Corrosion at Oil Industry
Corrosion at Oil Industry
Corrosion at Oil Industry
Most metals exist in nature as stable ores of oxides, carbonates or sulfides. Refining them, to make them
useful, requires energy. Corrosion is simply natures way of reversing an unnatural process back to a lower
energy state. Preventing corrosion is vital in every step in the production of oil and gas.
Denis Brondel
Montrouge, France
Randy Edwards
Columbus, Ohio, USA
Andrew Hayman
Clamart, France
Donald Hill
Tulsa, Oklahoma, USA
Shreekant Mehta
St. Austell, England
Tony Semerad
Mobil
Sumatra, Indonesia
For help in preparation of this article, thanks to Dylan
Davies, Schlumberger Cambridge Research, Ahmad
Madjidi, Schlumberger GeoQuest, Abu Dhabi, UAE;
Nabil Mazzawi, Schlumberger Wireline & Testing,
Tripoli, Libya; Perry Nice, Statoil, Stavanger, Norway;
Barry Nicholson, Schlumberger Wireline & Testing,
Jakarta, Indonesia; Daniel Roche, Elf, Bergen, Norway;
Philippe Rutman and Derek Stark, Schlumberger Wireline & Testing, Montrouge, France; Dave Thompson,
Schlumberger Wireline & Testing, Bergen, Norway; and
Piers Temple, Joe Vinet and Mohamed Watfa, Schlumberger Wireline & Testing, Abu Dhabi, UAE.
CET (Cement Evaluation Tool), CORBAN, CPET (Corrosion and Protection Evaluation Tool), FACT (Flux Array
Corrosion Tool), IDCIDE, IDFILM, IDSCAV, METT (Multifrequency Electromagnetic Thickness Tool), PAL (Pipe
Analysis Log), UBI (Ultrasonic Borehole Imager) and
USI (UltraSonic Imager) are marks of Schlumberger.
Corrosion costs US industries alone an estimated $170 billion a year. The oil industry,
with its complex and demanding production techniques, and the environmental
threat should components fail, takes an
above average share of these costs.1
Corrosionthe deterioration of a metal or
its propertiesattacks every component at
every stage in the life of every oil and gas
field. From casing strings to production platforms, from drilling through to abandonment, corrosion is an adversary worthy of
all the high technology and research we can
throw at it.
Oxygen, which plays such an important
role in corrosion, is not normally present in
producing formations. It is only at the
drilling stage that oxygen-contaminated fluids are first introduced. Drilling muds, left
untreated, will corrode not only well casing,
but also drilling equipment, pipelines and
mud handling equipment. Water and carbon dioxideproduced or injected for secondary recoverycan cause severe corrosion of completion strings. Acidused to
reduce formation damage around the well
or to remove scalereadily attacks metal.
Completions and surface pipelines can be
eroded away by high production velocities
or blasted by formation sand. Hydrogen sulfide [H2S] poses other problems (next page ).
Handling all these corrosion situations, with
the added complications of high temperatures, pressures and stresses involved in
drilling or production, requires the expertise
of a corrosion engineer, an increasingly key
figure in the industry.
Because it is almost impossible to prevent
corrosion, it is becoming more apparent that
controlling the corrosion rate may be the
most economical solution. Corrosion engineers are therefore increasingly involved in
estimating the cost of their solutions to corrosion prevention and estimating the useful
life of equipment. For example, development wells in Mobils Arun gas field in
Indonesia have been monitored for corrosion since they were drilled in 1977.
Production wells were completed using
7-in. L-80 grade carbon steel tubingan
H2S-resistant steelallowing flow rates in
excess of 50 MMscf/D [1.4 MMscm/D] at
over 300F [150C]. High flow rates, H2S
and carbon dioxide [CO 2] all contributed
to the corrosion of the tubing. Laboratory
experiments simulated the Arun well conditions, alongside continued field monitoring. These help find the most economical
solution to the corrosion problem.2 The
results showed that the carbon steel tubing
would have to be changed to more expensive chromium steel or to corrosion-resistant alloy (CRA).
Oilfield Review
Paint
Cathodic protection
Stress
Crustaceans
Oxygen-rich seawater
Pipeline coating
Sacrificial
anodes
Inhibitors
Cement
Stress
Unsupported
casing stress
nCorrosion in every
aspect of the oil
industry. From generalized corrosion
caused by oxygenrich environments
on marine structures to sulfide
stress corrosion in
hostile wells, the
corrosion engineer
is faced with a
whole gamut of
problems.
Scale
Acidizing
April 1994
2. Sutanto H, Semerad VAW and Bordelon TP: Simulation of Future Wellbore Corrosion With Low Production Rate Field Tests, paper 571, presented at the Corrosion 91 NACE Annual Conference and Corrosion
Show, Cincinnati, Ohio, USA, March 11-15, 1991.
Semerad VAW and Sutanto H: Wellbore Corrosion
Logging of Deep Hot Corrosive Wells, paper OSEA
90141, presented at the 8th Offshore South East Asia
Conference, Singapore, December 4-7, 1990.
Asphahani AI, Prouheze JC and Petersen GJ: Corrosion-Resistant Alloys for Hot, Deep, Sour Wells: Properties and Experience, SPE Production Engineering 6,
no. 4 (November 1991): 459-464.
Farooqul MASZ and Holland S: Corrosion-Resistant
Tubulars for Prolonging GWI Well Life, paper SPE
21365, presented at the SPE Middle East Oil Show,
Manama, Bahrain, November 16-19, 1991.
Conductor
e
Anode
Cathode
Electrolyte
Electrolyte
O2
Fe2O3.H2Ox
H2S
FeSx
CO2
Fe2CO3
O2
2 OH
Steel
Anode
e
Fe++
Fe
e
H2O
/2 O2
Cathode
H2S or CO2
H2
H+
H+
Oilfield Review
Ultraviolet exposure
Precipitated salt
Condensation
Atmospheric sea exposure
(pollutants, dust and sand)
Platform
Superstructure
Little corrosion
(shifting bottom)
April 1994
nDiverse corrosive
environments
attacking an offshore rig (above,
left). Sacrificial
anodes on the leg
and spud tank of
Sedco Forexs Trident IV jackup rig
(left). Cathodic protection is a common way of combating corrosion;
sacrificial anodes
provide one
method.
3. A corrosion cell may also be formed by having the
same metal in two different electrolytes.
An electrolyte is a nonmetallic electric conductor.
Current is carried through an electrolyte by the
movement of charged atoms called ions. Negative
ions have extra electrons and positive ions have lost
electrons.
4. Confusion often arises over whether an anode is
positive or negative, because in a driven cell, such
as electroplating baths or vacuum tubes in old
radios, the positive is the anode and the negative the
cathode. In any battery, however, including a corrosion cell, the cathode has positive charge and the
anode negative charge. At the anode, ferrous ions
[Fe++] leaving the surface leave a net negative
charge, and the electrons flow through the metal to
the cathode. At the cathode, hydrogen ions [H+]
discharge themselves to leave a positive charge and
result in free hydrogenpolarization.
Corrosion Mechanisms
Corrosion encountered in petroleum production operations involves several mechanisms. These have been grouped into
electrochemical corrosion, chemical corrosion and mechanical and mechanical/corrosive effects.
Electrochemical Corrosion
Surface installation
Corrosion
Cathodic protection
nStray-current corrosion. Current paths are shown between surface installation, electrical machinery,
pipelines and a well. Current leaving the casing sets up an anodic area and corrosion.
OH
M+
Na+ CI
M+
Na+
O2
M+
Na+
CI
O2
CI
Pitting corrosion is another form of crevice corrosion where a small scratch, defect or impurity
M+
OH
O2
OH
O2
starts at drillpipe joints, tubing collars or casing collars. The gap in the joint becomes devoid of oxygen
and anodic. In salty water the corrosion is promoted
by the migration of negatively charged chlorine ions
[Cl-] to the crevice. These not only counteract the
buildup of positive charges around the crevice, but
also act as a catalyst accelerating the dissolution of
metal [M+]. This ongoing process leads to a deep pit.
Oilfield Review
Tubing
Methane,
hydrogen sulfide,
water
Pit
Chloride film
Iron sulfide
scale
Chemical Corrosion
Well fluids
be corrosive.
acids are often pumped into the wells to stimulate production by increasing formation permeability in the near wellbore region. For limestone
formations, 5 to 28% hydrochloric [HCl] acid is
commonly used. For sandstones, additions of
hydrofluoric acidnormally up to 3%are nec-
April 1994
H+
H+
Electrolyte
H2
Steel
Hydrogen Embrittlement
ceeds quickly.
H
sion, because it is known to be an anodic stimulant. In low-flow rate systems, hard rust nodules
H2
H
Air
H2
pro-
Cyclic stress
Corrosion fatigue
FeCO3
O2
OH
Cathodic
Fe(OH)3
FeS
Fe2
2
SO4
Fe3
H2S
SRB
Hydrogen
embrittlement
Static
stress
Stress
corrosion
type of corrosion.
Highly anodic
Iron or steel
pressure.
Steel
Cl
Cl
Cl
Cl
200F [95C].
Plastic zone
10
Oilfield Review
April 1994
nComparison of
corrosion rates of
steel. Measurements of the corrosion rates of a carbon steel exposed
to different concentrations of O2,
CO2 and H2S gases
dissolved in water,
show that O2 is
about 80 times
more corrosive
than CO2 and 400
times more corrosive than H2S.
