Source: https://patents.google.com/patent/CA2795818C/en
Timestamp: 2020-01-22 19:46:04
Document Index: 173858771

Matched Legal Cases: ['art 75', 'art 75', 'art 75', 'art 75', 'art 75', 'art 75', 'art 75', 'art 75', 'art 75', 'art 75', 'art 75', 'art 75', 'art 75', 'art 75', 'art 75', 'art 75', 'art 75', 'art 75', 'art 75', 'art 75', 'art 75', 'art 75', 'art 75', 'art 75', 'art 75', 'art 75', 'art 75', 'art 75', 'arts 75']

CA2795818C - Managed pressure cementing - Google Patents
Managed pressure cementing Download PDF
CA2795818C
CA2795818C CA2795818A CA2795818A CA2795818C CA 2795818 C CA2795818 C CA 2795818C CA 2795818 A CA2795818 A CA 2795818A CA 2795818 A CA2795818 A CA 2795818A CA 2795818 C CA2795818 C CA 2795818C
CA2795818A
CA2795818A1 (en
Michael Brian Grayson
Said Boutalbi
Todd Douglas Cooper
Frank Zamora, Jr.
2011-11-16 Priority to US201161560500P priority Critical
2011-11-16 Priority to US61/560,500 priority
2012-11-14 Application filed by Weatherford/Lamb Inc filed Critical Weatherford/Lamb Inc
2013-05-16 Publication of CA2795818A1 publication Critical patent/CA2795818A1/en
2015-03-17 Publication of CA2795818C publication Critical patent/CA2795818C/en
239000004568 cement Substances 0 abstract claims description 220
238000005086 pumping Methods 0 abstract claims description 52
238000005553 drilling Methods 0 claims description 86
238000005755 formation Methods 0 claims description 62
241000424123 Trachinotus baillonii Species 0 description 54
101700070874 BOP family Proteins 0 description 5
102100013789 OPN1SW Human genes 0 description 5
101700028823 OPSB family Proteins 0 description 5
102100015698 RTL10 Human genes 0 description 5
102100005325 SMYD1 Human genes 0 description 5
101700056290 SMYD1 family Proteins 0 description 5
101700062447 BPPB3 family Proteins 0 description 4
A method of cementing a tubular string in a wellbore includes: deploying the tubular string into the wellbore; pumping cement slurry into the tubular string; launching a cementing plug after pumping the cement slurry; propelling the cementing plug through the tubular string, thereby pumping the cement slurry through the tubular string and into an annulus formed between the tubular string and the wellbore; and controlling flow of fluid displaced from the wellbore by the cement slurry to control pressure of the annulus.
Field of the Invention Embodiments of the present invention generally relate to managed pressure cementing.
Description of the Related Art In wellbore construction and completion operations, a wellbore is formed to access hydrocarbon-bearing formations (e.g., crude oil and/or natural gas) by the use of drilling. Drilling is accomplished by utilizing a drill bit that is mounted on the end of a drill string. To drill within the wellbore to a predetermined depth, the drill string is often rotated by a top drive or rotary table on a surface platform or rig, and/or by a downhole motor mounted towards the lower end of the drill string. After drilling to a predetermined depth, the drill string and drill bit are removed and a section of casing is lowered into the wellbore. An annulus is thus formed between the string of casing and the formation. The casing string is hung from the wellhead. A cementing operation is then conducted in order to fill the annulus with cement. The casing string is cemented into the wellbore by circulating cement into the annulus defined between the outer wall of the casing and the borehole. The combination of cement and casing strengthens the wellbore and facilitates the isolation of certain areas of the formation behind the casing for the production of hydrocarbons.
Once the initial or surface casing has been cemented, the wellbore may be extended and another string of casing or liner may be cemented into the wellbore. This process may be repeated until the wellbore intersects the formation. Once the formation has been produced and depleted, cement plugs may be used to abandon the wellbore. If the wellbore is exploratory, tests may be performed and then the wellbore abandoned.
Not all wells that are drilled and casing strings cemented in place during the well operation are problematic. Conversely, primary cementing of problematic wells has historically been inefficient to unobtainable by manipulation of the traditional variables. What can be recorded today to effectively measure the success or failure of a primary cement job is not adequate for cementing problematic wells. Understanding the objectives of a primary cement job, being able to execute the primary cement job and adequately interpreting the results have ultimately been the criteria of a success or a failure. Whether success is a leak-off test, open-hole kick-off plug, isolation of a hydrocarbon bearing zone of interest, or a fresh water zone that must be hydraulically or mechanically isolated and protected, the tools and methods that operators and service companies employ today that can be controlled and monitored are not always enough to provide the expected nor the desired results.
Embodiments of the present invention generally relate to managed pressure cementing. In one embodiment, a method of cementing a tubular string in a wellbore includes: deploying the tubular string into the wellbore;
pumping cement slurry into the tubular string; launching a cementing plug after pumping the cement slurry; propelling the cementing plug through the tubular string, thereby pumping the cement slurry through the tubular string and into an annulus formed between the tubular string and the wellbore; and controlling flow of fluid displaced from the wellbore by the cement slurry to control pressure of the annulus.
In another embodiment, a method of cementing a tubular string in a wellbore includes: deploying the tubular string into the wellbore, the tubular string including one or more cement sensors; pumping cement slurry into the tubular string; launching a cementing plug after pumping the cement slurry; propelling the cementing plug through the tubular string, thereby pumping the cement slurry through the tubular string and into an annulus formed between the tubular string
2 and the wellbore; and analyzing data from the cement sensors during curing of the cement slurry.
In another embodiment, a method of cementing a tubular string in a subsea wellbore includes: deploying the tubular string into the subsea wellbore;
pumping cement slurry into the tubular string; launching a cementing plug after pumping the cement slurry; propelling the cementing plug through the tubular string using a chase (aka displacement) fluid, thereby pumping the cement slurry through the tubular string and into an annulus formed between the tubular string and the wellbore; measuring a flow rate of the chase fluid; and measuring a flow rate of fluid displaced from the wellbore by diverting the displaced fluid from a bore of a pressure control assembly connected to a subsea wellhead of the subsea wellbore through a subsea flow meter of the pressure control assembly.
In another embodiment, a method for drilling a wellbore includes drilling the wellbore by injecting drilling fluid into a top of a drill string disposed in the wellbore at a first flow rate and rotating a drill bit. The drilling fluid exits the drill bit and carries cuttings from the drill bit. The cuttings and drilling fluid (returns) flow from the drill bit through an annulus defined between the tubular string and the wellbore. A seal of a rotating control device is engaged with the drill string and diverts the returns into an outlet of the rotating control device. The method further includes, while drilling the wellbore: choking the flow of returns such that a bottomhole pressure corresponds to a target pressure, wherein the target pressure is greater than or equal to a pore pressure and less than a fracture pressure of an exposed formation adjacent to the wellbore; increasing the returns choking such that the bottomhole pressure corresponds to a pressure expected during cementing of the exposed formation; and while the returns choking is increased: measuring the first flow rate; measuring a flow rate of the returns; and comparing the returns flow rate to the first flow rate to ensure integrity of the exposed formation.
Figure 1 illustrates a terrestrial drilling system in a casing cementing mode, according to one embodiment of the present invention.
Figures 2A-2G illustrate a casing cementing operation performed using the drilling system.
Figure 3A illustrates operation of a programmable logic controller (PLC) of the drilling system during the casing cementing operation. Figure 3B
illustrates monitoring of the cementing operation. Figure 3C illustrates detection of formation influx during cementing. Figure 3D illustrates detection of cement loss during cementing. Figure 3E illustrates monitoring of curing of the cement slurry and application of a beneficial amount of backpressure on the annulus. Figure 3F illustrates detection of formation influx during curing. Figure 3G
illustrates detection of cement loss during curing.
Figures 4A and 4B illustrates a portion of the drilling system in a liner cementing mode, according to another embodiment of the present invention.
Figure 4C illustrates operation of cement sensors.
Figures 5A-5F illustrate a liner cementing operation performed using the drilling system.
Figure 6 illustrates operation of the PLC during the liner cementing operation.
4 Figures 7A-C illustrates an offshore drilling system in a drilling mode, according to another embodiment of the present invention. Figure 7D
illustrates a dynamic formation integrity test performed using the drilling system.
Figures 7E and 7F illustrate monitoring of cement curing of a subsea casing cementing operation conducted using the drilling system.
Figure 8A illustrates monitoring of cement curing of a subsea casing cementing operation conducted using an second offshore drilling system, according to another embodiment of the present invention. Figures 8B and 8C
illustrate a subsea casing cementing operation conducted using a third offshore drilling system, according to another embodiment of the present invention.
Figures 9A and 9B illustrate monitoring of cement curing of a subsea casing cementing operation conducted using a fourth offshore drilling system, according to another embodiment of the present invention. Figures 9C and 9E
illustrate a wireless cement sensor sub of an alternative inner casing string being cemented. Figure 9D illustrate a radio frequency identification (RFID) tag for communication with the sensor sub. Figure 9F illustrates the fluid handling system of the drilling system.
Figures 10A-10C illustrate a remedial cementing operation being performed using an alternative casing string, according to another embodiment of the present invention.
Figures 11A-11C illustrate a remedial squeeze operation being performed using the alternative casing string, according to another embodiment of the present invention.
Figure 1 illustrates a terrestrial drilling system 1 in a casing cementing mode, according to one embodiment of the present invention. The drilling system 1 may include a drilling rig 1r, a fluid handling system If, and a pressure control assembly (PCA) 1p. The drilling rig 1r may include a derrick 2 having a 5 rig floor 4 at its lower end having an opening 6 through which a casing adapter 7 extends downwardly into the PCA 1p. The PCA 1p may be connected to a wellhead 21. The wellhead 21 may be mounted on an outer casing string 101 which has been deployed into a wellbore 100 drilled from a surface 104s of the earth and cemented 102 into the wellbore. The casing adapter 7 may include a seal head (not shown) for engaging an inner casing string 105 which has been deployed into the wellbore 100 and is ready to be cemented into place. The casing adapter 7 may also be connected to a cementing head 10. The cementing head 10 may also be connected to a Kelly valve 11 via spool 17. The Kelly valve 11 may be connected to a quill of a top drive 12. The top drive 12 may include a motor for rotating a drill string. The top drive motor may be electric or hydraulic. A housing of the top drive 12 may be coupled to a rail (not shown) of the derrick 2 for preventing rotation of the top drive housing during rotation of the drill string and allowing for vertical movement of the top drive with a traveling block 13. A housing of the top drive 12 may be suspended from the derrick 2 by the traveling block 13. The traveling block 13 may be supported by wire rope connected at its upper end to a crown block 15. The wire rope 14 may be woven through sheaves of the blocks 13, 15 and extend to drawworks 16 for reeling thereof, thereby raising or lowering the traveling block 13 relative to the derrick 2.
Alternatively, the wellbore may be subsea having a wellhead located adjacent to the waterline and the drilling rig may be a located on a platform adjacent the wellhead. Alternatively, a Kelly and rotary table (not shown) may be used instead of the top drive.
The cementing head 10 may include one or more plug launchers 8u,b, and a manifold 18. The cementing manifold 18 may include a trunk and one or more branches, such as three. Each branch may include a shutoff valve 9u,m,b, for providing selective fluid communication between the manifold trunk and the launchers 8u,b. Each launcher 8u,b may include a canister for housing a respective cementing plug, such as wiper 125u,b (Figures 2B and 2C), and retainer valve or latch operable to selectively retain the respective wiper in the launcher. A lower branch having the valve 9b may connect the manifold trunk directly to the casing adapter 7, thereby bypassing the launchers 8u,b. A mid branch having the valve 9m may connect the trunk between the launchers 8u,b for deploying the a bottom wiper 125b. An upper branch having the valve 9u may connect the trunk above an upper launcher 8u for deploying a top wiper 125u.
The PCA lp may include a blow out preventer (BOP) 20, a rotating control device (RCD) 22, and a variable choke valve 23. A housing of the BOP 20 may be connected to the wellhead 21, such as by a flanged connection. The BOP
housing may also be connected to a housing of the RCD 22, such as by a flanged connection. The RCD 22 may include a stripper seal and the housing.
The stripper seal may be supported for rotation relative to the housing by bearings. The stripper seal-housing interface may be isolated by seals. The stripper seal may form an interference fit with an outer surface of the casing adapter 7 and be directional for augmentation by wellbore pressure.
Alternatively, the stripper seal may be an inflatable bladder or a lubricated packer assembly. Alternatively, a packer or BOP may be used instead of the RCD.
