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Directional Drilling Training Manual
Directional Drilling Training Manual
Document Type
Software
Source File
DDTM_13.DOC
TM.DOT
Author
Mike Smith
Author info
Anadrill Technique
200 Gillingham Lane
Sugar Land TX 77478-3136
Tel: + 1 281 285 8859
Fax: + 1 281 285 8290/4155
email: msmith@sugar-land.anadrill.slb.com
Revision History
Provisory - 06 Dec 96
05 Dec 96
2nd Revision
06-Dec-96
Confidential
Directional Drilling
Table of Contents
13
Drilling Problems
Page
List of Figures
Figure 13-1
Figure 13-2
Figure 13-3
Figure 13-4
Figure 13-5
Figure 13-6
Figure 13-7
Figure 13-8
Page
List of Tables
Page
No list of figures.
Provisory - 07 Dec 96
Confidential
Directional Drilling
13-i
Drilling Problems
13 Drilling Problems
About this chapter
The development of new technologies in the past 10 years, like the MWD systems for
real-time surveying, steerable systems for an effective control of trajectory, PDC bits for
efficient drilling of long sections, mud and hydraulic systems for improved control of
hole cleaning and borehole stability, etc. have transformed directional drilling into a
common practice.
There are a few serious problems which may arise during the course of drilling a
directional well. The probability of certain drilling problems arising (e.g. differential
sticking) is increased by virtue of the well being deviated. The causes and implications of
differential sticking are discussed here, as well as solutions and possible preventive
measures. This is very relevant to the DD, particularly in areas which are prone to
differential sticking.
Dog legs and key seats are discussed here in detail. As mentioned elsewhere in this
manual, it is the DDs responsibility to ascertain the clients limit on dog leg severity at
the beginning of the project. The consequences of high dog leg severity at a shallow
depth often do not become apparent until much deeper in the well.
Problems caused by borehole instability due to poor hydraulics and mud conditioning are
outlined. Increases in Drag, particularly when drilling with a PDM, directly concern the
DD. In high-angle wells, it often becomes very difficult to "slide".
Objectives of this Chapter
On completing this chapter the directional driller should be able to do the following
exercises:
1. Describe the main causes of differential sticking.
2. Explain how the API Filtrate (Water Loss) influences the chances of getting
differentially stuck.
3. Describe the precautions the DD should take or recommend when about to drill in an
area known for differential sticking.
4. Explain why the chances of borehole instability are influenced by hole inclination.
5. List the drilling (and other) problems arising from high dog leg severity in a deviated
well.
6. Explain what the DD should do if his survey indicates an unacceptably-high dog leg
severity in the interval just drilled.
13.1 An Overview
The development of new technologies in the 80s, like the MWD systems for real-time
surveying, steerable systems for an effective control of trajectory, PDC bits for efficient
drilling of long sections, mud and hydraulic systems for improved control of hole
cleaning and borehole stability, etc. have transformed directional drilling into a common
practice.
Provisory - 07 Dec 96
Confidential
Directional Drilling
13-1
Drilling Problems
But, if we compare the performance and drilling conditions of vertical and directional
wells, it is possible to identify some particular problems related to deviated boreholes. In
this chapter we analyze the most common directional drilling problems and possible
solutions.
Pipe sticking occurs when part of the drill string rests against the wall of the
borehole, which is the case in directional wells, imbedding itself in the filter
cake. The area of the drill pipe in contact with filter cake is then sealed from the
full hydrostatic pressure of the mud column.
The pressure difference between the mud column pressure and the formation
pressure acts on the area of the drill pipe in contact with the filter cake to hold
the drill pipe against the wall of the borehole.
Overpull due to differential pressure sticking can be calculated from the product of
differential pressure, contact area, and a friction factor as follows:
Overpull = (Mud Pressure - Formation Pressure) xContact Area x Friction Factor
where
Overpull
(lbs.)
Mud Pressure
(psi)
Formation Pressure
(psi)
Contact Area
(sq in)
Friction Factor
(no unit)
Example: If there is a 6 ppg differential pressure across a sand at 7000 ft. T.V.D.
