US3743021A - Method for cleaning well perforations - Google Patents

Method for cleaning well perforations Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US3743021A
US3743021A US00163856A US3743021DA US3743021A US 3743021 A US3743021 A US 3743021A US 00163856 A US00163856 A US 00163856A US 3743021D A US3743021D A US 3743021DA US 3743021 A US3743021 A US 3743021A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
well
perforations
casing
fluid
chamber
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US00163856A
Inventor
T Mccauley
H Barnes
G Suman
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Shell USA Inc
Original Assignee
Shell Oil Co
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Shell Oil Co filed Critical Shell Oil Co
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US3743021A publication Critical patent/US3743021A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E21EARTH DRILLING; MINING
    • E21BEARTH DRILLING, e.g. DEEP DRILLING; OBTAINING OIL, GAS, WATER, SOLUBLE OR MELTABLE MATERIALS OR A SLURRY OF MINERALS FROM WELLS
    • E21B37/00Methods or apparatus for cleaning boreholes or wells
    • E21B37/08Methods or apparatus for cleaning boreholes or wells cleaning in situ of down-hole filters, screens, e.g. casing perforations, or gravel packs

Definitions

  • ABSTRACT Sand control operations in cased and perforated wells completed into unconsolidated formations are improved by first cleaning the perforations by packing off the perforated interval of the well, rapidly opening the packed-off interval of the well into fluid communication with a low-pressure chamber to surge fluid from surrounding earth formations through the perforations and into the well, allowing debris carried by the surging fluid to settle, and circulating debris from the well.
  • Two widely used sand exclusion methods are the installation of gravel or sand packs in the well bore adjacent the production interval and the consolidation of the formation sand in and/or around the well bore. Consolidation may, for example, be achieved by injecting plastics or resins into the formation or by metal plating the formation. Such consolidation techniques are described in US. Pat. Nos. 3,294,166 and 3,393,737.
  • injectivity impairment into the unconsolidated sands adjacent the perforated interval of the well bore. It is believed that injectivity impairment may be caused by a number of factors. Among these are pulvarized material force from the cement sheath, pulvarized and compacted formation material, and perforation change debris. When using sand consolidating techniques to control sand, the impairment can prevent injection of consolidating fluids into the formation through some of the perforations. This prevents complete consolidation of the interval adjacent the well bore. Additionally, treatment of impaired perforations can cause the impairment to become locked in place by the consolidating material.
  • a number of techniques have been proposed for improving injectivity into the unconsolidated interval prior to the installation of said control means.
  • these techniques are acid stimulation and fracturing. It has been found that each of these methods has the disadvantage that in many cases acid or fracturing fluid moves into the formation through only some of the perforations. Since all perforations are not opened, uniform placement of said control means throughout the interval is not assured.
  • flow impairing materials can be removed from perforations which extend into consolidated formations by perforating the well with the pressure in the unperforated well casing lower than the formation pressure. This causes formations fluids to surge into the casing carrying debris from the formation.
  • the method is referred to as underbalanced perforating.
  • a second technique which has been successfully used in consolidated formations is to backflow material into the well bore after the well is perforated by reducing well bore pressure. This can be done by swabbing fluid from the well bore to reduce the fluid column in the well.
  • the debris may be permitted to settle to the bottom of the well or, advantageously, be removed by unseating the packer to open the packed-off interval to fluid communication with the surface through the casing and circulating a fluid from the surface to the bottom of the well to remove debris from the well.
  • the method is advantageously used prior to the installation of sand exclusion means.
  • the chamber of lower pressure is provided by disposing upper and lower valve means in a string of tubular pipe.
  • a chamber-portion is formed within the string of pipe between the valve means when they are closed.
  • the chamber is operatively positioned by extending the string of pipe into the well. Opening the lower valve opens the chamber into fluid communication with the packed-off interval.
  • the drawing shows a cross-sectional view of a subsurface earth formation traversed by a well suitably equipped for the practice of this invention.
  • sand exclusion means such as a gravel pack or in situ consolidating materials (for example resin or metal plating solutions) according to the method of this invention
  • a string of tubing 15 carrying a packer 16 is run into the well 11.
  • the packer 16 is set above the perforating interval 17 of the casing 12 to pack off the annular space 22 between the casing 12 and the tubing 15.
  • the formation 10 is the lowest productive interval in the well 11. It should be understood that this method may be used in treating upper zones in wells which traverse more than one productive interval. When upper zones are treated, lower zones should be isolated by any suitable conventional means such as the positioning of a bridge plug in the casing 12 below the perforated interval 17 adjacent the formation 10 to be treated.
  • the tubing 15 carries a sealed low pressure chamber 18 containing a gas at a pressure substantially lower than the fluid pressure in the formation 10.
