The Science of Oil and Gas Well Construction: Senior Editor
The Science of Oil and Gas Well Construction: Senior Editor
The Science of Oil and Gas Well Construction: Senior Editor
The fourth in a series of introductory articles describing basic concepts of the E&P industry DEFINING COMPLETION
The Science of Oil and Gas Well Construction
Oileld Review Winter 2011/2012: 23, no. 4.
Copyright 2012 Schlumberger.
Rick von Flatern
Senior Editor
Once a well has been drilled to total depth (TD), evaluated, cased and
cemented, engineers complete it by inserting equipment, designed to opti-
mize production, into the hole. The driver behind every well completion
strategy, whether for a complex or basic well, is to recover, at a reasonable
cost, as large a percentage of the original oil in place (OOIP) as possible.
The decision to case and cement a well for production or plug and aban-
don it as a dry hole relies heavily on formation evaluation (FE) using open-
hole logs. For the purposes of this article, completion refers to all operations
following the placement of cement behind the production casing, which is
performed after FE.
Once FE log analysis indicates the existence and depth of formations
likely to produce commercial volumes of hydrocarbons, steel casing is run in
the borehole and cement is pumped behind it. Completion engineers then
displace the drilling mud in the well with a completion uid. This may be a
clear uid or brine formulated to be nonreactive with the formation.
A primary reason to cement casing is to prevent communication between
producing zones, thus engineers run a cement bond log (CBL) to ascertain
that the cement sheath between the casing and the borehole wall is without
aws (below left). If gaps exist, engineers remedy the problem by injecting
cement through holes made in the casing at the appropriate depths. This is
referred to as a cement squeeze job.
Engineers then perforate through the casing and cement sheath into
sections of the formation where FE analysis indicates conditions are favor-
able for hydrocarbon ow. Perforations are holes made in the casing, usually
using small, shaped charges red from perforating guns. The guns may be
lowered into the hole on wireline, tubing or coiled tubing.
Often, these operations leave debris in the well and in the perforations
themselves, which may hamper the ow of formation uids into the bore-
hole. To reduce the impact of this debris, engineers may pump a weak acid
solution downhole to the affected area to dissolve the debris.
Depending on their knowledge of the formations being completed, opera-
tors may then perform a well test. In some instances this is carried out
through a drillstem test (DST) valve attached to the bottom of a string of
tubing or drillpipe called a workstring. The DST valve can be opened from the
surface and the well uids owed through a separatora device that sepa-
rates the oil, gas, water and completion uids at the surface. By measuring
rates of water, gas and oil produced, operators gain information with which
to make deductions about future well performance. Well tests also give oper-
ators extensive information about the character and extent of the reservoir.
Completion engineers may then consider several options, which are
determined by formation characteristics. If the formation permeability is
low, engineers may choose to create a hydraulic fracture by pumping water
and sand or other materialsa slurrythrough the perforations and into
the formation at high pressure. Pump pressure builds against the unyielding
formation until the rock yields and cracks open. The slurry is then pumped
into the newly created formation fractures. When the pumps are turned off
and the well opened, the water ows out, leaving behind the sand. This prop-
pant holds open the newly created fractures. The result is a high-permeabil-
ity pathway for the hydrocarbons to ow from the formation to the wellbore.
While oil and gas ow readily through permeable rocks, such formations
may be unconsolidated and subject to breaking into small sand particles
that may ow into the wellbore with produced uids. These particles may
plug perforation tunnels and stop uids entering the well. To prevent the
migration of these particles through the formation, engineers may inject
chemicals into the formation to bind the sand grains together. To prevent
sand from entering the wellbore, engineers may also opt for a sand control
techniqueor a combination of techniquesthat includes various types of
sand screens and gravel packing systems. Designed to block the migration
of sand, these systems allow uids to freely ow through them.
The next stage in completion includes placing various pieces of hard-
warereferred to as jewelryin the well; the jewelry is attached to produc-
tion tubing. Tubing, the conduit between the producing formation and the
surface, is the infrastructure upon which almost all completions are built. Its
strength, material and sizeweight/unit length and internal diameterare
chosen according to expected production rates, production types, pressures,
depths, temperatures and corrosive potential of produced uids.
