WEll Control
WEll Control
WEll Control
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Outline
Introduction
Causes of Kicks
Primary, Secondary and Tertiary well control
Blowout Preventer stack
Kick Detection Equipment
killing a well
Outline
Introduction
Causes of Kicks
Primary, Secondary and Tertiary well control
Blowout Preventer stack
Kick Detection Equipment
killing a well
Introduction
Well control is the procedure of maintaining pressure on open
formation (that is exposed to the wellbore) to prevent or direct the
flow of formation fluids into the wellbore.
• Underbalance
Mud Hydrostatic Pressure < Formation Pressure (Possible Kick!)
Outline
Introduction
Causes of Kicks
Primary, Secondary and Tertiary well control
Blowout Preventer stack
Kick Detection Equipment
killing a well
Causes of Kicks
Kicks:
Underbalance is caused by :
• Increase in Formation Pressure.
• Mud Hydrostatic Reduction.
Causes of Kicks (cont.)
What causes Mud Hydrostatic to drop?
Pressure = Mud Wt X Constant X TVD
psi
Bottom Hole Pressures
Causes of Kicks (cont.)
5- Loss of Barite
Pit Hole
Causes of Kicks (cont.)
6- Lost circulation
Pressure Exert On
Upper Formation
Causes of Kicks (cont.)
7- Pull Out of The Hole Dry
Rig Floor
Flowline
Causes of Kicks (cont.)
8- Pull Out of The Hole Wet
Rig Floor
Flowline
Causes of Kicks (cont.)
Kick Prevention
Monitor trips; in and out.
Circulate bottoms up if in doubt of hole condition.
Monitor well at all times.
Trip carefully in and out.
Pump out if tight hole.
Circulate through choke if a lot of gas is expected.
Keep mud in good shape.
Always keep hole full.
Double check effect of lightweight mud/pills.
Pump good cement.
Outline
Introduction
Causes of Kicks
Primary, Secondary and Tertiary well control
Blowout Preventer stack
Kick Detection Equipment
killing a well
Primary, Secondary and Tertiary well control
You must have an idea of primary, secondary and tertiary well
control and the equipment used to detect the kicks or any
other problem.
Secondary Control
BOPs
Tertiary Control
Control &Recovery
Primary Control
Mud Weight
Primary, Secondary and Tertiary well control (cont.)
1. Detect a kick
2. Close-in the well at surface
3. Remove the formation fluid which has flowed into the well
4. Make the well safe
1- Primary well control
Mud Hydrostatic Pressure:
Mud Hydrostatic Pressure > Formation Pressure
2- Secondary well control
• Once the slurry is in position down hole and pumping stops, the
barite rapidly settles out to form an impermeable mass that will
hopefully stop the flow of formation fluid.
Outline
Introduction
Causes of Kicks
Primary, Secondary and Tertiary well control
Blowout Preventer stack
Kick Detection Equipment
killing a well
Blowout Preventer stack
Introduction
Causes of Kicks
Primary, Secondary and Tertiary well control
Blowout Preventer stack
Kick Detection Equipment
killing a well
Kick Detection Equipment
There are two main kick detection systems that give a direct indication
of a kick:
2. Flow indicator
Kick Detection Equipment (cont.)
The pit volume totalizer PVT:
• It provides a readout showing the
total volume of drilling fluid held on
the surface.
• If this total increases, and the
increase is not due to the mud
engineer adding chemicals or fresh
mud to the system, a kick is
occurring.
Kick Detection Equipment (cont.)
The flow indicator:
• This system consists of an instrument
attached to a paddle that sits in the flow
line from the annulus. This paddle is
pushed up by the returning mud stream. If
the flow rate increases, an alarm will
sound.
• However, the paddle-type flow indicator is
prone to false alarms because of cuttings
and other debris that may stick to the
paddle or build up underneath it.
Kick Warning Signs & Indicators
Kick Warning Signs
Drilled cuttings
1.ROP changes
• Less overbalance
• Softer rock
2.Hole condition
• Squeezing rock
• Torque / Drag / Fill Nocked
or packed off cutting
3.Data from Mud
• Gas • Chlorides
• Cuttings • Shale Property
• Temperature • Trip Monitor
Kick Warning Signs & Indicators (cont.)
Major Warning Signs:
• Improper fill up or displacement during trips
• Connection gas
• Increased background gas
• Increased drilling rate ( known as Drilling Break or Fast Break)
• Flowline mud temperature increase
• Increased chloride content of mud
• Increased drill string torque
• Increased drill string drag
• Increased number and size of cuttings
• Decreasing shale density
Kick Warning Signs & Indicators (cont.)
Surface Kick Indicators
• Excess flow from the well when tripping
• Return flow rate increase when pumping
• Pit gain
• Flow from well with pumps off
Outline
Introduction
Causes of Kicks
Primary, Secondary and Tertiary well control
Blowout Preventer stack
Kick Detection Equipment
killing a well
Killing a well
First, how to shut-in the well:
Reason for Shut In:
1- To prevent blowout.
2- To allow pressure reading to be taken for
kill mud
Shut In Methods
1. Hard (Drilling / Trapping)
2. Soft (Drilling / Trapping)
Hard Vs. Soft
- Quicker - Slower & Reduces Water Hammer Effect
- Less to Remember - Checks if choke line is Clean
- Smaller Influx - Larger Influx
Killing a well (cont.)
Simplifying the Initial Phase of Killing the well
Volumetric Bullheading
Killing a well (cont.)
A- The Driller’s Method:
The Driller`s method is one of the oldest well killing methods and it was
developed for shallow vertical wells.
As time moved on, wells got deeper and went from vertical into more
inclined pathways.
0 psi
Casing 0 psi
Pressure
B- Wait and Weight Method Procedures: Mud Pump
0 psi
- One Circulation
- Pump kill mud from the start
Killing a well (cont.)
C- Volumetric Method :
• As gas moves up and pressure in the well increases, the choke is opened to
bleed off and reduce the well pressure and it is then closed when the
pressure drops to a certain level.
• This procedure is maintained until the gas is completely out of the well.
Killing a well (cont.)
D- Bullheading Method Procedures:
• Operators sometimes have to look at different alternatives to solve
critical well control problems. When conventional method of
circulating down the drill string and up the annulus no longer is an
option, an alternative is to use a technique called bullheading.
• The higher the properties in the reservoir are (high permeability and
porosity) the lower the overbalance pressure needs to be in order to
force the influx back into the formation.