Causes of Wellbore Deviation
Causes of Wellbore Deviation
Causes of Wellbore Deviation
Because of its elasticity, its tendency to buckle under axial forces and its inability to withstand
lateral forces, the drill string has long been recognized as a key to controlling wellbore
deviation. The role of the drill bit has been less obvious, although it has long been known that
forces at the bit can affect its path. These forces vary among different bit types even in the same
formation, indicating that bit design and geometry relate to wellbore deviation. Still, most studies
on wellbore deviation have focused on the drill string, accepting the idea that weight-on-bit is the
principle contributor to deviation.
Although the exact causes of wellbore deviation are unknown, we can list the following as
contributing factors:
Wellbore deviation results from forces acting at the bit. We can separate a study of these forces
into two parts:
Bit/rock interaction — the study of bit behavior in various rocks under the action
of applied bit loads
Drill string mechanics — the analysis of drill string behavior under the action of
imposed forces
Bit-Rock Interaction
We can break down the mechanical actions of drilling a rock into three categories: percussive
action, drag-rotary action and combined percussive/drag-rotary action ( Figure 1 ,
Parameters affecting hole deviation that are due to rock/bit interaction):
Figure 1
Rolling cutter bits employ a combined percussive/drag-rotary action, while, fixed cutter bits fall
into the drag-rotary action category.
Parameters that affect hole deviation based on bit/rock interaction relate to rock properties, bit
characteristics and drilling variables. Table 1 , below, lists the most important of these.
Table 1. Parameters affecting hole deviation that are due to rock/bit interaction
Figure 2
The extent to which buckling occurs depends on the drill string's rigidity and length. Techniques
that have been used to minimize buckling include:
reducing weight-on-bit to a value less than that of the critical weight which
induces first-order buckling
adding stabilizers to the drill string at points of maximum deflection in the
predicted buckling mode
using large-diameter drill collars
From the standpoint of reducing buckling, the ideal bottomhole assembly (BHA) would have a
diameter equal to the hole diameter. Of course, this is a practical impossibility, so we instead use
stabilizers ( Figure 3 ), which have larger diameters than drill collars, to limit the BHA's lateral
movement.
Figure 3
Factors that are of practical importance in affecting drill string behavior include:
Figure 4
In analyzing these forces, we assume that the bit is free to turn, but laterally restrained; that the
drill collars lie on the low side of the hole and will remain stable there; and that the bit will drill
in the direction in which it is pushed, which is not necessarily the direction in which it is aimed.
The force with which the bit acts on the formation is F , and is applied at an angle with the vertical. We
B
may resolve FB into two components: a longitudinal force F1, which acts in the direction of the hole axis, and a
lateral force F2, which is perpendicular to the hole axis. F2 may act on the low side of the hole ( Figure 4
(a)); it may be zero ( Figure 4 (b)); or it may act on the high side of the hole ( Figure 4 (c)).
When F2 acts on the low side of the hole, deviation will decrease. If it acts on the high side,
deviation will increase. If F = 0, a stable condition results, in which drilling proceeds in the direction of the
2
smaller value of a. If hole deviation is increasing, a stable condition will occur at some larger value of a.
In Figure 4 (a), an increase in F causes F to increase, while in Figure 4 (c), an increase in FP cause F to
P 2 2
decrease. Clearly, increasing FP results in a smaller equilibrium angle a. This beneficial result of increasing F P is
known as the Pendulum Effect.