SPE Drilling & Completion
Volume 24,
Number 2,
June 2009,
pp. 226-331
Summary
The invasion of the pulverized formation rock grains and the resulting
low-permeability crushed zone is the primary cause of wellbore damage in
perforated completions, as established by Behrmann et al. (1991). To minimize
this damage during the perforating process, it is necessary to provide a
dynamic underbalance in the well that will deliberately induce flow into the
wellbore for tunnel cleanup. Traditional well fluids have a limited application
in depleted reservoirs because the lowest achievable density is on the order of
6.6 lbm/gal. In many depleted reservoirs, this density can represent an
overbalance. It is not always desirable or operationally practical to provide
this underbalance with a gas cushion; therefore, to achieve underbalance, it is
desirable to engineer a stable fluid with nondamaging chemical properties,
which would have a significantly lower density. This paper reports on the
formulation of superlight completion fluids consisting of Shell Sarapar 147
synthetic oil (SO) [Shell Middle Distillate Synthesis (MDS), Kuala Lumpur) and
3M Scotchlite hollow-glass spheres (HGSs) (3M, St. Paul, Minnesota, USA), also
known as glass bubbles, as a density-reducing agent, with an appropriate
stabilizing agent. Laboratory tests show that density values as low as 5.0
lbm/gal could be achieved. Similar mixtures were prepared and used in
perforation operations for Talisman Malaysia. A total of 72 bbl of lightweight
completion fluids (LWCFs) at approximately 5.5 lbm/gal was pumped downhole, and
the perforation job was completed successfully. Production history of the well
shows marked increase in production rate compared to the neighboring wells,
which produce from the same reservoir but were perforated traditionally with
little or no underbalance. This technology is not necessarily limited to
depleted reservoirs. In normally pressured zones where permeability is
extremely low, the fluid provides an opportunity to increase the available
underbalance by an order of magnitude to assist cleanup.
© 2009. Society of Petroleum Engineers
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History
- Original manuscript received:
7 April 2007
- Meeting paper published:
27 June 2007
- Revised manuscript received:
19 November 2008
- Manuscript approved:
1 December 2008
- Published online:
1 June 2009
- Version of record:
1 June 2009