Abstract

Estimating the sealing property of the cementing interface is vital for judging the quality of well cementing construction. The main methods currently used to evaluate the sealing property of the cementing interface (hydraulic cementing strength method and shear cementing strength method) are susceptible to the effects of specimen geometric regularity, interfacial cementing condition, and shear damage pressure source, and the measurement results are not stable, making it difficult to use them as effective methods to evaluate the real cementing interface sealing performance. In this paper, based on the cracking behavior of cohesive units, a method to evaluate the sealing performance of the cementing interface by simulating the cracking process of fluid breaking through the cementing interface in ABAQUSTM FEA software was investigated. The research process includes two parts: first, using a self-designed holding stretching device after eliminating the errors caused by non-interface displacement in the conventional stretching method by repeated stretching and subtraction. The real interfacial traction-separation curve and formation cohesion unit parameters were obtained. Secondly, the cohesive unit parameters obtained in the first step were input into ABAQUSTM FEA software to build a fluid–solid coupling model to simulate the cracking process in the interface region when the fluid breaks through the cementing interface, in which obtaining the solid interface cracking sealing pressure and evaluating its sealing performance are finished. And the accuracy and feasibility of this method were verified by a homemade physical sealing model of the cementing interface. In addition, the factors affecting the fluid pressure at the breakthrough of the cemented interface were investigated in this paper, and it was concluded that changing the elastic modulus of sandstone and cement sheath had a more significant effect on the fluid pressure at the breakthrough of the cemented interface than their Poisson's ratios. Furthermore, the results of this paper also indicate that when the permeability of cement sheath and sandstone is in the range of 0.001 mD–10 mD, the fluid pressure at the time of breaking the cemented interface decreases as the permeability of cement sheath and sandstone increases, and beyond this interval, the effect of the sudden change in permeability of cement sheath and sandstone on the fluid pressure at the time of breaking the cemented interface is no longer obvious.

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