Lecture 2 - Module 4
Lecture 2 - Module 4
PETROCHEMICAL INDUSTRIES
Subject Code: 19-206-0607(IE)
Lecture 2
By
By Produced Fluid
• Wells that produce oil
• Wells that produce oil and natural gas
• Wells that only produce natural gas
By Location
• Onshore
• Offshore
• Wells with subsea wellheads, where the top of the well is sitting on the ocean floor
under water, and often connected to a pipeline on the ocean floor.
• Wells with 'dry' wellheads, where the top of the well is above the water on a
platform or jacket, which also often contains processing equipment for the
produced fluid.
By Purpose
Another way to classify oil wells is by their purpose in contributing to the development of a resource.
They can be characterized as:
• wildcat wells are drilled where little or no known geological information is available. The site may
have been selected because of wells drilled some distance from the proposed location but on a terrain
that appeared similar to the proposed site.
• exploration wells are drilled purely for exploratory (information gathering) purposes in a new area,
the site selection is usually based on seismic data, satellite surveys etc. Details gathered in this well
includes the presence of Hydrocarbon in the drilled location, the amount of fluid present and the
depth at which oil or/and gas occurs.
• appraisal wells are used to assess characteristics (such as flow rate, reserve quantity) of a proven
hydrocarbon accumulation. The purpose of this well is to reduce uncertainty about the characteristics
and properties of the hydrocarbon present in the field.
• production wells are drilled primarily for producing oil or gas, once the producing structure and
characteristics are determined.
• development wells are wells drilled for the production of oil or gas already proven by appraisal
drilling to be suitable for exploitation.
• Abandoned well are wells permanently plugged in the drilling phase for technical reasons.
Production wells may be further categorised as-
• oil producers producing predominantly liquid hydrocarbons, but mostly with some
associated gas.
• gas producers producing almost entirely gaseous hydrocarbons.
• water injectors injecting water into the formation to maintain reservoir pressure, or simply
to dispose of water produced with the hydrocarbons because even after treatment, it
would be too oily and too saline to be considered clean for dumping overboard offshore,
let alone into a fresh water resource in the case of onshore wells. Water injection into the
producing zone frequently has an element of reservoir management; however, often
produced water disposal is into shallower zones safely beneath any fresh water zones.
• aquifer producers intentionally producing water for re-injection to manage pressure. If
possible this water will come from the reservoir itself. Using aquifer produced water
rather than water from other sources is to preclude chemical incompatibility that might
lead to reservoir-plugging precipitates. These wells will generally be needed only if
produced water from the oil or gas producers is insufficient for reservoir management
purposes.
• gas injectors injecting gas into the reservoir often as a means of disposal or sequestering
for later production, but also to maintain reservoir pressure
ONSHORE/OFFSHORE DRILLING
INTRODUCTION
• The first offshore oil well was drilled more than 70 years ago off the coast of California, but the
majority of offshore drilling has taken place only in the last 25 years (see figure). Crude oil is
mainly found in certain geological structures such as anticlines, fault traps and salt domes, which
are located by seismic geophysical survey, under different terrains and different climates.
• Offshore oil operation involves several activities—
• Exploration,
• Drilling,
• Construction work,
• Production,
• Maintenance and repair work underwater,
• And ultimate transport of oil/gas to refineries.
• The location of oil is by seismic geophysical survey. When oil is located, experimental drilling is
carried out to ascertain whether output will be commercially viable. If the experimental well
produces sufficient oil, then production wells are drilled, and the crude oil and gas are conveyed by
pipelines ultimately to refineries on shore
OIL EXPLORATION
Forming Oil
Oil is formed from the remains of tiny plants and animals (plankton)
that died in ancient seas between 10 million and 600 million years ago.
After the organisms died, they sank into the sand and mud at the bottom
of the sea.
1, 2) conventional fixed platforms; 3) compliant tower; 4, 5) vertically moored tension leg and
mini-tension leg platform; 6) spar; 7, 8) semi-submersibles; 9) floating production, storage,
and offloading facility; 10) sub-sea completion and tie-back to host facility
Fixed platforms
• These platforms are built on concrete or steel legs, or both,
anchored directly onto the seabed, supporting the deck
with space for drilling rigs, production facilities and crew
quarters. Such platforms are, by virtue of their immobility,
designed for very long term use (for instance the Hibernia
platform). Various types of structure are used: steel jacket,
concrete caisson, floating steel, and even floating concrete.
Steel jackets are structural sections made of tubular steel
members, and are usually piled into the seabed
• Concrete caisson structures, pioneered by the Condeep
concept, often have in-built oil storage in tanks below the
sea surface and these tanks were often used as a flotation
capability, allowing them to be built close to shore
(Norwegian fjords and Scottish firths are popular because
they are sheltered and deep enough) and then floated to
their final position where they are sunk to the seabed.
Fixed platforms are economically feasible for installation
in water depths up to about 520 m (1,710 ft)
Compliant towers
These platforms consist of slender, flexible
towers and a pile foundation supporting a
conventional deck for drilling and production
operations. Compliant towers are designed to
sustain significant lateral deflections and forces,
and are typically used in water depths ranging
from 370 to 910 metres (1,210 to 2,990 ft)
Semi-submersible platform
These platforms have hulls (columns and
pontoons) of sufficient buoyancy to cause the
structure to float, but of weight sufficient to keep
the structure upright. Semi-submersible platforms
can be moved from place to place and can be
ballasted up or down by altering the amount of
flooding in buoyancy tanks. They are generally
anchored by combinations of chain, wire rope or
polyester rope, or both, during drilling and/or
production operations, though they can also be
kept in place by the use of dynamic positioning.
Semi-submersibles can be used in water depths
from 60 to 3,000 metres (200 to 10,000 ft)
Jack-up drilling rigs
Jack-up Mobile Drilling Units (or jack-ups), as the name suggests, are rigs that can
be jacked up above the sea using legs that can be lowered. These MODUs (Mobile
Offshore Drilling Units) are typically used in water depths up to 120 metres (390
ft), although some designs can go to 170 m (560 ft) depth. They are designed to
move from place to place, and then anchor themselves by deploying their legs to the
ocean bottom using a rack and pinion gear system on each leg.
Drillships
Devils tower
Well Killing
• A well kill is the operation of placing a column of special fluids of the
required density into a well bore in order to prevent the flow of
reservoir fluids without the need for pressure control equipment at the
surface.
• Methods:
• Reverse Circulation
• Bullheading
• Forward Circulation
• Lubricate and bleed
Well kick
A kick is a well control problem in which the pressure found within the
drilled rock is higher than the mud hydrostatic pressure acting on the
borehole or rock face. When this occurs, the greater formation pressure
has a tendency to force formation fluids into the wellbore. This forced
fluid flow is called a kick. If the flow is successfully controlled, the kick
is considered to have been killed. An uncontrolled kick that increases in
severity may result in what is known as a “blowout.”
Blow out