  • the gas in the chamber 18 is advantageously air at substantially atmospheric pressure since this eliminates the need for special equipment to prepare the chamber.
  • other gases and pressures may be used with equal effect.
  • the pressure difference between the fluids in the formation 10 and the low pressure chamber 18 be the maximum available to insure creation of an initial surge of fluid through the perforations 14 at a rate sufficient to dislodge debris tightly packed in the perforations 14 during the perforating process.
  • initial pressure differences in the range of 1,200 psi to 4,000 psi have worked equally well.
  • the volume of the chamber 18 for best results is at least about one-fourth gallon per perforation in the perforated interval 17 and less than about 1 gallon per perforation.
  • the chamber 18 is connected with the interior of the tubing 15 above and below the chamber 18 by valve means 19 and 20 of a type which may be opened from the surface.
  • the lower valve 20 may be a full opening shock valve which is opened by means such as applying tubing weight or by pressurizing the annular space between the casing 12 and tubing 15.
  • the upper valve 19 may be of a type opened by dropping a bar, application of additional tubing weight, or pressurizing the tubing 15.
  • the lower valve 20 is rapidly opened after the packer 16 is set. This allows a controlled volume of fluids from the formation 10 to surge through the perforations 14 into the well 11 as fluid in the well moves into the low pressure chamber 18.
  • the fluid flowing through the perforations 14 carries debris such as pulvarized formation material into the well 11.
  • the debris merely can be permitted to settle to the bottom of the well 1 1 prior to the installation of sand control means. This is achieved by waiting a sufficient time, usually about I hour, for settling to take place prior to disturbing fluids in the well 11.
  • a suitable material is an aqueous suspension of about 25 pounds per barrel of a mixture of lignolsulfonate and 2240 micron calcium carbonate particles. The suspended material screens out on the formation to plug the perforations. After debris has been circulated from the well, the material is dissolved by pumping an acid, such as hydrochloric acid, down the tubing 16.
  • the method of this invention is most advantageously practiced by using one or more sections or joints of the tubing 15 and full opening valves 19 and 20 to form the low pressure chamber 18. This provides flexibility in choosing chamber size without requiring equipment additional to that normally used in sand consolidation other than the two valves 19 and 20. For example, if the length of the perforated interval 17 is 60 feet and if the casing 12 is provided with four perforations per foot, then if the tubing is 2 /8 inch OD.
  • the low pressure chamber 18 can comprise 300 to 1,200 feet of tubing (i.e., a capacity between about 60 and 240 gallons which is one-fourth to 1 gallon per perforation) between an upper valve 19 and a lower valve 20. If other chamber volumes are desired, it is only necessary to change the length of the tubing section.
  • full opening valves 19 and 20 allows fluid to be circulated through the tubing string 21 after the perforations have been cleaned without obstruction from the back surge apparatus. Therefore, if the sand control means to be installed around the casing 12 is installed by injecting fluids into the formation, as in resin or metal plating type consolidation, sand control means placement can continue without withdrawing the tubing string 15 from the well 11. After debris carried into the well 11 has been circulated out of the well, or permitted to settle, the necessary resin or metal plating fluids may be injected down the tubing string 15 and into the formation 17. In most cases, it will be advantageous to reset the packer 16 before injecting these materials.
  • valve 19 and 20 in the well as a permanent part of the tuning string 15 which is then used as a production tubing string.
  • perforations 14 may be cleaned, the formation 10 consolidated in situ, and the well 11 put on production without withdrawing the tubing 15 from the well.
  • packing off a perforated interval of the casing with at least one packer positioning adjacent the packed-off interval a chamber containing a gas at a pressure substantially lower than the formation pressure, the chamber having a selected volume of at least about onefourth gallon times the number of perforations in the packed-off perforated interval of the well;
  • step of positioning a chamber adjacent the packed-off interval comprises the steps of:
  • first and second valve means at longitudinally displaced points in a tubular string of pipe to form a chamber portion within the string of pipe between the two valve means;
  • packing off a perforated interval of the casing with at least one packer positioning adjacent the packed-off interval a chamber containing a gas at a pressure substantially lower than the formation pressure, the chamber having a selected volume of at least about onefourth gallon times the number of perforations in the packed-off perforated interval of the well;
  • step of positioning a chamber adjacent the packed-off interval comprises the steps of:
  • first and second valve means at longitudinally displaced points in a tubular string of pipe to form a chamber portion within the string of pipe between the two valve means;
  • the method of claim 4 including the step of allowing debris carried by the surging fluid into the packedoff interval to settle for at least 15 minutes before circulating fluid to remove debris from the well.
  • valve means installed in a string of tubular pipe to form a closed chamber between the valve means having a volume of at least about one-fourth gallon times the number of perforations in the plurality of perforationsbut less than 1 gallon times that number;
  • sand exclusion means is a resin coating applied to sand adjacent the casing.
  • sand exclusion means is a metal coating applied to sand adjacent the casing by electroless metal plating.

