07-Hoan Thien Gieng Optimize PDF
07-Hoan Thien Gieng Optimize PDF
07-Hoan Thien Gieng Optimize PDF
2. Completion Procedure
3. Perforating
4. Stimulation
20’’ CASING
perforate the production casing 13 3/8’’ CASING
inished.
Stimulated Completions
These completions are generally applied to improve the natural drainage
patterns of hard, low-permeability formations. It is used to remove
barriers that prevent easy passage of fluids into the wellbore.
Sand-Control Completions
Sand-control completions support the formation while allowing the flow of fluids.
They are performed in young, unconsolidated or less mechanically competent
sandstones.
Well Completion and Stimulation 7
GEOPET
TYPE OF COMPLETION
The design of a particular completion depends on:
The next step usually involves the running of the final string of casing - the
production string.
One of these configurations will be the basis for the completion design,
which may incorporate:
one or multiple strings of tubing: single, dual, or triple, etc
and a variety of tubing components to facilitate production
(production method): pumping, flowing, etc.
from one or multiple zones: single or multiple zones
For our purposes, a cased and perforated well with a single tubing
string will serve to illustrate the typical completion procedure.
Whichever rig is used, the next step in the completion is to measure the
tubing while running it into the hole.
A careful count must be kept of the exact number of tubing joints run
into the hole and their total length.
With the tubing in the hole, the BOP stack, which is now attached
above the tubing head where the tubing will hang, may be tested.
The casing may also be pressure tested,
and a filtered completion fluid may be circulated into the well to
displace the drilling mud prior to perforating.
This fluid is usually a heavy brine, because it:
o provides the hydrostatic pressure needed to control the well,
o does not contain solids that can plug the perforations and
damage the formation.
With the well perforated, it may now be time to stimulate the well by
either
acidizing or
hydraulically fracturing the formation.
Acid can be used to dissolve formation-damaging particles left by the
drilling mud or, in carbonate formations, to create flow passages by
dissolving portions of the rock itself.
Hydraulic fracturing involves the high-pressure pumping of fluid into
the formation to split the rock apart and increase its flow capacity of
tight formations.
The rig will often be moved off location at this point, allowing the well to
brought on production. On an offshore platform, the rig may be skidded
to the next well slot.
If a rod pump is required on the well, it may be installed at this time
and the necessary rods and downhole pumping mechanism run
into the tubing.
If gas lift valves have been incorporated into the tubing string, gas
may be used to blow the completion fluid out of the tubing and
permit the well to flow on its own.
In some cases, the well will be "swabbed in" at this point, by running a
close-fitting plunger into the tubing on wireline and pulling it back up,
thereby displacing the completion fluid in the tubing and allowing the
formation to flow.
After an initial well test, which may be conducted with temporary test
facilities, the flow line needed to produce the well on a continuous basis
will be connected.
The decision about the interval to be perforated is often made by the geologist
or by the engineer and geologist responsible for the area in which the well is
drilled.
Consideration will be given to maximizing flow rate and minimizing
production problems such as produced sand, water coning, or excessive
gas production in an oil well.
The decision is often made after careful review of the log and core data
back at the company office.
The geologist's input concerning net pay, sidewall core descriptions, and
the areal extent of sand intervals can be crucial in determining the best
interval to be perforated.
One of the advantages of the cased and perforated completion: ability to
selectively stimulate specific formations.
In many cases,
acidizing
or fracturing
is a routine part of the completion program.
Either type of stimulation may also be applied soon after a well
has been completed and
has tested at lower production rates than expected.
Stimulation may also be part of a remedial or "workover" program
designed to improve productivity following a decline in production.
Stimulation will often follow a formation pressure buildup test that was
run to determine if the cause of low productivity was
permeability reduction near the wellbore,
low permeability throughout the reservoir,
or low reservoir pressure.
Acid stimulation can improve the first condition,
while fracturing is necessary to significantly improve the second
condition.
Of course, the third condition can only be helped by pressure
maintenance.
Some acid treatments are even designed to generate acid within the
formation, again allowing deeper penetration of active acid.
In acid fracturing, it is important to keep the acid from leaking away as
a fracture spreads out from the wellbore. Fluid loss agents can be
added to keep the acid inside the fracture and allow it to penetrate
farther into the formation.
Temporary plugging agents are also added, during matrix acidizing
jobs, to divert the acid into different layers of the formation and improve
overall permeability.
Early researchers realized that the fracture would close once the
hydraulic pressure was relieved,
a solid material is added to the fracturing fluid to "prop" open the
fracture.
The standard proppant used to hold open the fracture is silica sand.
Sand can be crushed, however, in deep formations where fracture-
closure stresses are high.
In such cases sintered bauxite, zirconium oxide, or other high-
strength materials are substituted for sand.
Casing collapse;
Reduced productivity;
Typical Open Hole Gravel Pack Installation Typical Cased Hole Gravel Pack Installation
Frac and pack techniques have come into wide use, and in some
areas have largely supplanted the more conventional sand control
methods described above.
The decision to complete a well with sand control is not always easy.
For example, in a formation where sand production may occur, the completion
designer may risk the cost of a future workover in order to save the immediate
expense of a gravel pack.
This may be particularly true if multiple producing zones in the well will
require future work down hole.
Of course, the cost of remedial work to clean out and gravel-pack a sanded-up
well may be much higher than if the work had been done during the original
completion.
This is particularly true at some offshore locations where the cost of simply
moving a work over rig on to a producing structure can be enormous.
With sand control, as with other facets of the completion procedure, decision
making is dependent on a number of factors.
Well Head
X-mas Tree
Hydraulic
Control Line
Safety
Valve Production
Tubing
Reservoir
Gas Lift
Valve
Perforation
Packer
Pump Out
Plug Sump
20’’ CASING
13 3/8’’ CASING
9 5/8’’ CASING
7’’ LINER
RESEVOIR
Safety Valve
Packer
Packer
Packer is a device consisting of a
sealing device, a holding or setting
device and an inside passage for
fluids. It expands externally to seal the
well bore. It helps in blocking the fluids
through the annular space between
the pipe and the well bore wall.
Packers use flexible, electrometric
elements that expand. It is set
hydraulically from the surface.
Safety Valve
A safety valve is a device that is
installed in the upper well bore to
provide emergency closure of the
channels that produce oil. The
valve has a housing and a movable
valve element that controls the flow
of fluid in the
well.
Hydraulic control line is a device filled with hydraulic fluid and connected
to a hydraulic fluid source.
Hydraulic control line is used to operate the safety valve. When the
control line is pressurized up to a certain pressure limit, the safety valve
opens. Its one end connects at the top of the safety valve and the other
end to a pressurizing panel at the surface. It is lowered along with the
safety valve while lowering the tubing string during completion.
Well Head
The surface termination of a wellbore
that incorporates facilities for installing
casing hangers during the well
construction phase is the well head.