The choke 23 may be connected to an outlet port 210 (Figure 3B) of the wellhead 21. The choke 23 may be fortified to operate in an environment where return fluid may include solids, such as cuttings. The choke 23 may include a hydraulic actuator operated by a programmable logic controller (PLC) 25 via a hydraulic power unit (HPU) (not shown) to maintain backpressure (Figure 3A) in the wellhead 21. Alternatively, the choke actuator may be electrical or pneumatic.
The outer casing string 101 may extend to a depth adjacent a bottom of an upper formation 104u and the inner casing string 105 may extend into a portion of the wellbore 100 traversing a lower formation 104b. The upper formation 104u may be non-productive and the lower formation 104b may be a hydrocarbon-bearing reservoir. Alternatively, the lower formation 104b may be environmentally sensitive, such as an aquifer, or unstable. The inner casing string 105 may include a plurality of casing joints 106 connected together, such as by threaded connections, one or more centralizers 107 spaced along the casing joints at regular intervals, a float collar 108, a guide shoe 109, and a casing hanger 24. Each casing joint 106 may be made from a metal or alloy, such as steel or stainless steel. The centralizers 107 may be fixed or sprung.
The centralizers 107 may engage an inner surface of the outer casing 101 and/or wellbore 100. The centralizers 107 may operate to center the inner casing 105 in the wellbore 100.
The shoe 109 may be disposed at the lower end of the casing string 105 and have a bore formed therethrough. The shoe 109 may be convex for guiding the casing string 105 toward the center of the wellbore 100. The shoe 109 may minimize problems associated with hitting rock ledges or washouts in the wellbore 100 as the casing string 105 is lowered into the wellbore. An outer portion of the shoe 109 may be made from the casing material, discussed above.
An inner portion of the shoe 109 may be made of a drillable material, such as cement, cast iron, non-ferrous metal or alloy, or polymer, so that the inner portion may be drilled through if the wellbore 100 is to be further drilled. The float collar 108 may include a check valve for selectively sealing the shoe bore. The check valve may be operable to allow fluid flow from the casing bore into the wellbore 100 and prevent reverse flow from the wellbore into the casing bore.
The fluid system if may include one or pumps 30a,m,c, a drilling fluid reservoir, such as a pit 31 or tank, a degassing spool (not shown, see degassing spool 230 in Figure 7A), a solids separator, such as a shale shaker 33, one or more flow meters 34a,m,c,r and one or more pressure sensors 35a,m,c,r. Each pressure sensor 35a,m,c,r may be in data communication with the PLC 25. The pressure sensor 35r may be connected between the choke 23 and the outlet port 210 and may be operable to monitor wellhead pressure. The pressure sensor 35a may be connected between an annulus pump 30a and an inlet port 21i of the wellhead 21 and may be operable to monitor a discharge pressure of the annulus pump. The pressure sensor 35m may be connected between a mud pump 30m and a standpipe (not shown) connected to an inlet of the top drive 12 and may be operable to monitor standpipe pressure. The pressure sensor 35c may be connected between a cement pump 30c and the cementing manifold 18 and may be operable to monitor manifold pressure.
The returns 34r and cement 34c flow meters may each be a mass flow meter, such as a Coriolis flow meter, and may each be in data communication with the PLC 25. The cement flow meter 35c may be connected between the cement pump 30c and the cementing manifold 18 and may be operable to monitor a flow rate of the cement pump. The returns flow meter 34r may be connected between the choke 23 and the shale shaker 33 and may be operable to monitor a flow rate of return fluid. The supply 34m and annulus 34a flow meters may each be a volumetric flow meter, such as a Venturi flow meter and may each be in data communication with the PLC 25. The annulus flow meter 34a may be connected between the annulus pump 30a and the inlet port 21i and may be operable to monitor a flow rate of the annulus pump. The PLC 25 may receive a density measurement of indicator fluid 130i (Figure 3E) from an indicator fluid blender (not shown) to determine a mass flow rate of the indicator fluid from the volumetric measurement of the supply flow meter 34d. The supply flow meter 35m may be connected between a mud pump 30m and the standpipe and may be operable to monitor a flow rate of the mud pump. The PLC 25 may receive a density measurement of drilling fluid 130m (Figure 2A) from a mud blender (not shown) to determine a mass flow rate of the drilling fluid from the volumetric measurement of the supply flow meter 34d.
Alternatively, a stroke counter (not shown) may be used to monitor a flow rate of each pump 30a,m,c instead of the respective flow meters.
Alternatively, the annulus 34a and/or supply 34m flow meters may be mass flow meters.
Alternatively, the cement flow meter 34c may be a volumetric flow meter.
In the drilling mode (not shown, see Figure 7A), such as for extending the wellbore 100 from a shoe of casing 101 to a depth for deploying the casing 105, the mud pump 30m may pump the drilling fluid 130m from the pit 31, through the standpipe and a Kelly hose to the top drive 12. The drilling fluid 130m may include a base liquid. The base liquid may be refined oil, water, brine, or a water/oil emulsion. The drilling fluid 130m may further include solids dissolved or suspended in the base liquid, such as organophilic clay, lignite, and/or asphalt, thereby forming a mud. Alternatively, the drilling fluid 130m may further include a gas, such as diatomic nitrogen mixed with the base liquid, thereby forming a two-phase mixture. If the drilling fluid 130m is two-phase, the drilling system 1 may further include a nitrogen production unit (not shown) operable to produce commercially pure nitrogen from air.
The drilling fluid 130m may flow from the standpipe and into a drill string (not shown, see drill string 207 in Figures 7A-7C) via the top drive 12. The drilling fluid 130m may be pumped down through the drill string and exit a drill bit, where the fluid may circulate the cuttings away from the bit and return the cuttings up an annulus formed between an inner surface of the casing 101 or wellbore 100 and an outer surface of the drill string. The returns (drilling fluid plus cuttings) may flow up the annulus to the wellhead 21 and be diverted by the RCD 22 into the wellhead outlet 210. The returns may continue through the choke 23 and the flow meter 34r. The returns may then flow into the shale shaker 33 and be processed thereby to remove the cuttings, thereby completing a cycle. As the drilling fluid 130m and returns circulate, the drill string may be rotated by the top drive 12 and lowered by the traveling block 13, thereby extending the wellbore 100 into the lower formation 104b.
During drilling, the PLC 25 may perform a mass balance between the drilling fluid 130m and the returns to monitor for formation fluid entering the annulus or drilling fluid entering the formation using the flow meters 34m,r.
The PLC 25 may then compare the measurements for detecting formation fluid ingress or drilling fluid egress may take remedial action by adjusting the choke 23 (some ingress may be tolerated for underbalanced drilling).
Once the wellbore 100 has been drilled to a depth sufficient to accommodate the outer casing 105, the drill string may be retrieved to surface 104s. The outer casing 105 may be assembled and deployed into the wellbore 100. Alternatively, the casing 105 may be drilled into the wellbore instead of using the drill string. Once the casing 105 has been deployed into the wellbore 100 and the casing hanger 24 landed into the wellhead 21, the casing adapter 7 may be engaged with the casing hanger 24. The cementing head 10 may be connected to the casing adapter and the top drive 12. A cement mixer, such as a recirculating mixer 36, cement pump 30c, and cementing conduit may be connected to the manifold trunk.
Figures 2A-2G illustrate a casing cementing operation performed using the drilling system 1. A conditioning fluid 130w may be circulated by the cement pump 30c through the lower manifold valve 9b. The conditioner 130w may flush the drilling fluid 130m from the wellbore 100, wash cuttings and/or mud cake from the wellbore, and/or adjust pH in the wellbore for pumping cement slurry 130c.
The lower manifold valve 9b may then be closed. The bottom wiper 125b may be released from the lower launcher 8b and the mid manifold valve 9m may be opened. The cement slurry 130c may be pumped from the mixer 36 into the mid manifold valve 9m by the cement pump 30c, thereby propelling the bottom wiper 125b into the a bore of the casing 105. As the bottom wiper 125b is driven through the casing bore, the bottom wiper may displace the conditioner 130w from the casing bore into an annulus 110 formed between an outer surface of the casing 105 and an inner surface of the wellbore 100 (or the existing casing 101).
The bottom wiper 125b may also protect the cement slurry 130c from dilution by the conditioner 130w.
Once the desired quantity of cement slurry 130c has been pumped, the mid manifold valve 9b may be closed, the top wiper 125u may be released from the upper launcher 8u, and the upper manifold valve 9u may be opened.
Displacement (aka chase) fluid 130d may be pumped from the mud pit 31 into the upper manifold valve 9u by the cement pump 30c, thereby propelling the top wiper 130u into the casing bore. The displacement fluid 130d may have a density less or substantially less than the cement slurry 130c so that the casing 105 is in compression during curing of the cement slurry. The displacement fluid 130d may be drilling fluid.
Pumping of the displacement fluid 130d by the cement pump 30c may continue until residual cement in the cement discharge conduit has been purged.
Pumping of the displacement fluid 130d may then be transferred to the mud pump 30m by closing the upper manifold valve 9u and opening the Kelly valve 11. As the top wiper 125u is driven through the casing bore, the bottom wiper 125b may land onto the float collar 108. Continued pumping of the displacement fluid 130d may exert pressure on the bottom wiper 125b until a diaphragm thereof ruptures. Rupture of the diaphragm may open a flow passage through the bottom wiper 125b and the cement slurry 130c may flow through the passage and the float valve and into the annulus 110. Pumping of the displacement fluid 130d may continue until the top wiper 130u lands onto the bottom wiper 130b.
Landing of the top wiper 130u may increase pressure in the casing bore and be detected by the PLC 25 monitoring the standpipe pressure. Once landing has been detected, pumping of the displacement fluid 130d may be halted and the pressure in the casing bore may be bled. The float valve may close, thereby preventing the cement slurry 130c from flowing back into the casing bore above the float collar 108 (aka U-tubing).
Alternatively, instead of landing the casing hanger 24 into the wellhead 21 before the cementing operation, the top drive 12 may suspend the casing 105 so that the hanger is above the wellhead so that the casing may be reciprocated by the drawworks 16 and/or rotated by the top drive during the cementing operation.
In this alternative, the manifold 18 may include flexible conduit to accommodate reciprocation and/or the cementing head 10 may include one or more cementing swivels to accommodate rotation. Alternatively, spacer fluid (not shown) may be pumped between the cement slurry 130c and the bottom wiper 125b.
Figure 3A illustrates operation of the PLC 25 during the casing cementing operation. Figure 3B illustrates monitoring of the cementing operation. Figure 3C illustrates detection of formation influx during cementing. Figure 3D
illustrates detection of cement loss during cementing.
The PLC 25 may be programmed to operate the choke 23 so that a target bottomhole pressure (BHP) is maintained in the annulus 110 during the cementing operation. The target BHP may be selected to be within a window defined as greater than or equal to a minimum threshold pressure, such as pore pressure, of the lower formation 104b and less than or equal to a maximum threshold pressure, such as fracture pressure, of the lower formation, such as an average of the pore and fracture BHPs. Alternatively, the minimum threshold may be stability pressure and/or the maximum threshold may be leakoff pressure. Alternatively, threshold pressure gradients may be used instead of pressures and the gradients may be at other depths along the lower formation 104b besides total depth, such as the depth of the maximum pore gradient and the depth of the minimum fracture gradient. Alternatively, the PLC 25 may be free to vary the BHP within the window during the cementing operation.
During the cementing operation, the PLC 25 may execute a real time simulation of the cementing operation in order to predict the actual BHP from measured data, such as manifold pressure from sensor 35c, cement pump flow rate from flow meter 34c, wellhead pressure from sensor 35r, and returns flow rate from the flow meter 34r. The PLC may then compare the predicted BHP to the target BHP and adjust the choke accordingly. At the initial stages of the cementing operation (Figures 2A-2C), the annulus 110 may be filled with the conditioner 130w having an equivalent circulation density (ECD) Wd (static density plus dynamic friction drag). The conditioner ECD Wd may be less or substantially less than an ECD Cd of the cement 130c. The conditioner ECD Wd may also be insufficient to maintain the target BHP without the addition of backpressure from the choke 23.
A static density Cs of the cement 130c may be selected to exert a BHP
corresponding to the target BHP at the conclusion of the cementing operation.
As cement flows into the annulus 110 (Figure 2E), the actual BHP may begin to be influenced by the cement ECD Cd (aka dual gradient effect). The PLC 25 may anticipate the dual gradient effect in the predicted BHP and reduce the backpressure accordingly by relaxing the choke 23. The PLC 25 may continue to relax the choke 23 as a level CL of cement in the annulus 110 rises and the influence of the cement ECD Cd on the BHP increases to maintain parity of the actual/predicted BHP with the target BHP.