25
threads provide ideal places for crevice corrosion, which can also occur in scars left on
the tool joints by makeup tongs. A special
grease, commonly known as dope, lubricates
the threads and helps prevent corrosion.9
Mud corrosionDrilling mud also plays a
key role in corrosion prevention. In addition
to its well-known functions, mud must also
remain noncorrosive. A greater awareness
of corrosion problems has come about by
the lower pH of polymer muds. Low pH
means more acidic and hence more corrosive. Oil-base muds are usually noncorrosive and, before the introduction of polymer
muds, water-base muds were used with relatively high pH of 10 or greater. So when
polymer muds were introduced, corrosion
from mud became more apparent.
Dissolved gases are the primary cause of
corrosion in drilling fluids. The most common are oxygen, carbon dioxide and hydrogen sulfide. Oxygen, even in concentrations
as low as 1 part per million (ppm), is capable of causing serious damage (top ).
Oxygen can enter the mud system at
many points, especially at the surface mixing and storage tanks, and at the shaker
screens. Other entry points are at the centrifugal pumps, desanders and desilters. As a
result, the mud is usually oxygen-saturated
before it reaches the mud pumps. Sodium
sulfite- or ammonium bisulfite-based oxygen scavengers, such as Dowells IDSCAV,
are routinely used in mud systems. These
chemicals bond with oxygen in the mud to
reduce its corrosivity.
Maintaining high pH is important in controlling corrosion rates by neutralizing acids
caused by H2 S or CO2. Hydrogen sulfide
can enter the mud system directly from the
formation or from thermally degraded mud
products, SRBs or makeup water (above,
right ). Scavengers, such as sodium chromate, zinc chromate, and sodium nitrite,
can quickly remove H 2S. Dowells filmforming inhibitors IDFILM, help protect the
drillstring and casing. Triazine compounds
are used in products such as Dowells
IDCIDE as biocides to control bacteria.10
O2
20
15
CO2
10
H2S
O2
1
CO2 50
H2S 100
100
150
200
250
300
350
400
200
300
400
500
600
700
800
Weld metal
O2
O2
Sulfate-reducing
bacteria
Metal substrate
Localized corrosion
11
Depth, ft
ing prevents sand blasting that causes erosion corrosion. Erosion corrosion will be
more pronounced on equipment that
restricts flow such as nipples, valves or
sharp pipe bends. Once erosion has
removed protective coatings, other forms of
corrosion can start. The velocity of produced fluids has the same effect as produced sand with erosion occurring at places
of turbulence and cavitation.
Stimulation programs may, inadvertently,
promote internal corrosion. Depending on
lithology, highly corrosive hydrochloric acid
[HCl] with additions of hydrofluoric [HF]
acid are used to improve near-wellbore permeability. These acids can also remove scale
buildup on the inside of casing and tubing,
allowing direct attack on bare metal. (Scale,
produced by iron sulfide and iron carbonate
deposits, restricts the corrosion process.
Other types of scale are porous and do not
protect.) It is therefore essential to use
inhibitors and to flow the well to remove
spent acid and allow pH levels to increase.
Inhibitors are mixed with acid to provide
a protective film over exposed completion
strings. 12 The first generation of acid
inhibitors was based on highly poisonous
arsenic products, but over the years less
toxic and more environmentally appropriate products have been developed. The
CORBAN range of inhibitors produced by
Dowell are designed for acid inhibition of
most oilfield tubulars, including coiled tubing, duplex steels and other exotic alloys at
up to 400 F [200 C].
The type and amount of inhibitor used
inhibitor loadingdepends not only on the
acid and its strength, but also on the metal
it is protecting, the working temperature
range and the protection time desired.
Inhibitor loadings are determined by measuring the corrosion of samples of casing or
tubingcouponsin a corrosion-test autoclave that duplicates the well-treating
environment.
Corrosion during productionCorrosion
can continue inside the casing and along
completion strings and pipelines during the
life of a well. Gas condensate wells may produce gas, hydrocarbons, formation water,
acid gases (CO 2 and H 2 S) and organic
Casing Geometry
Max
pit.
%
Internal Radii
Metal Loss %
-25
20
70
X40
X50
X60
X70
Caliper Devices
cated (above).
12
Telemetry cartridge
Electronic cartridge
Electrodes
A3
A1
A2
B3
B1
B2
C1
casing holes.
C2
Hydraulic section
D3
D1
nCPET Corrosion and Protection Evaluation Tool. The CPET tool has four sets of three electrodes, each one at
the end of a hydraulically operated arm. Stationary readings (inset) are taken and 12 separate contact resistances and electrode potential differences are measured.
Electromagnetic Devices
The PAL Pipe Analysis Log tool measures magnetic flux leakage anomalies on the casing wall.
Low-frequency magnetic flux is generated by an
electromagnet, and pad-mounted sensors detect
April 1994
13
Inner Radii
Thickness
Roughness
Eccentering
in. 0.5
in. 1
Radius
-9
Thickness
Well Sketch
in. 3
OD
Metal Loss
-7
5-10% gain
0-5% loss
10-15% loss
above 25%
14
Rel Bearing
1-.9 0 deg 360
.7-.6
Deviation
.2-.1 0 deg 360
0
Defect
code from
PAL
Inner defect
Code 2
Code 3
Code 4
Penetration
Casing ID
Oilfield Review
2.5
Wellhead
Inhibitor injection
capillary tube
1.5
0.5
10
15
20
25
% NaCI by weight
Clamp
Rectifier
Vented and secured
casing cap
Protected pipeline
Centering device
Anode strapped to
pipe support
Conductive material
Cabled individual
anode leads
Working portion of
ground bed
Pipe foot
April 1994
Tubing
nTypical cathodic
protection installation for a pipeline.
Sacrificial anodes
are buried deep
underground in a
hole filled with
conductive material to ensure electrical continuity
between the
anodes through
the ground to the
pipeline. The circuit is completed
by connecting a
cable through a
rectifier to the
pipeline. The rectifier ensures that
the cathodic protection system
does not reverse,
causing the
pipeline to corrode.
Side pocket
mandrel
Packer
15
Steel ring
Plastic Insulator
Drillpipe
tion network set up. Wells should be insulated from pipelines so that protection systems do not cause unwanted anodic regions
and stray current corrosion.
Under the right conditions, iron sulfide
and iron carbonate scalesthe corrosion
products when H2 S or CO2 are present
provide protective coatings. The composition of production fluids, however, may
change during the life of a reservoir so relying on natural protection may not be wise.
Corrosion monitoring, in some form, should
always be undertaken.
Sonde
Compensating device
Monitoring Corrosion
Tool joint
Test coupon
16
Motor assembly
Gear box assembly
Rotating electrical
connection
Centralizer
Rotating seal
Transducer
Interchangeable
rotating sub
7.5 rps
Oilfield Review
April 1994
Amplitude, dB
Radius
min.
Internal Radii
minus avg, in.
2.5 in 3.5
X212
perforations
0.5
0.1842
0.1842
avg, in.
0.5
0.15
0.0868
0.0711
0.1500
15
11
max.
X220
X228
17
Electronics
Pad-mounted sensors
and electromagnet
18
Oilfield Review
Theres more to designing a seismic survey than just choosing sources and receivers and shooting away. To
get the best signal at the lowest cost, geophysicists are tapping an arsenal of technology from integration of
borehole data to survey simulation in 3D.
C. Peter Ashton
Mrsk Olie og Gas AS
Copenhagen, Denmark
Christian Dplant
Elf Aquitaine
Pau, France
nCost of marine 3D
40
35
Dollars, in thousands
Brad Bacon
Angus Mann
Nick Moldoveanu
Houston, Texas, USA
30
25
20
15
10
5
DickiIreson
Thor Sinclair
Gatwick, England
Glen Redekop
Maersk Oil Qatar AS
Doha, Qatar
For help in preparation of this article, thanks to Jack
Caldwell and Greg Leriger, Geco-Prakla, Houston, USA;
Mandy Coxon and Dominique Pajot, Geco-Prakla,
Gatwick, England; Jacques Estival, Elf Petroleum Nigeria,
Lagos, Nigeria; Dietmar Kluge, Geco-Prakla, Hannover,
Germany; Lloyd Peardon, Schlumberger Cambridge
Research, England; Lars Sonneland, Geco-Prakla,
Stavanger, Norway; and Tim Spencer, British Gas,
Reading, England.
Appreciation is expressed to Qatar General Petroleum
Corporation (QGPC) for its consent to the release of data.
QUAD-QUAD is a mark of Geco-Prakla. TWST
(Through-Tubing Well Seismic Tool) is a mark of Schlumberger.
1. For the most recent worldwide figures:
Riley DC: Special Report Geophysical Activity in
1991, The Leading Edge 12, no. 11 (November
1993): 1094-1117.
2. Personal communication: Thor Sinclair.
April 1994
0
1990
1991
1992
1993
Year
19
Temporal Aliasing
50 Hz
nTemporal and
200 Hz
16
24
spatial aliasing
caused by sampling less than
twice per cycle.
Temporal aliasing
(top) occurs when
insufficient sampling renders a 50Hz signal and a
200-Hz signal indistinguishable
(arrows represent
sample points). The
50-Hz signal is adequately sampled,
but not the 200-Hz.
