Well Control Methods
Well Control Methods
Learning Objectives
You will learn well control circulating techniques You will learn non-circulating well control
and proper responses to change in pressures. techniques:
You will learn circulating well control techniques: • Volumetric
• Driller’s Method o Lubricate and Bleed
• Wait and Weight • Bullheading
• Concurrent
• Reverse circulation
Overview
The goal of all well control methods is to safely control the o Pressure is regulated with a choke.
well.
• Replacing the existing fluid with one that has sufficient
Circulating well control methods are often referred to as weight to regain hydrostatic control.
“constant bottom hole” methods as they keep BHP equal to
FP preventing additional influx fluids.
These methods provide for:
• Removal of kick fluids:
o Must keep BHP ≥ FP to prevent additional kicks.
o Must keep pump running at a constant speed.
Overview
Common circulating well control techniques are: A well is very rarely killed by one circulation due
to inefficient fluid displacement in the annulus.
• Driller’s
• Wait and Weight
• Concurrent
These all use the same procedures and only
differ when and if a kill weight fluid will be
circulated.
Bottom hole and surface pressures may be a combination of several factors. These are:
• Formation pressure
• Hydrostatic pressure(s)
• Circulating Friction pressure
• Choke pressure
Since FP, HP and circulating friction are fairly constant during the initial stages of well control, the
only way to change pressure is by choke manipulation.
While shut in or circulating a kick with pump at a constant reduced circulating rate, pressure is
regulated by choke manipulation.
• To decrease pressures, open choke slightly:
• If the circulating drillpipe/pump pressure gets too high, estimate the excess amount. Then use the choke
reduce or bleed off that amount. Monitor the casing pressure gauge whenever a pressure adjustment is
made.
• If circulating pressure is below the desired value, estimate the needed amount and monitoring the
casing pressure gauge, adjust to a more closed position until the adjustment pressure is made.
• Changes in pressure must be made only by using the gauge and not the choke position indicator. (The
indicator scale actually only shows the position of the choke and the direction it is moving. It does not
represent pressure changes.)
• If pressure on gauge (s) suddenly change, check pump rate and immediately return choke pressure to
last reliable value. Make a note of sequence of unregulated pressure changes.
The choke operator must also anticipate rapid increases in choke pressure. A
concern during well control is when liquid (fluid in use), following a gas kick
being circulated through the choke, enters the choke.
• Can cause rapid increase in pressure.
If the choke pressure is not immediately adjusted back to the prior value (just before this event),
the pressure increase may lead to lost circulation/formation breakdown.
• Subsea choke and kill lines require additional considerations, as both gas voiding the lines and liquid
following the gas must be taken into account.
Circulating (pump) and choke (casing) pressures are closely related through the “U-tube”.
• When a change in pressure occurs on one gauge, it will not be immediately reflected on the other
gauge.
• The other gauge “lags” behind as the pressure change transits the U-tube.
- If a pressure adjustment is made, proper lag time must be allowed in order to get an accurate
reading before making unnecessary adjustments.
• “Rule of thumb”: A lag time of two seconds per 1,000 feet of well length is typically required to transit a
pressure pulse in a drilling fluid.
- Obviously on deeper wells, lag times are longer than ones that are shallow.
- Compressibility of fluids (e.g., brine vs. gel muds) affect transit time.
• If additional adjustments are made before the pressure is allowed to transit the U-tube, inadequate or
unnecessary pressures can result.
Record pressures, volumes, pit gains and choke adjustments. Jot notes
down on what’s going on.
Be accurate!
• Begin recording SIDPP, SICP, until pressures stabilize, record pit gain.
• When ready to circulate, hold choke (casing) pressure at its SICP value and SLOWLY bring pump up to
Kill Rate Speed.
Once pump is at kill speed, and casing pressure is at its SICP value, record
circulating (pump) pressure.
• This pressure is the Initial Circulating Pressure, ICP and must be held until when/if
kill fluid will be pumped.
• ICP = SIDPP + KRP
- Pressure above SIDPP is from pump, if choke pressure is correct.
Pre-operation meeting with all involved personnel. Everyone must know their responsibilities.
Very good communication between pump and choke operator is necessary.
The pump should be brought up to speed slowly or in gradual stages to avoid formation damage
or complications.
• On rigs with mechanical pumps, the pump can’t be brought to speed in slow stages because its slow
speed is idle and idle is the kill rate. The choke or a bypass should be opened, then the pump engaged.
Then, using the choke, adjust choke pressure to previous value.
Casing pressure should be maintained at a constant pressure while bringing the pump to kill rate
speed. As soon as the pump is on line and running at proper kill rate speed, casing pressure
must be returned to its correct value.
