Well drilling in permafrost regions: dynamics of the thawed zone

In the cold regions, warm mud is usually used to drill deep wells. This mud causes formation thawing around wells, and as a rule is an uncertain parameter. For frozen soils, ice serves as a cementing material, so the strength of frozen soils is significantly reduced at the ice–water transition. If t...

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Main Authors: Lev V. Eppelbaum, Izzy M. Kutasov
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Norwegian Polar Institute 2019-06-01
Series:Polar Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://polarresearch.net/index.php/polar/article/view/3351/9269
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spelling doaj-241e84ce06784f1a88e6d604196678742020-11-25T02:01:17Zeng Norwegian Polar InstitutePolar Research1751-83692019-06-013801910.33265/polar.v38.33513351Well drilling in permafrost regions: dynamics of the thawed zoneLev V. Eppelbaum0Izzy M. Kutasov1Department of Geosciences, Raymond and Beverly Sackler Faculty of Exact Sciences, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, IsraelDepartment of Geosciences, Raymond and Beverly Sackler Faculty of Exact Sciences, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, IsraelIn the cold regions, warm mud is usually used to drill deep wells. This mud causes formation thawing around wells, and as a rule is an uncertain parameter. For frozen soils, ice serves as a cementing material, so the strength of frozen soils is significantly reduced at the ice–water transition. If the thawing soil cannot withstand the load of overlying layers, consolidation will take place, and the corresponding settlement can cause significant surface shifts. Therefore, for long-term drilling or oil/gas production, the radius of thawing should be estimated to predict platform stability and the integrity of the well. It is known that physical properties of formations are drastically changed at the thawing–freezing transition. When interpreting geophysical logs, it is therefore important to know the radius of thawing and its dynamics during drilling and shut-in periods. We have shown earlier that for a cylindrical system the position of the phase interface in the Stefan problem can be approximated through two functions: one function determines the position of the melting-temperature isotherm in the problem without phase transitions, and the second function does not depend on time. For the drilling period, we will use this approach to estimate the radius of thawing. For the shut-in period, we will utilize an empirical equation based on the results of numerical modelling.https://polarresearch.net/index.php/polar/article/view/3351/9269Radius of thawingfreezeback periodpermafrost temperatureStefan problem
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lev V. Eppelbaum
Izzy M. Kutasov
spellingShingle Lev V. Eppelbaum
Izzy M. Kutasov
Well drilling in permafrost regions: dynamics of the thawed zone
Polar Research
Radius of thawing
freezeback period
permafrost temperature
Stefan problem
author_facet Lev V. Eppelbaum
Izzy M. Kutasov
author_sort Lev V. Eppelbaum
title Well drilling in permafrost regions: dynamics of the thawed zone
title_short Well drilling in permafrost regions: dynamics of the thawed zone
title_full Well drilling in permafrost regions: dynamics of the thawed zone
title_fullStr Well drilling in permafrost regions: dynamics of the thawed zone
title_full_unstemmed Well drilling in permafrost regions: dynamics of the thawed zone
title_sort well drilling in permafrost regions: dynamics of the thawed zone
publisher Norwegian Polar Institute
series Polar Research
issn 1751-8369
publishDate 2019-06-01
description In the cold regions, warm mud is usually used to drill deep wells. This mud causes formation thawing around wells, and as a rule is an uncertain parameter. For frozen soils, ice serves as a cementing material, so the strength of frozen soils is significantly reduced at the ice–water transition. If the thawing soil cannot withstand the load of overlying layers, consolidation will take place, and the corresponding settlement can cause significant surface shifts. Therefore, for long-term drilling or oil/gas production, the radius of thawing should be estimated to predict platform stability and the integrity of the well. It is known that physical properties of formations are drastically changed at the thawing–freezing transition. When interpreting geophysical logs, it is therefore important to know the radius of thawing and its dynamics during drilling and shut-in periods. We have shown earlier that for a cylindrical system the position of the phase interface in the Stefan problem can be approximated through two functions: one function determines the position of the melting-temperature isotherm in the problem without phase transitions, and the second function does not depend on time. For the drilling period, we will use this approach to estimate the radius of thawing. For the shut-in period, we will utilize an empirical equation based on the results of numerical modelling.
topic Radius of thawing
freezeback period
permafrost temperature
Stefan problem
url https://polarresearch.net/index.php/polar/article/view/3351/9269
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