Title: PETE 411 Well Drilling
1PETE 411Well Drilling
Lesson 17Casing Design
2Casing Design
- Why Run Casing?
- Types of Casing Strings
- Classification of Casing
- Wellheads
- Burst, Collapse and Tension
- Example
- Effect of Axial Tension on Collapse Strength
- Example
3Read Applied Drilling Engineering, Ch.7
HW 9 Due 10-18-02
4Casing Design
What is casing?
Casing
Cement
- Why run casing?
- 1. To prevent the hole from caving in
- 2. Onshore - to prevent contamination of fresh
water sands - 3. To prevent water migration to producing
formation
5Casing Design - Why run casing, contd
- 4. To confine production to the wellbore
- 5. To control pressures during drilling
- 6. To provide an acceptable environment for
subsurface equipment in producing wells - 7. To enhance the probability of drilling to
total depth (TD) -
- e.g., you need 14 ppg to control a lower
zone, but an upper zone will fracture at
12 lb/gal. - What do you do?
6Types of Strings of Casing
Diameter Example 16-60 30
16-48 20 8 5/8-20 13 3/8
- 1. Drive pipe or structural pile
- Gulf Coast and offshore only 150-300
below mudline. - 2. Conductor string. 100 - 1,600
- (BML)
- 3. Surface pipe. 2,000 - 4,000
- (BML)
7Types of Strings of Casing
Diameter Example
- 4. Intermediate String
- 5. Production String (Csg.)
- 6. Liner(s)
- 7. Tubing String(s)
7 5/8-13 3/8 9 5/8
4 1/2-9 5/8 7
8Example Hole and String Sizes (in)
Hole Size
Pipe Size
Structural casing Conductor string Surface
pipe IntermediateString Production Liner
30 20 13 3/8 9 5/8 7
36 26 17 1/2 12 1/4 8 3/4
9Example Hole and String Sizes (in)
Hole Size
Pipe Size
Structural casing Conductor string Surface
pipe IntermediateString Production Liner
30 20 13 3/8 9 5/8 7
36 26 17 1/2 12 1/4 8 3/4
10Example Hole and String Sizes (in)
Structural casing Conductor string Surfac
e pipe IntermediateString Production Liner
Mudline
250 1,000 4,000
11Classification of CSG.
- 1. Outside diameter of pipe (e.g. 9 5/8)
- 2. Wall thickness (e.g. 1/2)
- 3. Grade of material (e.g. N-80)
- 4. Type to threads and couplings (e.g. API LCSG)
- 5. Length of each joint (RANGE) (e.g. Range 3)
- 6. Nominal weight (Avg. wt/ft incl. Wt.
Coupling) (e.g. 47 lb/ft)
12s
e
13Length of Casing Joints
- RANGE 1 16-25 ft
- RANGE 2 25-34 ft
- RANGE 3 gt 34 ft.
14Casing Threads and Couplings
- API round threads - short CSG
- API round thread - long LCSG
- Buttress
BCSG - Extreme line XCSG
- Other
- See Halliburton Book...
15API Design Factors (typical)
Required 10,000 psi 100,000 lbf 10,000 psi
Design 11,250 psi 180,000 lbf 11,000 psi
- Collapse 1.125
- Tension 1.8
- Burst 1.1
16Abnormal
Normal Pore Pressure Abnormal Pore Pressure
0.433 - 0.465 psi/ft gp gt normal
17Design from bottom
18Press. Gauge
X-mas Tree
Wing Valve
Choke Box
Master Valves
- Wellhead
- Hang Csg. Strings
- Provide Seals
- Control Production from Well
19Wellhead
20Wellhead
21Casing Design
Tension
Tension
Depth
Burst
Collapse
Collapse
STRESS
- Burst Assume full reservoir
pressure all along the wellbore. - Collapse Hydrostatic pressure increases
with depth - Tension Tensile stress due to weight of
string is highest at top
Burst
22Casing Design
- Collapse (from external pressure)
- Yield Strength Collapse
- Plastic Collapse
- Transition Collapse
- Elastic Collapse
Collapse pressure is affected by axial stress
23Casing Design - Collapse
24Casing Design - Tension
25Casing Design - Burst (from internal pressure)
- Internal Yield Pressure for pipe
- Internal Yield Pressure for couplings
- Internal pressure leak resistance
p
Internal Pressure
p
26Casing Design - Burst
- Example 1
- Design a 7 Csg. String to 10,000 ft.
- Pore pressure gradient 0.5 psi/ft
- Design factor, Ni1.1
- Design for burst only.
27Burst Example
- 1. Calculate probable reservoir pressure.
2. Calculate required pipe internal yield
pressure rating
28Example
- 3. Select the appropriate csg. grade and wt.
from the Halliburton Cementing tables - Burst Pressure required 5,500 psi
- 7, J-55, 26 lb/ft has BURST Rating of 4,980 psi
- 7, N-80, 23 lb/ft has BURST Rating of 6,340 psi
- 7, N-80, 26 lb/ft has BURST Rating of 7,249 psi
-
- Use N-80 Csg., 23 lb/ft
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3023 lb/ft 26 lb/ft N-80
31Collapse Pressure
- The following factors are important
- The collapse pressure resistance of a pipe
depends on the axial stress - There are different types of collapse failure
32Collapse Pressure
- There are four different types of collapse
pressure, each with its own equation for
calculating the collapse resistance - Yield strength collapse
- Plastic collapse
- Transition collapse
- Elastic collapse
33Casing Design
- Collapse pressure - with axial stress
- 1.
YPA yield strength of axial stress
equivalent grade, psi YP minimum yield
strength of pipe, psi SA Axial stress, psi
(tension is positive)
34Casing Design - Collapse
- 2. Calculate D/t to determine proper equation to
use for calculating the collapse pressure
Yield Strength Collapse Plastic Collapse
35Casing Design - Collapse, contd
- Transition
- Collapse
- Elastic Collapse
36Casing Design - Collapse
- If Axial Tension is Zero
-
- Yield Strength Plastic Transition
Elastic
J-55 14.81 25.01
37.31 N-80 13.38
22.47 31.02 P-110
12.44 20.41 26.22
37Example 2
- Determine the collapse strength of 5 1/2 O.D.,
14.00 /ft J-55 casing under zero axial load. - 1. Calculate
- the D/t ratio
38Example 2
- 2. Check the mode of collapse
- Table on p.35 (above) shows that,
- for J-55 pipe,
- with 14.81 lt D/t lt 25.01
- the mode of failure is plastic collapse.
39Example 2
- The plastic collapse is calculated from
Halliburton Tables rounds off to 3,120 psi
40Example 3
- Determine the collapse strength for a 5 1/2
O.D., 14.00 /ft, J-55 casing under axial load of
100,000 lbs - The axial tension will reduce the collapse
pressure as follows
41Example 3 contd
- The axial tension will reduce the collapse
pressure rating to
Here the axial load decreased the J-55 rating to
an equivalent J-38.2 rating
42Example 3 - contd
compared to 3,117 psi with no axial stress!
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