You are on page 1of 35

Pipe Cutoff Methods

Explosive or Jet cutters


Linear explosive charge cutter
Chemical cutter
Radial Cutting Torch
Erosive/Abrasive cutter
Mechanical cutter
Collider (rarely used in interventions)
Electrical arc tools

3/14/2009

George E. King Engineering


GEKEngineering.com

Pipe Cutoff Targets


Pipe, usually tubing, when pulling a packer
Tailpipe (below a packer)
Special Targets
Multiple strings
Casing recovery

3/14/2009

George E. King Engineering


GEKEngineering.com

Explosive Cutters
Continuous or segmented cutters
A variation of linear shaped charge
Needs to approach pipe ID: use a cutter with
80% of pipe ID for best performance.
The charge behavior is similar to how a
perforating shaped charge works.

3/14/2009

George E. King Engineering


GEKEngineering.com

Shaped Charge or Explosive Cutter note the flare remaining. The flare is a result of
yielding the pipe when cut. The flared end may have to be milled away to allow the pipe
to be pulled.

3/14/2009

George E. King Engineering


GEKEngineering.com

Minimum flare from a well designed explosive cutter still requires dressing to fish with an
overshot.
3/14/2009

George E. King Engineering


GEKEngineering.com

Cutter Problems
Large diameter cutter deployment is difficult
die to restrictions in the string.
Obtaining complete pipe separation
Excessive flare at cut
Outer pipe damage

3/14/2009

George E. King Engineering


GEKEngineering.com

Chemical Cutters
A focused spray of bromine trifluoride that corrodes the tubular
wall. BrF3 reacts violently on contact with water to evolve
oxygen.
Application expertise is critical to success of a chemical cutter.
Field data - 75% reliable (first cut) above packer, 25% reliable
below packer
Less reliability at depths beyond 10,000 ft and high alloy pipe
may be more difficult to cut
Usually cuts about 95% of pipe wall have to pull apart. Typical
overpulls to part the pipe are > 30,000 lb.
Steel wool in mixing cavity believed to increase cutting efficiency.
The performance of chemical cutters is adversely affected by
liquid crossflows from uneven liquid heads or pressures in the
tubing and annulus.

3/14/2009

George E. King Engineering


GEKEngineering.com

NotePerfect
the nozzle
spray pattern
this 3-1/2
S135 drill
pipe. The nozzles
befired.
of One
A Near
Chemical
Cut. 50kinoverpull,
dropped
off immediately
whenmust
cutter
optimum
and cut
at optimum
distance
from the
inside
wall oftubing.
the target pipe for best
joint
in stringsize
above
found backed
off 4-1/2
turns
on pulling
performance. Small amounts of the wall may not be cut under even the best conditions
and overpulls of over 50,000 lbs have been applied in some cases before the pipe finally
separates.
3/14/2009

George E. King Engineering


GEKEngineering.com

Chemical Cutter Guidelines


Avoid cuts in jewelry (profiles, collars, subs,
mandrels and other heavy body or irregular
shaped components), also avoid heavier wall and
higher alloy pipe when possible
The minimum restriction in a tubing string
above the cut is the number 1 consideration
when determining if a chemical cutter can be
used. Efficiency is dramatically reduced if
the cutter is used in tubing with a larger I.D.
than recommended.
3/14/2009

George E. King Engineering


GEKEngineering.com

Nozzle Power Falls Rapidly With Increasing Standoff The Jet is diffused with
distance from the nozzle.
Note: this is for a fluid jet without particles.

Impact energy remaining at distances away from the nozzle.


The spreading of the jet reduces the amount of chemical
reacting with the cutting zone where pipe separation is
needed.
d

93% to 99%

6 to 8d max

3/14/2009

75% to 92%

9 to 15d max

25% to 75%

16 to 24 d max

George E. King Engineering


GEKEngineering.com

10

Source unknown

Chemical cutter deployment critical pieces are max tool diameter, centralization, anchoring
and tool and casing preparation. Pulling pipe tension is often necessary.
3/14/2009

George E. King Engineering


GEKEngineering.com

11

Differential pressure effects


Chemical tool performance can be severely
reduced if a pressure differential exists
between inside the tubing and the annulus.
Typically, a small hole is created near the zone
to be cut with a puncher charge and the
pressures are allow to equalize before the
pipe cut is attempted.

3/14/2009

George E. King Engineering


GEKEngineering.com

12

Tubing showing incomplete chemical cut


The remaining steel in this example could not be yielded by overpull. Failures are
due to many problems including small tool diameter, moving well fluids, deposits
inside the tubing, pressure, temperature, depth and pipe grade.

3/14/2009

George E. King Engineering


GEKEngineering.com

13
Courtesy BP

Debris in pipe cut and pulled from a well. Debris, including pipe dope, mill scale,

paraffin, scale, wireline grease, plastic coatings, etc., can be barriers to chemical
cutters.