32
Time, msec
Extreme Aliasing
Two-way time
Minor Aliasing
Increasing offset
Increasing offset
aliasing (bottom)
occurs when
receiver spacing is
more than half the
spatial wavelength.
With minor aliasing
(left) arrivals can be
tracked at near offsets as time
increases, but
become difficult to
follow at far offsets.
With extreme aliasing (right) arrivals
even appear to be
traveling backwards, toward near
offsets as time
increases. (Adapted
from Claerbout, reference 6.)
Two-way time
Offset
Offset
Hyperbolic
moveout
+ Stacking =
velocity
CMP gather
Corrected
CMP gather
=
Stacked
CMP trace
Reflection arrival times from different offsets are assumed to follow a hyperbola. The shape of the hyperbola is computed from
the arrivals. Traces are aligned by flattening the best-fitting
hyperbola into a straight line, then summed, or stacked. Perfect
alignment should yield maximum signal amplitude at the time
corresponding to zero offset. A wide range of evenly spaced offsets gives a better-fitting hyperbola, and so a better stack.
20
What makes a good seismic signal? Processing specialists list three vital requirementsgood signal-to-noise ratio (S/N),
high resolving power and adequate spatial
coverage of the target. These basic elements,
along with some geophysical guidelines (see
Guidelines from Geophysics, page 22 ),
form the foundation of survey design.
High S/N means the seismic trace has
high amplitudes at times that correspond to
reflections, and little or no amplitude at
other times. During acquisition, high S/N is
achieved by maximizing signal with a seismic source of sufficient power and directivity, and by minimizing noise.3 Noise can
either be generated by the sourceshotgenerated or coherent noise, sometimes
orders of magnitude stronger than deep seismic reflectionsor be random. Limitations
in the dynamic range of acquisition equipment require that shot-generated noise be
minimized with proper source and receiver
geometry. Proper geometry avoids spatial
aliasing of the signal, attenuates noise and
obtains signals that can benefit from subsequent processing. Aliasing is the ambiguity
that arises when a signal is sampled less
than twice per cycle (left ). Noise and signal
cannot be distinguished when their sampling is aliased.
A common type of coherent noise that
can be aliased comes from low-frequency
waves trapped near the surface, called surface waves. On land, these are known as
ground roll, and create major problems for
processors. They pass the receivers at a
much slower velocity than the signal, and
so need closer receiver spacing to be properly sampled. Planners always try to design
surveys so that surface waves do not contaminate the signal. But if this is not possible, the surface waves must be adequately
sampled spatially so they can be removed.
During processing, S/N is enhanced
through filters that suppress noise. Coherent
noise is reduced by removing temporal and
spatial frequencies different from those of
the desired signal, if known. Both coherent
and random noise are suppressed by stackingsumming traces from a set of sourcereceiver pairs associated with reflections at
a common midpoint, or CMP.4 The sourcereceiver spacing is called offset. To be
stacked, every CMP set needs a wide and
evenly sampled range of offsets to define the
reflection travel-time curve, known as the
normal moveout curve. Flattening that
curve, called normal moveout correction,
will make reflections from different offsets
arrive at the time of the zero-offset reflection. They are then summed to produce a
stack trace (left ). In 3D surveys, with the
April 1994
Source
Bin
Receiver
Offset Distribution
1
160
190
220
130
40
36
160
33
29
190
25
22
220
Fold
18
14
11
250
7
3
nA fold plot showing 40-fold coverage over the heart of the survey.
The edge of the survey has partial fold because several of the first
and last shots do not reach as many receivers as in the central part
of the survey.
21
Seafloor reflection
1.0
Time, sec
Seafloor multiple
2.0
Seafloor multiple
Primary reflection
3.0
Multiple
Multiple
4.0
Primary
reflection
Ghost
Near-surface
multiples
Long-path
multiple
nMultiple reflec-
or between the earths surface and the bottom of a layer of unconsolidated rock
(below, left ). Multiples can appear as later
arrivals on a seismic section, and are easy to
confuse with deep reflections (left ).6 And
because they can have the same characteristics as the desired signalsame frequency
content and similar velocitiesthey are
often difficult to suppress through filtering
and stacking. Sometimes they can be
removed through other processing techniques, called demultiple processing, but
researchers continue to look for better ways
to treat multiples.
The second characteristic of a good seismic signal is high resolution, or resolving
powerthe ability to detect reflectors and
quantify the strength of the reflection. This is
achieved by recording a high bandwidth, or
wide range of frequencies. The greater the
bandwidth, the greater the resolving power
of the seismic wave. A common objective of
seismic surveys is to distinguish the top and
bottom of the target. The target thickness
determines the minimum wavelength
required in the survey, generally considered
to be four times the thickness.7 That wavelength is used to calculate the maximum
required frequency in the bandwidth
average seismic velocity to the target
divided by minimum wavelength equals
maximum frequency. The minimum frequency is related to the depth of the target.
Lower frequencies can travel deeper. Some
seismic sources are designed to emit energy
in particular frequency bands, and receivers
normally operate over a wider band. Ideally,
sources that operate in the optimum frequency band are selected during survey
design. More often, however, surveys are
shot with whatever equipment is proposed
by the lowest bidder.
x =
V rms
4f max sin
ple 3D surveys:
y = x.
3D fold is determined from estimated S/N of
X max =
2Tv 2
f v
v
22
xy
2Rf dx
,
1. Normal moveout stretch is the distortion in waveshape caused by normal moveout correction.
April 1994
Horizontal Reflector
Dipping Reflector
Shotpoint
Receiver
flat (top) the CMP is a common reflection point. When the reflector
dips (bottom) there is no CMP. A dipping reflector may require
changes in survey parameters, because reflections may involve
more distant sources and receivers than reflections from a flat layer.
23
Theoretical Grid
Final Grid
Checkerboard Pattern
Brick Pattern
Zigzag Pattern
Source
Receiver
Source
Receiver
USA (top, left) calls for a checkerboard of receiver lines (blue) and
source lines (red). The actual survey shot (bottom, left) came very
close to plan. Other cities present acquisition challenges. A survey
in Milan,iItaly (right) used a random arrangement of sources and
receivers. (Adapted from Bertelli et al, reference 9.)
24
Oilfield Review
tens of thousands of dollars per day to operate. Sources are clusters of air guns of different volumes and receivers are hydrophones
strung 0.5 m [1.6 ft] apart in groups of up to
48, on cables up to 6000 m [19,680 ft]
long. Sources and receivers are almost
always towed in straight lines across the target (below, right ), although other geometries
are possible. Circular surveys have been
acquired with sources and receivers towed
by vessels running in spirals or concentric
circles.10 Geco-Praklas QUAD-QUAD system tows four receiver cables and four
source arrays simultaneously, acquiring 16
lines at a time. Currents and tides can cause
the long receiver cables to deviate by calculable amountsup to 30from the towing
direction. Spacing between shotpoints is a
function of vessel speed, and can be limited
by how quickly the air guns can recover full
pressure and fire again. Access is usually
limited only by water depth, but drilling
rigs, production platforms and shipping
lanes can present navigational obstacles.
Environmental constraints also influence
marine surveys: the commercial fishing
industry is imposing limits on location of,
and seasons for, marine acquisition.11 For
example, planning in the Caspian Sea must
avoid the sturgeon breeding season or seismic surveys would wipe out caviar production for the year.
Transition zonesshallow water areas
have their own problems, and require specialized equipment and creative planning.12
Transition zones are complex, involving
shorelines, river mouths, coral reefs and
swamps. They present a sensitive environment and are influenced by ship traffic,
commercial fishing and bottom obstructions. Survey planners have to contend with
varying water depths, high environmental
noise, complex geology, wind, surf and
multiple receiver typesoften a combination of hydrophones and geophones.
One thing all surveys have in common is
that planning must be done quickly. The
nMarine acquisi-
Bin
tion geometry
showing seismic
vessels looping in
oblong circuits.
The length of
straight segments is
calculated from
fold plots, and must
include additional
lengthrun in
and run outto
allow cable to
straighten after
each turn.
April 1994
25
Specification
Define survey
objectives
Required
geophysical
parameters
Resolution
analysis
Design
No Required Yes
equal
obtainable?
Source,
template
and array
design
Planning
Preferred
survey
parameters
No
Objectives Yes Final survey
design
achieved?
Evaluation
Analysis of
existing data
Data
Type
Resolution, noise
and coverage
analysis
Parameters
to be Determined
Maximum frequencies
attainable
Prospect
description
Obtainable
geophysical
parameters
Means to
Determine Parameters
VSP processing
Reflection response
of target
VSP
Identification
of multiples origin
Source peak amplitude
Source modeling
Source volume
Resolution attainable
Process or Output
Loss modeling
Frequency
dependent losses
Peak-to-bubble ratio
Source depth
Operational,
cost and safety
constraints
Source signature
for various depths
Bandwidth at target
Apply losses to
source signatures
Target wavelet
Noise levels
Logs or
1D Models
Modeled section
Build geological
2D model and
apply appropriate
target wavelet
Synthetic shots
Migration aperture
Synthetic
CMP gathers
Analysis of
2D synthetic
CMP gathers
Long-offset analysis
Normal incidence
stacks
Statics model
Signal-to-noise ratio
Establish noise
mechanisms
Refraction velocities
(near surface)
2D or 3D
Surface Seismic
Analysis of existing
surface seismic
Amplitude versus
time plots
Group interval
Mute, stack,
fold tests
Crossline spacing
Spatial frequency
Spatial resolution
Shotpoint interval
Noise records
Analysis of
migration
requirements
Migration aperture
Shooting direction
Record length
Migration of
synthetic
zero-offset data
Migration of
existing 2D data
Ambient noise
estimation
26
Oilfield Review
Shot Depth 28 m
April 1994
1.0
Time, sec
Shot Depth 9 m
2.0
3.0
4.0
Ground roll
Offset
300 m
Source
Receiver
27
0-10 Hz
10-20 Hz
20-30 Hz
30-40 Hz
nFiltered 2D data
showing frequency
content variation
with depth. Each
panel has been filtered to allow a different band of frequencies, called the
passband, to pass.
