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Carbon capture and storage (CCS) technology has become one of the most cost‐effective and promising ways to achieve global climate change mitigation goals. The CO2 storage capacity in depleted oil and gas reservoirs is currently the safest and most economical option. The long‐term sealing of the cement–formation interface in CO2 storage wells (CSW) is essential to avoid CO2 leakage. The filter cake easily affects the interfacial sealing ability, which is a thin impermeable layer formed by drilling fluid residue or solid particles remaining on the borehole wall due to permeable formation. Filter cake removal is essential for favorable cementation and production efficiency. This study highlights the current developments and the main challenges for oil‐ and water‐based mud filter cake removal during the cementing and completion process. Moreover, research ideas and recommendations for various types of filter cake removal are proposed to provide a reference for future work. This information helps deepen understanding with respect to the different filter cake removal options available in the CCS industry and provides a knowledge base that can facilitate the improvement of the cementing quality and production efficiency of existing systems to combat battle CSW safety and production efficiency problems.
Carbon capture and storage (CCS) technology has become one of the most cost‐effective and promising ways to achieve global climate change mitigation goals. The CO2 storage capacity in depleted oil and gas reservoirs is currently the safest and most economical option. The long‐term sealing of the cement–formation interface in CO2 storage wells (CSW) is essential to avoid CO2 leakage. The filter cake easily affects the interfacial sealing ability, which is a thin impermeable layer formed by drilling fluid residue or solid particles remaining on the borehole wall due to permeable formation. Filter cake removal is essential for favorable cementation and production efficiency. This study highlights the current developments and the main challenges for oil‐ and water‐based mud filter cake removal during the cementing and completion process. Moreover, research ideas and recommendations for various types of filter cake removal are proposed to provide a reference for future work. This information helps deepen understanding with respect to the different filter cake removal options available in the CCS industry and provides a knowledge base that can facilitate the improvement of the cementing quality and production efficiency of existing systems to combat battle CSW safety and production efficiency problems.
The well clean-up process involves the removal of impermeable filter cake from the formation face. This process is essential to allow the formation fluids to flow from the reservoir to the wellbore. Different types of drilling fluids such as oil- and water-based drilling fluids are used to drill oil and gas wells. These drilling fluids are weighted with different weighting materials such as bentonite, calcium carbonate, and barite. The filter cake that forms on the formation face consists mainly of the drilling fluid weighting materials (around 90%), and the rest is other additives such as polymers or oil in the case of oil-base drilling fluids. The process of filter cake removal is very complicated because it involves more than one stage due to the compatibility issues of the fluids used to remove the filter cake. Different formulations were used to remove different types of filter cake, but the problem with these methods is the removal efficiency or the compatibility. In this paper, a new method was developed to remove different types of filter cakes and to clean-up oil and gas wells after drilling operations. Thermochemical fluids that consist of two inert salts when mixed together will generate very high pressure and high temperature in addition to hot water and hot nitrogen. These fluids are sodium nitrate and ammonium chloride. The filter cake was formed using barite and calcite water- and oil-based drilling fluids at high pressure and high temperature. The removal process started by injecting 500 ml of the two salts and left for different time periods from 6 to 24 h. The results of this study showed that the newly developed method of thermochemical removed the filter cake after 6 h with a removal efficiency of 89 wt% for the barite filter cake in the water-based drilling fluid. The mechanisms of removal using the combined solution of thermochemical fluid and ethylenediamine tetra-acetic acid (EDTA) chelating agent were explained by the generation of a strong pressure pulse that disturbed the filter cake and the generation of the high temperature that enhanced the barite dissolution and polymer degradation. This solution for filter cake removal works for reservoir temperatures greater than 100 °C.
Barite is one of the most common weighting materials used in drilling fluid for deep oil and gas wells. Consequently, the main source of solids building the filter cake is the weighting material used in drilling fluids ‘Barite particles’. Barite is insoluble in water and acids such as HCl, formic, citric, and acetic acids, as well as the barite has low solubility in chelating agent such as Ethylene Diamine Tetra Acetic Acid (EDTA). The present study introduces a new formulation to dissolve the barite filter cake using converters and catalysts. Barite can be converted to barium carbonate at high pH medium using combination of potassium hydroxide (KOH) and potassium carbonate (K2CO3) solution. Then HCl acid can be used to dissolve the barium carbonate. Another solution is to use high pH EDTA chelating agent and potassium carbonate as a catalyst/converter in one step. The removal formulation also contains polymer breaker (oxidizers). The three components of the new formulation are compatible and stable up to 300°F. Solubility tests were conducted using industrial barite particles with size ranged from 30 to 60 micron. The solubility experiments were carried at 300°F for 24 hours. Different concentrations of catalyst were added to select the optimum concentration. The designed formulation was examined to remove filter cake formed by Barite drilling fluid using High Pressure High Temperature cell (HPHT). The result of this study showed that the barite removal efficiency of new formulation reached to 87 % in water base mud and 83 % in oil base mud. The solubility test results presented that the solubility of barite particles in 0.6M EDTA was 62 % in 24 hours at 300°F. Adding potassium carbonate catalyst to the 0.6M EDTA solution the increased the solubility of barite to 90 wt. % in 24 hours. The use of converting agents increased the barite solubility from62% to 90% in EDTA. The EDTA was compatible with the polymer breaker (oxidizer) so the filter cake removal will be in single stage. The oxidizer concentration used was 10 wt%, potassium carbonate concentration was 10 wt% and EDTA concentration was 0.6M. The new formulation achieved 85% filter cake removal in both oil-based and water-based drilling fluids. In oil base mud a water wetting surfactant, mutual solvent, and emulsifier should be added to the formulation to remove the oil. In this study, two solutions were proposed to remove the barite filter cake and barite scale from oil and gas wells at different conditions. The first one is by using HCl acid after converting the barium sulfate to barium carbonate using high pH medium such as KOH and K2CO3. Then HCl can easily remove the barium carbonate. The second method is to create the high pH medium by using the removal fluid itself which is EDTA chelating agent in addition to potassium carbonate as converter.
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