Analysis of Diagnostic Testing of Sustained Casing Pressure in Wells

Over 8,000 wells in the Gulf of Mexico exhibit sustained casing pressure (SCP). SCP is defined as any measurable casing pressure that rebuilds after being bled down, attributable to cause(s) other than artificially applied pressures or temperature fluctuations in the well. The Minerals Management S...

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Main Author: Xu, Rong
Other Authors: Andrew K. Wojtanowicz
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: LSU 2002
Subjects:
Online Access:http://etd.lsu.edu/docs/available/etd-1114102-122738/
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spelling ndltd-LSU-oai-etd.lsu.edu-etd-1114102-1227382013-01-07T22:48:18Z Analysis of Diagnostic Testing of Sustained Casing Pressure in Wells Xu, Rong Petroleum Engineering Over 8,000 wells in the Gulf of Mexico exhibit sustained casing pressure (SCP). SCP is defined as any measurable casing pressure that rebuilds after being bled down, attributable to cause(s) other than artificially applied pressures or temperature fluctuations in the well. The Minerals Management Service (MMS) regulations consider SCP hazardous and, in principle, require its elimination. In some cases the agency may allow continuing production at a well with SCP by granting a temporary departure permit. The departure permits are based on diagnostic tests involving pressure bleed-down through a 0.5-inch needle valve followed by closing the valve and recording pressure buildup for 24 hours. Presently, analysis of testing data is mostly qualitative and limited to arbitrary criteria. This work provides theory, mathematical models and software needed for qualitative analysis of SCP tests. SCP occurs due to the loss of wells external integrity causing gas inflow from a high-pressure formation into the wells annulus. Then, the gas migrates upward through a leaking cement sheath, percolates through the mud column and accumulates above the liquid level inside the gas cap. The study identified two scenarios of gas flow in the liquid column: rapid percolation through low-viscosity Newtonian fluid; and, slow ascendance of gas bubble swarms in viscous, non-Newtonian mud. The two scenarios have been mathematically modeled and theoretically studied. The first model assumes rapid percolation and ignores gas entrainment in the liquid column. Simulation showed that early pressure buildup was controlled by mud compressibility, annular conductivity, and gas cap volume while formation pressure controlled the late pressure buildup. Mathematical simulations matched pressure buildups recorded in two wells, showing that the model had physical merit. The second mathematical model fully describes gas migration by coupling the variable rate gas flow in cement with the two-phase flow in liquid column. The model was used to study typical patterns of bleed-down and buildup from SCP diagnostic tests. It showed that analysis of pressure bleed-down gives properties of gas-liquid mixture above the cement, while a sufficiently long pressure buildup may give values of the annular conductivity, the depth and pressure of the gas-source formation. Andrew K. Wojtanowicz John Rogers Smith Zaki Bassiouni Christopher White Mehdy Sabbaghian LSU 2002-11-15 text application/pdf http://etd.lsu.edu/docs/available/etd-1114102-122738/ http://etd.lsu.edu/docs/available/etd-1114102-122738/ en unrestricted I hereby grant to LSU or its agents the right to archive and to make available my thesis or dissertation in whole or in part in the University Libraries in all forms of media, now or hereafter known. I retain all proprietary rights, such as patent rights. I also retain the right to use in future works (such as articles or books) all or part of this thesis or dissertation.
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Petroleum Engineering
spellingShingle Petroleum Engineering
Xu, Rong
Analysis of Diagnostic Testing of Sustained Casing Pressure in Wells
description Over 8,000 wells in the Gulf of Mexico exhibit sustained casing pressure (SCP). SCP is defined as any measurable casing pressure that rebuilds after being bled down, attributable to cause(s) other than artificially applied pressures or temperature fluctuations in the well. The Minerals Management Service (MMS) regulations consider SCP hazardous and, in principle, require its elimination. In some cases the agency may allow continuing production at a well with SCP by granting a temporary departure permit. The departure permits are based on diagnostic tests involving pressure bleed-down through a 0.5-inch needle valve followed by closing the valve and recording pressure buildup for 24 hours. Presently, analysis of testing data is mostly qualitative and limited to arbitrary criteria. This work provides theory, mathematical models and software needed for qualitative analysis of SCP tests. SCP occurs due to the loss of wells external integrity causing gas inflow from a high-pressure formation into the wells annulus. Then, the gas migrates upward through a leaking cement sheath, percolates through the mud column and accumulates above the liquid level inside the gas cap. The study identified two scenarios of gas flow in the liquid column: rapid percolation through low-viscosity Newtonian fluid; and, slow ascendance of gas bubble swarms in viscous, non-Newtonian mud. The two scenarios have been mathematically modeled and theoretically studied. The first model assumes rapid percolation and ignores gas entrainment in the liquid column. Simulation showed that early pressure buildup was controlled by mud compressibility, annular conductivity, and gas cap volume while formation pressure controlled the late pressure buildup. Mathematical simulations matched pressure buildups recorded in two wells, showing that the model had physical merit. The second mathematical model fully describes gas migration by coupling the variable rate gas flow in cement with the two-phase flow in liquid column. The model was used to study typical patterns of bleed-down and buildup from SCP diagnostic tests. It showed that analysis of pressure bleed-down gives properties of gas-liquid mixture above the cement, while a sufficiently long pressure buildup may give values of the annular conductivity, the depth and pressure of the gas-source formation.
author2 Andrew K. Wojtanowicz
author_facet Andrew K. Wojtanowicz
Xu, Rong
author Xu, Rong
author_sort Xu, Rong
title Analysis of Diagnostic Testing of Sustained Casing Pressure in Wells
title_short Analysis of Diagnostic Testing of Sustained Casing Pressure in Wells
title_full Analysis of Diagnostic Testing of Sustained Casing Pressure in Wells
title_fullStr Analysis of Diagnostic Testing of Sustained Casing Pressure in Wells
title_full_unstemmed Analysis of Diagnostic Testing of Sustained Casing Pressure in Wells
title_sort analysis of diagnostic testing of sustained casing pressure in wells
publisher LSU
publishDate 2002
url http://etd.lsu.edu/docs/available/etd-1114102-122738/
work_keys_str_mv AT xurong analysisofdiagnostictestingofsustainedcasingpressureinwells
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