ICP, which is shown on the circulating pressure gauge, is the pressure needed to circulate a well
at a given rate and prevent the well from flowing. ICP = SIDPP + KRP.
If this value does not agree with calculated values a decision must be made.
• Were the shut in pressures correct, or could they be inaccurate due to gas migration?
• Are the gauges correct?
• Are the calculations correct?
• Were proper start up procedures used?
• Is the pump at the same efficiency as when kill rate pressures were taken?
A decision must be made on what values to use, or shut it down, shut it in, reevaluate shut in
pressures, and try again.
Special Operational
Well Control
Considerations
Six Methods of Well
Control
Lubricate
and Bleed
Methods of Well
Control
1
Shut well back in
SLOWLY bring pump to
and verify kill
8 2 kill speed holding CP constant
From
Circulate kill fluid through
well maintaining FCP 7 Shut-in
well
3 Verify correct
circulating pressure
ICP
Maintain proper
pressure vs stks 6 4 Circulate Kick out maintaining ICP
ICP → FCP
5
Weight up pits
Prepare pressure chart
Switch to Kill Fluid
Good for gas kicks with high migration rates that may result in shut-in
problems.
Also used to remove kicks that are swabbed in during a trip out of the hole.
*More time to kill the well is needed in this method than other methods. It may cause
slightly higher pressure in the annulus than other methods (due to lack of additional HP
from Kill Fluid in initial circulation).
Methods of Well
Control
The Wait and Weight method kills the kick faster and keeps wellbore and surface pressures
lower than any other method.
Requires good mixing facilities, full crews, and more supervision than most other methods.
The first calculation that should be done in the Wait and Weight Method is kill fluid density.
Fluid weight is increased before circulation begins, hence the name Wait and Weight.
• Pressure chart
• Pressure limitations
7. Follow pressure chart/graph as kill fluid is pumped down the string to bit/end of
string.
8. Once kill fluid is at the bit/end of string, FCP should be realized.
• Circulating pressure should be equivalent to the calculated FCP.
9. Maintain constant FCP circulating pressure until the kill fluid completely fills the well.
• The gain in HP should necessitate slowly reducing choke pressure.
• Once the kill fluid reaches surface the choke should have been fully opened.
Methods of Well
Control
Sometimes referred to as the Circulate and Weight Method or Slow Weight-Up Method.
- It involves gradually weighting up fluid while circulating out the kick.
Additional calculations are required when tracking different fluid weights in the string at irregular
intervals.
* Sometimes, crew members are required to record concurrent method data even if this is not
the method intended to be used.
5. Each interval or unit of increased fluid density is then noted and recorded with the
pump stroke count at that time.
• The change in circulating pressure for the different density is calculated.
• Once this fluid reaches the bit/end of tubing, circulating pressure is adjusted with
the choke by that amount.
6. The kick is circulated out and the fluid in the well continues to be gradually
increased.
7. Once the kill fluid is consistent throughout the well, shut down pump and check for
flow.
8. Close choke, shut well in and check pressures.
9. If no pressure is noted, open choke (bleeding any trapped pressure), open BOP.
Methods of Well
Control
If casing pressure does not increase 30 minutes after a kick is shut in, gas migration is
minimal. This means that the Volumetric Method need not be used. However, if casing
pressures continues to increase there is a need to initiate Volumetric techniques.
• Some basic scientific principles must be understood before using the Volumetric Method:
• Boyle’s Law – shows the pressure/volume relationship for gas. It states that if gas is allowed
to expand, pressure within the gas will decrease. This is the same concept used by the
Volumetric Method in that it allows gas to expand by bleeding off an estimated fluid volume
at surface, which results in decreasing of wellbore pressures.
Boyle’s Law
P1 V1 = P2 V2
Single Bubble Theory – The biggest misconception in well control schools is that the
gas enters the well as a “single bubble”.
• In reality it is dispersed as pumping and observance of the kick is noted, then more “pure”
kick as the pumps are shut down and well is shut in.
• It may be many minutes before the kick is actually noted resulting in an annulus filled with
influx/regular fluid.
• So, in reality, a single large kick rarely occurs, and once the well is shut in, the pressures on
the casing shoe/weak zone have probably reached it’s maximum.
• This is not to say that MAASP should not be observed, just that it should be considered that
the maximum pressure should be based on the latest pressure test of the BOP or casing.
A stripping pressure schedule must be created in order to control pressures during stripping
operations while gas is migrating, pipe is moving, and fluid is being bled off at choke.
The Lubricate & Bleed Method is used when kick fluid reaches the wellhead.
Generally, workover operations more commonly use the Lubricate and Bleed technique because
circulating ports in the tubing are plugged, sanded tubing, or circulation is not possible.
In this method, fluid is pumped into the well on the annulus side.
Volume must be precisely measured so hydrostatic pressure gain in the well can be calculated.
