Screenles Methods To Control Sand
Screenles Methods To Control Sand
Combining proven oileld technologies allows operators to achieve solidsfree production in many of todays challenging oil and gas developments.
This approach provides viable, cost-effective alternatives to conventional
sand-control methods for completion or rehabilitation of wells that produce
sand, especially when applied riglesswithout conventional rigs.
Andrew Acock
Aberdeen, Scotland
Norbert Heitmann
Caracas, Venezuela
Steve Hoover
Houston, Texas, USA
Badar Zia Malik
Stavanger, Norway
Enzo Pitoni
Eni S.p.A. E&P Division
Milan, Italy
Claud Riddles
J.M. Huber Corp.
Houston, Texas
J. Ricardo Solares
Saudi Aramco
Udhailiyah, Saudi Arabia
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Oileld Review
Propped fracture
Cement
Casing
Perforations
External pack
Oil
Formation
sand grain
Proppant-flowback control
Proppant grains held in
place by PropNET fibers
Resin
Formation consolidation
> Screenless completions. Rigless methods prevent sand inux without screens or annular
packs by combining optimized perforating, chemical formation consolidation, or stabilization,
and tip-screenout (TSO) fracturing with proppant-owback control bers to create an "external"
pack (top left). Resin-coated proppants (RCP), PropNET hydraulic fracturing proppant-pack
additives, or both, help stop proppant and formation sand production (top right). Formation
consolidation involves injection of a resin system into the formation to form a stronger bond
between individual grains (bottom left).
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600
400
300
200
Thousand dollars
500
100
0
Rigless completion
without screens
Fracturing
Tools
Pumping
Perforating
Rig
> Screenless completion versus frac packing with internal screens. Rigless sand-control methods
require additional pumping and coiled tubing services, but elimination of mechanical screen assemblies, more complex downhole equipment and conventional rig operations reduces costs signicantly.
Rigless Interventions
Screenless completions avoid the limitations and
productivity restrictions of internal gravel packs
and screens. Screenless completions do not
restrict wellbores across pay intervals. This fullbore access provides additional exibility for
subsequent well logging and data gathering,
remedial repairs and recompletions, reservoir
monitoring and production management, and
control of water or gas inow.
In addition to simplifying completion operations and reducing installation risks, this
approach decreases cost by eliminating screen
assemblies and associated equipment, complex
downhole tools, and the fluid volumes and
pumping operations that are required to place
gravel around screens (above).
Screenless completions can provide primary
sand control in newly drilled wells or lateral sidetracks, especially for casing sizes and wellbore
configurations that preclude the installation of
mechanical sand-exclusion screens. In addition,
they are used to complete bypassed zones in
existing wellbores. Wells without screens and
gravel packs that begin to produce sand can be
recompleted using screenless techniques.
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Evolving Techniques
In the early 1990s, companies began evaluating
methods to prevent sand inux by mitigating formation failure and perforation breakdown in
unstable formations. Since that time, operators
and service companies have worked together to
develop and optimize rigless sand-control techniques. These efforts led to optimized perforating
practices for sand managementcontrol and
preventionas well as increased hydraulic fracturing and frac packing for sand control.1
Amoco used up-and-under fracturing in the
North Sea Valhall eld during the 1980s.2 Statoil
applied a similar technique called indirect vertical fracturing (IVF) to control sand in the North
Sea Gullfaks eld without installing screens and
gravel packing.3 These methods involve perforating competent shale or other high-strength
Oileld Review
Spring 2003
Cement
Casing
Competent layer
Weak layer
Propped fracture
Perforations
Competent layer
> Early screenless completion in the North Sea. The "up-and-under," or indirect
vertical fracturing (IVF), technique was used by Amoco in the Valhall eld to
control chalk production, and by Statoil in the Gullfaks eld to control sand in
reservoirs with relatively thick, interbedded sandstones and shale layers.
Hydraulic fracture treatments designed to propagate into a nearby hydrocarbonbearing formation are initiated by perforating a shale or stronger zone. Fracture
height and length grow rapidly through the weaker producing interval, with the
initial fracture section in the more competent layer acting to exclude formation
sand from the wellbore.
