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Initial Circulating Pressure in Well Control

This document discusses circulation and well control. It explains that pump rates must be carefully controlled during well control operations to maintain bottom hole pressure. It provides calculations for determining kill rate pressure, initial circulating pressure, final circulating pressure, pipe volumes, annular volumes, total circulating strokes, and circulating time. Maintaining the proper pump rate and understanding these pressure and volume calculations is important for successful well control.

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Andrés López
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
280 views17 pages

Initial Circulating Pressure in Well Control

This document discusses circulation and well control. It explains that pump rates must be carefully controlled during well control operations to maintain bottom hole pressure. It provides calculations for determining kill rate pressure, initial circulating pressure, final circulating pressure, pipe volumes, annular volumes, total circulating strokes, and circulating time. Maintaining the proper pump rate and understanding these pressure and volume calculations is important for successful well control.

Uploaded by

Andrés López
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

CIRCULATION & WELL CONTROL

WILD WELL CONTROL


Learning Objectives

You will learn:

 The importance of pump rates and pressures during well control operations
 Pressure relationships
 Basic calculations necessary in well control for:
 Capacity

 Volume

 Strokes

WILD WELL CONTROL


Overview

• Pumps are one of the basic tools used in well control.


• Used to circulate kick fluids out
• Used to circulate kill fluid throughout well.
• Used to pump cement, pills, plugs, etc.
• Usually measured in strokes per minute and output, bbls/min.
• Small changes in pump rate can greatly affect pressures throughout well.
• So, in well control, to keep bottom hole pressure in a specified range, pump
rate needs to be carefully controlled.

3
WILD WELL CONTROL
Circulation and Well Control

Overview
• Pumps are one of the basic tools used in well control.
• Used to circulate kick fluids out.
• Used to circulate kill fluid throughout well.
• Used to pump cement, pills, plugs, etc.
• Usually measured in strokes per minute and output, bbls/min.
• Small changes in pump rate can greatly affect pressures
throughout well.
• So, in well control, to keep bottom hole pressure in a specified range,
pump rate needs to be carefully controlled.

WILD WELL CONTROL


Kill Rate

 Pump speed is critical because it affects pump pressure.


• Any change in speed may drastically affect circulating pressure!
 Usually taken at 1/4, 1/3 and 1/2 normal circulating rate.
• Often 20, 30 and 40 stk/min are used.
• Sometimes based on rate to reach a certain pressure.
• Sometimes based on bbls/min (e.g., 2 – 5 bbls/min).

WILD WELL CONTROL


Kill Rate Pressure

 Kill rate pressure is the circulating pressure at the kill rate pump speed.
 Kill rate pressures should be taken when:
• There is a change in fluid density or fluid flow (rhelogical) characteristics.
• There is a change in bit and bit nozzles.
• BHA, downhole tools and string changes.
• When 500 or more feet of new hole is drilled.
• Each tour.
• After pump repair.

WILD WELL CONTROL


Kill Rate Pressure

 Ideally, kill rate pressures should be taken through the kill manifold and choke.
• Have to flush kill manifold and choke.
• Usually taken with BOP stack open instead.
 A small change in rate can affect circulating pressure greatly.
 This can be mathematically calculated.
• A pump pressure and rate must be known.
• Fluid properties have to be the same.
• Much better to get actual pressures than calculated.
P2 = P1 X (SPM22  SPM12)
Where:
P2 = original pump pressure at SPM1, psi
P1 = reduced or changed pump pressure at SPM2, psi
SPM1 = original pump rate, stks/min
SPM2 = reduced or changed pump rate, stks/min

WILD WELL CONTROL


Initial Circulating Pressure

 Initial circulating pressure (ICP) - the combination of shut-in drill pipe pressure plus the pressure
needed to circulate fluid at a given rate.

ICP = KRP + SIDPP

Where:
ICP = initial circulating pressure, psi
KRP = kill rate pressure, psi
SIDPP = shut in drill pipe pressure, psi

WILD WELL CONTROL


Initial Circulating Pressure

 ICP is the circulating pressure used once the pump is at kill rate speed.
• If no kill fluid is pumped, then this is the circulating pressure necessary to maintain BHP constant at or
slightly above FP.
• If kill fluid is pumped, ICP must be allowed to drop as the kill fluid fills the string increasing hydrostatic
killing the pressure deficit.

WILD WELL CONTROL


Final Circulating Pressure

 Once kill fluid fills the string the circulating pressure is commonly referred to as
Final Circulating Pressure (FCP).
This change in circulating pressure can be calculated by:

FCP = KRP X (KWM  OMW)

Where:
FCP = final circulating pressure, psi
KRP = kill rate pressure, psi
KWM = kill weight mud (fluid), ppg
OMW = old mud weight, ppg

WILD WELL CONTROL


Surface to Bit, Pump Strokes and Time

 The number of strokes to pump a fluid, such as a kill fluid, from the surface to the end of the
string is critical for successful well control and maintaining BHP constant.
 Also, the time to pump from the surface to the end of the string is important.

 The volume within the string must be calculated. This is the combined total of:
• Volume of tubing or drill pipe.
• Volume of BHA.
• Additionally, the amount of strokes/time to clear the surface equipment should be known.

WILD WELL CONTROL


Surface to Bit, Pump Strokes and Time

 To calculate a pipe/string volume:


Volumebbls = Capacity bbl/ft X Length ft

This is calculated for each section of the string (i.e. pipe, HWDP, BHA)
 The volumes are totaled for the entire string.

 To calculate the amount of strokes to displace the string volume:

Strokes = Total String Volume bbls  Pump Output bbl/stk

Note: Capacity of pipe may be looked up in charts and tables.

WILD WELL CONTROL


Surface to Bit, Pump Strokes and Time

 If lookup tables are not available, the following formula can be used to calculate the capacity of a
cylindrical object such as an open hole, casing, tubing, drill pipe, BHA or choke/kill lines in bbls/ft :

Capacity bbls/ft = Diameter2  1029.4

WILD WELL CONTROL


Annular Volumes

 The calculation for annular volume is similar to that of capacity, but subtracting out the
displacement of the tubulars in the well.
 There may be several different bbl/ft annulus capacity sections:
• Based on well bore geometry and where different pipes are located.
• Each section must be calculated individually:
- Tubing/DP in casing, liner, open hole and/or riser.
- Hevi wate in casing, liner, open hole and/or riser.
- BHA/DC in casing, open hole and/or riser.

WILD WELL CONTROL


Annular Volumes

 If lookup tables are not available, the capacity for each section can be calculated by:
Capacity bbls/ft = (OD2 - ID2)  1029.4
Where:
ID = ID of open or cased hole, inches
OD = OD of tubular in section, inches
Note: 1029.4 is the conversion factor between cylindrical area and volume

 Once the capacities are known, the volumes for each section and total volume can be calculated.

 Strokes to surface and time to surface for bottoms up can then be easily calculated.

WILD WELL CONTROL


Total Circulating Strokes and Time

 Simply by adding the volumes for each section, a total volume, strokes and circulating time down
the string and back to surface can be calculated.
• By adding separate volumes from surface, or the bottom of the string we can also calculate volume,
strokes and time to circulate for:
- End of string or bit to casing shoe
- Choke and kill line
- Any individual or combined lengths and sections

WILD WELL CONTROL


Circulation and Well Control

Learning Objectives
 You learned the importance of pump rates and
pressures during well control operations.
 You learned pressure relationships.
 You learned basic calculations necessary in
well control for:
• Capacity
• Volume
• Strokes

WILD WELL CONTROL

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