As the passband
rises, the maximum
depth of penetration
of seismic energy
decreases. Lower
frequencies (left)
penetrate deeper.
Higher frequencies
(right) do not propagate to deeper levels. At the target
level of 3.0 sec there
is still some 50 Hz
energy left.
1.0
Time, sec
40-50 Hz
2.0
3.0
4.0
28
Oilfield Review
5-10 Hz
10-20 Hz
20-40 Hz
40-60 Hz
60-80 Hz
80-100 Hz
Time, sec
0.5
1.0
1.5
April 1994
2400
90
3325
80
4250
70
60
5175
Level number
Measured depth, ft
6100
50
40
7025
30
7950
20
8875
10
9800
0
0
0.5
Time, sec
1.0
80
70
60
50
nVertical seismic profile (VSP) traces (left) analyzed for amplitude loss with depth (right).
Amplitudes of first arrivals recorded in a 92-level VSP are calibrated with amplitudes of a
surface reference signal to account for changes in source amplitude from level to level.
The amplitude ratio from one level to the next is plotted in decibels (dB). One dB is 20
times the log of the amplitude ratio. An amplitude ratio of 100 is equivalent to 40 dB.
Amplitudes expected from a surface seismic survey would normally be 3 dB less than
those from a VSP, and scaled by a reflection coefficient.
29
3-m throw
6-m throw
12-m throw
24-m throw
0.3
0.4
0.5
12-m
thick
0.6
24-m
thick
0.7
36-m
thick
0.8
nResolution of thin beds and small-scale faulting. Each panel shows the modeled
response of a seismic wave of 48-m [160-ft] wavelength ( ) to a different vertical fault displacing a series of thin beds of thicknesses 12 m, 24 m and 36 m. From left to right, faults
with 3-m [10-ft], 6-m [20-ft], 12-m [40-ft] and 24-m [80-ft] throws correspond to /16, /8,
/4 and /2, respectively. A fault throw of at least 12 m, corresponding to /4, can be
resolved quantitatively. At less than that, existence of a fault can be detected, but its
throw resolved only qualitatively.
0
-128
Amplitude
30
127
miles
km
3.2
Oilfield Review
0
1000
2000
Depth, m
Salt
3000
4000
5000
6000
0
4000
8000
12,000
16,000
20,000
24,000
28,000
Distance, m
nRaytrace modeling showing strong changes in reflection paths through salt. Traces that
would have a common midpoint in a flat-layered earth no longer bounce in the same
bin. Salt, with its ability to deform and its high seismic velocity, creates complex structure
and strong refraction, or ray bending.
TEXAS
LOUISIANA
Ship Shoal
South Addition
G U L F
0
0
miles
km
O F
M E X
I C O
100
161
Some of the advances to be made in 3D survey design have origins in other fields. VSP
design routinely models seismic raypaths
through complex subsurface structure, but
rarely does surface seismic design account
for structure. Despite considerable sophistication in 3D data processing, most 3D survey design assumes plane layer geometry in
the subsurface to calculate midpoints and
target coverage. But to estimate subsurface
coverage adequately in complicated struc15. Migration, sometimes called imaging, is a processing
step that rearranges recorded seismic energy back to
the position from which it was reflected, producing
an image of the reflector.
16. Poster C: Taking the Pulse of 3D Seismics, Middle
East Well Evaluation Review, no. 13 (1992): 6-9.
April 1994
31
0
1000
Depth, m
2000
3000
4000
5000
6000
0
4000
8000
12,000
16,000
20,000
24,000
28,000
20,000
24,000
28,000
Distance, m
0
1000
Depth, m
2000
3000
4000
5000
6000
0
4000
8000
12,000
16,000
Distance, m
nRaytrace modeling to optimize cable length. Refraction through salt may mean a longer
cable is required to image structure below. Two cable lengths, 8075 m (top) and 5425 m
(bottom) were tested using the model on the previous page. Surprisingly, in this case both
cables give similar coverage of subsalt horizons.
32
Oilfield Review
Gone are the days when drilling fluidor mud as it is commonly calledcomprised only clay and water.
Today, the drilling engineer designing a mud program chooses from a comprehensive catalog of ingredients.
The aim is to select an environmentally acceptable fluid that suits the well and the formation being drilled, to
understand the muds limitations, and then to manage operations efficiently within those limitations.
Ben Bloys
ARCO Exploration and
Production Technology
Plano, Texas, USA
Neal Davis
Chevron Petroleum Technology Company
Houston, Texas, USA
Brad Smolen
BP Exploration Inc.
Houston, Texas, USA
Louise Bailey
Otto Houwen
Paul Reid
John Sherwood
Cambridge, England
Lindsay Fraser
Houston, Texas, USA
Mike Hodder
Montrouge, France
April 1994
33
Critical Decisions
Issue
Decision
Logistics
Remote location well
Geology
Composition and
arrangement of the
minerals in the formation
and the clay chemistry
Determines mud
chemistry/composition
Diameter of casing
Potential wellbore
stability issues may
concern mud weight
Length of exposed
open hole.
Greater inhibition
needed for longer
sections
Determines minimum
mud weight needed to
prevent blowout
Rock strength-fracture
gradient
Indicates maximum
mud weight that will not
fracture well
Temperature
High-temperature well
34
Requires nondamaging
mud to limit
invasion, wettability
effects of mud,
potential emulsion
blockage of the
formation, fines
mobilization and invasion,
scale formation.
nShale instability. In this example, Pierre shale has been exposed to a mud comprising
fresh water and bentonite gel. Because this fluid contains no inhibitors, water has
entered the shale causing it to swell and weakening the formation. Continuous flow of
mud has eroded the borehole leaving an enlarged hole that would be hard to log and
complete. This simulation was carried out using the small wellbore simulator at Schlumberger Cambridge Research, Cambridge, England.
Formation
(low salinity
water)
Water and
salts (high
salinity)
Surfactant
April 1994
Water migration
Base oil
35
thetic polymers.
residual solids.
equivalent.
include the dispersion of formation clays or dissolution of salt formations; the performance of other
mud productsfor example, polymers are
affected by pH and calcium; and corrosion in the
well (see Corrosion in the Oil Industry, page 4).
Mud Ingredients
fied cellulose.
Fluid lossThe aim is to create a low-permeability filter cake to seal between the wellbore and
ClayMost commonly, bentonite is used to provide viscosity and create a filter cake on the borehole wall to control fluid loss. Clay is frequently
replaced by organic colloids such as biopolymers,
cellulose polymers or starch.
PolymersThese are used to reduce filtration,
stabilize clays, flocculate drilled solids and
increase cuttings-carrying capacity. Cellulosic,
minimize dispersion of the drill cuttings. Longchain polymers are adsorbed onto the cuttings,
thereby preventing disintegration and dispersion.
36
Oilfield Review
April 1994
100
80
60
KCL @ 25 lbm/bbl
PHPA @ 0.75 lbm/bbl
40
20
Seawater/polymer mud
KCI/PHPA
3% Polyol additive
OBM
nImproving inhibition with addition of polyglycol. This chart shows the recovery of cuttings comprising Tertiary shaleLondon Clay that contains about 20% smectitethat
have been exposed to different muds in an aggressive dispersion test. This test is an
indication of a muds shale stabilizing qualities rather than a simulation of downhole
conditions. The weight of the cuttings before treatment is compared to the weight afterwards. Recovery increased from about 40% to 80% with the addition of polyglycol to a
KCl-PHPA mud. Conventional seawater-polymer mud yields about 10%, while OBM
showed almost 100% recovery.
9. Hale AH and Mody FK: Partially Hydrolyzed Polyacrylamide (PHPA) Mud Systems for Gulf of Mexico
Deepwater Prospects, paper SPE 25180, presented
at the SPE International Symposium on Oilfield
Chemistry, New Orleans, Louisiana, USA, March 25, 1993.
Bol GM, The Effect of Various Polymers and Salts
on Borehole and Cutting Stability in Water-Base
Shale Drilling Fluids, paper SPE 14802, presented
at the SPE/IADC Drilling Conference, Dallas, Texas,
USA, February 10-12, 1986.
10. Sherwood JD and Bailey L: Swelling of Shale
Around a Cylindrical Wellbore, Proceedings of the
Royal Society 444, London, England (1994): 161184.
Hale AH, Mody FK and Salisbury DP: Experimental
Investigation of the Influence of Chemical Potential
on Wellbore Stability, paper SPE 23885, presented
at the SPE/IADC Drilling Conference, New Orleans,
Louisiana, USA, February 18-21, 1992.
