This study is focused on the application of novel pozzolans (superplasticizers) ahead of cement, prior to casing and while drilling to treat and prevent wellbore fracture due to overburden stresses. This study is a combination of quantitative and qualitative analysis based on laboratory and field applications of pozzolanic materials in the construction of wells. Pozzolans have long been applied to construction materials in order to improve lifespan and compressive strength. The application of pozzolanic materials goes back over 2000 years to the construction of Roman Aqueducts, buildings and roads known for their longevity and ability to resist corrosion and stress. These materials cover a broad range of naturally occurring and man-made materials. The most common pozzolanic materials used in drilling today include Bentonite, Kaolin, and Fly Ash. Pozzolans when combined with Portland Cement have been shown to increase the compressive strength and durability dramatically. Pozzolans are currently applied globally in cementing applications for HTHP, high loss zones and more. This paper will examine the application in the drilling phase as an applied treatment during drilling for the reinforcement of the wellbore as well as to treat induced losses. The study will review cases for use of Novel Pozzolans for drilling, pre-cement, casing and for production zones the application of Novel acid soluble pozzolans for similar purposes. These applications validate the application of these materials beyond cementing into the drilling phase and wellbore construction for reducing backside pressure, reducing days on losses, reducing sidetrack, increasing operational ECD while drilling and cementing and achieving top of cement without inducing losses due to overburden in tight ECD window environments. Deepwater environments provide a unique environment for the application of these novel materials as they offer some of the highest overburden environments with greatest operating costs and daily operating costs. Thusly this study has shown the applications have saved operators on multiple wells and over long periods many days and millions in operating costs with proven prevention of losses in field studies where wells were compared for offset value over a period of time. Multiple operators have adopted this technology as a result and there is a long track record of use while there are few papers on the subject. The purpose of this paper is to illustrate the best practices as well as new technologies and state of the art when it comes to the development of the latest in pozzolanics for these applications.
This paper reviews the successful application of a Mud Cooling and Managed Pressure Drilling (MPD) system in a HPHT well to explore the potential of the Mesozoic Carbonate Platform with pressure ramp and Narrow Mud Weight Window (NMWW) in the Nile Delta of Egypt. The Constant Bottom Hole Pressure (CBHP) variation of MPD in combination with mud cooling was used to drill from the middle of the pressure ramp to the target depth, maintaining the mud inlet temperature at around 50°C. Drilling this well is challenging due to the uncertainty of pressure and temperature regimes and the lack of data in this area. This paper will discuss the application of the MPD and Mud Cooling combination. Also, the challenges encountered while drilling and how they were tackled will be explained, besides the best practices and recommendations for similar applications. 10 in. × 12 in. section completed the pressure ramp, then entered and drilled through the NMWW. The hole was drilled and enlarged simultaneously to 12 in. to section target depth (TD) at 5118 m. Losses at a rate of 3.5 to 5m3/h were encountered (lost 26m3) when circulating to increase mud weight from 2.16 to 2.20 sg to follow the pressure ramp. Then the mud weight was cut back to 2.16 sg, and drilling continued with active use of the MPD system to maintain a CBHP at 2.22 sg. Equivalent Mud Weight (EMW) both equivalent circulation density (ECD) while drilling and with surface back pressure (SBP) during connections. A dynamic formation integrity test (FIT) and a static Pore pressure Test were performed with the MPD to re-assess the drilling window and adjust mud weight accordingly. The mud cooler was running at 100% capacity keeping mud-in temperature 50°C while mud-out temperature ranging from 60 to 70°C and annular temperature from MWD was recorded while drilling at a maximum temperature of 139°C at TD. The 8 in. hole was drilled through the primary objective from 5118 to 5585 m. The MPD detected two well control events early at 5585 m which alleviated their consequences. Difficulties were experienced to regain control of the well, facing a kick and losses scenario due to NMWW. The open hole was plugged back with cement to secure the well after a fragile control was regained. The mud-in temperature was maintained at around 40°C. T-1 well was the first well to reach that deeply buried Mesozoic carbonate structure. The Mesozoic carbonate platform has never been reached in this area. This paper provides an in-depth study for an innovative combination of utilizing MPD along with mud cooling technique to drill a HPHT exploratory well with a NMWW providing guidance for similar applications.