(Mud Pressure - Formation Pressure) = 0.052 x 7000 x 6 = 2184 psi.
Say we have a contact of 3 inches of drill collar circumference across a sand which is 10
thick. That gives a contact area of 360 square inches. From experience, the friction
factors vary from 0.15 to 0.50. We will use 0.15 for this example.
Overpull
117,936.00 lbs.
118000 lbs.
An extra overpull of 118 lbs. on top of the normal friction in the wellbore can easily
mean the difference between being free and being stuck. This example also used a
relatively thin sand of 10 feet.
We should actually use the projection of the contact area onto the horizontal plane to be
precise. This is more difficult to visualize and is not used here for simplicity.
Provisory - 07 Dec 96
Confidential
Directional Drilling
13-2
Drilling Problems
Borehole
Wall
Mud Pressure
Contact
Area
Mud
Cake
Formation Pressure
Figure 13-1
Differential sticking
Filter Cake Thickness The thicker the filter cake, the larger the contact area
with the drill collars and the higher the resulting differential sticking force. The
following illustrates the formation of a filter cake.
Many factors affect the rate of growth and the final thickness of the filter cake.
1. A higher differential pressure will increase the rate of growth of the filter cake. The
final thickness of the cake will be larger in order to seal off the higher pressure.
Figure 13-2
2. As the amount of drill solids in the mud increases, the filter cake becomes more
porous and permeable. This results in a faster rate of growth of the filter cake and a
larger final thickness. The ideal situation would be a thin, hard filter cake made up of
mud solids only.
Provisory - 07 Dec 96
Confidential
Directional Drilling
13-3
Drilling Problems
Mud Pressure
Mud Pressure
Pore Pressure
Pore Pressure
Mud Solids
Drill Solids
Permeable Formation
With a high amount of drill solids, the
filter cake tends to be more porous
and permeable and the final thickness
of the cake tends to be larger.
Figure 13-3
Permeable Formation
With low amounts of drill solids, the
filter cake tends to be thin and tough
which reduces the chances of
differential sticking.
3. The lower the water loss or filtrate of the mud, the thinner and harder the filter cake.
In the case of drilling into a sand after undergoing a pressure regression, the
differential pressure is so high that sufficient mud cake can be formed to stick the
BHA while drilling. The best defenses in these cases are proper pore pressure
detection, lowering the mud weight if possible or setting casing.
If the pipe stays motionless (for example, taking surveys in a directional well)
for a period of time adjacent to the sand, the situation gets worse. The filter cake
tends to bridge around the pipe, thus increasing the contact area. The filter cake
in contact with the pipe is no longer in direct contact with the mud and the
friction factor increases by virtue of more water being filtered out of the filter
cake. The end result is that a much greater overpull is required to free the
drillstring.
Mud Pressure
Contact
Area
Bridging
Mud
Cake
Formation Pressure
Figure 13-4
Provisory - 07 Dec 96
Confidential
Directional Drilling
13-4
Drilling Problems
Filter cake erosion occurs while drilling due to the drill pipe rubbing against the
borehole wall. This only affects a small portion of the circumference of the
wellbore. Wiper trips pull the stabilizers and bit through the filter cake and will
scrape off a significant amount. The best disruption of filter cake is reaming,
where most of the cake will be removed.
Drill Pipe Erosion
Wiper Trip
Reaming
Wiper Trip
A wiper trip will pass the
stabilizers and the bit
across the formatioin
scraping away a large
portion of the filter cake
Reaming
Reaming does the best
job of scraping awaw the
filter cake but is very
time consuming.
Figure 13-5
13.1.1.1Warning Signs
High differential pressure (1500 psi) across the permeable formations, if known.
The pipe was stationary just before sticking usually at a connection while
drilling or tripping
Provisory - 07 Dec 96
Confidential
Directional Drilling
13-5
Drilling Problems
13.1.1.3Preventive Actions
1. Pre-well Planning:
Estimate the pressure of permeable formation, using nearby welldata and any
available RFT, DST or producing well data.