The PLC 25 may also perform a mass balance during the cementing operation. Although Figures 3B-3D illustrate the PLC 25 performing the mass balance during displacement of the cement slurry 130c into the annulus 110, the PLC may also perform the mass balance during the rest of the cementing operation, such as during conditioning and propulsion of the bottom wiper 125b by pumping the cement slurry. As the propellant (displacement fluid 130d shown) is being pumped into the wellbore 100 by the mud pump 30m (or cement pump 30c) and the return fluid (conditioner 130w shown) is being received by the wellhead outlet 210, the PLC 25 may compare the propellant mass flow rate to the return fluid flow rate (i.e., propellant rate minus return fluid rate) using the flow meters 34m,r (or 34c,r).
The PLC 25 may use the mass balance to monitor for formation fluid 130f entering the annulus 110 (Figure 3C) or cement slurry 130c (or return fluid) entering the formation 104b (Figure 3D). Upon detection of either event, the PLC
25 may take remedial action, such as tightening the choke 23 in response to detection of formation fluid 130f entering the annulus 110 and relaxing the choke in response to cement 130c entering the formation 104b. The PLC 25 may also alert an operator to reduce a flow rate of the respective pump and reduce the target BHP in response to detection of fluid egress into the formation. The PLC
25 may also alert the operator to increase a flow rate of the respective pump and increase the target BHP in response to detection of fluid ingress to the annulus.
Alternatively, the PLC 25 may be in communication with one or more of the pumps and the PLC may take remedial action autonomously or semi-autonomously. The PLC 25 may also divert the return fluid flow into the degassing spool as part of the remedial action.
The PLC 25 may also use the flow meters 34r,c,m to calculate the cement level CL in the annulus. The PLC 25 may account for cement slurry egress in the cement level calculation. The PLC 25 may also use the flow meters 34r,c,m calculate other events during the cementing operation, such as seating of the wipers 125u,b and/or completion of conditioner circulation (annulus 110 filled with conditioner 130w).
Figure 3E illustrates monitoring of curing of the cement slurry 130c and application of a beneficial amount of backpressure on the annulus 110. Figure 3F illustrates detection of formation influx during curing. Figure 3G
illustrates detection of cement loss during curing. Once the casing bore has been bled, the annulus pump 30a may be operated to pump indicator fluid 130i from the pit 31 into the inlet port 21i. The indicator fluid 130i may flow radially across the wellhead 21 and exit the wellhead 21 at the outlet port 21o. The indicator fluid path may be in fluid communication with the annulus 110, thereby forming a tee having the annulus as a stagnant branch. The indicator fluid 1301 may continue through the choke 23, returns flow meter 34r, and shaker 33 and back to the mud pit 31. Circulation of the indicator fluid 1301 may be maintained during the curing period. As the indicator fluid 130i is being circulated, the PLC 25 may perform a mass balance between entry and exit of the indicator fluid into/from the wellhead 21 to monitor for formation fluid 130f entering the annulus 110 (Figure 3F) or cement slurry 130c entering the formation 104b (Figure 3G) using the flow meters 34a,r. The PLC 25 may tighten the choke 23 in response to detection of formation fluid 130f entering the annulus 110 and relax the choke in response to cement slurry 130c entering the formation 104b. The PLC 25 may also divert the return fluid flow into the degassing spool in response to detection of either event.
The PLC 25 may also be programmed to discern between formation fluid 130f continuously flowing into the annulus 110 or cement 130c continuously flowing into the formation 104b and opening or closing of micro-fractures in the formation during cementing and/or curing (aka ballooning) by calculating and monitoring a rate of change of the mass balance with respect to time (delta balance) and comparing the delta balance to a predetermined threshold.
The PLC 25 may keep a cumulative record during the cementing and curing operation of any fluid ingress/egress events, discussed above, and the PLC may make an evaluation as to the acceptability of the cured cement bond.
The PLC 25 may also determine and include the final cement level CL in the evaluation. Should the PLC 25 determine that the cured cement is unacceptable, the PLC may make recommendations for remedial action, such as a cement bond/evaluation log and/or a secondary cementing operation.
Figures 4A and 4B illustrates a portion of the drilling system 1 in a liner cementing mode, according to another embodiment of the present invention. A
wellbore 150 may include a vertical portion and a deviated, such as horizontal, portion instead of the vertical wellbore 100. The wellbore 150 may be terrestrial or subsea. A cementing head 50 may be used instead of the cementing head 10 and a workstring 57 may be used instead of the casing adapter 7. The workstring 57 may include joints of tubulars, such as drill pipe 57p, connected together, such as by threaded connections, a seal head 57h, and a setting tool 57s. The setting tool 57s may connect a liner string 155 to the workstring 57.
The workstring 57 may also be connected to the cementing head 50. The cementing head 50 may also be connected to the Kelly valve 11.
The cementing head 50 may include an actuator swivel 51a, a cementing swivel 51c, and a launcher 58. Each swivel 51a,c may include a housing torsionally connected to the derrick 2, such as by bars, wire rope, or a bracket (not shown). Each torsional connection may accommodate longitudinal movement of the respective swivel 51a,c relative to the derrick 2. Each swivel 51a,c may further include a mandrel and bearings for supporting the housing from the mandrel while accommodating relative rotation therebetween. The cementing swivel 51c may further include an inlet formed through a wall of the housing and in fluid communication with a port formed through the mandrel and a seal assembly for isolating the inlet-port communication. The cementing swivel inlet may be connected to the cement pump 30c via shutoff valve 59. The shutoff valve 59 may be automated and have a hydraulic actuator (not shown) operable by the PLC 25 via fluid communication with the HPU. Alternatively, the shutoff valve actuator may be pneumatic or electric. The cementing mandrel port may provide fluid communication between a bore of the cementing head 50 and the housing inlet. Each seal assembly may include one or more stacks of V-shaped seal rings, such as opposing stacks, disposed between the mandrel and the housing and straddling the inlet-port interface. Alternatively, the seal assembly may include rotary seals, such as mechanical face seals.
The actuator swivel 51a may be hydraulic and may include a housing inlet formed through a wall of the housing and in fluid communication with a passage formed through the mandrel, and a seal assembly for isolating the inlet-passage communication. The passage may extend to an outlet of the mandrel for connection to a hydraulic conduit for operating a hydraulic actuator 58a of the cementing head 10. The actuator swivel 51a may be in fluid communication with the HPU. Alternatively, the actuator swivel and cementing head actuator may be pneumatic or electric. The Kelly valve 11 may also be automated and include a hydraulic actuator (not shown) operable by the PLC 25 via fluid communication with the HPU. The cementing head 50 may further include an additional actuator swivel (not shown) for operation of the Kelly valve 11 or the top drive 12 may include the additional actuator swivel. Alternatively, the Kelly valve actuator may be electric or pneumatic.
The launcher 58 may include a housing 58h, a diverter 58d, a canister 58c, a latch 58r, and the actuator 58a. The housing 58h may be tubular and may have a bore therethrough and a coupling formed at each longitudinal end thereof, such as threaded couplings. Alternatively, the upper housing coupling may be a flange. To facilitate assembly, the housing 58h may include two or more sections (three shown) connected together, such as by a threaded connection. The housing 58h may also serve as the cementing swivel housing (shown) or the launcher and cementing swivel 51c may have separate housings (not shown).
The housing 58h may further have a landing shoulder 58s formed in an inner surface thereof. The canister 58c and diverter 58d may each be disposed in the housing bore. The diverter 58d may be connected to the housing 58h, such as by a threaded connection. The canister 58c may be longitudinally movable relative to the housing 58h. The canister 58c may be tubular and have ribs formed along and around an outer surface thereof. Bypass passages may be formed between the ribs. The canister 58c may further have a landing shoulder formed in a lower end thereof corresponding to the housing landing shoulder 58s.
The diverter 58d may be operable to deflect cement slurry 130c or displacement fluid 130d away from a bore of the canister and toward the bypass passages. A
cementing plug, such as dart 75, may be disposed in the canister bore for selective release and pumping downhole to activate a cementing plug, such as wiper 175, releasably connected to the setting tool 57s.
The latch 58r may include a body, a plunger, and a shaft. The body may be connected to a lug formed in an outer surface of the launcher housing 58h, such as by a threaded connection. The plunger may be longitudinally movable relative to the body and radially movable relative to the housing 58h between a capture position and a release position. The plunger may be moved between the positions by interaction, such as a jackscrew, with the shaft. The shaft may be longitudinally connected to and rotatable relative to the body. The actuator 58a may be a hydraulic motor operable to rotate the shaft relative to the body.
Alternatively, the actuator may be linear, such as a piston and cylinder.
Alternatively, the actuator may be electric or pneumatic. Alternatively, the actuator may be manual, such as a handwheel.
In operation, the PLC 25 may release the dart 75 by operating the HPU to supply hydraulic fluid to the actuator 58a via the actuator swivel 51a. The actuator 58a may then move the plunger to the release position (not shown).
The canister 58c and dart 75 may then move downward relative to the housing 58h until the landing shoulders 58s engage. Engagement of the landing shoulders 58s may close the canister bypass passages, thereby forcing displacement fluid 130d to flow into the canister bore. The displacement fluid 130d may then propel the dart 75 from the canister bore into a lower bore of the housing 58h and onward through the drill pipe 57p to the wiper 175.
Additionally, the cementing head 50 may further include a launch sensor (not shown). The launch sensor may be in data communication with the PLC 25 via an additional swivel (not shown). The dart may include a magnetic or radio frequency identification tag and the launch sensor may include a receiver or transceiver for interacting with the dart tag, thereby detecting launch of the dart.
The launch sensor may then report launch detection to the PLC 25.
Alternatively, the launcher may include a main body having a main bore and a parallel side bore, with both bores being machined integral to the main body. The dart 75 may be loaded into the main bore, and a dart releaser valve may be provided below the dart to maintain it in the capture position. The dart releaser valve may be side-mounted externally and extend through the main body. A port in the dart releaser valve may provide fluid communication between the main bore and the side bore. When pumping cement slurry 130c, the dart 75 may be maintained in the main bore with the dart releaser valve closed. The slurry 130c may flow through the side bore and into the main bore below the dart via the fluid communication port in the dart releaser valve. To release the dart 75, the dart releaser valve may be turned, such as by ninety degrees, thereby closing the side bore and opening the main bore through the dart releaser valve.
The displacement fluid 130d may then enter the main bore behind the dart, causing it to drop downhole.
To facilitate removal of the drill string and deployment of the liner string 155, the outer casing 101 may include an isolation valve 140. The isolation valve 140 may include a tubular housing, a flow tube (not shown), and a closure member, such as a flapper 140f. Alternatively, the closure member may be a ball (not shown) instead of the flapper. To facilitate manufacturing and assembly, the housing may include one or more sections connected together, such as fastened with threaded connections and/or fasteners. The housing may have a longitudinal bore formed therethrough for passage of a tubular string. The flow tube may be disposed within the housing. The flow tube may be longitudinally movable relative to the housing. A piston (not shown) may be formed in or fastened to an outer surface of the flow tube. The flow tube may be longitudinally movable by the piston between the open position and the closed position. In the closed position, the flow tube may be clear from the flapper 140f, thereby allowing the flapper to close. In the open position, the flow tube may engage the flapper 140f, push the flapper to the open position, and engage a seat formed in or disposed in the housing. Engagement of the flow tube with the seat may form a chamber between the flow tube and the housing, thereby protecting the flapper 140f and the flapper seat. The flapper 140f may be pivoted to the housing, such as by a fastener 140p. A biasing member, such as a torsion spring (not shown) may engage the flapper 140f and the housing and be disposed about the fastener 140p to bias the flapper toward the closed position. In the closed position, the flapper 140f may fluidly isolate an upper portion of the valve (and an upper portion of the wellbore 150) from a lower portion of the valve (and the formation 104b).
The valve 140 may be in communication with the PLC 25 via a control line 142. The control line 142 may include hydraulic conduits providing fluid communication between the HPU and the flow tube piston for opening and closing the valve 140. The control line 142 may further include a data conduit for providing data communication between the PLC 25 and the valve 140. The control line data conduit may be electrical or optical. The valve 140 may further include a cablehead 141h for receiving the control line cable.
The valve 140 may further include one or more sensors, such as an upper pressure sensor 141u, a lower pressure sensor 141b, and a position sensor 141p. The upper pressure sensor 141u may be in fluid communication with the housing bore above the flapper 140f and the lower pressure sensor 141b may be in fluid communication with the housing bore below the flapper. Lead wires may provide data communication between the control line 142 and the sensors 141u,b,p. The position sensor 141p may be able to detect when the flow tube is in the open position, the closed position, or at any position between the open and closed positions so that the PLC 25 may monitor full or partial opening of the valve 140. The sensors may be powered by the data conduit of the control line 142 or the valve 140 may include a battery pack.