Methods of Well
Control
Reverse circulation is the reversal of normal circulation or normal well kill pump direction.
In reverse circulation, due to friction (APL, ECD) most of the circulating pump pressure is exerted
on the annulus.
Standard start up procedures apply.
Methods of Well
Control
Bullheading is only possible when there are no obstructions in the tubing and there can be
injection in the formation without exceeding pressure restraints.
Bullheading involves pumping back well fluid into the reservoir, displacing the tubing or casing
with a good amount of kill fluid.
Bullheading Procedure
1. Well is shut in and formation pressure is calculated. If bullheading down the tubing,
maximum pressures should be calculated.
2. Prepare a rough pressure chart of volume pumped versus maximum pressures at
surface. Friction and formation pressure must be overcome to achieve injection of the
liquid in the tubing back into the formation. If pressures or pump rate is too high,
damage to the formation may occur.
3. Once the pumped liquid reaches the formation, an increase in pump pressure may
occur. This is due to a non-native fluid injected to the formation.
4. Once the calculated amount of fluid is pumped, shut down, observe pressures. If no
pressure increase is observed, bleed off injection pressure and, again, observe. If no
pressure change is seen, the well should be dead. Proceed operations with caution.
Formation
Injection
occurs
Kill fluid @
formation
Stripping
Using Annular
Air drilling allows a well to flow until the formation is producing at a sufficient rate or conditions
are no longer safe.
Well killing techniques differ with different areas and different accepted practices. Some pump
water, some inject air. Some shut the well incompletely.
Areas that perform air drilling techniques are usually limited on water and have formations that
do not produce high liquid or gas flow rates.
Most kill techniques involve pumping water down the drillpipe to the bit. This water is pumped at
a high rate down the drillstring because:
• Extreme differences between weight of water being pumped and the formation gases in the annulus.
• Vacuuming – the well may “U-tube” faster than slower pump rates can keep up.
The pump may be slowed down in order to avoid an abrupt increase in surge pressure on the
pump as the water reaches the end of the string.
After pump rate is decided and fluid has reached the bit, different techniques may be used
depending on situation.
• Technique A:
- When enough water hydrostatic has accumulated in the annulus, the formation flow stops and the
well is killed.
• Technique B:
- This will cause more backpressure that may be enough to cease flow in the well.
The advantage of using backpressure is that holding backpressure through the choke
slows the expansion of gas.
This allows drops of water to fall back downhole, saving water that could be lost
when not using backpressure.
Choke Techniques
There are various choke techniques that can be used to maintain the
equivalent hydrostatic pressure of water in order to gain control of the well.
Choke technique 1:
• When water rounds the bit, choke is closed enough to exert the water’s hydrostatic
as backpressure.
• Water circulates up the hole and backpressure is decreased by the estimated gain
in water hydrostatic.
• However, formation gases also exert hydrostatic pressure, so this must be noted in
order to stop the well from pressuring up higher than the equivalent weight of the
water used.
Choke Technique 2:
• Pressure is not applied on choke until the water is believed to be at the casing
shoe.
• Equivalent hydrostatic from shoe to surface is held.
• Hydrostatic begins to gain above the shoe and the equivalent is bled from the
choke.
- However, the formation fracture or formation strength at the casing shoe is often unknown.
This calls for a leak-off test, but it defeats the purpose of air drilling to water the
hole and perform the test.
Therefore, this technique is not used in many areas.
Additionally, the structural integrity of the formation or the strength of the bond
between the cement and casing is usually not known or tested.
Mudcap drilling allows for drilling while managing extreme lost circulation in an overpressured
area.
As with most procedures, there are advantages and disadvantages to mudcap drilling.
Pressured Mudcap Drilling Technique – Pressured mudcap drilling permits monitoring of annulus
pressure to show any changes downhole. A pressure ranging from 150 to 200 psi is usually held
on the choke. Changes in pressures indicate the potential of an influx in the well and/or formation
pressure changes.
Non-pressured Mudcap Drilling Technique – no monitoring of annulus pressures. Used where
sub normal pressures are encountered.
Floating Mudcap Drilling Technique – A viscous heavy mud “cap” is used to prevent formation
flow is utilized. Usually used where a loss zone is encountered and the mudcap used to prevent
formation flow.
Well control is limited to the following when producing from multiple zones:
- Fluid barriers
- Mechanical barriers
- Live well intervention
In slim holes, more than 90% of the hole length is drilled with bit diameters that are smaller than
7”.
• High annular friction while pumping can cause fluid losses while circulating. Kill rate speed and
pressures must be at a rate slow enough to minimize annular friction.
• Since the diameter of the hole is smaller, there is a high potential for swabbing. Trip speed at a given
depth should be calculated and not exceeded.