3/14/2009

George E. King Engineering


GEKEngineering.com

14

Chemical cutter head (Beryllium Bronze) with nozzles. Nozzles wear with use critical wells
and cuts at the limit of the tool may warrant use of a new nozzle body.
3/14/2009

George E. King Engineering


GEKEngineering.com

15

Chemical Cutter, tool cut 3.5, 13.3 lb/ft, S-135 DP no residual (uncut) steel was left this
George E. King Engineering
was an
unusually good cut.
3/14/2009
16
GEKEngineering.com

An experiment to measure the outside casing damage when cutting DP - <1


clearance from 7 casing to 3.5 drill pipe
3/14/2009

George E. King Engineering


GEKEngineering.com

17

Outer casing damage by chemical cutter when DP was touching casing Wall. Depression was
George E. King Engineering
about3/14/2009
0.15 deep.
18
GEKEngineering.com

Test of Chemical Cutter on 13.5 ppf DP - 5% metal retaining.

The small uncut area, about 5% of pipe body, would require overpull to complete the pipe
George E. King Engineering
3/14/2009
19
separation
in the well.
GEKEngineering.com

Chemical cut end of drill pipe, showing small uncut area broken by hand after the test.
3/14/2009

George E. King Engineering


GEKEngineering.com

20

Chemical cut on a recovered pipe


note the nozzle impact areas and the
areas that had to be pulled apart by
overpull.

3/14/2009

George E. King Engineering


GEKEngineering.com

21

Split Shot or Linear Explosive Shaped Charge


Breaks the strength of the coupling. Usually
requires only minor overpull to separate
unless the connection uses hook-wall threads.

3/14/2009

George E. King Engineering


GEKEngineering.com

22

A SplitShot charge in a coupling the


effects vary but a high success is typical.
Problems:
Depth control
Hookwall threads

3/14/2009

George E. King Engineering


GEKEngineering.com

Courtesy Owen Tool

23

Radial Torch Cutter


Thermite plasma extreme high temperatures
(~5000oF).
Nozzle cutter tool.
Outer string damage potential controllable in
most cases.

3/14/2009

George E. King Engineering


GEKEngineering.com

24

Troika Data
TBG - 4-1/2" 13.5# 13Cr85
1st attempt w/chem cutter failed. Tool OD 31/8" - Over Pull 25K
2nd attempt w/same tool failed- Over Pull 55K
3rd attempt w/radial cutting torch Tool OD 215/16" - Over Pull 25 pipe parted

3/14/2009

George E. King Engineering


GEKEngineering.com

25

Courtesy BP

Radial Torch Cut, 13Cr 85 ksi pipe. Note the nozzle patterns and the melted steel.
3/14/2009

George E. King Engineering


GEKEngineering.com

26

String Shot Techniques


Aid in backoff and jump-out of coupling.
Stringshot
1 to 4 strings of 90 grain (nominal wt) detonation
cord, 3 to 4 ft long, suspended with E-line, across
a coupling.
Initiated high order
Tension already pulled into pipe (25k+ overpull) or
torque when doing a back-off
May not damage coupling or pin.
3/14/2009

George E. King Engineering


GEKEngineering.com

27

Abrasive Cutting
Abrasives such as sand or pellets of carbonate
carried at high velocity by water or oil can
easily cut steel.
Multiple layer cuts are possible.
Control of the cut may be difficult.
Back pressure in deeper wells slows the
cutting performance.
Nozzle performance less affected by standoff
when using abrasives.
3/14/2009

George E. King Engineering


GEKEngineering.com

28

Cut End of 3.5 DP, after Abrasive Cutoff


3/14/2009

George E. King Engineering


GEKEngineering.com

29

Washout in drill pipe caused by stall during abrasive jetting with a rotating tool
3/14/2009

George E. King Engineering


GEKEngineering.com

30

Groove and washout in outer casing caused by abrasive tool


3/14/2009

George E. King Engineering


GEKEngineering.com

31

Surface Cutoff Test of Abrasive Cutter in 2-3/8 tubing cemented in 4-1/2 . Cut required less
than 20 minutes using frac sand and a rotating head nozzle tool.

Courtesy Charlie Hailey


Company

3/14/2009

George E. King Engineering


GEKEngineering.com

32

Mechanical Cutters
Best choice for pipe where no tension can be
pulled.
Minimize the number of cutter arms to insure
good load application of cutter
Must be anchored
Slowest form of cutting typically 1 to 10
hours to get a cut.
Very experience dependent.
3/14/2009

George E. King Engineering


GEKEngineering.com

33

Two bladed mechanical cutter blades pump out with pressure must be held out and rotated
by a motor powered by the same flow.
3/14/2009

George E. King Engineering


GEKEngineering.com

34

Pipe Cutoff Conclusions


The optimum cutoff device depends on well
conditions, pipe type, clearances above the
cut, ability to apply overpull and operator
experience.

3/14/2009

George E. King Engineering


GEKEngineering.com

35

You might also like