The liner string 155 may include a plurality of casing joints 106 connected to each other, such as by threaded connections, one or more centralizers 107 spaced along the liner string at regular intervals, a landing collar 158, a float shoe 159, a liner hanger 160, one or more cement sensors 161a-f, and a wireless data coupling 162i. The shoe 159 may be disposed at the lower end of the joints 106 and have a bore formed therethrough. The shoe 159 may be convex for guiding the liner string 155 toward the center of the wellbore 150. An outer portion of the shoe 159 may be made from the casing material, discussed above. An inner portion of the shoe 159 may be made of the drillable material, discussed above.
The shoe 159 may include the check valve, discussed above.
The liner hanger 160 may include an anchor 160a and a packoff 160p.
The anchor 160a may be operable to engage the casing 101 and longitudinally support the liner string 155 from the casing 101. The anchor 160a may include slips and a cone. The anchor 160a may accommodate relative rotation between the liner string 155 and the casing 101, such as by including a bearing (not shown). The packoff 160p may be operable to radially expand into engagement with an inner surface of the casing 101, thereby isolating the liner-casing interface. The setting tool 57s may be operable to set the anchor and packoff independently. The setting tool 57s may include a seat for receiving a blocking member, such as a ball (not shown). The cementing head 50 may further include an additional launcher (not shown) for deploying the ball.
Once landed, a setting piston (not shown) of the setting tool 57s may be operated to set the anchor 160a by increasing fluid pressure in the workstring against the seated ball. Setting of the anchor 160a may be confirmed by pulling the workstring 57. Additional pressure may then be exerted to longitudinally release the setting tool 57s from the liner string 155. Alternatively, the setting tool 57s may be released by rotation of the workstring 57. Release of the setting tool 57s may be confirmed by pulling the workstring 57. Further additional pressure may be exerted to release the ball from the seat. After cementing, the packoff 160p may be set by articulation of the workstring 57. Alternatively, the anchor 160a may also be set by articulation of the workstring 57.
Figure 4C illustrates operation of the cement sensors 161a-f. The cement sensors 161a-f may each be capacitance sensors and may be spaced along the joints 106 and connected by a data cable 163. The data cable 163 may be electrical or optical and the cement sensors 161a-f may be powered via the data cable 163 or have batteries. The data cable may extend along an outer surface of the casing joints 106 and fastened thereto, be disposed in a groove formed in an outer surface of the casing joints, or be disposed in segments within a wall of the casing joints and connected by couplings disposed in an end of each casing joint. The cement sensors 161a-f may be in fluid communication with an annulus 111 formed between liner string 155 and the wellbore 150. The data cable 163 may be connected to the data coupling 1621. The data coupling 162i may be in communication with a corresponding data coupling 162o of the casing string 101.
The data couplings 162i,o may be inductive, capacitive, radio frequency, or acoustic couplings and may provide data communication without contact and may accommodate misalignment. The casing coupling 1620 may be in data communication with the control line 142 via a lead wire. The control line data cable and couplings 162i,o may provide data communication between the cement sensors 161a-f and a sampling head 164. The sampling head 164 may be located at surface 104s and be in data communication with the PLC 25.
The cement sensors 161a-f may each include a semi-rigid coaxial cable 165 having a short section of inner conductor 1651 protruding at its tip.
Since the exposed tip 1651 may be an effective radiator in high-permittivity liquids, it may be shielded, such as by a serrated castle nut 165n. The serrated castle nut 165n may provide a surrounding ground plane while allowing free-flow of cement slurry 130c through the tip 1651. Additionally, each cement sensor 161a-f may be part of a cement sensor assembly further including a pressure and/or temperature sensor. Alternatively, each cement sensor 161a-f may be a pressure and/or temperature sensor instead of a capacitance sensor.
The sampling head 164 may include a pulse generator 164g and a pulse detector 164d. The pulse generator 164g may supply a step function incident pulse 164p to the data cable 163. Each sensor 161a-f may reflect a return pulse 164r back to the pulse detector 164d. Alternatively, the sampling head 164 may be located in the liner hanger 160 or the outer casing string 101 as a part thereof.
Figures 5A-5F illustrate a liner cementing operation performed using the drilling system 1. As discussed above for the casing cementing operation, conditioner 130w may be circulated (not shown) by the cement pump 30c through the valve 59 or by the mud pump 30m via the top drive 12 to prepare for pumping of the cement slurry 130c. The anchor 160a may then be set and the setting tool 57s released from the liner 155, as discussed above. The workstring 57 and liner 155 may then be rotated 180 from surface by the top drive 12 and rotation may continue during the cementing operation. Cement slurry 130c may be pumped from the mixer 36 into the cementing swivel 50c via the valve 59 by the cement pump 30c. The cement slurry 130c may flow into the launcher 58 and be diverted past the dart 75 via the diverter 58d and bypass passages.
Once the desired quantity of cement slurry 130c has been pumped, the cementing dart 75 may be released from the launcher 58 by the PLC 25 operating the actuator 58a. Displacement fluid 130d may be pumped into the cementing swivel 51c via the valve 59 by the cement pump 30c. The displacement fluid 130d may flow into the launcher 58 and be forced behind the dart 75 by closing of the bypass passages, thereby propelling the dart into the workstring bore. Pumping of the displacement fluid 130d by the cement pump 30c may continue until residual cement in the cement discharge conduit has been purged. Pumping of the displacement fluid 130d may then be transferred to the mud pump 30m by closing the valve 59 and opening the Kelly valve 11. The dart 75 may be driven through the workstring bore by the displacement fluid 130d until the dart lands onto the wiper 175, thereby closing a bore of the wiper.
Continued pumping of the displacement fluid 130d may exert pressure on the seated dart 75 until the wiper 175 is released from the setting tool 57s.
Once released, the combined dart and wiper 75,175 may be driven through the liner bore by the displacement fluid 130d, thereby driving cement slurry 130c through the float shoe 159 and into the annulus 111. Pumping of the displacement fluid 130d may continue until the combined dart and wiper 75,175 land on the collar 158. Landing of the combined dart and wiper 75,175 may increase pressure in the liner 155 and workstring bore and be detected by the PLC 25 monitoring the standpipe pressure. Once landing has been detected, pumping of the displacement fluid 130d and rotation 180 of the liner 155 may be halted and the packoff 160p set. The setting tool 57s may be raised from the liner hanger 160 and displacement fluid 130d circulated to wash away excess cement slurry. Pressure in the workstring 57 and liner bore may be bled. The float shoe 159 may close, thereby preventing the cement slurry 130c from flowing back into the liner bore.
Additionally, the cementing head 50 may further include a bottom dart and a bottom wiper may also be connected to the setting tool. The bottom dart may be launched before pumping of the cement 130c.
Figure 6 illustrates operation of the PLC 25 during the liner cementing operation. The PLC 25 may be programmed to operate the choke 23 so that the target bottomhole pressure (BHP) is maintained in the annulus 111 during the cementing operation and the PLC 25 may execute a real time simulation of the cementing operation in order to predict the actual BHP from measured data (as discussed above for the casing cementing operation). The PLC 25 may then compare the predicted BHP to the target BHP and adjust the choke 23 accordingly. At the initial stages of the cementing operation (Figures 5A and 5B), the annulus 111 may be filled with only the conditioner 130w having the ECD
The conditioner 130w may have an ECD Wd less or substantially less than an ECD Cd of the cement 130c. The conditioner ECD Wd may also be insufficient to maintain the target BHP without the addition of backpressure from the choke 23.
Due to the deviated portion of the wellbore 150, a static density Cs of the cement 130c corresponding to the target BHP at the conclusion of the cementing operation may not be available as the increased ECD would likely exert a BHP
exceeding the target pressure. As cement 130c flows into the annulus 111 (Figures 5C and 5D), the actual BHP may begin to be influenced by the cement ECD Cd.
The PLC 25 may anticipate the dual gradient effect in the predicted BHP
and reduce the backpressure accordingly by relaxing the choke 23. The PLC 25 may continue to relax the choke as a level of cement 130c in the annulus 111 rises and the influence of the cement ECD Cd on the BHP increases to maintain parity of the actual/predicted BHP with the target BHP. The PLC 25 may be in data communication with the mud pump 30m. Once the cement level nears the liner hanger 160, the PLC 25 may reduce a flow rate of displacement fluid 130d pumped by the mud pump 30m and tighten the choke 23 to increase backpressure while reducing the cement ECD Cd so that when the cement level reaches the liner hanger 160, the choke 23 may be closed to seal the increased backpressure in the annulus 111, thereby maintaining the target BHP. The packoff 160p may then be set while the sealed backpressure is exerted on the annulus 111. Additionally, the annulus pump 30a may be operated to aid in increasing the backpressure while the mud pump 30m rate is being reduced.
During the cementing operation, the PLC 25 may monitor the cement sensors 161a-f via sampling head 164 to track the cement level in the annulus 111. The PLC 25 may also perform the mass balance during the cementing operation as discussed above for the casing cementing operation. Since the packoff 160p is set during curing, the PLC 25 may instead rely on the cement sensors 161a-f for monitoring the curing operation for formation fluid 130f entering the annulus 111 or cement slurry 130c entering the formation 104b.
From data, such as complex permittivity, obtained from the cement sensors 161a-f during the curing operation and over a broadband frequency range, such as between ten kilohertz and ten gigahertz, the PLC 25 may perform a time domain reflectometry dielectric spectroscopy (TDRDS) analysis, such as by Fourier transform, during and/or after the curing operation.
From the analysis, the PLC 25 may determine one or more parameters of the curing operation, such as disappearance of water into hydration (aka free water relaxation, appearing near ten gigahertz), water attaching to developing cement microstructure (aka bound water relaxation, appearing near one hundred megahertz), local ion migration in the developing cement microstructure (aka low relaxation, appearing near one megahertz), and long range ion drift through the developing cement microstructure (aka ion conductivity, appearing below one megahertz). The PLC 25 may compare each parameter to a known benchmark for evaluating the integrity of the cured cement bond. Additionally, the PLC
may plot the parameters against cure time and graphically display the parameters for manual evaluation. The PLC 25 may superimpose plots for a particular parameter at the various depths of the sensors 161a-f with the benchmark.
Based upon monitoring and control of the cementing operation and monitoring and analysis of the curing operation, the PLC 25 may determine acceptability of the cured cement bond. Should the PLC 25 determine that the cured cement is unacceptable, the PLC may make recommendations for remedial action, such as a cement bond/evaluation log and/or a secondary cementing operation. Further, the PLC 25 may pinpoint depths of defects in the annulus 111 based on the location of the particular sensor that detected the defect. Pinpointing of the defects may facilitate the remedial action.
Alternatively, the inner casing string 105 may have the cement sensors 161a-f and the data cable 163 disposed therealong or at least along a portion thereof corresponding to the exposed portion of the wellbore 100.
Figures 7A-C illustrates an offshore drilling system 201 in a drilling mode, according to another embodiment of the present invention. The drilling system 201 may include a mobile offshore drilling unit (MODU) 201m, such as a semi-submersible, the drilling rig 1r, a fluid handling system 201f, a fluid transport system 201t, and a pressure control assembly (PCA) 201p. Alternatively, a fixed offshore drilling unit or a non-mobile floating offshore drilling unit may be used instead of the MODU 1m. The MODU 1m may carry the drilling rig 1r and the fluid handling system 201f aboard and may include a moon pool, through which drilling operations are conducted. The semi-submersible MODU 1m may include a lower barge hull which floats below a surface (aka waterline) 204w of sea and is, therefore, less subject to surface wave action. Stability columns (only one shown) may be mounted on the lower barge hull for supporting an upper hull above the waterline. The upper hull may have one or more decks for carrying the drilling rig 1r and fluid handling system 201f. The MODU 1m may further have a dynamic positioning system (DPS) (not shown) or be moored for maintaining the moon pool in position over a subsea wellhead 221.
The drilling rig 1r may further include a drill string compensator (not shown) to account for heave of the MODU lm. The drill string compensator may be disposed between the traveling block 13 and the top drive 12 (aka hook mounted) or between the crown block 15 and the derrick 2 (aka top mounted).
The drill string 207 may include a bottomhole assembly (BHA) 207b and joints of drill pipe 57p connected together, such as by threaded couplings. The BHA 207h may be connected to the drill pipe 57p, such as by a threaded connection, and include a drill bit 207b and one or more drill collars 207c connected thereto, such as by a threaded connection. The drill bit 207b may be rotated 180 by the top drive 12 via the drill pipe 57p and/or the BHA 207h may further include a drilling motor (not shown) for rotating the drill bit. The BHA 207h may further include an instrumentation sub (not shown), such as a measurement while drilling (MWD) and/or a logging while drilling (LWD) sub.
