Compression of Particulate Materials in Wellbore Fractures and Enhancement in the Wellbore Breakdown Limit

Author:

Nguyen Kien1,Mehrabian Amin2,Bathija Arpita P.3,Santra Ashok3

Affiliation:

1. Energy and Mineral Sciences Energy Institute, The Pennsylvania State University Department of Energy and Mineral Engineering, , 228 Hosler Building, University Park, PA 16802

2. Energy and Mineral Sciences Energy Institute, The Pennsylvania State University Department of Energy and Mineral Engineering, , 102 Hosler Building, University Park, PA 16802

3. Aramco Services Company, Aramco Research Center—Houston , 16300 Park Row Dr, Houston, TX 77084

Abstract

Abstract Fluid loss during subterranean drilling often occurs through fractures that develop or preexist around the wellbore. Particulate additives, known as lost circulation material (LCM), are commonly added to the drilling fluid to mitigate lost circulation. The LCM forms an impermeable agglomerate within the fractures while preventing further tensile failure of the wellbore wall. The outcome is enhancement in the wellbore breakdown limit. A semi-analytical elastic solution is developed to estimate the width of near-wellbore fractures that partially close on the LCM agglomerate. The solution uses stress–strain data from confined compression testing on LCMs. The compression test results are modeled through a modified form of Kawakita’s (1971) powder compaction equation. The developed constitutive model is embedded within the described semi-analytical solution for the wellbore fractures. The solution adopts an incremental loading approach to treat the nonlinearities arising from the characterized LCM constitutive behavior, as well as large deformation of the LCM agglomerate within the partially closed fractures. At each incremental load, the nonlocal stress equilibrium along the fracture length is described via an integral equation. Successive solutions to these integral equations determine the unknown fracture width of partially closed fractures. A competition between the fractures tendency for propagation and the wellbore wall tendency for secondary tensile failure determines the overall stability of the fractured wellbore. Mechanical behavior of the LCM agglomerate under compression is identified as a key parameter that controls both mechanisms, thereby, the gain in breakdown limit of a fractured and LCM-treated wellbore.

Publisher

ASME International

Subject

Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics

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