11. See Bailey et al, reference 6.
37
Rheology Profile
50
28
MMH
PHPA, Partially hydrolized polyacrylamide
MMH
PHPA
24
40
Shear stress
Dial reading
20
30
20
16
12
8
10
4
0
0
0
100
200
300
600
200
400
600
800
1000
nComparison of the rheologies of MMH and conventional PHPA mud. For MMH, the relatively high 3and 6-rpm readings and low 300- and 600-rpm readings result in a flat rheology profile that is quite different from that of conventional PHPA mud. With use of a Huxley-Bertram rheometer to measure the
rheologies at 190F [88C] and 2500 psi, the MMH shows a relatively high shear-stress intercept and a
nearly linear rheologic profile. This contrasts with the downward curve of the PHPA mud. [Adapted from
Sparling DP and Williamson D: Mixed Metal Hydroxide Mud Improves Drilling in Unstable Shales, Oil & Gas Journal 89
(June 10, 1991): 29.]
38
Oilfield Review
bore acting as a reactor vessel. In this reactor, the composition of the drilling fluid will
be changed dynamically by such factors as
filtration at the wellbore and evaporation at
surface; solids will be added and taken
away by the drilling process and the solidscontrol equipment; chemicals will be lost as
14. Fraser L and Enriquez F: Mixed Metal Hydroxide
Fluids Research Widens Applications, Petroleum
Engineer International 63 (June 1992): 43-45.
Fraser LJ and Haydel S: Mixed Metal Hydroxide
Mud Application in Horizontal WellsCase Studies
Under Diverse Drilling Conditions, presented at the
5th International Conference on Horizontal Well
Technology, Houston, Texas, USA, November 9-11,
1993.
15. Fraser LJ: Unique Characteristics of Mixed Metal
Hydroxide Fluids Provide Gauge Hole in Diverse
Types of Formation, paper SPE 22379, presented at
the SPE International Meeting on Petroleum Engineering, Beijing, China, March 24-27, 1992.
Lavoix F and Lewis M: Mixed Metal Hydroxide
Drilling Fluid Minimizes Well Bore Washouts, Oil
& Gas Journal 90 (September 28, 1992): 87-90.
acceptable, do not unduly affect other mud properties and, ideally, show low depletion rates.
fluid it replaces.
Choice of inhibiting ionCations such as potassium should be incorporated into the formulation.
These will replace ions such as sodium found in
most shales to produce less hydrated clays with
significantly reduced swelling potential. Any
inhibitors added to the mud should have sufficient
April 1994
39
they adhere to the borehole wall and to cuttings, and they will be added routinely at
surface; formation fluids will contaminate
the mud, perhaps causing flocculation or
loss of viscosity, and oxygen may become
entrained. Temperature, pressure and possible bacterial action may also have significant effects.
Under these circumstances effective management is not trivial. Nevertheless, basic
process control techniques have been
applied rigside for some years to aid in the
selection and maintenance of the fluid formulation and to optimize the solids-control
equipmentsuch as shale shakers and centrifuges (next page).16 This approach is often
linked to incentive contracts, where savings
in mud costs are shared between contractor
and operator, and has led to remarkable
savings in mud costs.
For example, with a systems approach to
drilling fluid management for 16 wells offshore Dubai, mud costs were cut in half and
reduced as a proportion of total drilling
costs from 6% to 3%. At the same time,
hole condition remained the same or betterthis was assessed by looking at hole
diameter, time to run casing and mud usage
per foot of well drilled.17
Such an approach is based on three
premises:
More frequent and more precise measurements, for example five mud checks per
day and the introduction of advanced
measurement techniques (more about
these later)
Efficient data management using mass
balance techniqueswhich track the
volumes of chemicals, hole and cuttingsand computerized data storage
and acquisition
Integration of the management of the
solids control equipment with that of the
drilling fluids.
12
16
40
Oilfield Review
Centrifuge 1
Down hole
Shale shaker
Mud pump
Mud
Barite
(HGS)
Solids to waste
Degasser
New mud
Centrifuge 2
LGS discharge
April 1994
41
42
LGS
Barite
Volume, %
20
15
10
0
800
1000
1200
1400
1600
1800
2000
2200
1800
2000
Measurement by MSM
25
20
nComparison of the
solids content of
muds using the traditional retort and
MSM measurements.
In this example the
retort measurement
overestimates the
barite content, while
the MSM measurement indicates a relatively larger
amount of drilled
solids. If decisions
had been based on
the retort measurement, necessary
remedial action for
the mud would not
have been carried
out and drilling efficiency would have
suffered.
2200
Depth, m
Volume, %
LGS
Barite
15
10
0
800
1000
1200
1400
1600
Depth, m
Oilfield Review
Comparison of PV Readings
Using FMP and Fann Viscometer
50
pH skid 2
(PH)
Conductivity skid 2
(MS/C)
100
PV FMP
Temperature skid 2
(DEGF)
100
Flow rate skid 2
(GPM)
10
30
nMinute-by-minute
mud information.
This example of an
FMP log from pilot
tests shows how the
mud parameters
change over 2 hours
and 20 minutes.
The right column
includes bench
tests carried out to
validate the FMP
measurements.
12
14
Density skid 2
(PPG)
14:40
16
Take sample
10
14:50
10
30
50
PV Fann 35
15:0
15:10
Future Developments
Pressurized mud
balance 15.26 ppg
FMP 15.23 ppg
Start add 50 kg
barite
15:20
Barite addition
finished
Take sample 2
Fann PV/YP 37/28
Pressurized mud
balance 15.91 ppg
FMP 15.9 ppg
15:30
16:10
Bench pH 10.08
Bench temp. 22C
Bench conductivity
1.0 mS (25C comp.)
16:20
Add 2 kg of NaCl
16:30
Take sample 3
16:40
16:50
Bench conductivity
8.9 mS (25C comp.)
Fann PV/YP 32/20
Bench pH 9.697
FMP 15.91 ppg
Pressurized mud
balance 15.91
Add 5 kg of NaCl
17:00
April 1994
43
Daniel Borling
Amoco Production Company
Bairoil, Wyoming, USA
Ken Chan
Tulsa, Oklahoma, USA
Trevor Hughes
Cambridge, England
Robert Sydansk
Marathon Oil Company
Littleton, Colorado, USA
The growing problem of water production and a stricter environmental enforcement on water disposal are
forcing oil companies to reconsider conformance controlthe manipulation of a reservoirs external fluid
drive to push out more oil and less water. The technical challenges range from polymer chemistry to
detailed knowledge of reservoir behavior.
44
nTwo examples of
production reversal
during Marathon
Oil Companys conformance control
campaign in
Wyomings Big Horn
basin. In each case,
Marathon injected a
polymer-gel system
into an injector and
noted the production response in
adjacent producers.
Both examples
show a dramatic
reversal of both
declining oil rate
and increasing
water/oil ratio
(WOR)see straightline trends in top
figure. On average,
each extra barrel of
oil derived from
their series of 29
treatments cost
Marathon just $0.34.
1000
1000
10
Gel treatment
10
1000
100
100
Gel treatment
10
1984
1985
1986
1987
1988
1989
Oilfield Review
Already produced
23%
Remaining
20%
Technique
800
200
Gas injection
1425
Modified waterflood
Improved waterflood
Surfactant
Polymer
Foam flooding
40
Conformance control
Polymer gels
Microbial
500
2400
April 1994
more than five billion barrels and contributes to raising final oil recovery from the
43% obtained using primary and conventional secondary recovery methods to 54%,
an increase of 11%. Unlike many of the IOR
techniques reviewed by the DTI, conformance control technology was judged
mature enough to use immediately.
Conformance control during waterflooding covers any technique designed to
reduce water production and redistribute
waterdrive, either near the wellbore or deep
in the reservoir. Near the wellbore, these
techniques include unsophisticated expedients such as setting a bridge plug to isolate
part of a well, dumping sand or cement in a
well to shut off the bottom perforations, and
cement squeezing to correct channeling and
fill near-well fractures. Deep in the reservoir,
water diversion needs chemical treatment.
Initially, straight injection of polymer was
tried but proved uneconomical because of
the large volumes required to alter reservoir
behavior and because polymers tend to get
washed out. The current trend is gels,
which if correctly placed can do the job
1. Sydansk RD and Moore PE: Production Responses in
Wyomings Big Horn Basin Resulting From Application of Acrylamide-Polymer/Cr(III)-Carboxylate Gels,
paper SPE 21894, 1990, unsolicited.
2. Coleman B: DTIs IOR Strategy in Best Practices for
Improved Oil Recovery. London, England: IBC Technical Services Ltd, 1993.
45
more efficiently with much smaller volumes. In the future, potentially less expensive foams including foamed gel may be
tried. Ultimately, reducing water production
may require a new well. The choice of
technique or combination of techniques
depends crucially on the reservoir and its
production history.
Take, for example, the case of two producing zones separated by an impermeable
shale, in which the bottom zone has
watered out (right ). The first solution is to
cement in the bottom zone. Suppose,
though, that the shale barrier does not
extend to the producing well. Then success
with the cement plug becomes short-lived
and water soon starts coning toward the top
interval. The only recourse now is to inject
a permeability blockersome kind of
gelling systemdeep into the lower zone.
