Abstract

Abstract During the past decade, the increased use of Managed Pressure Drilling (MPD) equipment has significantly improved the safety and efficiency of gas influx management. However, it is still not clear to the industry what should be the safest and most effective pressure control method for removing gas influxes out of a riser. The objective of this study is to perform a systematic evaluation of different pressure control methods for riser gas handling, including the constant surface backpressure method, the constant riser bottom pressure method, and the fixed choke and constant outflow method. A transient multiphase flow simulator based on a Drift Flux Model was developed to simulate riser gas handling events in a Water Based Mud (WBM) system. Multiple sets of full-scale experimental data were used for the calibration and validation of the simulator. In the full-scale experiments, riser gas events were simulated by injecting gas into the bottom of an experimental well, followed by applying different pressure control methods. Besides conventional downhole and surface pressure and flow measurement instrumentations, a Distributed Fiber Optic Sensing (DFOS) system was used for the high-resolution monitoring of gas influxes in the annulus. The performance of different pressure control methods was evaluated based on the simulation results, including the behaviors of surface and riser bottom pressures, peak surface outflow rates, and the time required for riser gas handling. The numerical simulations carried out in this study can help better understand the different pressure control methods and improve the design of riser gas handling strategies.

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