Abstract

Production of oil from shallow reservoirs typically involves drilling highly deviated wells through unconsolidated (or poorly lithified) rocks or clays. This paper describes numerical analyses of the deformations and stability of deviated wellbores within a K0-consolidated clay. The analyses consider planar deformations in the plane orthogonal to the wellbore using a quasi three-dimensional (3D) finite element model that represents coupled flow and deformations within the soil mass. Cross-anisotropic mechanical properties of the clay are described by a generalized effective stress model, MIT-E3, with parameters previously calibrated from laboratory thick-walled cylinder tests. The analyses compute the relationship between the drilling mud pressure and wellbore stability associated with either the onset of localized failure mechanisms or large plastic deformations around the cavity. The results show that short-term, undrained stability requires mud pressures in excess of the in situ formation pore pressures for more highly deviated wellbores at inclinations greater than 45°. The analyses examine the mechanisms for further destabilization, due to consolidation within the formation, and how they are affected by drainage conditions at the wellbore wall. The results provide qualitative information for the design and control of drilling operations for deviated wellbores in unconsolidated formations.

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