Abstract

Sand control operations in cased and perforated wells completed into unconsolidated formations are improved by first cleaning the perforations by packing off the perforated interval of the well, rapidly opening the packed-off interval of the well into fluid communication with a low-pressure chamber to surge fluid from surrounding earth formations through the perforations and into the well, allowing debris carried by the surging fluid to settle, and circulating debris from the well.

Description

United States Patent 1191 McCauley et a]. 1 July 3, 1973 {54] METHOD FOR CLEANING WELL 3.045.749 7/1962 Brandon 166/177 x PERFORATIONS 3,048,226 8/1962 Smith 166/177 X 3,062,290 11/1962 Beckett.... 166/311 Inventors: ma rn M Ca y: Herbert 3,209,834 10/1965 Essary 166/311 W. Barnes, both of New Orleans, 3.255.820 6/1966 Brandon l66/3l1 La; George 0. Suman, Jr., Houston,
Tex.
[73] Assignee: Shell Oil Company, Houston, Tex.
[22] Filed: July 19, 1971 211 App]. No.: 163,856
[52] US. Cl. 166/311 [51] Int. Cl E2lb 21/00 [58] Field of Search 166/311, 177, 299, 166/ 163 [56] References Cited UNITED STATES PATENTS 3,627,045 12/1971 Lebourg 166/311 X 2,918,127 12/1959 Bodine, .lr 166/177 Primary Examiner-James A. Leppink Attorney-Harold L. Denkler and Rand N. Shulman [5 7] ABSTRACT Sand control operations in cased and perforated wells completed into unconsolidated formations are improved by first cleaning the perforations by packing off the perforated interval of the well, rapidly opening the packed-off interval of the well into fluid communication with a low-pressure chamber to surge fluid from surrounding earth formations through the perforations and into the well, allowing debris carried by the surging fluid to settle, and circulating debris from the well.
13 Claims, 1 Drawing Figure PATENTEDJUL 3 I975 6.0 SumanJr 7'. l .'Mc Cauley IN VE N TORS 1 METHOD FOR CLEANING WELL PERFORATIONS BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 1. Field of the Invention This invention relates to the field of completing wells, and more particularly, to a method for cleaning perforations in a cased and perforated well.
2. Description of the Prior Art In completing wells, such as oil wells, it is common practice to drill the well bore hole into an oil containing formation, cement a tubular casing throughout the length of the bore hole, and thereafter perforate the casing and cement adjacent the oil containing formation to open the formation into fluid communication with the interior of the casing. If the oil containing formation behind the perforated casing is unconsolidated, it may be necessary to provide means for excluding sand from the well bore before the well can be put on production.
It has been found that the presence of unconsolidated sand even in small quantities can seriously effect the operation of both the producing and injection wells. Besides high rate of wear on subsurface and surface equipment due to sand abrasion, partial or complete plugging of a well can occur. If no sand control means is provided, expensive well cleanout is frequently required. In extreme instances the cleanout may not be possible and the well must be abandoned.
Two widely used sand exclusion methods are the installation of gravel or sand packs in the well bore adjacent the production interval and the consolidation of the formation sand in and/or around the well bore. Consolidation may, for example, be achieved by injecting plastics or resins into the formation or by metal plating the formation. Such consolidation techniques are described in US. Pat. Nos. 3,294,166 and 3,393,737.
In some oil producing regions where unconsolidated sands are common and where the above-mentioned sand control methods are frequently used, a high incidence of sand control failure with associated casing damage has been observed. An important factor causing this failure is injectivity impairment into the unconsolidated sands adjacent the perforated interval of the well bore. It is believed that injectivity impairment may be caused by a number of factors. Among these are pulvarized material force from the cement sheath, pulvarized and compacted formation material, and perforation change debris. When using sand consolidating techniques to control sand, the impairment can prevent injection of consolidating fluids into the formation through some of the perforations. This prevents complete consolidation of the interval adjacent the well bore. Additionally, treatment of impaired perforations can cause the impairment to become locked in place by the consolidating material.
It has also been found that permeability impairment in unconsolidated sands can inhibit deposition of gravel in perforation tunnels where sand control is by gravel packing. Tunnels are best filled with gravel if fluid flows out of the wellbore through the perforation tunnels thus carrying packing material into these tunnels. The absence of gravel in perforation tunnels allows fine formation sand to fill in the tunnels when the well is placed on production. This fine formation sand severely restricts fluid flow, and thereby decreases well productivity.
A number of techniques have been proposed for improving injectivity into the unconsolidated interval prior to the installation of said control means. Among these techniques are acid stimulation and fracturing. It has been found that each of these methods has the disadvantage that in many cases acid or fracturing fluid moves into the formation through only some of the perforations. Since all perforations are not opened, uniform placement of said control means throughout the interval is not assured.
It is known that flow impairing materials can be removed from perforations which extend into consolidated formations by perforating the well with the pressure in the unperforated well casing lower than the formation pressure. This causes formations fluids to surge into the casing carrying debris from the formation. The method is referred to as underbalanced perforating. A second technique which has been successfully used in consolidated formations is to backflow material into the well bore after the well is perforated by reducing well bore pressure. This can be done by swabbing fluid from the well bore to reduce the fluid column in the well.
Unfortunately, these techniques have often not been successful in unconsolidated formations which are pressure depleted (i.e. formations in which the pressure of reservoir fluids is significantly less than hydrostatic pressure). A major disadvantage of these methods is that it is very difficult to control the amount of fluid which flows into the well bore. If the well bore fluid column is drawn down too much, then an excessively large volume of fluid may surge into the well carrying a large volume of formation sand. When this occurs, it is necessary to remove the sand before sand control means are installed. This, of course, results in additional expenditures of time and increases the cost of sand control installation. Additionally, if an excessively large volume of fluid flows into the well bore, formation sand around the entire casing can be disturbed. This may result in impairment of formation permeability adjacent the well, thus reducing well productivity.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION We have now found that well perforations in a well cased with a tubular casing which is substantially perforated to open the well into fluid communication with an unconsolidated, fluid containing sub-surface earth formation can be cleared of perforation debris without sanding up the well bore and without creating permeability impairment of the adjacent formation by disturbing sands adjacent well bore by a method which comprises the steps of packing off the perforated interval of the well with at least one packer; positioning adjacent the packed off interval a chamber containing a gas at a pressure substantially lower than the formation pressure, the chamber having selected volume of at least about one-fourth gallon per perforation in the perforated interval of the well but less than 1 gallon per perforation; and rapidly opening the chamber into fluid communication with the packed-off perforated interval whereby fluid surges from the fluid containing formation through the perforations and into the well carrying debris from the perforations into the well. The debris may be permitted to settle to the bottom of the well or, advantageously, be removed by unseating the packer to open the packed-off interval to fluid communication with the surface through the casing and circulating a fluid from the surface to the bottom of the well to remove debris from the well. The method is advantageously used prior to the installation of sand exclusion means.
