2023 年 1 月
特征

不是踢:在定向钻井过程中使用 MPD 控制气球效应

大约 40% 的 NPT 是由与井筒压力相关的意外问题引起的。运营商可以通过应用 MPD 优化的旋转导向 BHA 来解决许多此类问题,从而降低成本并提高安全性。
赫克托·维兹卡拉 / 韦瑟福德 Alex Ngan / 韦瑟福德 埃德加·阿尔贝托·加西亚·吉尔 / 韦瑟福德

在能源行业压力日益增大的推动下,许多运营商正在从曾经被认为无法获得的水库中寻求更多资源。其中一些储层需要钻井解决方案来精确可靠地实现复杂的井眼轨迹以到达产油区。在这些钻井作业期间,计划外事件会增加成本、安全风险和非生产时间 (NPT)。由意外事件引起的所有 NPT 中近 40% 与井筒压力有关,但解决这些问题的典型方法往往是仅将控制压力钻井 (MPD) 技术作为最后的手段。因此,运营商赌博并希望他们的项目不会遇到此类挑战。 

挑战 

大多数钻井作业都会遇到挑战,某些储层具有固有的品质,使操作员能够预测问题并主动缓解挑战。墨西哥的一个海上油田要求运营商钻穿上白垩统角砾岩的碳酸盐岩。为了到达储层,操作员必须钻穿高压区域,该区域的地层在钻井活动期间容易出现膨胀行为。  

一些现场工作人员可能会将这种现象误认为是踢动,因为这两个事件在表面上都显示出相似的迹象,例如连接期间的流动。此外,钻井操作员花费大量时间等待流量检查、稳定流量返回、有害的泥浆加重计划以及对机械钻速的相应影响,这进一步加剧了膨胀效应。因此,这些气球事件通常会导致重大的 NPT。  

解决方案  

为了应对该领域存在的固有挑战,运营商需要一种创新的解决方案,在优化定向钻井的同时管理井下压力。 

规划和设计以获得最佳性能。 在规划阶段,采用标准化钻井工程流程来安全地识别技术限制并在作业的整个生命周期中准确地定位井。运营商、服务公司和钻机承包商之间的早期合作使团队集中精力确定钻井挑战和相关风险。 

在设计阶段,团队分析了偏置井的数据,以确定重要的风险和最佳钻井实践。目标是制定具体的钻井计划,通过适合目的的缓解计划来应对所有风险,以尽可能减少钻井危险和意外事件。  

其中一项挑战涉及钻井承包商。前两口井经历了与气球效应相关的相当大的 NPT,这主要是由于等待井稳定、钻井人员混乱以及启动井控协议的结果。 

团队同意管理井下等效循环密度 (ECD),不允许其超过 2.04 克/立方厘米,这是触发气球效应的阈值,这一点已在上口井中得到验证。根据 ECD 限制的设定,Weatherford 的 MPD 专家进行了广泛的水力学建模,并提出了 1.90 克/立方厘米的合适泥浆密度。这种密度可以为孔清洁提供充足的流量,同时考虑到预期的 ROP,以避免突破 ECD 阈值。 

第二个考虑重点是设置孔底的最小等效密度,以保持井眼稳定性。选择的值为 1.96 gr/cc(最大塌陷压力为 1.925 gr/cc),通过在连接过程中施加 250 psi 的表面背压 (SBP),即可实现目标。   

通过适当管理井下压力的策略,定向钻井团队专注于旋转导向系统 (RSS) 最佳性能的设计设置。我们决定使用带有三个独立导向垫的推入式 RSS,以减少井眼弯曲度并提高可靠性。 

工程师们对不同的底部钻具组合 (BHA) 配置进行了广泛的建模,根据井轨迹寻求最佳设计。这些模拟是沿着计划的井轨迹进行的,以收集广泛的结果,识别与振动相关的潜在危险,如图 1 所示。 对偏置井的扭矩和拖曳摩擦系数以及液压系统的校准确认了钻井参数在钻机操作限制范围内。静态分析发挥了重要作用,它为钻压 (WOB) 提供了一个安全范围,以避免可能损坏工具的接触力,并识别可能引起 BHA 部件屈服的应力。 

