Killshot 消除了完成时的液体交换

如果 ESP 在操作或拆卸过程中松动,该工具还可防止 ESP 掉落到井下。

保罗·怀斯曼,撰稿人

Peak Completion Technologies Inc. 的工程师创建了 Killshot 工具作为定制解决方案,用于在没有重液的情况下压井并捕获松动的井下泵。 

它被设计为大口径、单次起下工具,可以在放置电潜泵 (ESP) 之前压井,并且可以防止 ESP 在其使用寿命或拆卸过程中意外松动时掉落到够不到的地方。 

ESP 通常不会掉落,但当它们掉落时,将其找回可能会非常昂贵且耗时。

Peak 工程副总裁斯隆·穆斯克罗夫特 (Sloane Muscroft) 表示,将两种功能结合在一个大口径工具中可以节省时间和金钱,以应对不断上升的完井成本。 

WSM 杀戮射击
Peak Completion Technologies 的 Killshot 是一款大口径、单次起下钻工具,设计用于在 ESP 放置之前压井,并作为 ESP 捕获器,防止泵在松动时掉落到够不到的地方。该公司工程副总裁斯隆·穆斯克罗夫特(Sloan Muscroft)(如图)表示,将这两种功能结合在一个大孔径工具中可以节省操作员的井下行程。(来源:Peak Completion Technologies)

Killshot 消除了在放置 ESP 时进行液体击杀的需要。液体杀戮成本高昂且难以清除。该工具将隔离插头插入行程与 ESP 捕获工具行程结合在一起,从而节省了时间和金钱。一旦隔离塞被抽出或破裂,大孔径允许几乎完全自由的生产流,具体取决于完井团队使用的塞子类型。

Killshot 的血统书

Killshot 源自之前的两款压裂产品。第一个是 Set-a-Seat 压裂挡板,旨在取代复合塞。马斯克罗夫特说,该技术是多年前开发的,“其想法是你可以设置它,将压裂球放入其中并对其进行压裂”。复合球需要清理,而可溶压裂球一般不需要清理,节省了第二次下井的成本。

随着当前复合材料插头的出现,Set-a-Seat 变得不再那么必要了,尽管 Muscroft 表示 Peak 继续销售一些,主要是在国际市场上。 
他说,下一步是 Set-a-Stop,它是根据客户要求创建的,只是一个 ESP 捕集器,没有密封功能,以防在 ESP 放置或收回期间管道破裂。 

“操作员已经这样做了,但他们通常使用油管锚或双握箭头套件来完成。”

这些的问题是它们的孔径较小,大约是套管孔径的一半。较小的孔径会限制石油流动,并且工具可能会腐蚀或被沙子或其他井下碎片堵塞,需要进行清理或打捞以移除硬件。第二个工具与第一个工具类似,只是删除了隔离功能。

Muscroft 表示,“Set-a-Stop”也旨在作为一种一次性解决方案,但它的实用性为 Peak 开辟了一条新的产品线。

一种工具可以捕捉 ESP,取代液体杀伤

他说,用重液压井的恢复成本高昂且耗时,需要单独的井下维修行程。客户“需要密封能力,他们希望能够堵塞即将进入的油井的生产区域,或者可能会引起对气袋的担忧,或者在安装 ESP 时可能发生其他问题”。 ”他说。

为了满足井控要求,匹克增加了密封元件、双向承载能力和保压机构。一旦安装了 ESP,后者就会被移除。开发人员基于“设置座位”设计来构建该元素和相对的滑动条。

Muscroft 表示,安装 ESP 的长度可能为 30 英尺或更长,包括电源线、控制线和其他设备,而进行液体压井可能会很复杂。 

“杀戮射击让他们不用担心杀灭液或堵塞物。如果他们担心油井控制,他们可以运行一个简单的钢丝润滑器设置,只是为了将 Killshot 安装到位。一般来说,一旦 Killshot 进入深度,他们就可以完成所有操作并插入 ESP,而不会像没有安装 Killshot 时那样担心。

接待和未来 

Muscroft 表示,客户特别欣赏 Killshot 节省了“完井结束时、油井投入生产之前的流体更换相关的时间和金钱”这一事实。这还消除了与流体压井相关的流量减少的风险,从而使操作员能够从生产一开始就最大限度地提高流量。它还允许在生产阶段几乎不受限制的流体流动。

“展望未来,”穆斯克罗夫特说,“我们看到该工具在其他完井中使用的额外潜力,包括压裂保护型作业以及生产套管中的结痂衬里应用。”

原文链接/hartenergy

Killshot Eliminates Fluid Swaps at Completion

The tool also prevents the ESP from falling downhole if it comes loose during operation or removal.

