SPE Drilling & Completion
Volume 27,
Number 4,
December 2012,
pp. 459-472
Summary
Typical shale well completions involve massive, multistage fracturing in
horizontal wells. Aggressive trajectories (with up to 20°/100 ft doglegs),
multistage high-rate fracturing (up to 20 stages, 100 bbl/min), and increasing
temperature and pressure of shale reservoirs result in large thermal and
bending stresses that are critical in the design of production casing. In
addition, when cement voids are present and the production casing is not
restrained during fracturing, thermal effects can result in magnified load
conditions. The resulting loads can be well in excess of those deemed allowable
by regular casing design techniques. These loads are often ignored in standard
well design, exposing casing to the risk of failure during multistage
fracturing. In this work, the major factors influencing normal and special
loads on production casing in shale wells are discussed. A method for
optimization of shale well production casing design is then introduced. The
constraints on the applicability of different design options are discussed.
Load-magnification effects of cement voids are described, and a method for
their evaluation is developed. Thermal effects during cooling are shown to
create both bending stress magnification and annular pressure reduction caused
by fluid contraction in trapped cement voids. This can result in significant
loads and new modes of failure that must be considered in design. The
performance of connections under these loads is also discussed. Examples are
provided to illustrate the key concepts described. Finally, acceptable design
options for shale well production casing are discussed. The results presented
here are expected to improve the reliability of shale well designs. They
provide operators with insight into load effects that must be onsidered in the
design of production casing for such wells. By understanding the causes and
magnitude of load-augmentation effects, operators can manage their design and
practices to ensure well integrity.
© 2012. Society of Petroleum Engineers
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History
- Original manuscript received:
15 March 2012
- Meeting paper published:
6 March 2012
- Revised manuscript received:
10 September 2012
- Manuscript approved:
12 September 2012
- Published online:
28 November 2012
- Version of record:
11 December 2012