图 1. 统计和振动分析

通过井下传感器看到一切。使用实时定向传感器来遵守编程目标并最大限度地减少井眼弯曲度。这些近钻头传感器可在钻井时准确测量倾斜趋势,使定向钻井人员能够监控并及时进行转向修正,以避免出现微狗腿,这是激进定向作业的典型后果。微狗腿会导致井眼弯曲,从而显着增加井下扭矩和阻力、机械卡管的风险以及将套管柱到达设定深度的问题。RSS 凭借其比例转向能力为这项工作提供了帮助,它还大大减少了井中的微狗腿,并显着改善了弯曲度。  

在此操作中,工程师部署了下行链路系统来自动发送命令,并减少因下行链路而造成的典型损失时间。该系统在钻井过程中转移一小部分泥浆流量以及作为数字编码遥测信号的相关负压。这些信号由放置在井下的钻井工具接收和解码,并解释为来自地面的命令。通过分流来自泥浆泵的一定量的泥浆流,将其通过数据链路连接器,并通过旁通管线直接返回到泥浆罐中,从而产生流量减少。通过使用 RSS 减少井眼弯曲度和钻机停机时间以及平滑井眼,操作员可以更快地将套管下入底部,风险更低,从而使操作员能够专注于井眼稳定性和机械钻速。 

卓越执行力。8陆英寸的目标。尾管将继续在测量深度(MD)从 9,022 英尺到 15,118 英尺的层段钻探,将角度从 9.71° 增加到 20.66°,方位角从 327° 转向 316.04°。在执行阶段,实时数据通过 WITSML 从钻井现场传输到威德福实时操作中心 (RTOC),专家们在那里持续监控钻井作业。RTOC 工程师跟踪井中井下功能障碍的任何趋势,确保根据水力学以及扭矩和阻力模拟应用计划的钻井参数,并在必要时提供主动干预。  

由于为了避免气球效应而采用严格的 ECD 阈值,RTOC 工程师实时仔细分析了来自井下钻孔环空压力 (BAP) 传感器的 ECD 值,以识别 ECD 中的意外值。此外,还跟踪 BHA 上的压降并与实时模拟进行连续比较,以确保压力处于 RSS 工作范围内。  

由于发现差异后迅速采取行动,钻探继续进行,根据计划轨迹增加倾斜度并转动方位角。在 MD 9,878 ft (3,011 m) 处,达到最终倾角 (21.06°) 和方位角方向 (315.11°)。事实证明,RSS 性能最佳,与井图的距离仅为 18.5 英尺 (5.64 m)。 

RTOC专家的有效沟通和及时干预为突发情况提供了中肯的指导。例如,在马里兰州 11,909 英尺处,下行链路发送到 RSS 后,BHA 下降压力突然增加(1,060 至 1,300 psi),使钻井的连续性面临风险,如图 2 所示。  

BHA 压降 11,975 英尺

在与现场工作人员确认该事件后,商定了新的流量,以延长 RSS 的使用寿命,而无需额外前往地面。在这种情况下,流量降低至 350 gpm,ECD 降低至 2.026 gr/cc,进一步降低了气球效应的风险。流量变化后,进一步评估孔状况,通过实时更新的模拟考虑孔清洁,以确保钻屑百分比低于 3%,即使机械钻速为 131 英尺/小时。 

定向服务、钻机人员和 MPD 服务之间的协调工作保证了连接时有足够的 SBP,保持最小的等效静态密度 (ESD),以防止井眼不稳定。操作员决定继续钻探直至 15,249 英尺(4,648 m),地质学家在此确定了 7 英寸的套管座。衬垫。 

