Abstract

During the drilling of highly deviated and horizontal wells, a pump shutdown causes drill cuttings to settle and form a cuttings bed in the annulus. This study investigated the incipient motion law of the particles on the cuttings bed surface when the drilling fluid starts circulating again. This work could help field engineers to determine a reasonable incipient pump displacement to improve hole-cleaning efficiency. In this study, the effects of the well inclination angle, cuttings size, and different cuttings densities on the critical velocity of particle motion are analyzed experimentally, using a large-scale flow loop. Next, based on a stress analysis of the particles on the cutting bed surface and on the boundary layer flow around the particles, an analytical formula for the surface shear force of the drilling fluid on particles is derived and a critical velocity model for incipient motion is established. Verification is then carried out and combined with the experimental results. This study has important implications for the design of drilling operations and for the management of cuttings transport in oil and gas wells. It can guide the setting and prediction of pump discharge to improve hole-cleaning efficiency.

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