The trick is not letting the gelling system
invade the upper zone. This can be
achieved by pumping through coiled tubing
to the top of the watered-out zone while
simultaneously pumping an inert fluid,
water or diesel fuel through the annulus into
the upper zone to prevent upward migration
of the gelling system.
Deep gelling systems are also the answer
for a high-permeability but watered-out formation sandwiched between two lower permeability formationsthe classic breakthrough scenario. A casing patch or cement
squeeze may halt water production momentarily, but long-term shutoff requires a
deeper block. The fractured reservoir is a
variant of this scenario. If natural fractures
are interconnected, they can provide a
ready conduit for water breakthrough, leaving oil in the matrix trapped and unproducible. The solution is to inject and fill the
fractures with a gelling system, that once
gelled, forces injection water into the matrix
to drive the oil out.
The possibilities are endless, and there are
as many solutions to blocking water production as there are reservoirs to block.3 The
challenges for the reservoir engineer contemplating conformance control are knowing why, where and how water is produced,
and which water blocking technique to use.
In the case of using a gelling system, there
are the additional challenges of being sure
46
Solution
Problem
Oil
Oil
Shale
Water
Water
Cement
Gelling solution
Protective
pressure
fluid
Oil
Oil
Shale
Gel
fluid
Water
Water
nMultiple causes
of early water production during a
waterdrive. Top: a
watered-out zone
separated from an
oil zone by an
impermeable shale
barrierthe solution is to cement in
bottom zone. Middle: same as above
but the shale barrier does not reach
the production
wellcementing
does not work, so
the solution is to
inject gel into the
lower zone while
balancing the
upper zone pressure
with inert fluid.
Bottom: watered-out
high-permeability
zone sandwiched
between two oil
zonesthe solution
is to isolate the zone
and inject gel.
(Adapted from Morgan, reference 3.)
Gelling solution
Oil
Oil
Gel
Water
Oil
Water
Oil
Oilfield Review
Pre-gel
Cross-linking Begins
mer is called partially hydrolyzed polyacrylamide (PHPA) and with its negatively
charged carboxylate groups becomes susceptible to ionic cross-linking.
Efficient cross-linkers are trivalent metal
ions such as aluminum, Al3+, and chromium,
Cr3+. These can be packaged either as simple inorganic ions in solution or within soluble chemical complexes in which the trivalent ion is associated with small inorganic or
organic groups called ligands. Some of the
first polymer-gel systems from the early
1970s used aluminum in the form of aluminum sulfate. Whatever the choice, the
trivalent metal ion readily links carboxylate
3. Morgan J: State-of-the-Art of Water Shut-off Well Treatments in Best Practices for Improved Oil Recovery.
London, England: IBC Technical Services Ltd, 1993.
Seright RS and Liang J: A Survey of Field Applications
of Gel Treatments for Water Shutoff, paper SPE
26991, presented at the 1994 SPE Permian Basin Oil
& Gas Recovery Conference, Midland, Texas, USA,
March 16-18, 1994.
4. Needham RB, Threlkeld CB and Gall JW: Control
of Water Mobility Using Polymers and Multivalent
Cations, paper SPE 4747, presented at the SPE
Improved Oil Recovery Symposium, Tulsa, Oklahoma,
USA, April 22-24, 1974.
5. For a general review:
Sorbie KS: Polymer-Improved Oil Recovery. Glasgow,
Scotland: Blackie, 1992.
Woods CL: Review of Polymers and Gels for IOR
Applications in the North Sea. London, England:
HMSO Publications Centre, 1991.
Gel Formed
Amide Monomer
H
Polyacrylamide (PA)
NH2
....
NH2
NH2
....
NH2
Na
Amide
April 1994
NH2
....
Carboxylate
Amide
47
....
O
M
H2O Cross-linker
O
O
H
. . . . PHPA
H2O
NH2
NH2
. . . . PHPA
Low pH
. . . .C
. . . . PHPA
O
H2O
O
H2O
Ac
Ac
Cr
Cr
Chromium acetate
O
Ac
Ac
Ac
Ac
Cr
H2O
....C
. . . . PHPA
High pH
H
....
....
PHPA
H2O
Ac
Ac
Cr
Cr
OH
OH
OH
Ac
Ac
Ac
Chromium
acetate
Cr
H2O
....
....
PHPA
....
H
H
Ac is
C
Tonguing
Intermediate
Rigid
nMarathons MARCIT gel in three final states depending on concentration, from left:
tonguing gel, intermediate strength gel and rigid gel. (Courtesy of Marathon Oil Company.)
48
Oilfield Review
Pre-gel
H
....
NH2
April 1994
Na+
C
O
Al
CH2
C
CH2
Aluminum
citrate
OH
....
NH2
. . . . PHPA
CH2 CO2
Na+
O
Al
C
CH2
OH
C
O
....
NH2
. . . . PHPA
O
Al
C
OH
NH2
6. Sydansk RD: A New Conformance-ImprovementTreatment Chromium (III) Gel Technology, paper
SPE/DOE 17329, presented at the SPE/DOE Enhanced
Oil Recovery Symposium, Tulsa, Oklahoma, USA,
April 17-20, 1988.
7. Fletcher AJP, Flew S, Forsdyke IN, Morgan JC, Rogers
C and Suttles D: Deep Diverting Gels for Very CostEffective Waterflood Control, Journal of Petroleum
Science and Engineering 7 (1992): 33-43.
Rogers C, Morgan JC and Forsdyke IN: Deep Diverting Gels for Improved Profile Control, in Oil and Gas
Technology in a Wider Europe: Proceedings of the 4th
EC Symposium, Berlin, Germany, November 3-5,
1992. Aberdeen, Scotland: Petroleum Science and
Technology Institute (1992): 381-399.
. . . . PHPA
+
CH2 CO2 Na
....
. . . . PHPA
49
molecule bonds to just one polymer carboxylate site. In the second stage, which
occurs only above 50C [122F], the aluminum citrate complex can attach to a second carboxylate group thereby cross-linking
two polymer molecules and contributing to
produce a gel network. Because the crosslink itself contains carboxylate groups and
these have an affinity for water molecules,
the formed gel may flow in a beaker, yet
provide an adequate permeability block in
porous rock.
BP and ARCOs strategy is to pump the
system into the reservoir through injection
wells, where the cooler temperature of the
injection water will promote only the firststage reaction, resulting in a pumpable fluid
of low viscosity. Then, as the fluid permeates deep into high-permeability sections of
the reservoir and experiences higher temperatures, the second-stage will kick in and
enough of a gel will form to divert waterdrive to less permeable zones. In preparation for field tests, BP conducted an extensive computer simulation of the temperature
distribution and likely flow patterns of the
polymer-gel system within the reservoir, and
also laboratory studies of the system
injectability through 190-ft [58-m] long
slimtubes packed with sand (below ). It is
too early to tell whether their ambitious
plan is working in the field.
The problem of injecting polymer gel systems through the narrow pore spaces of
matrix is multifaceted and has been a focus
Pore throat
Pore
200
42 days
180
Resistance factor
160
140
120
100
80
60
40 days
40
20
37 days
0
Warm
2.5-ft
section
50
Oilfield Review
80
6.0
5.5
Viscosity, cp
pH
40
5.0
20
4.5
4.0
0
0
12
16
Time, hr
nDevelopment of Dowell DGS gel as the system pH increases, with postulated gel structure showing aluminum
atoms in blue and oxygen atoms in red. Hydrogen will be loosely associated with the exterior, singly bonded
oxygen atoms.
Modification Using DGS Gelling System,
next page ).
Besides their inherent ability to deeply
permeate matrix rock, inorganic gels have
another advantage over their polymer-based
cousins. If the treatment fluid gets incorrectly placed causing a deterioration in
reservoir performance, inorganic gel can be
removed with acid. Of course, the acid has
to be able to reach the gel to be able to
remove it. Polymer gels, on the other hand,
cannot be dismantled easily and are therefore usually in place for the duration.
If deep penetration in matrix is one key
factor in the conformance control debate,
another concern is contamination of the
gelling system through contact with ions in
the formation water. As noted, the DGS system may be adversely affected by divalent
anions. PHPA, on the other hand, both
before and after gelling may be affected by
April 1994
divalent cations such as Ca2+, which are relatively ubiquitous in formation waters. Ca2+
ions associate with the carboxylate groups
in PHPA causing free polymer to precipitate.
This becomes more of a problem as the
degree of hydrolysis of the polymer
increases, and DH can increase with
increasing temperature. Research initiated at
Phillips Petroleum Co. and pursued further
at Eniricerche SpA, Italys national research
center for the oil industry situated near
Milan, has identified other polymer types
that may offer better protection from ionic
attack yet still be susceptible to ionic cross-
51
Mourhaf Jabri
Canning Vale, Western Australia
Gilberto Torres
Corpoven, S.A.
Caracas, Venezuela
The following two conformance control case studies describe a producer that is watered-out from coning (Venezuela) and water
injectors that have poor injection profiles (Australia).
Venezuela
Injection Profiles
K13
Australia
Production layers
5
6
K35
1
Production layers
6
7
20
40
60
80
100
Pre-treatment
Post-treatment
down the annulus above the packer into the overlying oil zone to prevent the treatment fluid from
entering the oil zone. The treatment fluid was
then displaced with 78 barrels of water and
allowed to gel for a week.
When the well was put back on production, oil
52
Oilfield Review
..
..
2+
Ca
Malonate
..