In a preferred embodiment the chamber of lower pressure is provided by disposing upper and lower valve means in a string of tubular pipe. A chamber-portion is formed within the string of pipe between the valve means when they are closed. The chamber is operatively positioned by extending the string of pipe into the well. Opening the lower valve opens the chamber into fluid communication with the packed-off interval.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING The drawing shows a cross-sectional view of a subsurface earth formation traversed by a well suitably equipped for the practice of this invention.
DESCRIPTION OF A PREFERRED EMBODIMENT Referring to the FIGURE we see an hydrocarbon bearing, unconsolidated sub-surface earth formation traversed by bore hole of a well 11 in which tubular casing 12 has been cemented with cement 13. The casing 12 and cement 13 adjacent the formation 10 have been perforated by conventional means, such as jet or gun perforating, with a number of perforations 14.
To insure uniform placement of sand exclusion means such as a gravel pack or in situ consolidating materials (for example resin or metal plating solutions) according to the method of this invention, a string of tubing 15 carrying a packer 16 is run into the well 11. The packer 16 is set above the perforating interval 17 of the casing 12 to pack off the annular space 22 between the casing 12 and the tubing 15. In the drawing, the formation 10 is the lowest productive interval in the well 11. It should be understood that this method may be used in treating upper zones in wells which traverse more than one productive interval. When upper zones are treated, lower zones should be isolated by any suitable conventional means such as the positioning of a bridge plug in the casing 12 below the perforated interval 17 adjacent the formation 10 to be treated.
The tubing 15 carries a sealed low pressure chamber 18 containing a gas at a pressure substantially lower than the fluid pressure in the formation 10. In practice the gas in the chamber 18 is advantageously air at substantially atmospheric pressure since this eliminates the need for special equipment to prepare the chamber. However, other gases and pressures may be used with equal effect. It is only necessary that the pressure in the chamber 18 be sufficiently lower than the pressure in the formation 10 to allow an adequate volume of fluid to flow into the chamber 18. In practice operators may prefer that the pressure difference between the fluids in the formation 10 and the low pressure chamber 18 be the maximum available to insure creation of an initial surge of fluid through the perforations 14 at a rate sufficient to dislodge debris tightly packed in the perforations 14 during the perforating process. However, we have found that initial pressure differences in the range of 1,200 psi to 4,000 psi have worked equally well.
The volume of the chamber 18 for best results is at least about one-fourth gallon per perforation in the perforated interval 17 and less than about 1 gallon per perforation. We have found that for chamber volumes less than about one-fourth gallon per perforation, productivity through subsequently placed sand control installations is not greatly improved. For volumes greater than about 1 gallon per perforation, the well tends to become filled with sand washed through the perforations 14, and further productivity improvement is not achieved.
The chamber 18 is connected with the interior of the tubing 15 above and below the chamber 18 by valve means 19 and 20 of a type which may be opened from the surface. For example, the lower valve 20 may be a full opening shock valve which is opened by means such as applying tubing weight or by pressurizing the annular space between the casing 12 and tubing 15. Similarly, the upper valve 19 may be of a type opened by dropping a bar, application of additional tubing weight, or pressurizing the tubing 15. To clean the perforations 14 the lower valve 20 is rapidly opened after the packer 16 is set. This allows a controlled volume of fluids from the formation 10 to surge through the perforations 14 into the well 11 as fluid in the well moves into the low pressure chamber 18. The fluid flowing through the perforations 14 carries debris such as pulvarized formation material into the well 11.
In some cases, the debris merely can be permitted to settle to the bottom of the well 1 1 prior to the installation of sand control means. This is achieved by waiting a sufficient time, usually about I hour, for settling to take place prior to disturbing fluids in the well 11.
However, in many cases it is advantageous to remove the debris from the well 11. This insures that the debris is not carried back into the perforations 14 as fluid, for example in situ consolidation fluid, is injected into the formation. To remove the debris from the well 11, the packer 16 is released, and the upper valve 19 is opened. Cleaning fluid such as salt water, a liquid hydrocarbon, or other suitable liquid can then be circulated from the surface down the tubing 15 and up the annular space between the tubing 15 and casing 12 to carry debris away from the perforated interval 17. Sand control means is then installed in a conventional manner.
In some cases best results may be obtained by allowing debris to settle in the well 11 for 15 minutes or more before circulating cleaning fluid. Advantageously, sufficient tail pipe 21 is run below the packer to enable lowering the tubing string 15 to the bottom of the well 11 when circulating debris out of the well 11 without running the packer 16 through the perforated interval. This avoids washing additional sand into the well bore as the packer passes up through the perforations 14 after washing to bottom.
It has been found that in some cases when the pressure in the formation 10 is depleted, the circulating cleaning fluid may flow in large amounts back through the perforations 14 and into the formation 10 carrying debris into the perforations 14. Therefore it is advantageous in such cases to inject a temporary plugging material into the perforations 14 prior to circulating debris out of the well. A suitable material is an aqueous suspension of about 25 pounds per barrel of a mixture of lignolsulfonate and 2240 micron calcium carbonate particles. The suspended material screens out on the formation to plug the perforations. After debris has been circulated from the well, the material is dissolved by pumping an acid, such as hydrochloric acid, down the tubing 16.