在井后评估期间,带有定制设计的 BHA 的 RSS 在井段末端实现了规划的井轨迹。没有观察到气球效应;因此,没有计算与该现象相关的 NPT,并且旋转控制装置(RCD)按计划运行。RSS 的使用寿命足以在一次运行中完成该部分,并且不会对制动垫造成明显损坏或磨损。与同类偏置井平均机械钻速60.3英尺/小时相比,本次作业平均机械钻速81.4英尺/小时,钻井时间缩短25.89%,见图3。 

结论 

凭借最佳的 RSS 解决方案,8陆英寸。孔截面一次完成,没有膨胀效应,满足操作员的所有要求。规划的参数有效地满足了 MPD 操作的操作范围限制,包括低转速和流量范围。通过实时 RTOC 监控和支持来自多个学科和承包商的技术部署来进行运营调整。  

成功部署此 RSS 技术钻探 8 陆路。孔部分,并用 7 英寸的外壳将其封闭。liner 证实了集成控制压力和定向钻井解决方案在该领域的可行性。从这项工作中吸取的经验教训可以在未来的油田中复制,以避免与气球效应相关的 NPT。 

关于作者
赫克托·维兹卡拉
韦瑟福德
Hector Vizcarra 是威德福钻井服务公司驻比亚埃尔莫萨的墨西哥钻井工程和运营经理。
颜俊杰
韦瑟福德
Alex Ngan 是 Weatherford 的全球高级钻井工程师。Ngan 先生常驻休斯敦,为钻井工程的所有技术方面提供支持,并被视为钻井危险缓解方面的主题专家。在 Weatherford 的 14 年任期中,他在油井建设、油井完整性、油藏解决方案、油井工程和项目管理领域担任过各种全球和区域职位。在之前的任务中,他领导了一个在全球范围内开发和执行油井工程解决方案的团队。
埃德加·阿尔贝托·加西亚·吉尔
韦瑟福德
Edgar Alberto Garcia Gil 在定向钻井、扩孔方面拥有七年经验,并在墨西哥和阿根廷担任钻井作业主管。他曾在休斯敦和墨西哥参加过技术课程,并拥有化学石油工程学位。
相关文章 来自档案
原文链接/worldoil
January 2023
Features

Not a kick: Controlling ballooning effect with MPD during directional drilling

Approximately 40% of NPT is caused by unplanned issues related to wellbore pressure. Operators can solve many of these problems by applying an MPD-optimized rotary steerable BHA to lower costs and increase safety.
Hector Vizcarra / Weatherford Alex Ngan / Weatherford Edgar Alberto Garcia Gil / Weatherford

Driven by increased stress on the energy industry, many operators are seeking additional resources from reservoirs once considered unattainable. Some of these reservoirs require drilling solutions to precisely and reliably achieve complex wellbore trajectories to reach the pay zones. During these drilling operations, unplanned events increase costs, safety risks and nonproductive time (NPT). Nearly 40% of all NPT caused by unplanned events is related to wellbore pressure, but too often, the typical approach to solving these problems is to use managed pressure drilling (MPD) technology only as a last resort. Thus, operators gamble and hope their projects will not encounter these types of challenges. 

CHALLENGE 

Most all drilling operations encounter challenges, and certain reservoirs have inherent qualities that enable operators to predict problems and proactively mitigate challenges. One offshore field in Mexico requires the operator to drill through carbonates of the Upper Cretaceous Breccia. To reach the reservoir, the operator has to drill through a high-pressure zone with formations that are prone to ballooning behaviors during drilling activities.  

Some field personnel can confuse this phenomenon as a kick, since both events display similar signs on the surface, such as flow during connection. In addition, drilling operators spend considerable time waiting for flow checks, stabilizing flow returns, and detrimental mud weight-up schedules and the corresponding impact on ROP, which further exacerbate the ballooning effect. As a result, these ballooning events often contribute to significant NPT.  

SOLUTION  

To counter the intrinsic challenges present in this field, the operator needed an innovative solution that managed downhole pressure while optimizing directional drilling. 