Paul Wiseman, Contributor

The engineers at Peak Completion Technologies Inc. created the Killshot tool as a bespoke solution to kill wells without heavy fluids and catch loosened downhole pumps. 

Designed as a large-bore, single-trip tool, it can kill a well prior to placing electrical submersible pumps (ESP) and can prevent an ESP from falling out of reach should it accidentally come loose during its service life or removal. 

ESPs don’t typically fall, but when they do, retrieving them can be costly and time-consuming.

Combining the two functions in a large-bore tool saves time and money against ever-rising completion costs, said Sloane Muscroft, vice president of engineering for Peak. 

WSM Killshot
Peak Completion Technologies’ Killshot is a large bore, single-trip tool designed to kill the well prior to ESP placement and as an ESP catch, to keep the pump from falling out of reach should it come loose. The company’s Vice President of Engineering, Sloan Muscroft (pictured), says that combining the two functions in a large bore tool saves downhole trips for operators. (Source: Peak Completion Technologies)

Killshot eliminates the need for a fluid kill while placing the ESP. Fluid kills are costly and difficult to remove. The tool combines the isolation plug insertion trip with the ESP catch tool trip, saving time and money in the process. And the large bore allows for almost completely free production flow once the isolation plug is pumped out or ruptured, depending on what type of plug a completion team uses.

The Killshot’s pedigree

The Killshot descends from two previous frac products. The first one was the Set-a-Seat frac baffle, designed to replace composite plugs. Developed many years ago, “the idea was that you could set it, drop a frac ball into it and frac against it,” Muscroft said. Composite balls need to be cleaned up while dissolvable frac balls generally required no cleanup, saving the cost of a second downhole trip.

With the advent of current composite plugs, the Set-a-Seat became less necessary, although Muscroft said Peak continued to sell some, mostly in international markets. 
Set-a-Stop was the next step, created at customer request as just an ESP catcher, without the sealing function “in case their tubing breaks” during ESP placement or retrieval, he said. 

“Operators already do that, but they generally do it with a tubing anchor or a double grip arrow set.”

The problem with those is they have a smaller bore, about half the bore of the casing. The smaller bore can restrict oil flow, and the tools can corrode or become clogged with sand or other downhole debris, requiring a cleanout or fishing trip to remove the hardware. The second tool was similar to the first, with the isolation function removed.

Set-a-Stop was also intended as a one-off solution, but its usefulness started a new product line for Peak, Muscroft said.

One tool catches ESPs, replaces fluid kills

Killing a well with heavy fluid is costly and time-consuming to undo, requiring a separate downhole service trip, he said. Customers “wanted the sealing ability, and they wanted the ability to plug off the production zones of the well for wells that were coming in or that might create concerns about gas pockets, or other issues could happen while they were installing the ESP,” he said.

To meet well control requirements, Peak added a sealing element, bi-directional load-carrying capabilities and a pressure retaining mechanism. The latter is removed once the ESP is installed. Developers based the element and the opposing slips on the Set-a-Seat design.

Installing the ESP—which can be 30 ft or longer and includes power cables, control lines and other equipment—while doing a fluid kill can be complicated, Muscroft said. 

“What the Killshot allows them to do is to not worry about kill fluids or plugs. They can run a simple wireline lubricator setup, if they’re concerned about well control, just to get the Killshot in place. Once the Killshot’s on depth, they can pull that all off and insert the ESP, generally speaking, without the same concerns that they would have if they didn’t have the Killshot in place.”

Reception and future 

Muscroft said clients have especially appreciated the fact that the Killshot saves “time and money associated with fluid swaps at the end of the completion, prior to putting the well on production. This also eliminates the risk of decreased flow” associated with a fluid kill, which allows operators to maximize flow from the start of production. It also allows for nearly unrestricted fluid flow during the production phase.

“Looking forward,” Muscroft said, “we see additional potential for this tool to be used in other completions, including frac-protect type operations as well as scab-liner applications in production casing.”