The method of this invention is most advantageously practiced by using one or more sections or joints of the tubing 15 and full opening valves 19 and 20 to form the low pressure chamber 18. This provides flexibility in choosing chamber size without requiring equipment additional to that normally used in sand consolidation other than the two valves 19 and 20. For example, if the length of the perforated interval 17 is 60 feet and if the casing 12 is provided with four perforations per foot, then if the tubing is 2 /8 inch OD. tubing (which has a capacity of about gallons per hundred feed of length) the low pressure chamber 18 can comprise 300 to 1,200 feet of tubing (i.e., a capacity between about 60 and 240 gallons which is one-fourth to 1 gallon per perforation) between an upper valve 19 and a lower valve 20. If other chamber volumes are desired, it is only necessary to change the length of the tubing section.
The use of full opening valves 19 and 20 allows fluid to be circulated through the tubing string 21 after the perforations have been cleaned without obstruction from the back surge apparatus. Therefore, if the sand control means to be installed around the casing 12 is installed by injecting fluids into the formation, as in resin or metal plating type consolidation, sand control means placement can continue without withdrawing the tubing string 15 from the well 11. After debris carried into the well 11 has been circulated out of the well, or permitted to settle, the necessary resin or metal plating fluids may be injected down the tubing string 15 and into the formation 17. In most cases, it will be advantageous to reset the packer 16 before injecting these materials. In some cases, it may be advantageous to leave the valve 19 and 20 in the well as a permanent part of the tuning string 15 which is then used as a production tubing string. Thus perforations 14 may be cleaned, the formation 10 consolidated in situ, and the well 11 put on production without withdrawing the tubing 15 from the well.
I claim as my invention:
1. In a method of completing a well wherein the well bore hole is cased with a tubular casing that is subsequently perforated with a number of perforations to open the bore hole into fluid communication with a fluid-containing subsurface earth formation, the improvement which comprises cleaning the perforations to remove debris therefrom by:
packing off a perforated interval of the casing with at least one packer; positioning adjacent the packed-off interval a chamber containing a gas at a pressure substantially lower than the formation pressure, the chamber having a selected volume of at least about onefourth gallon times the number of perforations in the packed-off perforated interval of the well;
rapidly opening the chamber into fluid communication with the packed-off perforated interval whereby fluid surges from the fluid-containing formation through the perforations and into the casing carrying debris from the perforations into the well; and
permitting debris to settle in the well.
2. The method of claim 1 wherein the step of positioning a chamber adjacent the packed-off interval comprises the steps of:
disposing first and second valve means at longitudinally displaced points in a tubular string of pipe to form a chamber portion within the string of pipe between the two valve means; and
extending the string of pipe, including the chamber portion, into the well.
3. The method of claim 1 wherein the chamber positioned adjacent the packed-off interval contains air at substantially atmospheric pressure.
4. In a method of completing a well wherein the well bore hole is cased with a tubular casing that is subsequently perforated with a number of perforations to open the borehole into fluid communication with a fluid-containing subsurface earth formation, the improvement which comprises cleaning the perforations to remove debris therefrom by:
packing off a perforated interval of the casing with at least one packer; positioning adjacent the packed-off interval a chamber containing a gas at a pressure substantially lower than the formation pressure, the chamber having a selected volume of at least about onefourth gallon times the number of perforations in the packed-off perforated interval of the well;
rapidly opening the chamber into fluid communication with the packed-off perforated interval whereby a controlled volume of fluid substantially equal to the selected volume of the chamber surges from the fluid-containing formation through the perforations and into the casing carrying debris from the perforations into the well;
unseating the packer to open the packed-off interval to fluid communication with the surface through the casing; and
circulating a fluid from the surface into the well to remove debris from the well.
5. The method of claim 4 wherein the step of positioning a chamber adjacent the packed-off interval comprises the steps of:
disposing first and second valve means at longitudinally displaced points in a tubular string of pipe to form a chamber portion within the string of pipe between the two valve means; and
extending the string of pipe, including the chamber portion, into the well.
6. The method of claim 4 including the step of allowing debris carried by the surging fluid into the packedoff interval to settle for at least 15 minutes before circulating fluid to remove debris from the well.
7. In a well having a cemented casing perforated with a plurality of perforations which open the interior of the casing into fluid communication with an unconsolidated sand formation containing a fluid at a pressure, a method of excluding sand from the casing without locking perforation-plugging debris in the perforations comprising the steps of:
installing upper end and lower valve means in a string of tubular pipe to form a closed chamber between the valve means having a volume of at least about one-fourth gallon times the number of perforations in the plurality of perforationsbut less than 1 gallon times that number;
lowering the string of tubular pipe into the well through the casing with the pressure in the closed chamber substantially less than the pressure in the sand formation;
packing-01f the annular space between the tubular pipe and the casing above the perforations by setting a packer;
opening the lower valve to connect the chamber in fluid communication with'the-perforated portiomof the casing whereby fluid surges from the formation, through the perforations and into the casing carrying debris into the casing; and v installing sand exclusion means to exclude sand from the casing.
8. The method of claim 7 including the steps of after opening the lower valve:
releasing the packer to open the well to fluid communication between the earth surface and the perforated portion of the casing through the annular space between the tubular pipe and the casing;
opening the upper valve; and
circulating a fluid from the surface through the tubular pipe and annular space between the tubular pipe and the casing to remove debris from the easmg.
9. The method of claim 8 including the steps of:
temporarily plugging the perforations by injecting an acid soluble plugging material into the perforations before circulating the debris-removing fluid; and
injecting an acid into the perforations after circulating debris from the casing to open the temporarily plugged perforations.
10. The method of claim 7 wherein the sand exclusion means is a gravel pack.
11. The method of claim 7 wherein the sand exclusion means is a resin coating applied to sand adjacent the casing.
12. The method of claim 7 wherein the sand exclusion means is a metal coating applied to sand adjacent the casing by electroless metal plating.
13. The method of claim 7 wherein the sand exclusion means is installed without withdrawing the tubular string of pipe from the well and including the step of producing fluid from the formation through the tubular string of pipe including the open upper and lower valves.