..
April 1994
....
NH2
C
O
....
Vinylpyrrolidone
Amide
Carboxylate
nAn example of a polymer that may be more resistant to divalent cation attack than PHPA. Called poly/vinylpyrrolidone-acrylamide, this polymer gains stability from the inert pyrrolidone
groups that substitute for the regular amide or carboxylate
groups usually found on PHPA.
Treatment Fluid Placement
53
Case Study
The Wertz field was a model implementation of a CO2 tertiary flood, and, as a result,
field performance had been copiously documented. Not only were individual producers
and injectors monitored daily, but flow rates
of the three phases presentoil, water and
CO2were also measured. These measurements were made in special substations,
one substation for every dozen wells or so,
each with elaborate and automatic apparatuses for sampling each wells flow in or out
and the flows breakdown into three phases.
The Wertz producing formation is a 470-ft
[143-m] thick aeolian sandstone at an average depth of 6200 ft [1890 m], with 240 ft
[73 m] of net pay having 10% porosity and
13-md permeability. The formation is
believed to have some fractures and is oil
wet. Sixty-five wells over 1600 acres are
used for production and many more than
that have been drilled for injectionalternating water and CO2 injection, commonly
referred to as water-alternating-gas (WAG)
injection. By mid-1991, the fields fate literally hung in the balance. The fields total
production had dropped precipitously to
#142
#120
#125
#127
#84
nStructure of Amocos Wertz field at Bairoil, Wyoming, USA. Conformance control treatments performed in well #84 gained 110,000 additional barrels of oil production via neighboring producing wells #125
and #127. A treatment in well #120 gained 140,000 additional barrels
of oil production via neighboring producing well #142.
54
Oilfield Review
14. Scott T, Sharpe SR, Sorbie KS, Clifford PJ, Roberts LJ,
Foulser RWS and Oakes JA: A General Purpose
Chemical Flood Simulator, paper SPE 16029, presented at the 9th SPE Symposium on Reservoir Simulation, San Antonio, Texas, USA, February 1-4, 1987.
15. Hughes DS, Woods CL, Crofts HJ and Dixon RT:
Numerical Simulation of Single-Well Polymer Gel
Treatments in Heterogeneous Formations, paper
SPE/DOE 20242, presented at the SPE/DOE Seventh
Symposium on Enhanced Oil Recovery, Tulsa, Oklahoma, USA, April 22-25, 1990.
16. Borling DC: Injection Conformance Control Case
Histories Using Gels at the Wertz Field CO2 Tertiary
Flood in Wyoming, U.S.A., paper SPE/DOE 27825,
presented at the SPE/DOE Improved Oil Recovery
Symposium, Tulsa, Oklahoma, USA, April 17-20,
1994.
April 1994
Evaluate
mature field
No
Yes
High priority
Review
data
Focus on
injection
wells?
Yes
No
Focus on
production
wells?
Pattern
reserve
No
No
Injection
conformance
Favorable
indications?
Yes
Offset
production
Favorable
economics?
Intermediate priority
Yes
H2O/CO2
Cycling times
Conformance
method
Well
history
Sandback
In-situ foam
surfactant
Reservoir
kH
Matrix cement
In-situ
polymer gel
Pressure
data
Selection of
injection
equipment
Resins
Geol.
X section
Low priority
Zone
isolation
Other
Cement
bond logs
Combination
of above
Other
Tracer
tests
Combination
of techniques
Core
studies
Safety/
environmental
compliance
Other
Economics/
authorization
Implementation
Postappraisal
evaluation
nAmocos process logic for picking conformance control candidates in the Wertz field.
(Adapted from Borling, reference 16.)
55
Water
1 month pre-treatment
1 month post-treatment
7 months post-treatment
12 months post-treatment
Depth, ft
nInjection profiles
for water and CO2
in well #84 before
and at various
times after the gel
treatment, which
was confined to the
high-permeability
zone at the bottom
of the well. The
treatment dramatically improved
injection conformance. (Courtesy of
6400
6500
Sand
CO2
1 month pre-treatment
3 months post-treatment
10 months post-treatment
12 months post-treatment
6400
6500
56
Sand
Oilfield Review
Well #127
Well #125
1000
Gel treatment
Gel treatment
100
10
J F M A M J J A S O N D J F M A M J J A S O N D J F M A M J J A S O N DJ J F M A M J J A S O N D J F M A M J J A S O N D J F M A M J J A S O N D J
1991
1992
1993
1994 1991
1992
1993
1994
nImproved oil rate and WOR in production wells #125 and #127 for the 30 months following the gel treatment in well #84. The hiatuses in early 1992 and mid-1993 in well #127 were caused by surface facilities downtime. (Courtesy of Amoco Production Co.)
zone and also of the behind-pipe channel.
Amoco opted for Marathons low molecular-weight polymer-gel technology, and in
addition, mechanically isolated the target
interval to avoid losing treatment fluid to the
upper zone, a necessary contingency that
consumed 55% of the total treatment cost.
Altogether, 650 barrels of the PHPAchromium acetate mixture were pumped at
4 barrels a minute, in a two-stage operation
taking one day.
As with all their subsequent conformance
control operations, round-the-clock precautions were taken to avoid any environmental contamination by the treatment fluid and
to ensure the treatment fluid was being
injected in the correct proportions. In addition, fluid issuing from the production wells
was monitored to ensure that the treatment
fluid did not somehow bypass the matrix
and get produced. Finally, samples of the
treatment fluid taken in the field confirmed
that a rigid gel formed after a few hours.
One month after the treatment, injection
conformance in well #84 showed spectacular improvement with 57% of injected water
entering the upper zone (previous page ).
Two months later, during a CO2 cycle, 79%
of the CO2 was entering the upper zone.
The situation was just as good after ten
months, when Amoco decided to shut off
the entire bottom zone with sand. This
forced all injection to the upper zone, and
April 1994
injection profiles thereafter indicated conformance to be practically uniform throughout that zonea textbook example of injection conformance.
Meanwhile in producing well #125,
which had been previously shut in because
it produced only water, oil started appearing
and production was up to 150 BOPD after
twelve months; the water/oil ratio (WOR)
decreased to 40 (above ). Later, oil production began to slip and well #125 was shut
in. Nevertheless, the conformance treatment
prolonged the life of this producing well by
30 months, furnishing an additional 80,000
barrels of oil.
In producing well #127, oil production
rose from 45 BOPD before the treatment to
150 BOPD after. During the same time,
WOR dropped from 80 to nearly 20. The
improvement lasted 30 months, five of
which were unfortunately interrupted by
facility breakdowns. Altogether, the well
produced an extra 30,000 barrels of producible reserves.
The first treatment Amoco performed with
large volumes of a high-molecular weight
polymer-gel system was in well #120. This
well appeared to be in direct communication via fractures with neighboring producer
#142, as evidenced by a very rapid one- to
three-day breakthrough time for CO2 injection. Corroborating a rapid communication
between the wells was the behavior of well
#142. It could produce oil when #120 was
shut in, but its performance would deterio-
57
Water
CO2
1 month post-treatment
7 months post-treatment
12 months post-treatment
Depth, ft
1 month pre-treatment
6600
nInjection profiles
for water and CO2
in well #120 before
and after the gel
treatment, which
was aimed at the
suspected fracture
zone in the middle
of the well. The
treatment dramatically improved
injection conformance in the upper
zone. (Courtesy of
Amoco Production Co.)
6700
6800
6900
58
Well #142
Water/oil ratio
1000
Gel treatment
100
10
J F M A M J J A S O N D J F M A M J J A S O N D J F M A M J J A S O N DJ
1991
1992
1993
1994
Oilfield Review
An integrated services approach to drilling a horizontal well in Lake Maracaibo, Venezuela brought new life to
a watered-out, mature field. A crossdisciplinary cast of geoscientists from Maraven, S.A. and Schlumberger
overcame complex geology and landed a successful horizontal drainhole where previous attempts by other
companies had failed.
miles
500
km
805
Caracas
NA
C O
L O
M B
YA
Ren Casco
Joey Husband
Gerardo Monsegui
Chris Taylor
Caracas, Venezuela
S E A
N
C A R I B B E A
GU
Leonardo Belloso
Fernando Chacartegui
Bic Cortiula
Florangel Escorcia
Toms Mata
Elizabeth Sampson
Maraven, S.A.
Caracas, Venezuela
I A
B
I L
Bill Lesso
Sugar Land, Texas, USA
Tony Surez
Los Morochas, Venezuela
Lagunillas
VLA- 8
April 1994
Lake
Maracaibo
C-7
10 km
nBlock 1 of Lake
Maracaibo in
Venezuela. The first
successful horizontal drainhole was
drilled in the C-7
sands of the VLA-8
reservoir.
1 km
59
1000
Oil
B/D
Well
VLA- VLA- VLA- VLA- VLA- VLA- VLA137 417 462 545 546 459 798
500
1000
500
B/D
1500
2000
Water
2500
rth
No
Drainhole
(Attic)
Oil-water
contact
A
TE LT
CO AU
I
F
East
60
Oilfield Review
2. George D: Lake Maracaibo to Undergo Major Revitalization, $9.6 Billion for Development During the
Next Four years, Offshore/Oilman 52, no. 9 (September 1992): 25-29.