The PCA 201p may be connected to a wellhead 50 located adjacent a floor 204f of the sea 204. A conductor string 202p,h may be driven into the seafloor 204f. The conductor string 202p,h may include a housing 202h and joints of conductor pipe 202p connected together, such as by threaded connections. Once the conductor string 202p,h has been set, a subsea wellbore 200 may be drilled into the seafloor 204f and an outer casing string 203 may be deployed into the wellbore 200. The outer casing string 203 may include a wellhead housing and joints of casing connected together, such as by threaded connections. The wellhead housing may land in the conductor housing during deployment of the outer casing string 203. The outer casing string 203 may be cemented 102 into the wellbore 200. The outer casing string 203 may extend to a depth adjacent a bottom of the upper formation 104u. Although shown as vertical, the wellbore 200 may include a vertical portion and a deviated, such as horizontal, portion.
The PCA 201p may include a wellhead adapter 226b, one or more flow crosses 223u,m,b, one or more blow out preventers (B0Ps) 220a,u,b, a lower marine riser package (LMRP), one or more accumulators 211, a receiver 227 a kill line 229k, and a choke line 229c. The LMRP may include a control pod 225, a flex joint 228, and a connector 226u. The wellhead adapter 226b, flow crosses 223u,m,b, BOPs 220a,u,b, receiver 227, connector 226, and flex joint 228, may each include a housing having a longitudinal bore therethrough and may each be connected, such as by flanges, such that a continuous bore is maintained therethrough. The bore may have drift diameter, corresponding to a drift diameter of the wellhead 221.
Each of the connector 226u and wellhead adapter 226b may include one or more fasteners, such as dogs, for fastening the LMRP to the BOPs 220a,u,b and the PCA 201p to an external profile of the wellhead housing, respectively.
Each of the connector 226u and wellhead adapter 226b may further include a seal sleeve for engaging an internal profile of the respective receiver 46 and wellhead housing. Each of the connector 226u and wellhead adapter 226b may be in electric or hydraulic communication with the control pod 25 and/or further include an electric or hydraulic actuator and an interface, such as a hot stab, so that a remotely operated subsea vehicle (ROV) (not shown) may operate the actuator for engaging the dogs with the external profile.
The LMRP may receive a lower end of a marine riser 250 and connect the riser to the PCA 201p. The control pod 225 may be in electric, hydraulic, and/or optical communication with the PLC 25 onboard the MODU 201m via an umbilical 206. The control pod 225 may include one or more control valves (not shown) in communication with the BOPs 220a,u,b for operation thereof. Each control valve may include an electric or hydraulic actuator in communication with the umbilical 206. The umbilical 206 may include one or more hydraulic or electric control conduit/cables for the actuators. The accumulators 211 may store pressurized hydraulic fluid for operating the BOPs 220a,u,b. Additionally, the accumulators 211 may be used for operating one or more of the other components of the PCA 201p. The umbilical 206 may further include hydraulic, electric, and/or optic control conduit/cables for operating various functions of the PCA 201p. The PLC 25 may operate the PCA 201p via the umbilical 206 and the control pod 225.
A lower end of the kill line 229k may be connected to a branch of the upper flow cross 223u by a shutoff valve 208a. A kill manifold may also connect to the kill line lower end and have a prong connected to a respective branch of each flow cross 223m,b. Shutoff valves 208b,c may be disposed in respective prongs of the booster manifold. Alternatively, a separate line (not shown) may be connected to the branches of the flow crosses 223m,b instead of the kill manifold. An upper end of the kill line 229k may be connected to an outlet of the annulus pump 30a. A lower end of the choke line 229c may have prongs connected to respective second branches of the flow crosses 223m,b. Shutoff valves 208d,e may be disposed in respective prongs of the choke line lower end.
A pressure sensor 235a may be connected to a second branch of the upper flow cross 223u. Pressure sensors 235b,c may be connected to the choke line prongs between respective shutoff valves 208d,e and respective flow cross second branches. Each pressure sensor 235a-c may be in data communication with the control pod 225. The lines 229c,k and umbilical 206 may extend between the MODU 201m and the PCA 201p by being fastened to brackets disposed along the riser 250. Each line 229c,k may be a flow conduit, such as coiled tubing. Each shutoff valve 208a-e may be automated and have a hydraulic actuator (not shown) operable by the control pod 225 via fluid communication with a respective umbilical conduit or the LMRP accumulators 211. Alternatively, the valve actuators may be electrical or pneumatic.
The fluid transport system 201t may include an upper marine riser package (UMRP) 251, the marine riser 250, and a return line 229r. The riser may extend from the PCA 201p to the MODU 201m and may connect to the MODU via the UMRP 251. The UMRP 251 may include a riser compensator 240, a diverter 252, a flex joint 253, a slip (aka telescopic) joint 254, a tensioner 256, and an RCD 255. A lower end of the RCD 255 may be connected to an upper end of the riser 250, such as by a flanged connection. An auxiliary umbilical 212 may have hydraulic conduits and may provide fluid communication between an interface of the RCD 255 and the HPU of the PLC 25. The slip joint 254 may include an outer barrel connected to an upper end of the RCD 255, such as by a flanged connection, and an inner barrel connected to the flex joint 253, such as by a flanged connection. The outer barrel may also be connected to the tensioner 256, such as by a tensioner ring (not shown). The RCD 255 may be located adjacent the waterline 204w and may be submerged.
Alternatively, the RCD 255 may be located above the waterline 204w and/or along the UMRP 251 at any other location besides a lower end thereof.
Alternatively, the RCD 255 may be located at an upper end of the UMRP 251 and the slip joint 254 and bracket connecting the UMRP to the rig 1r may be omitted or the slip joint may be locked instead of being omitted.
Alternatively, the RCD 255 may be assembled as part of the riser 250 at any location therealong or as part of the PCA 1p.
The flex joint 253 may also connect to the diverter 252, such as by a flanged connection. The diverter 252 may also be connected to the rig floor 4, such as by a bracket. The slip joint 254 may be operable to extend and retract in response to heave of the MODU 201m relative to the riser 250 while the tensioner 256 may reel wire rope in response to the heave, thereby supporting the riser 250 from the MODU 201m while accommodating the heave. The flex joints 253, 228 may accommodate respective horizontal and/or rotational (aka pitch and roll) movement of the MODU 201m relative to the riser 250 and the riser relative to the PCA 201p. The riser 250 may have one or more buoyancy modules (not shown) disposed therealong to reduce load on the tensioner 256.
The riser compensator 240 may be employed to aid the PLC 25 in maintaining parity of the actual and target BHPs instead of or in addition to having to adjust the choke 23. The riser compensator 240 may include an accumulator 241, a gas source 242, a pressure regulator 243, a flow line, one or more shutoff valves 245, 248, and a pressure sensor 246.
The shutoff valve 245 may be automated and have a hydraulic actuator (not shown) operable by the PLC 25 via fluid communication with the HPU. The shutoff valve 245 may be connected to an inlet of the RCD 255. The flow line may be a flexible conduit, such as hose, and may also be connected to the accumulator 241 via a flow tee. The accumulator 241 may store only a volume of compressed gas, such as nitrogen. Alternatively, the accumulator may store both liquid and gas and may include a partition, such as a bladder or piston, for separating the liquid and gas. A liquid and gas interface 247 may be in the flow line. The shutoff valve 248 may be disposed in a vent line of the accumulator 241. The pressure regulator 243 may connect to the flow line via a branch of the tee. The pressure regulator 243 may be automated and have an adjuster operable by the PLC 25 via fluid communication with the HPU or electrical communication with the PLC. A set pressure of the regulator 243 may correspond to a set pressure of the choke 23 and both set pressures may be adjusted in tandem. The gas source 242 may also be connected to the pressure regulator 243.
The riser compensator 240 may be activated by opening the shutoff valve 245. During heaving, when the drill string 207 (and/or riser 250) moves downward, the volume of fluid displaced by the downward movement may flow through the shutoff valve 245 into the flow line, moving the liquid and gas interface 247 toward the accumulator 241 and accommodating the downward movement. The interface 247 may or may not move into the accumulator 241.
When the drill string 207 (and/or riser 250) moves upward, the interface 247 may move along the flow line 244 away from the accumulator 241, thereby replacing the volume of fluid moved thereby.
The fluid handling system 201f may include the pumps 30c,a,m, the shale shaker 33, the flow meters 34c,a,m,r, the pressure sensors 35c,a,m,r, the choke 23, and the degassing spool 230. A lower end of the return line 229r may be connected to an outlet of the RCD 255 and an upper end of the return line 229r may be connected to a returns spool. An upper end of the choke line 229r may also be connected to the returns spool. The returns pressure sensor 35r, choke 23, and returns flow meter 34r may be assembled as part of the returns spool.
lower end of the standpipe may be connected to an outlet of the mud pump 30d and an upper end of a Kelly hose may be connected to an inlet of the top drive
The supply pressure sensor 35d and supply flow meter 34d may be assembled as part of a supply line (standpipe and Kelly hose).
The degassing spool 230 may include automated shutoff valves at each end, a mud-gas separator (MGS) 232, and a gas detector 231. A first end of the degassing spool may be connected to the returns spool between the returns flow meter 34r and the shaker 33 and a second end of the degasser spool may be connected to an inlet of the shaker. The gas detector 231 may include a probe having a membrane for sampling gas from the returns 130r, a gas chromatograph, and a carrier system for delivering the gas sample to the chromatograph. The MGS 231 may include an inlet and a liquid outlet assembled as part of the degassing spool and a gas outlet connected to a flare (not shown) or a gas storage vessel.
Figure 7D illustrates a dynamic formation integrity test (DFIT) performed using the drilling system 201. During drilling of the lower formation 104b, the PLC 25 may periodically increase the BHP from the target BHP to a pressure corresponding to an expected pressure that will be exerted on the lower formation during the cementing operation. The PLC 25 may increase the BHP to the expected pressure by tightening the choke 23. The expected pressure may be slightly less than the fracture pressure of the lower formation 104b. The expected pressure may be maintained for a desired depth and/or period of time.
Should the lower formation 104b withstand the expected pressure, then the cementing operation may proceed as planned. Should returns 130r leak into the formation during the DFIT, then the cementing operation may have to be modified, such as by adding returns pump 270 (or alternatives discussed below) or by modifying properties of the cement slurry 130c to decrease the expected pressure.
Figures 7E and 7F illustrate monitoring of cement curing of a subsea casing cementing operation conducted using the drilling system 201. Once the wellbore 200 has been drilled into the lower reservoir 104b to a desired depth, the drill string 207 may be retrieved from the wellbore 200 and an inner casing string 205 may be deployed into the wellbore 200. The inner casing string 205 may include the casing joints 106, the centralizers 107, the float collar 108, the guide shoe 109, and a casing hanger 224. The casing hanger 224 may include a body 224b, an anchor 224a, and a packoff 224p.
The inner casing string 205 may be deployed into the wellbore 200 using a workstring 257. The workstring 257 may include joints of tubulars, such as drill pipe 57p, connected together, such as by threaded connections, a seal head 257h, and a setting tool 257s. A top wiper 175u and a bottom wiper 175b, each similar to the liner wiper 175, may be connected to a bottom of the setting tool.
The setting tool 257s may connect the inner casing string 205 to the workstring 257. The workstring 257 may also be connected to a subsea cementing head (not shown). The subsea cementing head may be similar to the liner cementing head 50 except that the subsea cementing head may include a top dart 75u and a bottom dart 75b for engaging the top wiper 175u and the bottom wiper 175b, respectively, and the swivels may or may not be omitted. The subsea cementing head may also be connected to the Kelly valve 11.
The anchor 224a may include a cam and one or more fasteners. The anchor cam may land on a shoulder formed in an inner surface of the wellhead housing. The wellhead housing may also have a locking profile (not shown) formed in an inner surface thereof for receiving the anchor fasteners. The anchor cam may be operable to extend the anchor fasteners into engagement with the wellhead locking profile, thereby longitudinally connecting the casing hanger to the wellhead 221. The anchor cam may be operated by articulation of the workstring 257, such as by setting weight on the anchor 224a or rotation of the workstring. The anchor 224a may further include flow passages formed therethrough for allowing flow of return fluid from the cementing operation.
