Abstract

Abstract In-situ heavy oil, oil sand pilots, and conventional oil production located in unconsolidated sand reservoirs, have experienced a variety of problems related to plugging dissolution of silica sand conventionally used as a filter-pack, and erosion. The erosion is followed by a massive inflow of sand into the production wells resulting in reduction of flow capacity. To alleviate some of these problems, a new metallic filter of high porosity was designed and field tested. It employed steel wool elastically compressed arid sandwiched between inner and outer high-resistance mandrels. Field testing of the new filters has revealed some erosion-associated problems and a laboratory program was initialed to find the optimal design criteria for reducing the erosion damage. For the first time, the capacity of compressed metallic wool to withstand erosion was experimentally assessed. Standard sand-Jet blasting equipment was calibrated and used to determine penetration time for common well-material coupons and for compressed metallic wool filters. Filters having the compression factors ranging from 5 (density = 0.15) to 30 (density = 0.92) and metallic wool depth from 6 mm ro 19 mm were exposed to the erosion tests and results are presented graphically and analytically. It appears that increasing the wool density or filter thickness lead to an optimum value resulting in maximum filter erosion resistance. Photomicrographs of the eroded zones are presented in order to explain some of the mechanisms involved. Introduction In-situ recovery pilots(1) and conventional oil production located in unconsolidated sand reservoirs have experienced a variety of problems related to filter-pack erosion and massive inflow of sand into production wells. As a result, considerable research sponsored by Texaco Canada Resources, was conducted at the Alberta Research Council, into new types of well completion, that would alleviate solids intrusion. To address the problems related to the dissolution or gravel packs in a high-temperature, high-pH environment and to improve flow conditions and skin-effect identified by excessive pressure drop in the wellbore region, a solids control device was developed by the Alberta Research Council and Texaco(2) The Meshrite* filter employed steel wool sandwiched between inner and outer mandrels, designed to be part of the outer well casing directly in contact with the formation (Fig. 1). A field testing program in Athabasca, revealed difficulties associated with erosion of the filter by formation solids. The presence of high permeability zones in the vicinity or the production well resulted in preferentially high fluid-velocity streams. Entrained formation solids impacting the well, tend to erode holes through the downhole filter elements as illustrated in Figures 2, 3 and 4. As a result of these field tests, a research program was initiated in 1987 to study methods of assessing and improving the erosion resistance of the Meshrite filter and well completion materials such as 155 and N80 tubing and casing steels. The field filters constructed to date have used wool with a bulk density in the range of 0.6 g/cm3 (compression factor of 20) with a thickness of 9.5 mm.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.