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Pge 472 4 PDF
Pge 472 4 PDF
By
Dr. Khaled El-shreef
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Casing Design
CONTENTS
Function of Casing
Casing Types & Tools
Strength Properties
Casing Specification
Casing Design
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RUNNING AND
CEMENTING CASING
Reasons for Running Casing
Provide a means of controlling well
pressures.
Permit circulation.
Prevent collapse of hole.
Prevent fluid migration.
Isolate troublesome zones.
Facilitate control of a production well.
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Conductor Casing
Characteristics:
Casing is usually large: 20 in. to 30 in.
diameter.
The hole may be severely eroded.
The setting depth of the conductor can vary from as
little as 20 ft to as much as a few hundred feet.
The most common pipe and hole sizes are a 16 in.
pipe in a 20 in. hole and 20 in. pipe in a 26 in. hole.
Conductor Casing
Conductor Casing is set to :
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Surface casing
Surface casing is usually the second string of pipe
set in the well.
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Surface casing
Surface casing is set to:
Protect fresh water sands.
Case unconsolidated formations.
Provide primary pressure control (BOP
usually nippled up on surface casing).
Support future casings.
Case off potential loss circulations zones.
Casing sizes normally range from 13-3/8in. on shallow
wells to 20 in. on deep, multistring wells.
Guide shoe, or float shoe, float collar and centralizers are
commonly used
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Intermediate Casing
The intermediate casing strings extend from the
surface to formations able to hold the expected mud
weights at greater depths.
This depth can vary several thousand feet in a single
stage job.
When a second intermediate string is set, the casing
is run to just below the weak zone to a firm
formation and cemented at that point.
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Intermediate Casing
Intermediate casing is set to:
Separates hole into workable drilling segments and
cases off loss circulation zones, water flows, etc.
isolates salt sections.
protects open hole from increases in mud weight.
prevents flow from high pressure zones if
mud weight must be reduced.
Basic pressure control casing.
BOP always installed.
Supports subsequent casings.
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Production Casing
The production casing is the last full string of pipe
set in the well.
It extends from below the deepest producing
formation to the surface-
Production tubing, downhole pumps, and other
equipment needed to produce oil and gas are
housed in this casing.
The production-casing cement must give a
pressure-tight seal between the formations and the
production casing.
It is essential to isolate the reservoir from fluids
both within the producing zone itself and from
other zones. 16
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Production Casing
Since the production casing may extend from the
total depth of the well to the surface, the setting
depth can vary from a few thousand feet to as much
as 14000 feet.
Below 14000 ft, liners may be set because of cost
savings and less pipe weight.
The size of the casing depends upon the number of
strings of production tubing to be run into the well
and the size of production equipment used.
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Production Casing
Characteristics
Common size 4-1/2 in., 5-1/2 in., and 7 in.
casing.
Drilling mud usually of good condition.
Usually not circulated. Generally cemented
back to intermediate casing.
Good cement job is vital to successful
completion.
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Production Casing
Production casing is set to:
Complete well for production.
Effect zonal isolation.
Protect pay zones from unwanted fluids.
Provide pressure control.
Cover worn or damaged intermediate casing.
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Liners String
A liner is a string of casing that does not reach the
surface.
They are hung on the intermediate casing by use of
suitable arrangement of a packer and slips called a
liner hanger.
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Types of Liners String
Drilling liners, used to isolate lost circulation
or abnormally pressured zones to permit
deeper drilling.
Production liners, run instead of a full casing
to provide isolation across the production or
injection zones.
Tie back liner, a section of casing extending
upwards from the top of an existing liner to
the surface.
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Liner String
The liner string consists of:
The cementing head with a drill pipe wiper
dart in place.
A drill pipe swivel if movement is considered.
Drill pipe.
Liner-setting mechanism.
Latch-in liner wiper plug.
A mechanical set or hydraulic set liner hanger.
Floating equipment. 23
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Hole Conditions
Sloughing
In many cases, this is the purpose of setting an
intermediate casing and it can create several
cement problems, such as bridging the annulus,
sticking the casing, and increasing the annulus
hydrostatic pressure.