The packoff 224p may be operable to radially expand into engagement with an inner surface of the wellhead housing, thereby isolating the casing-wellhead interface. The setting tool 257s may be operable to set the anchor 224a and packoff 224p independently. The packoff 224p may be set by further articulation of the workstring 257. Alternatively, the setting tool may be operated to set anchor and/or the packoff hydraulically as discussed above for the liner setting tool 57s. The setting tool 257s may be released from the casing hanger 224 by articulation of the workstring 257 or hydraulically.
To cement the inner casing string 205, conditioner 130w may be circulated by the cement pump 30c through the valve 59 or by the mud pump 30m via the top drive 12 to prepare for pumping of the cement slurry 130c. The anchor 224a may then be set and the setting tool 257s released from the casing hanger 22.
The bottom dart 75b may be released from the subsea cementing head. Cement slurry 130c may be pumped from the mixer 36 into the subsea cementing head via the valve 59 by the cement pump 30c. The cement slurry 130c may flow into the launcher and be diverted past the upper dart via the diverter and bypass passages. The cement slurry 130c may propel the bottom dart 75b through the workstring bore.
Once the desired quantity of cement slurry 130c has been pumped, the top dart 75u may be released from the launcher by the PLC 25. Depending on the length of the inner casing 205 and the depth of the wellhead 221, the bottom dart 75b may land onto the bottom wiper 175b before or after pumping of the cement slurry 130c has finished. The displacement fluid 130d may be pumped into the subsea cementing head via the valve 59 by the cement pump 30c. The displacement fluid 130d may flow into the launcher and be forced behind the top dart 75u, thereby propelling the top dart into the workstring bore. Pumping of the displacement fluid 130d by the cement pump 30c may continue until residual cement in the discharge conduit has been purged. Pumping of the displacement fluid 130d may then be transferred to the mud pump 30m by closing the valve 59 and opening the Kelly valve 11.
The top dart 75u may be driven through the workstring bore by the displacement fluid 130d (while driving the combined bottom dart 75b and wiper 175b through the casing bore) until the top dart 75u lands onto the top wiper 175u and the bottom dart and wiper land onto the float collar 108. A diaphragm (not shown) of the bottom dart 75b may rupture and the cement slurry 130c may be driven through the float collar 108 and guide shoe 109 and into the annulus 210c. Pumping of the displacement fluid 130d may continue until the combined top dart 75u and wiper 175u land on the float collar 108. Landing of the combined top dart 75u and wiper 175u may increase pressure in the casing and workstring bore and be detected by the PLC 25 monitoring the standpipe pressure. Once landing has been detected, pumping of the displacement fluid 130d may be halted. Pressure in the workstring and casing bore may be bled.
The float valve 108 may close, thereby preventing the cement slurry 130c from flowing back into the casing bore.
During the cementing operation, the PLC 25 may be programmed to operate the choke 23 so that the target bottomhole pressure (BHP) is maintained in the annulus 210c during the cementing operation and the PLC 25 may execute a real time simulation of the cementing operation in order to predict the actual BHP from measured data (as discussed above for the casing cementing operation). The PLC 25 may then compare the predicted BHP to the target BHP
and adjust the choke 23 accordingly. The PLC 25 may also perform the mass balance and adjust the target accordingly. The PLC 25 may also determine the cement level in the annulus 210c.
Once the casing bore has been bled, the annulus pump 30a may be operated to pump indicator fluid 1301 to the lower flow cross 223b via the kill line 229k. The indicator fluid 130i may flow radially across the wellhead 221 and exit the wellhead to the choke line 229c. As the packoff 224p has not been set, the indicator fluid path may be in fluid communication with the annulus 210c, thereby forming a tee having the annulus as a stagnant branch. The indicator fluid may continue through the choke 23, return flow meter 34r, and shaker 33.
Circulation of the indicator fluid 1301 may be maintained during the curing period.
As the indicator fluid 130i is being circulated, the PLC 25 may perform a mass balance between entry and exit of the indicator fluid into/from the wellhead 21 to monitor for formation fluid 130f entering the annulus 210c or cement slurry 130c entering the formation 104b using the flow meters 34a,r. The PLC 25 may tighten the choke 23 in response to detection of formation fluid 130f entering the annulus 210c and relax the choke 23 in response to cement slurry 130c entering the formation 104b.
The riser compensator 240 may be operated during the cementing and curing operation to negate the effect of heave on the mass balance.
Alternatively, the PLC 25 may include one or more sensors (not shown) to adjust the mass balance during curing to account for heave, such as an accelerometer and/or an altimeter. Alternatively, the PLC 25 may be in data communication with the MODU's dynamic positioning system and/or tensioner and receive necessary heave data therefrom. The PLC 25 may also adjust the choke 23 to maintain parity of the actual and target BHPs during cementing and/or curing in response to heave of the MODU. Once curing is complete, the setting tool 257s may be operated to set the packoff 224p.
Alternatively, the packoff 224p may be set after the cementing operation (before curing) and the curing monitoring may be omitted. Alternatively, the packoff 224p may be set after the cementing operation (before curing) and the inner casing string 205 may include any of the cement sensors 161a-f, the data cable 163, and the wireless data coupling 162i. The outer wireless data coupling 1620 may be disposed in the wellhead 221 and the wellhead may include a second wireless data coupling (not shown) connected to the outer coupling by lead wire which may interface with a corresponding second wireless data coupling disposed in the wellhead adapter 226b which may be in data communication with the pod 225 via a jumper. The PLC 25 may then receive measurements from the cement sensors 161a-f to monitor the curing (and cementing) operation.
Figure 8A illustrates monitoring of cement curing of a subsea casing cementing operation conducted using a second offshore drilling system, according to another embodiment of the present invention. The second drilling system may include the MODU 201m, the drilling rig 1r, the fluid handling system 201f, the fluid transport system 201t, and a pressure control assembly (PCA) 261p. The PCA 261p may include the wellhead adapter 226b, the flow crosses 223u,m,b, the blow out preventers (B0P5) 220a,u,b, the LMRP, the accumulators 211, the receiver 227, the choke line 229c, the kill line 229k, a second RCD 265, and a subsea flow meter 234.
The second RCD 265 may be similar to the RCD 255. Referring also to Figure 8B, the second RCD 265 may include an outlet 2650, an interface 265a, housing 265h, a latch 265c, and a rider 265r. The housing 265h may be tubular and include one or more sections connected together, such as by flanged connections. The housing 265h may further include an upper flange connected to an upper housing section, such as by welding, and a lower flange connected to a lower housing section, such as by welding.
The latch 265c may include a hydraulic actuator, such as a piston, one or more fasteners, such as dogs, and a body. The latch body may be connected to the housing 265h, such as by a threaded connection. A piston chamber may be formed between the latch body and a mid housing section. The latch body may have ports formed through a wall thereof for receiving the respective dogs.
The latch piston may be disposed in the chamber and may carry seals isolating an upper portion of the chamber from a lower portion of the chamber. A cam surface may be formed on an inner surface of the piston for radially displacing the dogs. Hydraulic ports (not shown) may be formed through the mid housing section and may provide fluid communication between the interface 265a and respective portions of the hydraulic chamber for selective operation of the latch piston. A jumper may have hydraulic conduits and may provide fluid communication between the RCD interface 265a and the control pod 225.
The rider 265r may include a bearing assembly 265b, a housing seal assembly, one or more strippers, and a catch sleeve. The bearing assembly 265b may support the strippers from the sleeve such that the strippers may rotate relative to the housing 255h (and the sleeve). The bearing assembly 265b may include one or more radial bearings, one or more thrust bearings, and a self contained lubricant system. The lubricant system may include a reservoir having a lubricant, such as bearing oil, and a balance piston in communication with the return fluid 130i,r,w (depending on the current operation being performed) for maintaining oil pressure in the reservoir at a pressure equal to or slightly greater than the return fluid pressure. The bearing assembly 265b may be disposed between the strippers and be housed in and connected to the catch sleeve, such as by a threaded connection and/or fasteners.
The rider 265r may be selectively longitudinally connected to the housing 265h by engagement of the latch 265c with the catch sleeve. The housing seal assembly may include a body carrying one or more seals, such as o-rings, and a retainer. The retainer may be connected to the catch sleeve, such as by a threaded connection (not shown), and the seal body may be trapped between a shoulder of the sleeve and the retainer. The housing seals may isolate an annulus formed between the housing 265h and the rider 265r. The catch sleeve may be torsionally coupled to the housing 265h, such as by seal friction or mating anti-rotation profiles.
The upper stripper may include the gland and a seal. The gland may include one or more sections, such as a first section and a second section, connected, such as by a threaded connection. The upper stripper seal may be connected to the first section, such as by fasteners (not shown), such that the upper stripper seal is longitudinally and torsionally coupled thereto. The second section may be connected to a rotating mandrel of the bearing assembly, such as by a threaded connection, such that the gland is longitudinally and torsionally coupled thereto. The lower stripper may include a retainer and a seal. The lower stripper seal may be connected to the stripper retainer, such as by fasteners (not shown), such that the lower stripper seal is longitudinally and torsionally coupled thereto. The stripper retainer may be connected to the rotating mandrel, such as by a threaded connection, such that the retainer is longitudinally and torsionally coupled thereto.
Each stripper seal may be directional and oriented to seal against the drill pipe 57p in response to higher pressure in the wellhead 221 than the riser 250.
Each stripper seal may have a conical shape for fluid pressure to act against a respective tapered surface thereof, thereby generating sealing pressure against the drill pipe 57p. Each stripper seal may have an inner diameter slightly less than a pipe diameter of the drill pipe 57p to form an interference fit therebetween.
Each stripper seal may be made from a polymer, such as a thermoplastic, elastomer, or copolymer, flexible enough to accommodate and seal against threaded couplings of the drill pipe 57p having a larger tool joint diameter.
The lower stripper seal may be exposed to the return fluid 130i,r,w to serve as the primary seal. The upper stripper seal may be idle as long as the lower stripper seal is functioning. Should the lower stripper seal fail, the returns 130r may leak therethrough and exert pressure on the upper stripper seal via an annular fluid passage formed between the bearing mandrel and the drill pipe 57p. The drill pipe 57p may be received through a bore of the rider 255r so that the stripper seals may engage the drill pipe. The stripper seals may provide a desired barrier in the riser 250 either when the drill pipe 57p is stationary or rotating.
Alternatively, the rider may be non-releasably connected to the housing.
Alternatively, an active seal RCD may be used. The active seal RCD may include one or more bladders (not shown) instead of the stripper seals and may be inflated to seal against the drill pipe by injection of inflation fluid. The active seal RCD rider may also served as a hydraulic swivel to facilitate inflation of the bladders. Alternatively, the active seal RCD may include one or more packings operated by one or more pistons of the rider. Alternatively, a lubricated packer assembly may be used.
A lower end of the second RCD housing 265h may be connected to the annular BOP 220a and an upper end of the second RCD housing may be connected to the upper flow cross 223u, such as by flanged connections. A
pressure sensor 265p may be connected to an upper housing section of the second RCD 265 above the rider 265r. The pressure sensor 265p may be in data communication with the control pod 225 and the second RCD latch piston may be in fluid communication with the control pod via the interface 265a of the second RCD 265.
A lower end of a subsea bypass spool 262 may be connected to the second RCD outlet 2650 and an upper end of the spool may be connected to the upper flow cross 223u. The bypass spool 262 may have first 209a and second 209b shutoff valves and the subsea flow meter 234 assembled as a part thereof.
Each shutoff valve 209a,b,b may be automated and have a hydraulic actuator (not shown) operable by the control pod 225 via fluid communication with a respective umbilical conduit or the LMRP accumulators 211. The subsea flow meter 234 may be a mass flow meter, such as a Coriolis flow meter, and may be in data communication with the PLC 25 via the pod 225 and the umbilical 206.
Alternatively, a subsea volumetric flow meter may be used instead of the mass flow meter.
The return fluid 130i,r,w may flow through the annulus 210c to the wellhead 221. The return fluid 130i,r,w may continue from the wellhead 221 to the second RCD 265 via the BOPs 220a,u,b. The return fluid 130i,r,w may be diverted by the second RCD 265 into the subsea bypass spool 262 via the second RCD outlet 265o. The return fluid 1301,r,w may flow through the open second shutoff valve 209b, the subsea flow meter 234, and the first shutoff valve 209a to a branch of the upper flow cross 223u. The return fluid 130i,r,w may flow into the riser 250 via the upper flow cross 223u, the receiver 227, and the LMRP.
The return fluid 130i,r,w may flow up the riser 250 to the first RCD 255. The return fluid 130i,r,w may be diverted by the first RCD 255 into the return line 229 via the first RCD outlet. The return fluid 1301,r,w may continue from the return line 29 and into the returns spool. The return fluid 1301,r,w may flow through the choke 36 and the returns flow meter 34r into the shale shaker 33.
