Title: PETE 689 Underbalanced Drilling, UBD
1PETE 689 - Underbalanced Drilling, UBD
- Lesson 3
- Benefits of Underbalanced Drilling
- Read UDM - Chapter 3
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2Benefits of Underbalanced Drilling
- Increased penetration rate.
- Increased bit life.
- Minimize lost circulation.
- Improved formation evaluation.
- Reduced formation damage.
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3Benefits of Underbalanced Drilling
- Reduced probability of differential sticking.
- Earlier production.
- Environmental benefits.
- Improved safety.
- Increased well productivity.
- Less need for stimulation treatments.
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4Increased Penetration Rate
- In permeable rocks, a positive differential
pressure will decrease penetration because. - Increases the effective confining stress which.
- Increases the rocks shear strength.
- Therefore increasing shear stress (by drilling
UB) increases penetration rate. - And increases the chip hold down effect.
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5Chip Hold Down Effect
Bit tooth.
As drilling fluid enters the fracture, the
pressure differential across the rock fragment
decreases, releasing the chip.
Crack in the formation.
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6Effect of Pressure Differential
Micro-bit test
- In permeable rocks penetration rate is a function
of the differential pressure not the absolute
pressure.
12
Indiana Limestone Confining Pressure 6000
psi Bit weight 1000 lbm 50 rpm
10
8
Drilling Rate (ft/hr)
6
4
2
0
0 1000 2000 3000
4000 5000
Overbalanced Differential Pressure (psl)
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7Gas Drilling Vs. Mud Drilling
Drilling Days
0 20 40 60 80
100 120
0
Drilled With Mud Drilled
With Gas
1000
2000
3000
Mud
4000
Depth (feet)
5000
6000
7000
8000
Gas
9000
10000
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8Penetration Rate As A Function Of The
Differential Pressure Across The Workfront
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9Penetration Rate in Impermeable Rocks
Bit tooth
In impermeable rock, the instantaneous initial
pressure in the crack itself is close to zero,
i.e. the penetration rate is now a function of
absolute wellbore pressure.
Crack in the formation.
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10Borehole pressure 440 psi
150
X Pore Pressure 87 psi O Pore Pressure 508
psi
125
100
75
Rate of Penetration (ft/hr)
50
25
0
0 5000 10000 15000 20000
25000 30000 35000 40000 45000
50000
Downhole Weight on Bit (lbf)
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11Borehole pressure 1.450 psi
150
X Pore Pressure 580 psi O Pore Pressure 870
psi Pore Pressure 116 psi
125
100
Rate of Penetration (ft/hr)
75
50
25
0
0 5000 10000 15000 20000
25000 30000 35000 40000 45000
50000
Downhole Weight on Bit (lbf)
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12Borehole pressure 4.800 psi
150
X Pore Pressure 2320 psi Pore Pressure 4930
psi
125
100
Rate of Penetration (ft/hr)
75
50
25
0
0 5000 10000 15000 20000
25000 30000 35000 40000 45000
50000
Downhole Weight on Bit (lbf)
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13Normalized Drilling Strength
WOB x RPM
ROP Pb
WOB x RPM
ROP Po DSn Normalized Drilling
Strength Index. WOB Weight on Bit (lbf). RPM
Rotary speed (rpm). ROP Rate of penetration
(ft/hr). P Pressure (psia). Subscript
b Indicates borehole conditions. Subscript
o Indicates atmospheric conditions.
DSn
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14Influence Of BHP On Normalized Drilling Strength
In Hard Shales
Normalized Rock Drilling Strength, DSn
A value of 5 means that the penetration rate at
an specific BHP will be 1/5 of the penetration
rate at atmospheric pressure.
0 500 1000 1500 2000
2500 3000 3500 4000 4500
5000
Bottomhole Pressure (psi)
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15Normalized Shale Strength Example
- A well drilled with an unweighted
- (8.5 ppg) mud at a depth of 6000.
- BHP 2900 psi.
- Reducing the effective MW to 7 ppg reduces BHP to
2400 psi. - Decreases the drilling strength, i.e., increase
the penetration rate by less than 15.
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16Normalized Shale Strength Example
- To double the penetration rate the BHP would have
to be dropped to - 1500 psi.
- A BHP of 100 psi might be expected if drilling
with air and would increase the penetration rate
approximately 5 times. - Note This assumes equal WOB and RPM.
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17Normalized Shale Strength Example
10
9
8
7
6
5
Normalized Rock Drilling Strength, DSn
4
3
2
1
0
0 500 1000 1500 2000
2500 3000 3500 4000
4500 5000
Bottomhole Pressure (psi)
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18Field Example Switching From Air To Mud
3000
Well 1 Well 2
Well 3
4000
DRY AIR
5000
SWITCH TO MUD
Depth (feet)
6000
7000
8000
9000
5 10 15
20 25
30
Days
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19Increased Bit Life???
- Increased vibration with air drilling may
actually decrease bearing life. - Bit may drill fewer rotating hours but drill more
footage. - The number of bits required to drill an interval
will be inversely proportional to the footage
drilled by each bit.
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20Effect Of UBD On Cutting Structure Of Roller Cone
Bits
- Mechanical Specific Energy, MSE, is defined as
the mechanical work that must be done to excavate
a unit volume of rock.
