Abstract
Abstract
Managed pressure operations enable keeping the equivalent circulation density (ECD) within a narrow pore-frac pressure window during drilling and cementing while maintaining the wellbore stability and controlling formation pressures. The operation becomes more complex during a cementing job, where fluids with different density and rheology parameters are pumped downhole at varying rates, resulting in different friction pressure profiles. Proper numerical simulators must be used to model such variations and keep the downhole pressure between the pore and fracture pressures during the operation.
Managed pressure techniques and technology were critical to the successful cementation of the 7-in. liner at 12,000 ft. in a gas field in Saudi Arabia, across formations ranging from a high-pressure zone with 2.36 SG (19.65 ppg) formation pore pressure to a depleted low-pressure formation with 2.44 SG (20.32 ppg) fracture pressure. The challenge in this job was to maintain the ECD at 2.40 SG (20 ppg) throughout the cement job to avoid any losses or flow from the formations.
An automatic choke setup on the return flow line with a dynamic control system was used to drill the 8.375-in. open hole with KCl polymer mud. Precise cementing simulation was used to determine the ECD during cement placement. Numerous pre-calculations and simulations were run to evaluate various scenarios prior to the cement job to ensure effective manipulation of back pressure through managed pressure drilling (MPD) equipment to maintain ECD at the desired value throughout the cementation process.
The detailed simulations run by cementing and MPD engineers prior to the job and a collaborative approach were instrumental in defining a final cementing plan, completing the layout of equipment used for the cementing job, and executing the job with real-time monitoring of all critical parameters affecting ECD and evaluation of the cement job.
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6 articles.
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