During the drilling, cementing, and curing operation, the PLC 25 may rely on the subsea flow meter 234 instead of the surface flow meter 34r to perform BHP control and the mass balance. The surface flow meter 34r may be used as a backup to the subsea flow meter 234 should the subsea flow meter fail.
Figures 8B and 8C illustrate a subsea casing cementing operation conducted using a third offshore drilling system, according to another embodiment of the present invention. The third drilling system may include the MODU 201m, the drilling rig 1r, the fluid handling system 201f, and a riserless pressure control assembly (PCA) 271p. The riserless PCA 271p may include the wellhead adapter 226b, the flow crosses 223m,b, the blow out preventers (B0Ps) 220a,u,b, the accumulators 211, the receiver 227, the kill line 229k, the choke line 229c, the second RCD 265, a return line 275, and a returns pump 270. The subsea wellbore 200 may also be drilled riserlessly using the third drilling system.
The return line 275 may include a bypass spool (not shown) around the returns pump 270 such that the returns pump 270 may be selectively employed.
A lower end of the return line 275 may connect to the second RCD outlet 2650 and an upper end of the return line 275 may connect to the returns spool.
The returns pump 270 may be assembled as part of the returns line 275 and may include a submersible electric motor 270m and a centrifugal pump stage 270p.
The returns pump 270 may further include a skid frame (not shown) having a mud mat for resting on the seafloor. A shaft of the motor 270m may be torsionally connected to a shaft of the pump stage 270p via a gearbox or directly (gearless). A lower end of a power cable 272 may be connected to the motor 270m and an upper end of the power cable 272 may be connected to a motor drive (not shown) onboard the MODU 201m and in data communication with the PLC 25. The motor drive may be a variable speed drive and the PLC 25 may control operation of the returns pump 270 by varying a rotational speed of the motor 270m. The returns line 275 may further include a discharge pressure sensor 273 in data communication with the control pod 225 and the PLC may monitor operation of the returns pump using the discharge pressure sensor and one of the pressure sensors 235b,c as an intake pressure sensor.
Alternatively, the choke 23 may be used to control the returns pump 270.
Additionally, the pump stage 270p may be capable of accommodating cuttings or the returns pump 270 may further include a cuttings collector and/or pulverizer (not shown). Alternatively, the PLC 25 may determine intake and discharge pressures of the pump stage by monitoring power consumption of the motor 270m. Alternatively, the pump stage 270p may be positive displacement and/or the returns pump may include multiple stages. Alternatively, the motor 270m may be hydraulic or pneumatic. If hydraulic, the motor 270m may be driven by a power fluid, such as seawater or hydraulic oil.
Referring to Figure 8C, an ECD Wd of the conditioner 130w may correspond to a threshold pressure gradient of the lower formation, such as pore pressure gradient, fracture pressure gradient, or an average of the two gradients.
However, due to the dual gradient effect caused by a substantially lower density Ss of the sea 204, the conditioner 130w may otherwise fracture the lower formation 104b if not for operation of the returns pump 270 (Pump Delta). The returns pump 270 may compensate for the dual gradient effect effectively creating a corresponding dual gradient effect so that the conditioner 130w does not fracture the lower formation 104b during conditioning. A static density (only ECD shown) of the cement 130c may also correspond to the threshold pressure gradient.
As cement 130c flows into the annulus 210c, the actual BHP may begin to be influenced by the cement ECD Cd. The PLC 25 may anticipate the dual gradient effect in the predicted BHP and increase the rotational speed of the pump, thereby increasing the pump delta. The PLC 25 may continue to increase the pump speed (thereby increasing pump delta) as a level CL of cement 130c in the annulus 210c rises and the influence of the cement ECD Cd on the BHP
increases to maintain parity of the actual/predicted BHP with the target BHP.
During the cementing operation, the PLC 25 may track the cement level CL in the annulus 210c and may also perform the mass balance and adjust the target accordingly, as discussed above.
Once pumping of cement 130c is completed, the casing bore may be bled, and the indicator fluid 130i may be supplied to the flow cross 223b via the kill line 225k for circulating across the wellhead 221 using the returns pump 270 to maintain parity between the actual and target BHPs while the PLC 25 monitors for fluid ingress/egress. Should the PLC 25 detect ingress, the PLC may reduce the speed of the returns pump 270 and should the PLC detect egress, the PLC
may increase the speed of the pump. Should the PLC 25 detect severe ingress during cementing or curing, the PLC may shut-down and bypass and the returns pump 270.
Alternatively, the returns line 275 may be shut-in, and the indicator fluid 130i may be circulated across the wellhead 221 by operating the annulus pump 30a to pump the indicator fluid 130i into the flow cross 223b via the kill line 225k.
The indicator fluid 130i may then return to the MODU 201m via the choke line 229c. Pressure control may be maintained over the curing cement 130c by the choke 23. Alternatively, the conditioner ECD may be less than the pore pressure gradient and the annulus pump 30a and choke 23 may be used to control the BHP during conditioning and then BHP control may be shifted to the returns pump 270 for/during the cementing.
Alternatively, a buoyant fluid, such as base oil or nitrogen, may be injected at the RCD inlet 265i instead of using the returns pump 270, thereby mixing with the return fluid 130i,r,w and forming a return mixture having a density substantially less than a density of the return fluid, such as a density corresponding to seawater. Alternatively, the returns pump 270 may be added to the bypass spool 262 in addition to or instead of the subsea flow meter 234.
Alternatively, the subsea flow meter 234 may be used in the riserless PCA 271p instead of or in addition to the returns pump 270.
illustrate a wireless cement sensor sub 282a of an alternative inner casing string 295 being cemented. Figure 9D illustrates a radio frequency identification (RFID) tag 280a-c for communication with the sensor sub 282a. Figure 9F illustrates the fluid handling system 281f of the drilling system. The fourth drilling system may include the MODU 201m, the drilling rig 1r, the fluid handling system 281f, the fluid transport system 201t, and the pressure control assembly (PCA) 201p.
Once the wellbore 200 has been drilled into the lower reservoir 104b to the desired depth, the drill string 207 may be retrieved from the wellbore 200 and the inner casing string 295 may be deployed into the wellbore 200 using the workstring 257. The inner casing string 295 may include the casing joints 106, the centralizers 107, the float collar 108, the guide shoe 109, the casing hanger 224, and one or more wireless cement sensor subs 282a-f. A bottom sensor sub 282b may be assembled adjacent to the guide shoe 109 and/or the float collar 108. The rest of the sensor subs 282a,c-f may be spaced along a portion of the casing string 295 above the top dart 75u.
Each sensor sub 282a-f may include a housing 287, one or more cement sensors 283p,t, an electronics package 284, one or more antennas 285r,t, and a power source. The cement sensors 283p,t may include a pressure sensor 283p and/or temperature sensor 283t. Respective components of each sensor sub 282a-f may be in electrical communication with each other by leads or a bus.
The power source may be a battery 286 or capacitor (not shown). The antennas 285r,t may include an outer antenna 285r and an inner antenna 285t. The bottom sensor sub 282b may not need the inner antenna 285t and the sensor subs 282c-f may not need the outer antenna 285r.
The housing 287 may include two or more tubular sections 287u,b connected to each other, such as by threaded connections. The housing 287 may have couplings, such as a threaded couplings, formed at a top and bottom thereof for connection to other component of the casing string 295. The housing 287 may have a pocket formed between the sections 287u,b thereof for receiving the electronics package 284, the battery 286, and the inner antenna 285t. To avoid interference with the antennas 285r,t, the housing 287 may be made from a diamagnetic or paramagnetic metal or alloy, such as austenitic stainless steel or aluminum. The housing 287 may have one or more radial ports formed through a wall thereof for receiving the respective sensors 283p,t such that the sensors are in fluid communication with the annulus 210c.
The electronics package 284 may include a control circuit 284c, a transmitter circuit 284t, and a receiver circuit 284r. The control circuit 284c may include a microprocessor controller (MPG), a data recorder (MEM), a clock (RTC), and an analog-digital converter (ADC). The data recorder may be a solid state drive. The transmitter circuit 284t may include an amplifier (AMP), a modulator (MOD), and an oscillator (OSC). The receiver circuit 284r may include the amplifier (AMP), a demodulator (MOD), and a filter (FIL). Alternatively, the transmitter 284t and receiver 284r circuits may be combined into a transceiver circuit.
Once the casing string 295 has been deployed, the sensor subs 282a,c-f may commence operation. Raw signals from the respective sensors 283p,t may be received by the respective converter, converted, and supplied to the controller. The controller may process the converted signals to determine the respective parameters, time stamp and address stamp the parameters, and send the processed data to the respective recorder for storage during tag latency.
The controller may also multiplex the processed data and supply the multiplexed data to the respective transmitter 284t. The transmitter 284t may then condition the multiplexed data and supply the conditioned signal to the antenna 285t for electromagnetic transmission, such as at radio frequency. Each sensor sub 282c-f may transmit current parameters and some past parameters corresponding to a data capacity of a communication window between the sensor subs and the tags 280a-c. Since the bottom sensor sub 282b is inaccessible to the tags 280a-c due to the top dart 75u and the top wiper 175u, the bottom sensor sub may transmit its data to the sensor sub 282a via its transmitter circuit and outer antenna and the sensor sub 282a may received the bottom data via its outer antenna 285r and receiver circuit 284r. The sensor sub 282a may then transmit its data and the bottom data for receipt by the tags 280a-c.
Cementing of the inner casing string 295 may be accomplished in the same fashion as cementing of the inner casing string 205. Instead of keeping the workstring 257 deployed and the packoff 2249 unset for the circulation of the indicator fluid 130i during curing, the packoff may immediately be set after pumping the cement slurry 130c. The workstring 257 may be retrieved to the MODU 201m. A drill string 297 may then be deployed to a depth adjacent the top dart 75u. The drill string 297 may include a bottomhole assembly (BHA) 297h and joints of the drill pipe 57p connected together, such as by threaded couplings. The BHA 297h may be connected to the drill pipe 57p, such as by a threaded connection, and include a drill bit 297b and one or more drill collars 297c connected thereto, such as by a threaded connection.
The fluid handling system 281f may include the pumps 30c,a,m, the shale shaker 33, the flow meters 34c,a,m,r, the pressure sensors 35c,a,m,r, the choke 23, the degassing spool 230, a tag reader 290, and a tag launcher 291. The tag launcher 291 may be assembled as part of the drilling fluid supply line. The tag launcher 291 may include a housing, a plunger, an actuator, and a magazine having a plurality of the RFID tags 280a-c loaded therein. A chambered RFID
tag may be disposed in the plunger for selective release and pumping downhole to communicate with the sensor subs 282a,c-f. The plunger may be movable relative to the housing between a capture position and a release position. The plunger may be moved between the positions by the actuator. The actuator may be hydraulic, such as a piston and cylinder assembly and may be in communication with the PLC HPU. Alternatively, the actuator may be electric or pneumatic. Alternatively, the actuator may be manual, such as a handwheel.
Each RFD tag 280a-c may be a wireless identification and sensing platform (WISP) RFID tag. Each tag 280a-c may include an electronics package and one or more antennas housed in an encapsulation 288. Respective components of each tag 280a-c may be in electrical communication with each other by leads or a bus. The electronics package may include a control circuit, a transmitter circuit, and a receiver circuit. The control circuit may include a microcontroller (MCU), the data recorder (MEM), and a RF power generator.
Alternatively, each tag 280a-c may have a battery instead of the RF power generator.
Once the drill string 295 has been deployed, the PLC 25 may launch the chambered tag by operating the HPU to supply hydraulic fluid to the launcher actuator. The actuator may then move the plunger to the release position (not shown). The carrier and chambered tag may then move into supply line.
Transport fluid 130t discharged by the mud pump 30m may then carry the chambered tag from the launcher 291 and into the drill string 297 via the top drive 12 and Kelly valve 11. Once the chambered tag has been launched, the actuator may move the plunger back to the capture position and the plunger may load another tag from the magazine during the movement. The PLC 25 may launch tags 280a-c at a desired frequency.
Once the tag 280a has been circulated through the drill string 297, the tag may exit the drill bit 297b in proximity to the sensor sub 282a. The tag 280a may receive the data signal transmitted by the sensor sub 282a, convert the signal to electricity, filter, demodulate, and record the parameters. As the tag 280a travels up the annulus, the tag 280a may communicate with the other sensor subs 282c-f and record the data therefrom. The tag 280a may continue through the wellhead 221, the PCA 201p, and the riser 250 to the RCD 255. The tag 280a may be diverted by the RCD 255 to the returns line 229r. The tag 280a may continue from the returns line 229r to the tag reader 290.