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Dynamic fracture
Proppant
Tip screenout
Perforation
Fracture inflation
Cement
Annular opening
Casing
Propped fracture
> Fracturing for screenless completions. Specialized stimulation designs generate tip-screenout (TSO)
fractures using proppant-carrying uids that leak off early in a treatment. Dehydration of this slurry
causes proppants to pack off at biwing fracture tips, halting length propagation, or extension (top).
Pumping additional slurry causes dynamic fractures to inate as proppants pack back toward the well
(middle). This promotes grain-to-grain contact after fracture closure and creates wide, high-conductivity fractures that connect discrete formation layers and establish linear ow to the well. A TSO treatment causes enough formation displacement over short intervals to create an annular opening around
the wellbore. This "external pack" becomes packed with proppants and covers perforations that are not
aligned with the PFP. This prevents sand production from nonaligned perforations, and further reduces
near-wellbore pressure drop (bottom).
Oileld Review
Minimum horizontal
stress (Sh)
180
SH
Sh
> Orienting perforations in the right direction. If in-situ stress directions are known, perforating guns
with charges at 0 or 180 can be aligned in the preferred fracture plane (PFP), perpendicular to the
minimum horizontal stress direction (Sh), so that the TSO fracture will cover all perforations. Proper
orientation reduces or eliminates complex near-wellbore ow, or tortuosity, which increases fracture
initiation and treatment pressures.
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PropNET ber technology uses randomly oriented carbon fibers that create a physical,
rather than chemical, barrier that reinforces
proppant packs and inhibits flowback (below
left).14 The bers are added continuously to fracturing uids at the wellsite and mix with proppants during pumping. Experience indicates
that PropNET fibers allow immediate flowback
to improve treatment-fluid recovery after fracturing. This capability is attributed to the building of a mechanically reinforced network that
interlocks proppant grains. Unlike RCP, this
technology does not depend on temperature-sensitive curing processes or other chemical reactions. The bers are inert and compatible with
all fracturing fluids, including ClearFRAC polymer-free frac uids based on viscoelastic surfactants (VES).
PropNET bers and proppants are easier to
remove than RCP alone, which can cure and
bond together inside the wellbore under certain
conditions. These specialized bers do not have
temperature, closure-stress or shut-in time limitations before, during or after fracturing.
Because PropNET bers do not bond with prop-
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Oileld Review
Spring 2003
0
30%
330
20%
300
Preferred fracture plane
30
Borehole breakout 60
10%
270
10%
20%
90
30%
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150
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180
Wireline
swivel
Initial Gyroscope Run
Relative bearing, 0
Wireline Perforating
Inclinometer Tool
(WPIT) and casingcollar locator (CCL)
Casing
Charges
Gyroscope
carrier
HSD gun
Upper weighted
spring-positioning
device (WSPD)
Perforating Run
Upper indexing
adapter
Relative bearing, 0
HSD High
Shot Density
gun, 180
phasing
Lower indexing
adapter
Lower weighted
spring-positioning
device (WSPD)
PFP
PFP
HSD gun
Casing
Charges
> Wireline-oriented perforating. The Schlumberger Wireline Oriented Perforating Tool (WOPT) can be
run in near-vertical and high-angle wells with inclination angles from 0.3 to about 60 (left). Developed
initially for oriented fracturing, the WOPT is also used for sand prevention and screenless completions.
This tool orients standard hollow-steel carrier guns with charges at optimal 0 or 180 phasing in a predetermined direction. Saudi Aramco, a primary user of oriented perforating, deploys the WOPT system
to facilitate TSO fracturing. The Ghawar eld PowerSTIM team used borehole breakout identied on
FMI Fullbore Formation MicroImager logs to conrm an east-west maximum stress and PFP orientation in the Jauf formation at an azimuth of about 80 or 260 (right).
14. Armstrong K, Card R, Navarrete R, Nelson E, Nimerick K,
Samuelson M, Collins J, Dumont G, Priaro M, Wasylycia N
and Slusher G: Advanced Fracturing Fluids Improve Well
Economics, Oileld Review 7. no. 3 (Autumn 1995):
2451.
15. Bartko KM, Robertson B and Wann D: Implementing
Fracturing Technology to the UKCS Carboniferous
Formation, paper SPE 38609, presented at the SPE
Annual Technical Conference and Exhibition, San
Antonio, Texas, USA, October 58, 1997.