Plan the use of lubricants ahead of time. Spotting fluid must be on location when
differential sticking occurs, otherwise it is useless. Studies show that spotting
fluid must be in place within 4 hours otherwise the chances of the pipe becoming
free are greatly reduced.
Plan on having high quality mud cleaning equipment on the rig to control mud
solids.
Minimize OD of drill collars used to minimize the contact area with the mud
cake. However, annular velocities and borehole cleaning need to be taken into
account when reducing the ODs of drill collars.
Keep the mud weight at the lowest safe level. This will keep differential pressure
across permeable formations at a minimum.
Maintain a tough, thin filter cake and keep drilled solids content to a minimum.
Use spiral drill collars and minimize unstabilized sections of the BHA.
Keep the pipe moving at all times. Reciprocating is the preferred motion as it
allows you to monitor overpulls. When possible, begin pipe motion in a
downward direction.
Minimize length of BHA. Use heavy weight drill pipe instead of a long section
of unstabilized drill collars.
Avoid surveying methods which result in pipe remaining static for long periods
(use MWD).
Frequent wiper trips through the permeable zones will scrape the filter cake and
may prevent it from becoming too thick.
Provisory - 07 Dec 96
Confidential
Directional Drilling
13-6
Drilling Problems
Overpressured formations
Unconsolidated formations
Mobile formations
Mechanical Stability
The behavior of vertical and directional wells in the first 5 cases above is similar; they
are controlled with the implementation of the correct mud system and operational
procedures.
The formation mechanical stability is a concern when drilling directional wells in general
and high inclination or horizontal wells in particular. When a borehole is drilled, the
process may be thought of as one of replacing the rock which was originally in the hole
with drilling mud. This causes a disturbance to the in-situ stress state local to the hole
because a column of rock which supported three, probably different, principal stresses
(three axes, i.e. two horizontal and one vertical) is replaced by fluid in which the three
principal stresses are equal and, typically, lower than any of the stresses in the original
rock column. Unbalanced conditions will generate borehole problems; lost circulation or
hole instability problems (e.g. sloughing or caving). The directional drilling plan,
deviation and azimuth, is a very important factor in the borehole stability.
Over the last years the industry has studied the borehole stability process to define, at the
planning stage, the borehole stability problems that would be faced during the actual
drilling operation. The intention is to identify the in-situ stress state where the well is to
be drilled, to calculate the stresses that will occur at the borehole wall when the well is
drilled and to substitute the borehole wall stresses into shear and tensile failure criteria to
see whether failure occurs. It was found that for a particular formation the upper and
lower formation stability limits (fracture initiation pressure and sloughing/caving
pressure) are greatly affected by the hole inclination and azimuth.
20
19
18
17
16
Safe
Working
Area
15
14
13
12
11
Sloughing - Caving
10
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
Figure 13-6
Provisory - 07 Dec 96
Confidential
Directional Drilling
13-7
Drilling Problems
This figure shows the formation behavior, for a set of given conditions, changes with the
hole inclination. It is possible to see that safe drilling conditions are achievable in
inclinations up to 60. Beyond that point, unstability situations would be unevitable.
The same type of analysis can be done for a well to be drilled; knowing the lithology,
formation characteristics and borehole trajectory, a set of plots can be generated:
This type of representation consists of three tracks: the first track gives the mud weight
which causes tensile failure of the borehole, that is the fracture initiation pressure (FIP);
the second track gives the maximum and minimum mud weights which can be used in
the hole without causing shear failure of the walls; the third track combines the FIP and
the shear failure limits on mud weight to give the maximum and minimum mud weights
which can be used to drill the well. It is possible to see that a vertical well can be drilled
without any borehole stability problems within a wide range of mud weight values;
however, at 50 inclination the operation becomes risky, because of a narrower safe mud
weight range and a totally unstable ledge at 2672m.
13.1.2.1Warning Signs
High friction factors while drilling and tripping (torque and drag).
Key seats.