Claims (13)

1. In a method of completing a well wherein the well bore hole is cased with a tubular casing that is subsequently perforated with a number of perforations to open the bore hole into fluid communication with a fluid-containing subsurface earth formation, the improvement which comprises cleaning the perforations to remove debris therefrom by: packing off a perforated interval of the casing with at least one packer; positioning adjacent the packed-off interval a chamber containing a gas at a pressure substantially lower than the formation pressure, the chamber having a selected volume of at least about one-fourth gallon times the number of perforations in the packed-off perforated interval of the well; rapidly opening the chamber into fluid communication with the packed-off perforated interval whereby fluid surges from the fluid-containing formation through the perforations and into the casing carrying debris from the perforations into the well; and permitting debris to settle in the well.
2. The method of claim 1 wherein the step of positioning a chamber adjacent the packed-off interval comprises the steps of: disposing first and second valve means at longitudinally displaced points in a tubular string of pipe to form a chamber portion within the string of pipe between the two valve means; and extending the string of pipe, including the chamber portion, into the well.
3. The method of claim 1 wherein the chamber positioned adjacent the packed-off interval contains air at substantially atmospheric pressure.
4. In a method of completing a well wherein the well bore hole is cased with a tubular casing that is subsequently perforated with a number of perforations to open the borehole into fluid communication with a fluid-containing subsurface earth formation, the improvement which comprises cleaning the perforations to remove debris therefrom by: packing off a perforated interval of the casing with at least one packer; positioning adjacent the packed-off interval a chamber containing a gas at a pressure substantially lower than the formation pressure, the chamber having a selected volume of at least about one-fourth gallon times the number of perforations in the packed-off perforated interval of the well; rapidly opening the chamber into fluid communication with the packed-off perforated interval whereby a controlled volume of fluid substantially equal to the selected volume of the chamber surges from the fluid-containing formation through the perforations and into the casing carrying debris from the perforations into the well; unseating the packer to open the packed-off interval to fluid communication with the surface through the casing; and circulating a fluid from the surface into the well to remove debris from the well.
5. The method of claim 4 wherein the step of positioning a chamber adjacent the packed-off interval comprises the steps of: disposing first and second valve means at longitudinally displaced points in a tubular string of pipe to form a chamber portion within the string of pIpe between the two valve means; and extending the string of pipe, including the chamber portion, into the well.
6. The method of claim 4 including the step of allowing debris carried by the surging fluid into the packed-off interval to settle for at least 15 minutes before circulating fluid to remove debris from the well.
7. In a well having a cemented casing perforated with a plurality of perforations which open the interior of the casing into fluid communication with an unconsolidated sand formation containing a fluid at a pressure, a method of excluding sand from the casing without locking perforation-plugging debris in the perforations comprising the steps of: installing upper and lower valve means in a string of tubular pipe to form a closed chamber between the valve means having a volume of at least about one-fourth gallon times the number of perforations in the plurality of perforations but less than 1 gallon times that number; lowering the string of tubular pipe into the well through the casing with the pressure in the closed chamber substantially less than the pressure in the sand formation; packing-off the annular space between the tubular pipe and the casing above the perforations by setting a packer; opening the lower valve to connect the chamber in fluid communication with the perforated portion of the casing whereby fluid surges from the formation, through the perforations and into the casing carrying debris into the casing; and installing sand exclusion means to exclude sand from the casing.
8. The method of claim 7 including the steps of after opening the lower valve: releasing the packer to open the well to fluid communication between the earth surface and the perforated portion of the casing through the annular space between the tubular pipe and the casing; opening the upper valve; and circulating a fluid from the surface through the tubular pipe and annular space between the tubular pipe and the casing to remove debris from the casing.
9. The method of claim 8 including the steps of: temporarily plugging the perforations by injecting an acid soluble plugging material into the perforations before circulating the debris-removing fluid; and injecting an acid into the perforations after circulating debris from the casing to open the temporarily plugged perforations.
10. The method of claim 7 wherein the sand exclusion means is a gravel pack.
11. The method of claim 7 wherein the sand exclusion means is a resin coating applied to sand adjacent the casing.
12. The method of claim 7 wherein the sand exclusion means is a metal coating applied to sand adjacent the casing by electroless metal plating.
13. The method of claim 7 wherein the sand exclusion means is installed without withdrawing the tubular string of pipe from the well and including the step of producing fluid from the formation through the tubular string of pipe including the open upper and lower valves.
US00163856A 1971-07-19 1971-07-19 Method for cleaning well perforations Expired - Lifetime US3743021A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US16385671A 1971-07-19 1971-07-19