16. Solares JR, Bartko KM and Habbtar AH: Pushing the
Envelope: Successful Hydraulic Fracturing for Sand
Control Strategy in High Gas Rate Screenless
Completions in the Jauf Reservoir, Saudi Arabia,
paper SPE 73724, presented at the SPE International
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Minimum horizontal
stress (Sh)
Borehole
Cement
Casing
Charges at 90 phasing
Perforations
Maximum
horizontal
stress (SH)
SH
90
Preferred fracture
plane (PFP)
PFP
Formation Consolidation
Pinch points
Sh
Single-wing
fracture
Misaligned
perforations
Properly aligned
perforations
> Fracturing considerations. Hydraulic fracture initiation can occur at various discrete points on the
wellbore radius if perforations are not aligned with the preferred fracture plane (PFP), or maximum
horizontal stress (SH). Developing fractures travel around casing and cement or turn to align with the
PFP. This results in complex near-wellbore ow paths, or tortuosity, including competing fractures,
pinch-point ow restrictions and fracture wings that curve or have poor alignment with the wellbore
(top). Perforations oriented close to the PFP, or path of least resistance, minimize fracture-initiation
and treating pressures. In full-scale laboratory tests on formation blocks under triaxial stress, perforations in the PFP resulted in a dominant single-wing fracture with minimal tortuosity and lower injection
pressures (bottom left). In the same test, misaligned perforations resulted in multiple fracture initiation
points (bottom right).
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fracture-initiation pressure for wells with oriented perforations. Pressure losses during
pumping operations dropped from about
2000 psi [13.8 MPa] for conventional perforating
to less than 600 psi [4.1 MPa] in wells with oriented perforations.
Improved hydraulic fracturing execution and
increased well productivity demonstrate the
effectiveness of oriented perforating. Fracture
stimulation treatments prior to implementation
of the revised well-completion strategies that
were devised by the joint team resulted in
extended flow periods to clean up wells after
treatments. In one case, it took 55 days to
Oileld Review
Spring 2003
Oil
Preflush
Resin solution
displaces preflush
Resin
solution
Formation
sand grain
Resin
Resin
> Formation consolidation. Chemical consolidation before fracturing stabilizes completion intervals
that do not have optimal or oriented perforations (top left). Typically, a resin system is injected into the
formation using conventional pumping services or coiled tubing. These treatments consist of three
basic stages: pretreatment acid and surfactant preush to displace formation water and hydrocarbons (top middle), resin injection (top right), catalyst injection and viscous overush with a shut-in
period that allows the resin to cure (bottom left). This procedure is followed by TSO fracturing to
bypass the consolidated region and reconnect with the unaltered rock (bottom right).
[15 m], but coiled tubing is the preferred placement method. This consolidation system costs
significantly less, is more environmentally
friendly and is easier to clean out of the wellbore
than resin systems. OrganoSEAL-R uids can be
easily squeezed into annular gravel packs, but
flow less readily into the formation because of
differences in gravel and rock-matrix permeability. This makes uid placement across an entire
zone for gravel-pack remediation feasible.
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MEXICO
MISSISSIPPI
ALABAMA
GEORGIA
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FLORIDA
TEXAS
New Orleans
South Timbalier
Block 21
0
0
100
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Gulf o
200
200
300
400
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400 miles
600 km
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Oileld Review
7-in. casing
Packer
EUROPE
ASIA
Liner hanger:
7652 ft MD
AFRICA
Giovanna
field
A
ITALY
Cement
dr
Rome
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Sea
Naples
Liner hanger:
10,811 ft MD
Ty r r h
an
eni
Se
Polished-bore receptacle
(PBR) and 5 12-in. liner:
11,101 ft MD
0
Propped fracture
100
100
200
200 300
300 miles
400 500 km
Spring 2003
One year after pumping the sand consolidation treatment, this well was still owing 220 B/D
[35 m3/d] of oil, 850 B/D [135 m3/d] of water and
380,000 scf/D [10,882 m3/d] of gas at a 1520-psi
[10.5-MPa] ftp. There was no significant sand
production during the rst year of production.