The same techniques used to detect kicks are used in slimhole operations.
However, since the hole is smaller, kicks must be detected on a smaller increase in flow, smaller
gain in pit or during the earlier stages.
In addition to kick detection by rig crew, additional equipment can be used to monitor the well.
When used, alarms should be set.
Operations should not begin until each crew member has received, understands and can perform
his/her instructions and duties.
Any and all changes in duties, from the normal duties, should be cleared, reported and recorded
by a supervisor.
Well control is a team effort, so communication with all personnel involved is critical.
The use of certain control techniques fluctuates on a case by case basis. More advanced
techniques besides the Driller’s, Wait and Weight, Concurrent and Volumetric methods include
are available.
If conventional techniques do not regain control of the well the following may be considered:
A Circulating Pressure Graph shows what happens to circulating/drillpipe pressure as the new
heavier mud weight is being pumped down the string.
A pressure chart shows strokes vs. what circulating pressure to hold at that point.
Column for:
High angle wells and also those using coiled tubing may have special considerations if the
Weight and Wait Method is used.
• Each section should be taken individually and the change in pressure charted/plotted.
• The pressure chart may not appear as a typical “straight line” and circulating pressure may actually
increase before Final Circulating Pressure is reached.
The maximum allowable surface pressure (MASP) must be calculated. The minimum of the
following is considered the pressure limitation:
- Casing Burst Pressure
Crew members must be aware not to exceed value if based on casing burst or BOP limits.
Casing depth, present and kill fluid density, formation integrity, kick position, and imposed surface
pressures are factors that affect this pressure consideration.
Internal Yield is the pressure value which, if applied within the tubular, will cause the pipe to
burst.
Some operations must consider burst and collapse limitations of the tubing/string and care taken
not to exceed these values.
Any excess pressure exerted against a formation may cause an increase in time and costs of
working over to bring it back to production. Keep pressure to a minimum.
As kill fluid flows down the production string, the amount of static surface pressure that may be
exerted before the damage decreases.
Circulation friction rises as the kill fluid is pumped down the string, which increases surface
pressure and pressure in the tubing.
• These sudden increases in pressure may cause a burst in the tubing.
Rotating/Control Heads:
• Developed to control pressure while drilling underbalanced.
• Accidents occur while putting too much pressure on the rotating head rubber.
• There are different types of rotating and control head products.
• Low pressure tests of 200 to 300 psi are required and high pressure tests are optional.
Kelly Types:
- Tri-Kelly.
- Hex-Kelly.
- Square-Kelly.
Stripper Rubbers:
• Used for air, gas, and water based fluid drilling.
• For oil based drilling fluids, polyurethane stripper rubbers are available.
Pressure Testing:
• Testing procedures for the rotating head should follow manufacturer’s recommended procedures.
Double Annulars:
• Before the improvement in higher working pressure of rotating heads, double annulars were used to
protect the crew.
• Having double annulars caused substructure restrictions on many rigs.
Kicks that occur while tripping are usually due to a failure to detect a swabbing effect because
the hole is not taking the proper amount of fluid.
Once an influx in the wellbore is noticed, the well should be shut in and controlled by stripping or
staging back to bottom, and pressures should be low.
Generally, stripping back to bottom is one of the best options; however, pressures to hold versus
volumes gained can be complex with well geometry and various pipe sizes.
Stripping is the adding or removing of pipe when the well is pressured without allowing vertical
flow at the top of the well.
Since stripping may lead to equipment failure, such as wearing of sealing elements, all activities
should be performed carefully.
A float or inside BOP in the string is required whenever stripping in or out.
To calculate if stripping operations will exert enough downward force to push pipe into the well
against pressures and preventer friction, use the following calculation:
Swt = (0.7854 x D2 x P) + F
Where:
Swt = estimated weight need to strip into hole, lbs
D = diameter of largest collar or tool joint in inches
P = annular pressure, psi
F = approximate pipe weight to slide through packer rubber (use a minimum of
2,000 lbs), lbs
For stripping purposes, the annular preventer is much easier and less time-consuming than
rams.
There are some restrictions and special points that need to be checked prior to use of the
annular preventer:
- Consideration for stripping in the Hole with the Annular Preventer.
- Stripping Out of the Hole with the Annular Preventer.
- Stripping in the Hole using Pipe Rams.
Small tubing, snubbing and coiled tubing units are specialized units that can strip and snub into
pressured wells. For our purposes, the differences are defined as:
• Stripping – movement of pipe in or out of well against pressure when pipe weight is greater than the
force to be overcome.
• Snubbing – forcing of pipe in or out of well against pressure that is great enough to eject the pipe.
Seals from well pressures are provided by specialized stripper assemblies. These are usually
lubricators, stripper preventers or specialized BOPs.
Learning Objectives