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US3743021A true US3743021A (en) 1973-07-03

Family

ID=22591874

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US00163856A Expired - Lifetime US3743021A (en) 1971-07-19 1971-07-19 Method for cleaning well perforations

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US3743021A (en)

Cited By (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO1985003529A1 (en) * 1984-01-31 1985-08-15 Parkhurst Warren E Corrosion protection anode
US4793417A (en) * 1987-08-19 1988-12-27 Otis Engineering Corporation Apparatus and methods for cleaning well perforations
US5669445A (en) * 1996-05-20 1997-09-23 Halliburton Energy Services, Inc. Well gravel pack formation method
US6142232A (en) * 1998-07-15 2000-11-07 Layne Christensen Company Method and apparatus for cleaning wells
US6296058B1 (en) * 2000-03-15 2001-10-02 Emmet F. Brieger Wellbottom fluid implosion treatment system
US20040016549A1 (en) * 2002-07-24 2004-01-29 Richard Selinger Method and apparatus for causing pressure variations in a wellbore
US8857513B2 (en) * 2012-01-20 2014-10-14 Baker Hughes Incorporated Refracturing method for plug and perforate wells
WO2018063006A1 (en) * 2016-09-30 2018-04-05 Tco As Method and system for plugging a subterranean well
US11248442B2 (en) 2019-12-10 2022-02-15 Halliburton Energy Services, Inc. Surge assembly with fluid bypass for well control