3. Boreham D, Kingston J, Shaw P and van Zeelst J: 3D
Seismic Data Processing, Oilfield Review 3, no. 1
(January 1991): 41-55.
Hansen T, Kingston J, Kjellesvik S, Lane G, lAnson K,
Naylor R and Walker C: 3-D Seismic Surveys, Oilfield Review 1, no. 3 (October 1989): 54-61.
4. In Lake Maracaibo, Maraven names reservoirs after
the name of their discovery well. In this case, the well
VLA-8 discovered the reservoir VLA-8. Maraven numbers wells sequentially. Wells in Block 1 have the prefix VLA, those drilled in Block 2 have the prefix VLB,
etc. VLA-1035 occurs in Block 1 and is the 1035th
well drilled by Maraven in Lake Maracaibo.
April 1994
100
eters
Inline
135
1500
400
1900
340
Cros
sline
400
mete
rs
400
1600
1650
1700
1750
1800
Time, msec
100
Inlin
ers
met
1200
400
128
2000
32
Cr
os
sli
40
ne
et
er
-128
36
-64
64
128
Amplitude
nCharisma workstation displays of 3D seismic data on the C-7 sands of Block 1. The
two-way time map (above) shows the elevated Attic area at the C-7 level. The color bar
denotes the blue area as the highest structural position. The westward edge of the blue
area represents the contact with the Icotea fault. The structure strikes north-south and
shows a slight arch in the middle of the area. Structural dip is visible to the east and
stops abruptly at the back fault (green-red contact). These two faults delineate the principal boundaries of the Attic block.
The amplitude map (below) shows the continuity at the C-7 level. The longest, lightgreen amplitude event in the middle of the time slice corresponds to the C-7 channel
sand as interpreted by the sedimentologists from core analysis. The horizontal drainhole was located in this event.
61
2.5
Horizontal
drainhole
1.5
2 verticals
1 vertical
0.5
0
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
2000
01
02
nHorizontal versus
vertical recovery.
Reservoir modeling
indicated that a
horizontal well
would recover 2.1
million barrels of
oil compared to 0.8
and 1.5 million
barrels for vertical
wells. Furthermore,
the horizontal well
should recover 87%
of its lifetime
production during
the first four years.
Year
nPlanned trajectory
for the pilot well
with three possible
drainhole locations.
5400
Vertical depth, ft
5700
55 6317 ft MD
6000
C-7 Upper
6300
C-7 Middle
6600
C-7 Lower
6900
55 7256 ft TD
0
600
1200
1800
2400
3000
3600
Horizontal displacement, ft
62
and on the other by the Icotea fault. Assuming that no more vertical wells would be
shut in and that water cut would stabilize,
Maraven calculated that existing conventional wells would recover only 18% of the
remaining reserves.
To find the most productive drainhole
location, Maraven modeled performance
for four horizontal drainholes, with lengths
of 584 ft [178 m], 884 ft [307 m], 1200 ft
[366 m] and 1600 ft [488 m], in the upper,
middle and lower sands. The 1200-ft drainhole in the C-7 lower sand performed best.
Overall, reservoir modeling showed that a
horizontal well would recover 40% to
160% more oil than a vertical well (top ).
After analyzing the seismic interpretation
and the reservoir simulation, Maraven geoscientists concluded that a horizontal drainhole could not be drilled without additional
information from a pilot well. First, they
needed to pinpoint the top and thickness of
C-7 with respect to the Icotea fault. Second,
they needed to better define the oil-water
contact. At this point, they negotiated with
Schlumberger to manage drilling the pilot
Oilfield Review
July
Week
1
2
6 Jul
13 Jul
Task
August
3
20 Jul
4
27 Jul
5
5 Aug
6
7
10 Aug 17 Aug
September
8
9
10
11
24 Aug 31 Aug 7 Sept 14 Sept
Core analysis
Acquire offset/field data
Structural/stratigraphic analysis
Core mechanical properties analysis
Static reservoir modeling
OK: in progress
Vertical option
W/Dowell
Design completion
Coiled-tubing servicing analysis
Scan lake bed for rig placement
Proximity analysis well resurvey
Study acceptance presentations
Rig mobilization/tripod fabrication
Personnel mobilization
Plans in progress
Pre-spud meeting
Start drilling, run conductor pipe
to 133/8-in. casing point
Official decision needed here
to mobilize rig/services
Reservoir
engineering
specialist
Drilling
operations
specialist
Seismic
Geco-Prakla
Petrophysics
specialist
Directional
drilling,
MWD/LWD
Anadrill
Schlumberger
Project
coordinator
Geology
specialist
Drilling
technologies
specialist
Logging,
well testing
Schlumberger
Wireline & Testing
Cementing,
stimulation
Dowell
63
61/4-in.
EARTHQUAKER
mechanical
drilling jar
5-in. drillpipe
to surface
Flex joint
26 joints
HWDP
9 joints
heavyweight
drillpipe (HWDP)
60 joints
drillpipe
3 joints
HWDP
61/2-in.
LWD CDN
7-in. MWD
61/2-in.
LWD CDR
stresses derived from logs and core measurements, and density logsto calculate
the stress field at the borehole wall for a
given well inclination and direction. More
importantly, it establishes safe mud weights
along the trajectory in the borehole. The
mud-weight range indicates the degree of
difficulty and expense associated with
drilling a horizontal well.
Vertical stress was derived from log measurements of the cumulative density of overlying sediments. Horizontal stresses were
obtained using differential strain-curve analysis. In this technique, strain gauges are
attached to a core sample, which is then
encased in a silicone plug and compressed
hydrostatically. Hydrostatic compression
closes microcracks that developed when the
core was removed. Measuring strain while
these cracks close gives the ratio of the horizontal stresses.
Analysis of DSI data gave the compressional and shear velocities needed, along
with the bulk density, to compute the
dynamic elastic moduli. These computations matched the elastic moduli measured
on cores prior to strain curve analysis. The
Impact analysis showed the zone to be
competent and drillable at high angles.
In finalizing the horizontal trajectory, the
team correlated pilot log data with offset
data from two nearby wells, which showed
that the C-7 upper dipped up about 5 from
the pilot well, then flattened out and eventually started dipping down. A 6/100 feet
build to 95 was planned to intersect the
target sand at 6380 ft [1945 m] true vertical
depth (TVD). Markers that could be identified with the LWD gamma ray or resistivity
sensors were chosen to verify the approach
to horizontal.
Drilling the Horizontal Drainhole
Non-mag
81/4-in. stabilizer
Non-mag
pony drill collar
Float sub
63/4-in. bent
housing steerable
motor with
11/2 bend
81/2-in. bit
Oilfield Review
MicroSFL Log
Washout
0.2
(ohm-m)
200
Wireline Caliper
in.
Laterolog Shallow
16
GAPI
150
MD
CDR Shallow
TVD
CDR Deep
0.2
(ohm-m)
2000
6600
6375
Moved Oil
C-7 target
6400
6700
Moved Water
6425
nCDR time-lapse overlay. Superimposing the Laterolog shallow, CDR shallow and CDR
deep resistivity measurements (right track) taken during and after drilling allows monitoring of invasion. Changes in the resistivity measurements can be used to identify
fluid types. Oil is indicated by the lower Laterolog resistivity readings after invasion of
fresh mud has occurred. Water is indicated where the LWD resistivity measurements
are lower than the Laterolog shallow measurement.
April 1994
65
Moved Oil
Water
Oil
Net Sand
TVD
GAPI
Moved Oil
Sand
Montmorillonite
Oil
Illite
Fluid Analysis
Combined Model
p.u.
p.u.
Water
Permeability
Net Pay
Gamma Ray
1:200 ft
Bound Water
Water
Hole
Enlargement
Mudcake
Oil
Permeability
Intrinsic
Permeability
150 10000
SW
md
MD
.01 100
p.u.
0 75
MD
100 0
100
Coal
6599
Top of C-7 upper
6400
6699
6799
6500
6900
66
Oilfield Review
Hole Diameter
Scale
MD
1:200 ft -12
6 psi
0.5
Oil
90
Shear Modulus
Hole
Enlargement
Water
Mudcake
Moved Oil
Bound Water
Youngs Modulus
0
6 psi
12 0
Illite
10
Poissons Ratio
Poissons Ratio
Caliper
0.5 5
Quartz
Montmorillonite
6600
Combined Model
25 0
p.u.
100
6700
6800
Safe drilling
window for 50
deviated well
Safe drilling
window for
horizontal
drainhole
67
8050 ft TD
drainhole 2
2000
7276 ft TD
drainhole 1
7493 ft
pilot TD
1000
Up-dip
direction
35
500
0
0
500
8050 ft
drainhole 2
TD
7276 ft
drainhole 1
TD
6600
1000
East, ft
41 6062 ft
9 5/8-in. casing
6000
Plan line
1500
5400 ft
kickoff point
5400
North, ft
8044 ft
planned TD
7493 ft
pilot TD
0
600
1200
1800
2400
Displacement, ft
68
Oilfield Review
nCompletion design
for VLA-1035.
9 5/8 in.
at 6062 ft
27/8 in.
Hydraulic
retrievable
packer
Port collar
External casing
packer (inflatable)
Centralizers
7-in. casing to
TD at 8050 ft
Shale
Sandy shale
Sand
Wellbore
Gamma ray
b
c
d
e
a b c
a
c
d
f
e
g
h
j
i
k
April 1994
69