Casing wear.
Provisory - 07 Dec 96
Confidential
Directional Drilling
13-8
Drilling Problems
When a deflecting tool is run in the hole, the directional driller must have permanent
control of the dog legs being generated, in order to take immediate remedial actions to
correct unexpected high dog leg values before continuing to drill. Once a high dog leg
has been created, efforts must be made to reduce the dog leg before drilling ahead.
In this section, the drilling related problems are analyzed.
13.1.3.1High Friction Factors While Drilling and Tripping
Friction factors are used to evaluate the planned maximum drilling and tripping stresses
while rotating or sliding, to be able to select the proper components to drill the well. Any
deviations from the plan, by making higher dog legs, could result in stopping the drilling
operation without reaching the desired T.D.; this is particularly important in extended
reach and horizontal wells.
The value of the dog leg is defined by the combination of several factors:
BHA design.
Drilling parameters.
Not all the factors are under our control. Formation characteristics can be estimated, but
they are an unknown until we drill them. For this reason, sometimes higher than expected
dog legs are obtained from a planned BHA, generating more drag and torque.
13.1.3.2Warning Signs
13.1.3.3Preventive Actions
Use previous directional wells data in the same area to identify possible dog leg
problems.
Provisory - 07 Dec 96
Confidential
Directional Drilling
13-9
Drilling Problems
Key seats are associated with doglegs, as the drill string will be forced into contact with
the formation. The more severe the dogleg and the higher it is up the hole, the greater the
side load will be and so the faster a key seat will develop. Other than doglegs, ledges are
features which provide points of continuous contact. Further variations include key seats
at the casing shoe, where the groove is made in metal instead of rock. Development of
key seats is dependent upon the number of rotating hours and the formation strength.
Section A-A
After creating a
dogleg, the drillstring
is forced against the
borehole wall. Pipe
rotation causes a
groove to be worn
into the formation.
Figure 13-7
Depending on the
strength of the formation,
the groove will eventually
wear deep into the
formation as shown in
section A-A.
13.1.4.1Warning Signs
Circulation unaffected.
13.1.4.3Preventive Actions
Planning:
Incorporate key seat reamer (string reamer) into the BHA design if high
torque and drag is not a problem.
Provisory - 07 Dec 96
Confidential
Directional Drilling
13-10
Drilling Problems
Figure 13-8
Ream any severe doglegs, before key seats have an opportunity to develop.
Minimize the number of correction runs. It is better to make one large correction
run close to target than numerous changes with a steerable assembly at shallow
TVDs.
A high-lubricating pill set at stuck point level will be helpful to free the stuck
drill string.
Use an adequate safety factor. Make a proper torque and drag plan.
Provisory - 07 Dec 96
Confidential
Directional Drilling
13-11
Drilling Problems
RPM.
Weight on bit.
13.1.6.1Preventive Actions
Know the technical and operational specifications of every tool run in the hole.
Know the technical and operational specifications of the rig and surface system.
Define the expected formations and lithology to be drilled during the bit run.
Poor hydraulics and mud conditioning will lead to the hole packing off. Solids will build
up in the mud and plug up the annulus while in turbulent flow. Remedy: Shut down the
pumps, thereby reducing ECD and annular velocity. Attempt to free pipe by jarring down
and, if possible, rotating. If circulation can be established, bring pumps up to speed very
slowly and circulate the hole clean.
Mud Motor Sliding:
When a mud motor is in sliding mode, it becomes very difficult to maintain a constant
WOB. In the worst case, all the surface weight can be slacked off with no change in
WOB. This is due to high sliding friction (Drag).
Remedy:
To improve the sliding condition, add walnut hulls to the mud system. This helps to keep
the PDM and BHA off the borehole wall and hence allow sliding to continue. Sweeping
the hole with a low-vie pill and LCM should help to reduce friction. (The LCM must be
fine-to-medium, well-mixed). As a last resort, POOH and run a hole opener through the
problem section.
Provisory - 07 Dec 96
Confidential
Directional Drilling
13-12