Planning and designing for optimal performance. In the planning phase, a standardized drilling engineering process was adopted to safely identify the technical limits and accurately position the wells through a job’s lifecycle. Early collaboration between the operator, service company, and rig contractor aligned the team’s focus to determine drilling challenges and associated risks. 

For the design phase, the teams analyzed data from offset wells to establish important risks and best drilling practices. The goal was to generate a specific drilling program, where all risks were met with fit-to-purpose mitigation plans to reduce drilling hazards and unplanned events as much as possible.  

One challenge involved the drilling contractor. The previous two wells experienced considerable NPT related to the ballooning effect, largely as a result of waiting for stabilization of the well, rig crew confusion, and the initiation of the well control protocol. 

The teams agreed to manage the downhole equivalent circulating density (ECD) and not allow it to exceed 2.04 gr/cc, the threshold that triggers the ballooning effect, as verified in the previous well. With the ECD limit set, Weatherford’s MPD experts conducted extensive hydraulics modeling and proposed a suitable mud density of 1.90 gr/cc. This density enables an ample flowrate for hole cleaning while accounting for the expected ROP to avoid the breaching the ECD threshold. 

The second consideration focused on setting the minimum equivalent density at the bottom of the hole to maintain wellbore stability. The value selected was 1.96 gr/cc (the maximum collapse pressure being 1.925 gr/cc) and, by applying a surface backpressure (SBP) of 250 psi during connections, the objective would be achieved.   

With a strategy to manage downhole pressure in place, the directional drilling team focused on design settings for the optimum performance of the rotary steerable system (RSS). The decision was made to use a push-the-bit RSS with three independent steering pads, in order to reduce wellbore tortuosity and improve reliability. 

The engineers extensively modeled different bottomhole assembly (BHA) configurations, seeking the optimal design according to well trajectory. These simulations were conducted along the planned well trajectory to gather a wide scope of results that identified potential hazards related to vibrations, Fig.1. Calibration of the torque and drag friction factors and hydraulics from the offset wells confirmed the drilling parameters were within the rig operating limits. Static analyses played an important role by giving a safe range for weight-on-bit (WOB) to avoid contact forces that could potentially damage tools and identify stresses that could provoke the yielding of BHA components. 

Fig. 1. Statis and vibrations analyses

Seeing everything via downhole sensors. Real-time directional sensors were used to comply with the programmed targets and minimize wellbore tortuosity. These near-bit sensors accurately measure the inclination tendency while drilling, allowing the directional driller to monitor and make timely steering corrections to avoid a micro-dogleg, which is a typical consequence of aggressive directional work. Micro-doglegs result in a tortuous wellbore that significantly increase downhole torque and drag, risks of mechanical stuck pipe, and issues with getting the casing string to the setting depth. The RSS aided in this effort, due to its proportional steering capability, which also dramatically reduced micro-doglegs in the well and provided a significant improvement in tortuosity.  

On this operation, the engineers deployed a downlink system to send commands automatically and reduce the typical lost time, due to downlinking. This system diverts a small percentage of the mud flowrate during the drilling process and associated negative pressure that serves as digitally coded telemetry signals. These signals are received and decoded by drilling tools placed downhole and interpreted as commands from the surface. The flowrate reductions are generated by tapping off a certain amount of the mud flow coming from the mud pump, routing it through the data link connector, and returning it via a bypass line directly into the mud tank. By reducing wellbore tortuosity and rig down time and a smooth wellbore with the RSS, the operator can run casing to the bottom faster and with less risk, enabling the operator to maintain focus on wellbore stability and ROP. 

Execution excellence. The objective of 8½-in. liner was to continue drilling the interval at a measured depth (MD) from 9,022 to 15,118 ft, increasing the angle from 9.71° to 20.66° and turning from 327° to 316.04° in azimuth. During the execution phase, real-time data were transmitted from the rig site via WITSML to a Weatherford Real-Time Operation Center (RTOC), where experts continuously monitored drilling operations. The RTOC engineers tracked the well for any trends of downhole dysfunctions, ensured the planned drilling parameters were applied according to hydraulics and torque and drag simulations, and provided proactive interventions when necessary.  

