380 likes | 471 Views
Petroleum Engineering 406. Lesson 4 Well Control. Read. Well Control Manual Chapter 9 Homework 2 Due Feb. 3, 1999. Content. Development of Abnormal Pressure Properties of Normally Pressured Formations Properties of Abnormally Pressured Formations Casing Seat Selection.
E N D
Petroleum Engineering 406 Lesson 4 Well Control
Read • Well Control Manual • Chapter 9 • Homework 2 Due Feb. 3, 1999
Content • Development of Abnormal Pressure • Properties of Normally Pressured Formations • Properties of Abnormally Pressured Formations • Casing Seat Selection
Knowledge of Pore and Fracture Pressures Leads to: • More effective well planning • Maximize penetration rates with balanced drilling • Safer and more economical selection of casing points • Minimize trouble due to lost circulation and kicks
Knowledge of Pore and Fracture Pressures Leads to: • Better engineered production and test equipment • Better understanding of local geology and drilling hazards • More accurate analysis of drilling data and electric logs
Normally Pressured Formation Fluids Squeezed out with compaction
Abnormal Formation Pressures • Due to: • Incomplete compaction • Diagenesis • Differential Density in Dipping Formations • Fluid Migration • Tectonic Movement • Aquifers • Thermal Effects
Incomplete compaction Fluids trapped in place Fluids begin to support overburden
Diagenesis • At 200oF to 300oF Clays undergo chemical alteration. Montmorillonite clays dehydrate and release some of the bound water into the space already occupied by free water, increasing pressure
Thermal Effects • Theories • Increased temperature with depth and chemical reactions cause increased pressures • Increased pressures caused increased temperatures
Salt Formations Pressure Gradient Depth Pore press. gradient Overburden gradient Salt formation
Shale Properties used to Predict Pore Pressures • Shales are used because: • Most pressure transition zones occur in relatively thick shales • Properties of clean shales are fairly homogeneous at any depth, and can be predicted with some degree of accuracy.
Shale Properties used to Predict Pore Pressures • Shales are used because: • A deviation from the expected can be interpreted as a change in pressure gradient • Detecting these deviations in low permeability shales gives an early warning prior to drilling into pressured permeable formations, thus avoiding kicks.
Normally Pressured Shales • Porosity - Decreases with depth • Density - Increases with depth • Conductivity - Decreases with depth • Resistivity - Increases with depth • Sonic travel time - Decreases with depth • Temp. gradient - Relatively constant
Abnormally Pressured Shales • Porosity - Higher than expected • Density - Lower than expected • Conductivity - Higher than expected • Resistivity - Lower than expected • Sonic travel time - Higher than expected • Temp gradient - Increases
Porosity Density Conductivity Sonic Shale Density
Temperature gradient - Increases Depth Normal Trend Top of Geo-pressure Temperature
Pore Pressure Prediction Occurs: • Prior to drilling • During drilling • After drilling
Before Drilling • Offset mud records, drilling reports, bit records, well tests • Geological Correlation
Before Drilling • Open Hole Logs from offset wells
Before Drilling • Seismic data
During Drilling • Kick - SIDPP and HSP in DP can give accurate measurement of formation pore pressure • LOT - gives accurate measurement of fracture pressure
Correlation of penetration rate to offset logs Changes in shale penetration rate During Drilling
During Drilling • Shale density Change • Mercury pump • Mud balance • Fill mud balance with clean shale until it balances at 8.33 ppg • Fill the balance cup with water and determine total weight • Calculate shale bulk density: • SBD=8.33/(16.66-Total Weight)
During Drilling • Shale density Change - Density column
During Drilling • Mud gas content change
During drilling • Shale cutting change
During Drilling • Mud chloride change • Increase in fill on bottom • Increase in drag or torque • Contaminated mud • Temperature change
During Drilling • Abnormal trip fill-up behavior • Periodic logging runs • Drill-stem tests • MWD or LWD tools • Paleontology
During Drilling • dc-exponent • P=K*(W/D)d*Ne • P=penetration rate of shale • K=formation drillability • W=weight on bit • D=bit diameter • N=rotary speed • d=bit weight exponent • e=rotary speed exponent
During Drilling d-exponent and dc-exponent
After Drilling • Log evaluation • Flow tests • BHP surveys • Shut-in pressure tests • Analysis of mud reports, drilling reports, and bit records