Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8125493 | Journal of Petroleum Science and Engineering | 2018 | 29 Pages |
Abstract
Compared with the conventional drilling methods, supercritical carbon dioxide used in drilling and completion has considerable potentials and many advantages. However, it is found in the research and practice that there are yet many basic problems to be solved. Wellbore stability is one of them. Firstly, in this paper, on the basis of Span & Wagner equation, combined with unique physical properties of supercritical carbon dioxide, parameters such as temperature and pressure in the wellbore while the supercritical carbon dioxide drilling are calculated. Secondly, the heat and mass transfer effect between the supercritical carbon dioxide and the formation has been studied, and the temperature change near the wellbore formation and stress change near the wellbore have been obtained. Thus, pore pressure change near the wellbore has been obtained. When the depth reaches 1500Â m, the downhole temperature will be 12Â K lower than the wellbore temperature, and the pore pressure will increase to 20Â Mpa as the supercritical carbon dioxide seeps into the formation. Thirdly, mechanical properties change rules when rocks are soaked in the supercritical carbon dioxide are obtained through experiments. The compressive strength decreases by 64%, the elastic modulus increases by 153%, and the poisson ratio decreases by 8%. Based on the above research, the wellbore collapse pressure model has been established. It is revealed that the wellbore collapse pressure rises from 9.17Â Mpa to 16.26Â MPa with the increase of time, which is still lower than the bottom pressure and cannot lead to instability. Meanwhile, the bottom collapse failure index keeps positive and increases gradually with the increase of time. It means that there is no wellbore enlargement. Therefore, the results have verified the wellbore stability while the supercritical carbon dioxide drilling. It has laid a solid foundation for the future development of supercritical carbon dioxide drilling.
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Authors
Lu Ding, Hongjian Ni, Mukun Li, Wentuo Li, Weiqiang Song, Xing Guo,