Due to the tight ECD threshold to avoid the ballooning effect, RTOC engineers closely analyzed ECD values in real time from the downhole borehole annular pressure (BAP) sensor to identify unexpected values from the ECD. Additionally, the drop pressure on the BHA was tracked and continuously compared with real-time simulations to ensure pressures were within RSS operating ranges.  

As a result of the prompt actions taken after discrepancies were detected, the drilling continued, increasing inclination and turning the azimuth according to the planned trajectory. At a MD of 9,878 ft (3,011 m), the final inclination (21.06°) and azimuthal direction (315.11°) were reached. The RSS performance proved optimal, having a separation from the well plan by only 18.5 ft (5.64 m). 

Effective communication and timely intervention from the RTOC experts provided pertinent guidelines during unexpected situations. For example, at 11,909 ft, MD, after a downlink was sent to the RSS, a sudden increase in the BHA drop pressure (1,060 to 1,300 psi) put the continuity of drilling at risk, Fig. 2.  

BHA pressure drop 11,975 ft.

After confirming the event with the field crew, a new flowrate was agreed upon to extend the operational life of the RSS without additional trips to the surface. In this case, the reduction of the flowrate to 350 gpm further minimized the risk of ballooning effect by a decrease in ECD to 2.026 gr/cc. After the flowrate change, the hole condition was further evaluated, taking into account hole cleaning by real-time updated simulations to ensure the cuttings percentage was below 3%, even with an ROP of 131 ft/hr. 

Coordinated work between the directional services, rig crew, and MPD services guaranteed sufficient SBP when making connections, maintaining the minimal equivalent static density (ESD) to prevent borehole instability. The operator decided to continue drilling until 15,249 ft (4,648 m), where the geologist determined the casing seat for the 7-in. liner. 

During the post-well evaluation, the RSS with the custom-designed BHA achieved the planned well trajectory at the end of the hole section. No ballooning effect was observed; consequently, no NPT related to this phenomenon was counted, and the rotating control device (RCD) performed as planned. The operational life of RSS was enough to complete the section in just one run with no significant damage or wear to the pads. Compared with the average ROP of 60.3 ft/hr in similar offset wells, the average for this operation was 81.4 ft/hr and the drilling time was reduced by 25.89%, Fig. 3. 

CONCLUSION 

With an optimal RSS solution, the 8½-in. hole section was completed in one run without the ballooning effect and met all requirements from the operator. The planned parameters effectively worked with the operating envelope limitations from MPD operations, including low RPM and range of flow. Operational adjustments were applied with real-time RTOC monitoring and supporting technology deployment from multiple disciplines and contractors.  

The success of deploying this RSS technology to drill the 8½-in. hole section, and case it off with the 7-in. liner confirmed the viability of the integrated managed pressure and directional drilling solution in this field. The lessons learned from this job can be replicated in future wells in the field to avoid NPT related to ballooning effect. 

About the Authors
Hector Vizcarra
Weatherford
Hector Vizcarra is The Mexico Drilling Engineering & Operations Manager, Based In Villahermosa, For Weatherford Drilling Services.
Alex Ngan
Weatherford
Alex Ngan is a global senior drilling engineer at Weatherford. Based in Houston, Mr. Ngan supports all technical aspects of drilling engineering and is regarded as a subject matter expert in drilling hazard mitigation. Over his 14-year tenure at Weatherford, he has held various global and regional positions in well construction, well integrity, reservoir solutions, well engineering, and project management. In his previous assignment, he led a team that developed and executed well engineering solutions globally.
Edgar Alberto Garcia Gil
Weatherford
Edgar Alberto Garcia Gil has seven years of experience in directional drilling, borehole enlargement and as a drilling operations supervisor in Mexico and Argentina. He has participated in technical courses in Houston and Mexico and has a degree in chemical petroleum engineering.
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