>
Cement sheath aws. Cement bond logs can detect negative results from
poor cementing practices or designs, which may allow uid ow (blue
arrows) from one zone to another or to the surface. Some causes of aws
include incorrect cement density (top left), poor drilling uid removal (top
right), premature gelation, or setting (bottom left), and excessive uid loss
from the cement slurry (bottom right).
Incorrect Density Poor Drilling Fluid Removal
Premature Gelation Excessive Fluid Loss
ORWIN01_Abandonment_Fig_01_3
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Cement
Borehole
Casing
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Jewelry almost always includes packers, which seal against the inside of
the casing. Packers isolate producing zones within the casing-tubing annulus
in the same way cement does outside the casing. If the zone being produced
is the deepest in the well, uids ow from the formation below the packer
and through the end of the tubing to the surface. In wells with multiple
zones, a more common scenario, ow enters the well between an upper and
lower packer and into the tubing through perforations or sliding sleeves
(below). A sliding sleeve is a valve that is opened or closed mechanically; a
specially designed tool on slickline or coiled tubing moves the valves inter-
nal perforated sleeve up or down.
Nearly all completions also include safety valves. These come in a vari-
ety of forms but all are placed in the tubing within a few hundred feet of the
surface. They are designed to automatically shut in the well when the sur-
face control system is breached. They can also be closed manually to add an
extra barrier between the well and the atmosphere when, for example, the
well is being worked on or a platform is being evacuated in preparation for
a storm.
With the basic jewelry deployed, many renements are possible, depend-
ing on the specic needs of the eld or well. For example, intelligent com-
pletions (ICs) are often used in situations or locations where entering the
well to change downhole settings is costly or otherwise problematic. ICs
include permanent, real-time remote pressure and temperature sensors
and a remotely operable ow control valve deployed at each formation.
In other wells, the formation pressure is, or eventually becomes, insuf-
cient to lift the formation uids out of the well. These wells must be
equipped with pumps or gas lift systems. Electric submersible pumps
(ESPs) pump uids to the surface using a rotor and stator. Pump rotor
drives can be located on the surface. Reciprocating pumps, called pump
jacks, may be used to lift the uid to the surface through a reciprocating
vertical motion.
Gas lift systems pump gas down the annulus between two casing strings.
The gas enters the tubing at a depth below the top of the uid column. This
decreases the uid density enough for buoyancy to lift the uid out of the
well. The amount of gas entering the well may be regulated through a
sequence of valves located along the length of tubing, or it may be streamed
in at one or more locations.
Also in low-pressure formations, water or gas may be injected down one
well to push oil through the formation to producing wells. The producers
may be tted with injection control devices (ICDs) that regulate how much
and where uid enters the wellbore.
Before designing a completion, engineers take into considerationfor
every wellthe types and volumes of uids to be produced, downhole and
surface temperatures, production zone depths, production rates, well loca-
tion and surrounding environment. Engineers must then choose from the
most basic openhole completion that may not have even a production casing
string, to highly complex multilateral wells that consist of numerous hori-
zontal or high-angle wellbores drilled from a single main wellbore, each of
which includes a discrete completion.
The indispensible underpinnings of the optimal completion are solid
FE, data from nearby offset wells and exibility. Armed with reliable
knowledge of target zones, how nearby wells accessing those formations
were completed and how they produced, engineers are often able to plan
the basic completion before the well is drilled. But completion engineers
know that not every well will behave as expected, so they include contin-
gencies in their completion plans and are prepared to implement them. In
the end, how a well is completedthe culmination of all the decisions
about jewelry and processesdirectly impacts the rate at which and how
long hydrocarbons will be produced from that well.
>
Single-zone and multizone well completions. In the single-zone completion
(left), a packer, which forms a seal inside the production casing, hydraulically
isolates the tubing string from the region above the packer, called the
backside. The backside contains completion uid with corrosion inhibitors
to prevent casing corrosion. The multizone completion (right) employs at least
two packers that separate the producing zones. Fluids from all zones may be
allowed to commingle during production, or production from the upper zone
may be shut off by closing a sliding sleeve until operators have determined the
uids may be commingled. Alternatively, operators may choose to allow the
lower zone to become depleted, then set a plug (not shown) above the lower
zone and open the sliding sleeve to produce only from the upper zone.
Surface casing
Casing-tubing
annulus
Production casing
Tubing string
Packer
Packer
Sliding
sleeve
Packer
Perforations
Cement
Winter 2011/2012 51
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