Drill Pipe Drag
Where the drag is occurring, and exactly why it
exists, could be important. This condition may
indicate the need for centralized casing or the use
of fluid loss control cements. 25
Hole Conditions
Low Pressure Zone:
One of the most persistent problems is
incompetent formations that will not support
effective columns of cements.
Mud Condition:
A well-conditioned mud greatly increases the
mud removal capability of the flushes and
cement slurry.
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Hole Conditions
Fluid Movement
Zone isolation fails any time fluid movement is
allowed to move during the time a cement slurry is
between the fluid and set state. If the cement
moves during the hardening, the cement will not
set.
Formation Movement
Are you located in an active fault zone? The most
common formation movement occurs with salt
intrusions.
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Physical Properties
Length Ranges
a. Casing comes in three range lengths:
R I 10 to 25 feet
R II 25 to 34 feet
R III > 34 feet
b. There are different 'grades' of casing which
indicate the strength of the sheet.
These are color coded:
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These are color coded:
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Casing Grades
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Couplings
API couplings
STC- Short round thread casing
LTC- Long round thread casing
BTC- Buttress thread casing
XL- Extreme line casing
Non-API couplings
Hydril super EU, TS
Valorec
Vam
See Halliburton Book ..
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Basic Design Features of Coupling
Form: V-shaped or squared shaped
Taper: change in thread diameter in inch per
foot of thread length
Height: distance between crest and root
Lead: distance between one point on the
thread and the corresponding point on the
other one.
Pitch diameter: diameter on an imaginary
cone that bisects each thread midway between
its crest and root
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API Coupling Configurations
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Strength Properties
Yield strength
Collapse strength
Burst strength
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Yield strength (Tensile Loading )
Tensile loading is applied to casing as a
result of its own weight and is at a
maximum underneath the casing hanger
at the surface.
Buoyancy reduces the tensile loading on
casing.
Tensile loading on the casing is increased
as a result of running it in directional
hole.
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Yield strength (Tensile Loading )
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Collapse Loading
The maximum external pressure required to
collapse a specimen of casing.
If the casing is emptied of fluid completely the
worst collapse situation exists. With no
internal hydrostatic pressure of the mud, the
full formation pressure is exerted on the casing
at the shoe.
At the surface the collapse pressure is clearly
zero since only atmospheric pressure is acting
on the casing.
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Collapse Loading
Where exceptional circumstances occur such as
casing run in salt formations or in earthquake
areas, extra collapse resistance is required and
must be designed for.
Types
Elastic collapse
Plastic collapse
Transition collapse
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Biaxial Loading
Collapse and burst loading on casing are both
affected by tensile loading.
Tensile loading tends to reduce the collapse
resistance of casing. This is a particular problem in
deep wells with long casing strings.
Tensile loading has the reverse effect on burst
resistance.
Burst resistance is increased due to the tensile
loading.
Temperature effects must also be considered as
the elongation of the casing can effect all loadings.
The Drilling Engineer will make use of standard
tables and equations to allow for the effect of
tension and temperature.
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Casing Design
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Casing Design
Casing design is required to ensure that casing run in
the well will withstand the various loads applied to it.
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Graphical Method for Casing Design
Burst Line
Burst pressure = Internal pressure
External pressure
Internal pressure = Pf (TD CSD)*G
External pressure = CSD* Gm
Where
Pf, formation pressure at total depth
TD, total depth, CSD, casing setting depth
G, formation fluid gradient (0.1 psi/ft)
Gm, mud gradient (0.465 psi/ft)
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Tensile force
Tensile force = weight of casing in air
Buoyancy force 52
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Graphical Method for Casing Design
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Running Casing
Condition hole.
Casing shoe and first two or three joints.
Check float equipment.
Remove wear bushing.
While running casing, check calculated displacement
to trip tank.
Keep pipe moving to avoid sticking and circulate.
Rig up cement head and plugs.
Pump water or chemical spacer to remove mud
cake.
Drop bottom plug.
Load top plug (if not already in cement head). 55
The End
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