Citations (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2918127A (en) * 1956-08-02 1959-12-22 Jr Albert G Bodine Method of cleaning out well pump tubing and the like
US3045749A (en) * 1954-06-02 1962-07-24 Orpha B Brandon Pivoting means and method for producing pulsating wave by and on fluid pressure drives
US3048226A (en) * 1955-04-04 1962-08-07 Edward W Smith Use of pulsating pressures for increasing the permeability of underground structures
US3062290A (en) * 1959-11-25 1962-11-06 Western Gulf Oil Company Apparatus for periodically back flushing a well
US3209834A (en) * 1962-06-07 1965-10-05 Shell Oil Co Shock inducing well tool
US3255820A (en) * 1959-11-16 1966-06-14 N A Hardin Method of treating wells by use of implosive reactions
US3627045A (en) * 1970-03-02 1971-12-14 Schlumberger Technology Corp Methods for completing wells traversing earth formations

Patent Citations (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3045749A (en) * 1954-06-02 1962-07-24 Orpha B Brandon Pivoting means and method for producing pulsating wave by and on fluid pressure drives
US3048226A (en) * 1955-04-04 1962-08-07 Edward W Smith Use of pulsating pressures for increasing the permeability of underground structures
US2918127A (en) * 1956-08-02 1959-12-22 Jr Albert G Bodine Method of cleaning out well pump tubing and the like
US3255820A (en) * 1959-11-16 1966-06-14 N A Hardin Method of treating wells by use of implosive reactions
US3062290A (en) * 1959-11-25 1962-11-06 Western Gulf Oil Company Apparatus for periodically back flushing a well
US3209834A (en) * 1962-06-07 1965-10-05 Shell Oil Co Shock inducing well tool
US3627045A (en) * 1970-03-02 1971-12-14 Schlumberger Technology Corp Methods for completing wells traversing earth formations

Cited By (13)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO1985003529A1 (en) * 1984-01-31 1985-08-15 Parkhurst Warren E Corrosion protection anode
US4793417A (en) * 1987-08-19 1988-12-27 Otis Engineering Corporation Apparatus and methods for cleaning well perforations
US5669445A (en) * 1996-05-20 1997-09-23 Halliburton Energy Services, Inc. Well gravel pack formation method
US6142232A (en) * 1998-07-15 2000-11-07 Layne Christensen Company Method and apparatus for cleaning wells
US6296058B1 (en) * 2000-03-15 2001-10-02 Emmet F. Brieger Wellbottom fluid implosion treatment system
US20040016549A1 (en) * 2002-07-24 2004-01-29 Richard Selinger Method and apparatus for causing pressure variations in a wellbore
US6877566B2 (en) * 2002-07-24 2005-04-12 Richard Selinger Method and apparatus for causing pressure variations in a wellbore
US8857513B2 (en) * 2012-01-20 2014-10-14 Baker Hughes Incorporated Refracturing method for plug and perforate wells
WO2018063006A1 (en) * 2016-09-30 2018-04-05 Tco As Method and system for plugging a subterranean well
GB2578266A (en) * 2016-09-30 2020-04-29 Tco As Method and system for plugging a subterranean well
US10697268B2 (en) 2016-09-30 2020-06-30 Tco As Method and system for plugging a subterranean well
GB2578266B (en) * 2016-09-30 2021-12-08 Tco As Method and system for plugging a subterranean well
US11248442B2 (en) 2019-12-10 2022-02-15 Halliburton Energy Services, Inc. Surge assembly with fluid bypass for well control

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US4685519A (en) Hydraulic fracturing and gravel packing method employing special sand control technique
US4549608A (en) Hydraulic fracturing method employing special sand control technique
US6772837B2 (en) Screen assembly having diverter members and method for progressively treating an interval of a welibore
US5178218A (en) Method of sand consolidation with resin
US5375661A (en) Well completion method
EP0426427B1 (en) Well completion method
US5964289A (en) Multiple zone well completion method and apparatus
US6857476B2 (en) Sand control screen assembly having an internal seal element and treatment method using the same
US6719051B2 (en) Sand control screen assembly and treatment method using the same
US5505260A (en) Method and apparatus for wellbore sand control
US6761218B2 (en) Methods and apparatus for improving performance of gravel packing systems
US3709298A (en) Sand pack-aided formation sand consolidation
US5373899A (en) Compatible fluid gravel packing method
US5197543A (en) Horizontal well treatment method
US3814187A (en) Subsurface formation plugging
US2749989A (en) Method and means of completing a well
US4917188A (en) Method for setting well casing using a resin coated particulate
US3696867A (en) Resin consolidated sandpack
US3437143A (en) Formation consolidation
US3251416A (en) Method for improving permeability
US3743021A (en) Method for cleaning well perforations
US3695355A (en) Gravel pack method
US5411090A (en) Method for isolating multiple gravel packed zones in wells
US3692114A (en) Fluidized sandpacking
US3088520A (en) Producing fluid from an unconsolidated subterranean reservoir