The tag reader 290 may be assembled as part of the returns spool. The tag reader may include a housing, a transmitter circuit, a receiver circuit, a transmitter antenna, and a receiver antenna. The housing may be tubular and have flanged ends for connection to other members of the returns spool and/or the returns line 229r. The transmitter and receiver circuits may be similar to those of the sensor sub 282a. Alternatively, the tag reader 290 may include a combined transceiver circuit and/or a combined transceiver antenna. The tag reader 290 may transmit an instruction signal to the tag 280a to transmit the stored data thereof. The tag 280a may then transmit the data to the tag reader 290. The tag reader 290 may be sized to have a communications window such that the cumulative data received from the sensor subs 282a-f may be communicated while the tag 280a is flowing through the tag reader 290. The tag reader 290 may then relay the cumulative data to the PLC 25. The PLC 25 may then monitor the curing of the cement 130c and/or display the data for an operator to do so. The tags 280a-c may be recovered from the shale shaker 33 and reused or may be discarded. The circulation of tags 280a-c may continue during curing of the cement 130c until completion.
Alternatively, the tags 280a-c may be recovered from the shale shaker 33 and physically transported to a standalone tag reader. The tags 280a-c may include a magnetic core to facilitate recovery from the shale shaker.
Alternatively, a solids separator having a tag reader may be used instead of the shale shaker 33. A vacuum conveyor separator (not shown) may be suitable for having a tag reader positioned over the filter belt to read the tag as it separated from the transport fluid 130t. Alternatively, the tag reader 290 may be located subsea in the PCA 201p or the riserless PCA 271p and may relay the data to the PCA via the umbilical 206. Alternatively, the tag reader 290 may be located in the bypass spool 262 of the PCA 261p.
Once the cement 130c has cured, the drill string 297 may be operated to drill out the darts 75u,b, wipers 175u,b, collar 108 and shoe 109 in preparation for a completion operation or to further extend the wellbore 200 into the lower formation 104b or another formation adjacent the lower formation.
Figures 10A-10C illustrate a remedial cementing operation being performed using an alternative casing string 305, according to another embodiment of the present invention. The casing string 305 may be similar to the casing string 105, except for the addition of one or more stage collars 300u,m,b. Alternatively, the liner string 155 and/or the subsea casing strings 205, 295 may be modified to include the stage collars 300u,m,b. Each stage collar 300u,m,b may include a housing 310, an opener 3110, a closer 311c, a flow passage 312, a closure member, such as rupture disk 313, and an expandable seal, such as a bladder 314. The flow passage 312 may be formed in a wall of the housing 310. The flow passage 312 may extend from an inlet in selective fluid communication with a bore of the housing 310 to an inflation chamber of the bladder 314 and have an outlet branch in selective fluid communication with the annulus 110. The rupture disk 313 may be configured to operate at a set pressure corresponding to an inflation pressure of the bladder 314.
The stage collars 300u,m,b may be disposed along the casing string 305, such as an upper collar 300u located proximate to the casing hanger, a lower collar 300b located proximate to the float collar, and a mid collar 300m located between the upper and lower collars. The mid 300m and lower 300b stage collars may be oriented for a remedial cementing operation and the upper stage collar 300u may be oriented for a sealant squeezing operation (i.e., upside down relative to the mid and lower collars).
The stage collars 300u,m,b may be selectively operated in the event that the cementing and curing operation fails to produce an acceptable result. As shown, the final cement level 320a is substantially below the intended final cement level 3201, thereby forming a void in the annulus 110. The void may be due to cement slurry 130c egress into the lower formation 104b (see Figures 3D
and 3G). Although failing, the PLC 25 may at least have determined the actual final cement level 320a and indicated that the cured cement 130c is unacceptable. The PLC 25 may also determine a quantity of remedial cement 330c necessary to fill the void. After curing of the cement slurry 130c, a workstring 357 may be deployed into the wellbore. The workstring 357 may include a shifting tool 357s, a seal head 357h, and a tubular string, such as coiled tubing 357p or drill pipe (not shown). Alternatively, the stage collars 300u,m,b may be operated by slick line or wire line. Alternatively, for the liner 155 and subsea casings 205, 295, the respective drill/workstrings 57, 257, 297 may include the shifting tool so that the remedial cementing operation may be performed without tripping.
The workstring 357 may be deployed until the shifting tool 357s is adjacent to the mid stage collar 300m as the lower stage collar 300u may be rendered inoperable by encasement in the cured cement 130c. The shifting tool 357s may be extended to engage a profile of the mid closer 311o. The shifting tool 357s may then longitudinally move the mid closer 3110 to an open position, thereby exposing the passage inlet. Inflation fluid (not shown), such as the conditioner 130w, may be pumped through the workstring 357 and may be discharged through ports of the shifting tool 357s into the mid passage inlet and along the mid passage 312 to the bladder chamber, thereby inflating the bladder 314. Once the bladder 314 has inflated, the rupture disk 313 may fracture thereby opening the outlet port. The inflation fluid may continue to be pumped until fully circulated through an open portion of the annulus 110. Once circulated, the remedial cement 330c may be pumped through the workstring 357 and into the annulus 110 via the mid stage collar 300m. The remedial cement 330c may be pumped until a level of the remedial cement reaches the intended cement level 320i. Once the remedial cement 330c has been pumped, the shifting tool 357s may be operated to engage the closer 311c and move the closer longitudinally (not shown), thereby closing the mid passage inlet to prevent backf low of the remedial cement slurry 330c.
During the remedial cementing operation, the PLC 25 may monitor and control conditioning and pumping of remedial cement slurry 330c as discussed above for the primary cementing operation. The PLC 25 may also monitor and control curing, as discussed above. Alternatively, the remedial cement slurry may be used to inflate the bladder, thereby obviating the conditioning step.
Figures 11A-11C illustrate a remedial squeeze operation being performed using the alternative casing string 305, according to another embodiment of the present invention. As shown, the cured cement 130c has channels 325 formed therein. The channel formation may be due to formation fluid 130f infiltration from the lower formation 104b (see Figures 3C and 3F). Although failing, the PLC 25 may at least have determined the infiltration and indicated that the cured cement 130c is unacceptable. The PLC 25 may also determine the quantity of sealant 330s necessary to fill the channels 325.
After curing of the cement slurry 130c, the workstring 357 may be deployed into the wellbore 100. The workstring 357 may be deployed until the shifting tool 357s is adjacent to the upper stage collar 300u. The shifting tool 357s may be operated to open the upper stage collar 300u. The sealant 330s may be pumped through the workstring 357, thereby inflating the upper bladder 314 and opening the outlet. The sealant 330s may continue to be pumped into the annulus 110 via the upper stage collar 300u until the channeled portion of the cement 130c has been impregnated by the sealant 330s. The upper stage collar 300u may then be closed and the sealant 300s may cure (polymerize), thereby filling the channels 325.
The sealant 330s may be pumped as a liquid mixture, such as a solution.
The solution may include a monomer, such as an ester, a diluent, such as water or seawater and/or alcohol, and a catalyst, such as a peroxide or persulfate.
Alternatively, the sealant may be pumped as a slurry, such as grout or mortar.
Additionally, for any of the embodiments discussed above, the PLC 25 may detect and adjust the choke for any transient effects, such as landing of the bottom wiper (or combination dart and wiper) onto the float collar or landing of the bottom dart onto the bottom wiper.
Additionally, for any of the embodiments discussed above, the PLC 25 may operate the mass balance and choke control during deployment of the casings or liner into the wellbore. For the subsea casing and liner embodiments, the PLC 25 may further operate the mass balance and choke control during retrieval of the workstring to the drilling rig (including washing of the excess cement for the liner embodiment).
Additionally, for any of the embodiments discussed above, after drilling the wellbore and before removing the drill string, a balanced pill (not shown), such as a quantity of heavy mud, may be pumped in (aka spotted) before the drilling system is configured for the cementing operation. The pill may then be circulated out while deploying the liner/casing into the wellbore. A second pill may then be spotted after curing for the casing operations or after setting the packoff for the liner operation.
Additionally, for any of the embodiments discussed above, after curing of the cement, an integrity test may be performed. For the casing embodiments, the annulus may pressurized using the annulus pump and then the annulus may be shut-in and the pressure monitored. For the liner embodiment, the workstring may be deployed with a packer, the packer set to isolate the liner, and the liner may be pressurized and the pressure monitored.
Additionally, any of the embodiments discussed above may be used to during a plugging and abandonment operation to form cement plugs in a bore of a casing string or to cement an annulus of a casing string after the annulus has been opened using a section mill.
1. A method of cementing a tubular string in a wellbore, comprising:
deploying the tubular string into the wellbore;
pumping cement slurry into the tubular string;
launching a cementing plug after pumping the cement slurry;
propelling the cementing plug through the tubular string, thereby pumping the cement slurry through the tubular string and into an annulus formed between the tubular string and the wellbore; and controlling flow of fluid displaced from the wellbore by the cement slurry to control pressure of the annulus.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein the displaced fluid flow is controlled by choking.
the annulus pressure is bottomhole pressure, and the choking is adjusted to maintain a constant bottom hole pressure as the cement slurry is pumped into the annulus.
4. The method of claim 3, wherein the choking is relaxed as the cement slurry is pumped into the annulus.
the choking is relaxed as the cement slurry is pumped into a first portion of the annulus, and the choking is tightened as the cement slurry is pumped into a second portion of the annulus.
6. The method of claim 3, further comprising exerting backpressure on the annulus while setting a packoff of the tubular string.
7. The method of claim 1, wherein the displaced fluid flow is controlled by pumping.
8. The method of claim 1, wherein the displaced fluid flow is controlled by buoying.
9. The method of claim 1, further comprising monitoring curing of the cement slurry.
10. The method of claim 9, wherein the curing is monitored by circulating indicator fluid across the wellhead and comparing a flow rate of indicator fluid into the wellhead to a flow rate of indicator fluid from the wellhead.
11. The method of claim 10, further comprising choking flow of the indicator fluid from the wellhead.
12. The method of claim 11, further comprising adjusting the choking of the indicator fluid in response to the flow rate comparison.
the tubular string comprises one or more cement sensors, and curing is monitored by analyzing data from the cement sensors.
14. The method of claim 13, further comprising analyzing data from the cement sensors while pumping the cement slurry into the annulus.
15. The method of claim 13, further comprising supplying a pulse to the sensors, wherein the sensors comprise capacitance sensors for reflecting a return pulse.
deploying a drill string into the wellbore after pumping the cement slurry;
and pumping an RFID tag through the drill string and into a second annulus formed between the drill string and the tubular string, wherein the RFID tag communicates with the cement sensors while returning through the second annulus.
the tubular string comprises a bottom sensor sub and a second sensor sub located above a landing position of the cementing plug, the bottom sensor sub transmits data to the second sensor sub, and the second sensor sub relays the data to the RFID tag.
the cementing plug is propelled by a chase fluid, the method further comprises:
measuring a flow rate of the chase fluid; and measuring a flow rate of the displaced fluid, and the displaced fluid flow is controlled using the measured flow rates.
the wellbore is subsea, and a subsea wellhead is located adjacent to the subsea wellbore.
20. The method of claim 19, wherein the displaced fluid flow rate is measured by diverting the displaced fluid from a bore of a pressure control assembly connected to the subsea wellhead through a subsea flow meter of the pressure control assembly.
21. The method of claim 19, wherein the method is performed riserlessly.
the tubular string comprises one or more stage collars, and the method further comprises:
deploying a workstring into the tubular string;
opening one of the stage collars using the workstring; and pumping cement slurry or sealant into the annulus via the open stage collar.
23. A method of cementing a tubular string in a wellbore, comprising:
deploying the tubular string into the wellbore, the tubular string comprising one or more cement sensors;
propelling the cementing plug through the tubular string, thereby pumping the cement slurry through the tubular string and into an annulus formed between the tubular string and the wellbore; and analyzing data from the cement sensors during curing of the cement slurry to determine acceptability of the cured cement bond.
24. A method of cementing a tubular string in a subsea wellbore, comprising:
deploying the tubular string into the subsea wellbore;
propelling the cementing plug through the tubular string using a chase fluid, thereby pumping the cement slurry through the tubular string and into an annulus formed between the tubular string and the wellbore;
measuring a flow rate of the chase fluid; and measuring a flow rate of fluid displaced from the wellbore by diverting the displaced fluid from a bore of a pressure control assembly connected to a subsea wellhead of the subsea wellbore through a subsea flow meter of the pressure control assembly, in order to perform a mass balance between the drilling fluid and the returns and monitor for formation fluid entering the annulus or drilling fluid entering the formation.
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