

And that energy distribution is speeding up drilling, according to the company. In the Midland Basin, operators using 12¼ inch WaveCut bits have drilled an average of 6,848 ft with an ROP of 185 ft/hr, according to the company. The fastest 12¼ inch intermediate run was a 6,060-ft section, which achieved a 258 ft/hr ROP.

The WaveCut design was inspired by the rolling wheels that crush engine blocks.

“These things are huge,” Gooch said. “It literally mashes them using these waved teeth that separate and move the energy.”

The WaveCut’s designer saw the possibility for changing energy distribution with the drill bit, he said.

“It’s not a hard rock technology, but these days that doesn’t really discount a whole lot. But for 95% of drilling applications around the world, the WaveCut would be applicable,” he said.

The company runs about 25,000 drill bits per year, and WaveCut is currently making up between 10% and 15% of that number, he said.

Automation focus

Saul Martinez
Saul Martinez, drilling optimization engineer at Patterson-UTI (Source: Patterson-UTI)

Automation is increasingly driving drilling processes. Saul Martinez, drilling optimization engineer at Patterson-UTI, told Hart Energy that its Cortex automation software is helping provide efficiencies and consistencies in drilling operations.

“Some of the customers that have been using our software, they can definitely see a lot more consistencies in the way that we’re ‘tagging bottom,’” he said.

It’s important to avoid inadvertently damaging the BHA or causing premature trips due to improper tagging bottom procedures, he added. The software helps mitigate some of those risks, and without the Slips to Weight software, which is part of Cortex, tagging bottom times can be “all over the place,” with one connection happening quickly and another more slowly, Martinez said.

One operator in the Permian Basin averaged a manual tag bottom time of 2.13 minutes. Using Slips to Weight software trimmed that average time to 1.4 minutes. A Haynesville Shale operator saw average manual times of 2.99 minutes but automated average times of 2.22 minutes, according to Patterson-UTI.

“This software, it helps smooth out a lot of those times,” he said. “We’re not trying to get record-breaking slips to weight times every time. We’re going for consistency.”

Location awareness

Wellbore positioning gets a lot of attention because operators want to ensure the wellbore goes where they want it.

“Operators spend a lot of money in their budget planning to develop a reservoir. And so, when we’re drilling the wells, we want to be as cost-efficient as possible. Speed is key, economics are key, but if your wellbore is not optimally placed within the planned spacing of how you want to drain that reservoir, you’re not going to capture the EUR that you’re projecting,” Ryan Kirby, vice president of operations for Superior QC, told Hart Energy.

Ryan Kirby
Ryan Kirby, VP of operations for Superior QC (Source: Patterson-UTI)

The company’s Hi-Fi Guidance wellbore positioning process, which is based on aerospace technology, starts with a fault detection, isolation and recovery algorithm. Hi-Fi Nav generates additional outputs, such as improved bit accuracy, for the drilling team, he said.

“We calculate the motor yield rates, both the effective and max in real time,” he said, adding the rotational tendencies are also outputted in real time to give the drilling engineer more information about how BHA interacts with the formation.

The company’s guidance platform is designed to maximize the efficiency in terms of where the steering intervals should be placed in the wellbore inside of the drilling window, Kirby said. 

“To maximize the efficiency, we want to rotate as much as we can because that’s faster for the most part, and less sliding and less steering creates less doglegs,” he said. “We see it as improving wellbore quality by using these wellbore placement services and technology offerings.”

The HiFi Nav’s high-density trajectory estimation was able to point out wellbore placement errors in a pair of Permian Basin wells and enable resteering to avoid the need for sidetracks, the company said. The first well had 70 ft of horizontal error and 33 ft of TVD error while the second well had 120 ft of horizontal error and 50 ft of TVD error.