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The evaluation of downhole well integrity is an important business for the oil and gas industry. It is driven primarily by the need to optimize production while maintaining a safe environment despite the inexorable corrosion of casing strings and other harsh downhole conditions. Furthermore, with aging infrastructure, evaluating well integrity to plan plug and abandonment or slot recovery projects is critically important. Many technologies have been developed to address the challenges of evaluating casing and cement integrity under varied downhole conditions. These technologies are necessarily growing increasingly more sophisticated to meet the requirements of evaluating multiple cemented casing strings. In particular, wireline cased-hole logging techniques based on electromagnetic (EM) and acoustic techniques have been applied to casing corrosion and cement integrity evaluation. The acoustic measurement techniques deployed for well integrity evaluation typically include the sonic frequency range of tens of kilohertz up to the ultrasonic frequency range of megahertz. The frequency ranges are appropriate for characteristic resolutions of decimeters down to millimeters for sonic and ultrasonic measurements, respectively. These techniques are sensitive to the elastic properties of materials in the well completion and crucial for assessing zonal isolation. In the domain of evaluating corrosion in one or multiple casing strings, the traditional measurement approach uses EM techniques, which are sensitive to the metal thickness, the electrical conductivity (the inverse of electrical resistivity), and the magnetic permeability of ferromagnetic pipes. The spectrum of common EM casing inspection techniques encompasses a frequency range between quasi-static (direct current) up to about 100 kHz. More recently, transient EM or pulsed-field eddy current tools have been introduced. Specific physics and challenges associated with well integrity measurements must be understood and considered in existing and emerging technology solutions.
The evaluation of downhole well integrity is an important business for the oil and gas industry. It is driven primarily by the need to optimize production while maintaining a safe environment despite the inexorable corrosion of casing strings and other harsh downhole conditions. Furthermore, with aging infrastructure, evaluating well integrity to plan plug and abandonment or slot recovery projects is critically important. Many technologies have been developed to address the challenges of evaluating casing and cement integrity under varied downhole conditions. These technologies are necessarily growing increasingly more sophisticated to meet the requirements of evaluating multiple cemented casing strings. In particular, wireline cased-hole logging techniques based on electromagnetic (EM) and acoustic techniques have been applied to casing corrosion and cement integrity evaluation. The acoustic measurement techniques deployed for well integrity evaluation typically include the sonic frequency range of tens of kilohertz up to the ultrasonic frequency range of megahertz. The frequency ranges are appropriate for characteristic resolutions of decimeters down to millimeters for sonic and ultrasonic measurements, respectively. These techniques are sensitive to the elastic properties of materials in the well completion and crucial for assessing zonal isolation. In the domain of evaluating corrosion in one or multiple casing strings, the traditional measurement approach uses EM techniques, which are sensitive to the metal thickness, the electrical conductivity (the inverse of electrical resistivity), and the magnetic permeability of ferromagnetic pipes. The spectrum of common EM casing inspection techniques encompasses a frequency range between quasi-static (direct current) up to about 100 kHz. More recently, transient EM or pulsed-field eddy current tools have been introduced. Specific physics and challenges associated with well integrity measurements must be understood and considered in existing and emerging technology solutions.
Bonding to casing material characterization is a topic of interest in the context of well barrier evaluation. There is a consolidated need directed to log data interpreters to answer questions related to the type of material present in the casing annuli of a given well. The objective of this work is to explore the possibility to provide a complementary answer to current general acoustic impedance and attenuation practice. We reiterate that knowledge about the density of the annuli material can reduce the well barrier evaluation uncertainty. We are describing and exemplifying a rapid method to estimate the "pseudo – density" of the material in the annuli at the time of data acquisition. We define "pseudo-density" as the ratio between estimated impedance (from ultrasonic pulse-echo) and annuli apparent velocities (from ultrasonic oblique incidence techniques). Resulting "pseudo-density" maps are constrained with prior information from geology, logging, and drilling data. This allows the interpreter to judge the uncertainty in the current interpretation practice and contextualization of the annuli material into the borehole reality. The examples provided show that when the underlying physics principles are met, the results are clear and a robust interpretation at scale along the entire logged path is possible. The estimated complementary results are affected by inherent errors and uncertainty associated with acoustic impedance and velocity estimation. However, using prior knowledge information, intervals with high uncertainty (such as unusually high impedances or large errors in the velocity estimation) are flagged providing the interpreter with information background easy to be used for final delivery. Along with standard applications, the proposed method includes the basic mandatory tool for evaluating, validating, and incorporating the forecasted growth based on nuclear integrity logging behind the casing evaluation techniques.
Reliable evaluation of the cement-bonding quality and identification of isolation zones of a cased-hole well are challenging problems, particularly for a plugged and abandoned (P&A) well. Ultrasonic tools have been developed to conduct pitch-catch and/or pulse-echo measurements for cement evaluation at high spatial resolutions. Recently, extended data processing of pitch-catch measurements has been developed to identify third-interface echoes (TIE) from flexural mode waveforms. The derived information of TIEs can be integrated with flexural attenuation rates of casing and acoustic impedances of annulus materials to enhance the accuracy and confidence of evaluations of cement quality and zone isolation. However, there are limitations in conventional pitch-catch measurements. The conventual pitch-catch measurements are longitude measurements. Their vertical resolution is limited by the spacing between transducers. A utilized piezoelectric transducer used by such measurements needs a liquid couplant. The received signals of this kind of sensor are sensitive to the mud density. The heavy mud may cause strong attenuations of intensities of received flexural mode waveforms. Additionally, a piezoelectric sensor is sensitive to the direction of wave propagation. Therefore, a TIE can be missed if two walls of the annulus of a well are not parallel, such as a deviated well. This paper introduces a new compensated pitch-catch measurement method for reliably detecting the eccentricity of the inner pipe and annulus material in a cased-hole environment. The electromagnetic acoustic transducers (EMATs) are utilized to excite and acquire Lamb and shear horizontal waves, respectively, which propagate circumferentially. The operation parameters of this new measurement method are optimized to excite and acquire waves for more reliably extracting TIEs from received waveforms. Compared with piezoelectric sensors, EMAT sensors do not require couplants and are not sensitive to the wave propagation angle, the mud density, and the rugosity of the pipe surface. The vertical resolution of the Lamb wave measurements is controlled by the vertical sampling rate of the tool and the sensor size. This new measurement method has been validated with Lab measurements. The test fixtures with varied annulus spacings were designed, constructed, and cemented. Multiple tests were designed and conducted to verify the modes of Lamb and shear horizontal waves, existences of TIEs with different operation parameters of measurements, and the relations between arrival times of TIE and annulus spacing, as well as filled in materials of annulus. The visibility of TIE for a deviated inner pipe has also been confirmed. The tests results confirmed the optimal operation parameters of this new measurement method. The detected arrival times of TIEs are consistent with their predicted values. This new measurement method has some key technical advantages. The tool measurements do not require a liquid-filled inner casing for acoustic coupling. The arrangement of the transducers in the tool enables fully compensated measurements. Furthermore, the vertical resolution of detected tubing eccentricity is governed by the vertical sampling rate of the tool rather than the physical transmitter-receiver spacing. The long length of received waveforms can provide the time window to exposure the trainlet of TIE for revealing the types of filled-in materials of annulus and acoustic impedance contrast of filled materials and well barriers.
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