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21The Work Done By The Bit Is
WOB x ROP 60 x RPM
W 2 pt
Where W work done by the bit (ft/ lbf/
revolution) t torque (ft- lbf) WOB weight on
bit (lbf) ROP rate of penetration (ft/hr) RPM
revolutions per minute
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22The Volume Of Rock Excavated Per Revolution Is
V volume of rock excavated per revolution (ft
3) db bit diameter (feet)
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23The Mechanical Specific Energy Is Give By
480 t x RPM 4WOB d b2 x ROP pd b2
MSE
MSE mechanical specific energy (psi)
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24What Does This Mean?
480 t x RPM 4WOB d b2 x ROP pd b2
MSE
- Bit torque is not a function of borehole
pressures. - Penetration rates generally increase with
decreasing borehole pressures. - MSE are therefore, usually lower at lower
borehole pressures.
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25What Does This Mean?
- Therefore, cutting structure wear rates (in terms
of distance drilled) should be inversely related
to the MSE. - If the bit has to do less work to remove a given
volume of rock, its cutting elements should wear
less. - A bit should be able to drill more footage, when
drilling underbalanced.
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26Reduced Differential Sticking
- Fs Ac DPms 144 sq.in./sq.ft.
- Fs Force required to free pipe (lbf)
- Ac Contact area (sq. ft)
- DP Pressure differential across the mud cake
(psid) - ms Coefficient of friction between the
string and the mud cake.
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27Example
- Contact area is 30 feet long and 0.25 ft wide.
- Pressure differential is 300 psid.
- The coefficient of friction is 0.3
- The force to free the pipe (in excess of string
weight) is - 30 x 0.25 x 300 x 0.3 x 144 97,200 lbf.
- Note Equation 3.5 in text is incorrect.
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28Minimized Lost Circulation
- If the pressure in the wellbore is less than the
formation pressure in the entire open hole
section, lost circulation will not occur.
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29Improved Formation Evaluation
- Production rates while drilling UB can be
measured with no filtrate invasion occurring. - No filtrate invasion can mean more accurate LWD
measurements.
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30Reduces Formation Damage
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31Formation Damage Mechanisms During Drilling
(Overbalanced)
- Scales, sludges or emulsions due to interaction
between filtrates and pore fluids. - Interaction between aqueous mud filtrate and clay
particles in the formation. - Solids invasion.
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32Formation Damage Mechanisms During Drilling
(Overbalanced)
- Phase trapping or blocking.
- Adsorption of drilling fluid additives, leading
to permeability reductions or changes in
wettability. - Migration of fines in the formation.
- Generation of pore-blocking organic byproducts
from bacteria entering the formation from the
drilling fluid.
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33Formation Damage Mechanisms During Drilling
(Overbalanced)
- Temporary overbalance.
- Spontaneous imbibition.
- Gravity-induced invasion.
- Wellbore glazing.
- Post-drilling damage.
- Mechanical degradation.
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34Temporary Overbalance
- Can be intentional to
- Kill well for trips.
- Transmit MWD surveys.
- Log the well.
- Completion and WO operations.
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35Temporary Overbalance
- Can be unintentional
- Slug flow or liquid holdup causing fluctuations
in downhole pressure. - High fluid pressures across the face of diamond
and TSP bits. - Near wellbore production reduces the formation
pressure near the face of the wellbore.
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36Temporary Overbalance
- Can be unintentional
- Varying pore pressure along the wellbore.
- Drill string running too fast after a bit is
changed. - Equipment malfunctions or procedural errors.
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37Spontaneous Imbibition
- Due to capillary effects - even if drilling
underbalanced. - The underbalance pressure necessary to prevent
water from being drawn from an aqueous drilling
fluid into the formation will depend on the
initial formation water saturation and the pore
sizes.
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38Spontaneous Imbibition
800
Countercurrent Imbibition is Possible for Initial
Wetting Phase Saurations Between 20 and 47 for
the Underbalance Pressure Shown in this Example
(200 psi).
Zone of Potential Spontaneous Imbibition
700
600
500
Capillary Pressure (psi)
400
300
Example Underbalance Pressure
200
100
Sa c 47 (Equilibrium)
Sa i 20
S a irr 40
0
0 20
40 60
80 100
Wetting Phase, a, Saturation ()
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39Gravity-induced Invasion
- Can occur during UBD in the
- formation produces from
- natural fractures or vugs.
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40Wellbore Glazing
- UBD can result in high wellbore temperatures due
to the friction between the rotating drillstring
and the borehole wall. - This can cause a thin low permeability glazed
zone.
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41Post-drilling Damage
- Due to
- Killing the well for completion.
- Cementing.
- Mobilization of fines during production.
- Liquid coning in gas reservoir.
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42Mechanical Degradation
- Rock around the wellbore experiences a
concentration of in-situ stresses due to drilling
the well. - As the wellbore pressure is lowered, the
effective stresses increase. - Resulting in a decrease in porosity and available
flow channels leading to reduced permeability.
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43Earlier Production
- With the necessary equipment on location during
UBD operations, produced fluids can go to sales. - Open-hole completions are sometimes performed.
- If the well is drilled and completed
underbalanced, wells from depleated reservoirs
will not need swabbing.
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44Environmental Benefits
- Closed loop systems produce less wasted drilling
fluids.
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45Less Need for Stimulation
- If the formation is not damaged during drilling
and completion, stimulation to remove the damage
will not be needed.
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46End of Lesson 3
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