This study is focused on the application of novel pozzolans (superplasticizers) ahead of cement, prior to casing and while drilling to treat and prevent wellbore fracture due to overburden stresses. This study is a combination of quantitative and qualitative analysis based on laboratory and field applications of pozzolanic materials in the construction of wells. Pozzolans have long been applied to construction materials in order to improve lifespan and compressive strength. The application of pozzolanic materials goes back over 2000 years to the construction of Roman Aqueducts, buildings and roads known for their longevity and ability to resist corrosion and stress. These materials cover a broad range of naturally occurring and man-made materials. The most common pozzolanic materials used in drilling today include Bentonite, Kaolin, and Fly Ash. Pozzolans when combined with Portland Cement have been shown to increase the compressive strength and durability dramatically. Pozzolans are currently applied globally in cementing applications for HTHP, high loss zones and more. This paper will examine the application in the drilling phase as an applied treatment during drilling for the reinforcement of the wellbore as well as to treat induced losses. The study will review cases for use of Novel Pozzolans for drilling, pre-cement, casing and for production zones the application of Novel acid soluble pozzolans for similar purposes. These applications validate the application of these materials beyond cementing into the drilling phase and wellbore construction for reducing backside pressure, reducing days on losses, reducing sidetrack, increasing operational ECD while drilling and cementing and achieving top of cement without inducing losses due to overburden in tight ECD window environments. Deepwater environments provide a unique environment for the application of these novel materials as they offer some of the highest overburden environments with greatest operating costs and daily operating costs. Thusly this study has shown the applications have saved operators on multiple wells and over long periods many days and millions in operating costs with proven prevention of losses in field studies where wells were compared for offset value over a period of time. Multiple operators have adopted this technology as a result and there is a long track record of use while there are few papers on the subject. The purpose of this paper is to illustrate the best practices as well as new technologies and state of the art when it comes to the development of the latest in pozzolanics for these applications.
Managed pressure drilling (MPD) has a reputation for enhancing drilling performance. However, in this study, we use it as a technology for making undrillable wells drillable. In the deepwater of the Mediterranean of Egypt, a gas field has been producing for few years. Water broke through in one well, thus, we must drill a new well to compensate for the reduction in production. Years of production led to pressure depletion, which makes it difficult to drill this well conventionally. In this study, we will discuss the combination of MPD and wellbore strengthening (WS). In addition, we will discuss the challenges we met while drilling and how we tackled them, and the best practices and recommendations for similar applications. The 12¼" × 13½" hole section passed depleted sands, followed by a pressure ramp. First, we drilled the depleted sands and confirmed the pressure ramp top. To strengthen the sand, we spotted a stress-cage pill of 645 bbls with a total concentration of 29 ppb. In addition, we conducted a formation integrity test (FIT), but its value was lower than the required value to drill to the section target depth (TD). Then, we switched to MPD and increased the mud weight. MPD in annular pressure control mode (AP) enabled us to walk the edge as near as possible to the impossible. Drilling this section was challenging due to the narrow mud weight window (MWW). We faced kick-loss cycles, where we had high-gas levels (from 20% to 55%) while drilling with a loss rate from 60 to 255 bph, at the same time. The 8½″ × 9½″ hole section will cover a depleted reservoir. Therefore, we decided to use the MPD to drill this section. To widen the MWW, we decided to stress-caging the hole, as we drill. We loaded the active-mud system with stress-cage materials totaling 39 ppb. We drilled the hole section while keeping the bottom hole pressure (BHP) at 14.6 ppg. We drilled using MPD by maintaining 525-psi surface back pressure (SBP). We used the SBP mode (semi-auto mode) to add connections, resulting in minor background gases and minor losses. This study discusses the application of a novel combination of MPD and WS. It emphasizes how MPD can integrate with other technologies to offer a practical solution to future drilling challenges in deepwater-drilling environments.
Although devised in 2003, managed pressure drilling (MPD) has gained widespread popularity in recent years to precisely control the annular pressure profile throughout the wellbore. Due to the relatively high cost and complexity of implementing MPD, some operators still face a challenge deciding whether or not to MPD the well. In the offshore Mediterranean of Egypt, severe to catastrophic mud losses are encountered while conventionally drilling deepwater wells through cavernous fractured carbonate gas reservoirs with a narrow pore pressure-fracture gradient (PP-FG) window, leading to the risk of not reaching the planned target depth (TD). Furthermore, treating such losses was associated with long non-productive time (NPT), massive volume consumption of cement, and lost-circulation materials (LCM), in addition to well control situations encountered several times due to loss of hydrostatic head during severe losses. Accordingly, the operator decided to abandon the conventional drilling method and implement MPD technology to drill these problematic formations. In this paper, the application of MPD is to be examined versus the conventional drilling in terms of well control events, NPT, rate of penetration (ROP), mud losses per drilled meter, LCM volume pumped, and drilling operations optimization. According to the comparative study, MPD application showed a drastic improvement in all drilling performance aspects over the conventional drilling where the mud losses per drilled meter reduced from 19.6 m3/m to 3.7m3/m (123.2 bbl/m to 23.4 bbl/m). In addition to that, a 35% reduction of NPT and also a 35% reduction of LCM pumped, and 67.2 % reduction by volume of cement pumped to cure the mud losses. Moreover, the average mechanical rate of penetration increased by 37.4%. MPD was also credited with eliminating the need for an additional contingent 7" liner which was conventionally used to isolate the thief zone. The MPD ability to precisely control bottom hole pressure during drilling with the integration of MPD early kick detection system enables the rapid response in case of mud loss or kick, eliminating kick-loss cycles, well control events, and drilling flat time to change mud density. This paper provides an advanced and in-depth study for deep-water drilling problems of a natural gas field in the East Mediterranean and presents a comprehensive analysis of the MPD application with a drilling performance assessment (average ROP, mud losses, LCM and cement volumes, well control events) emphasizing how MPD can offer a practical solution for future drilling of challenging deepwater gas wells.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.