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7-in. casing
Dual-tubing
packer
Cement
Packer
7-in. casing
Cement
Dual packer
2 38-in. tubing
Perforated
extension pipe
Propped
fracture
Packer
Internal casedhole gravel pack
Perforations
Packer
Openhole
gravel pack
Packer
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Consolidated formation
Consolidated annular
gravel pack
TSO propped
fracture
Cement
Casing
SqueezeCRETE cement
seals unwanted sections
of existing gravel packs
> Gravel-pack repair. Screenless techniques provide alternatives for rehabilitating existing completions that have eroded (left) or plugged (right) screens.
Coiled tubing is run to clean out the wellbore, displace produced uids and place, or spot, a consolidation chemical across and above sand-exclusion
screens. These steps are followed by a pressure squeeze to force treatment uids into the gravel-pack annulus (center). The main objective is to shut off
gravel-pack permeability and prevent a wellbore fracture screenout caused by annular uid loss. Chemical consolidation of the annular pack also keeps
perforation tunnels open after reperforating and performing a TSO fracturing treatment. "Micro" cement technology, such as SqueezeCRETE t-for-purpose
slurries, can penetrate and seal off unwanted sections of gravel-packed screens.
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also allow recompletion of wells with gravelpacked screens that fail or plug. Giovanna Well
14 was the first candidate well for screenless
rehabilitation of failed screens without pulling
and replacing the completion equipment.
Downhole conditions, reservoir compaction
and a long completion interval presented
operational challenges. The lower section of
screen and gravel pack was shut off with a
SqueezeCRETE cement slurry to reduce the target interval below 30 ft. In addition, the reperforated interval allowed coiled tubing access to
just the rst 12 ft [3.7 m], so the TSO fracture
probably did not cover all of the perforations,
which resulted in early nes migration.
Another screenless completion was identied and scheduled for an uncompleted interval
in Giovanna Well 16, but reservoir compaction
buckled the production equipment and made
reentry impossible. Several additional screenless completions are planned in other fields
where the dilemma facing completion teams is
that remaining gas reserves in target layers are
insufficient to justify the expense and risk of
conventional rig operations. Dual-well completions were equipped with a sliding side door
(SSD) at one or more perforated intervals within
Packer
Straddle-isolation tool
Pay zone 1
Fracture
Pay zone 2
Pay zone 1
Fracture
Pay zone 2
Sand plug
Pay zone 3
Pay zone 3
> Coiled tubing-conveyed fracturing. CoilFRAC stimulation through coiled tubing service facilitates formation consolidation
and hydraulic fracturing of individual or multiple zones in a single operation. A tension-set coiled tubing packer and sand
plugs can be used for zonal isolation. Pumping schedules for each zone include extra proppant to spot a plug across fractured intervals before moving up to treat the next zone (left). The CoilFRAC ST straddle tool system seals above and below
target intervals to isolate individual zones for selective stimulation. The tool can be moved quickly from one zone to another
without pulling out of the well (right).
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Oileld Review
Geomechanical
earth models
Production logging
Sand prediction
models
Sand detection
Intelligent
completions
Monitoring
Completion 3
Completion 2
Recompletions
Completion 1
Cash
Flow
Rigless
interventions
Traditional completion
Time
Remediation
Stimulated completion
Optimal perforating
Optimal perforating
Optimal perforating
Optimal perforating
TSO fracture
stimulation
Artificial-lift design
TSO fracture
stimulation
Optimal perforating
Downhole desander
Screenless-completion methods
Proppant-flowback
control
Formation consolidation
Cement technology
Selective coiled
tubing treatments
Selective Treatments
Sand-Management Solutions
Spring 2003
assemblies difcult, undesirable or even impossible. However, applications for rigless techniques will increasingly involve recompletion of
wells to tap marginal reserves that do not economically justify conventional rig-based operations. Screenless results to date clearly prove
the viability of this emerging technology, which
provides attractive solutions to avoid otherwise
deferred production and lost reserves.
Screenless techniques are an important element in advanced sand-management strategies,
but they will not replace conventional sandcontrol methods. In some reservoirs, however,
they provide cost-effective alternative strategies
to eliminate or manage sand production over the
productive life of a well or field development.
Current research and development efforts are
directed at improving computer models for predicting sand production and providing enhanced
risk assessment. These efforts will ensure the
effectiveness of increasingly sophisticated well
perforating and completion techniques. MET
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