Sand Control
Sand Control
The reliability of the production is essential in offshore operations. Producing a well at its maximum
rate is important everywhere. This is often compromised by having sand and fines production which not
only plugs the wells and reduce production rate but also erode the equipment and settle in surface
vessels. This paper describes a case history where an operator was faced with a well that was rate
limited because of fines and sand production. An advanced sand control chemistry system was
proposed and a treatment was designed. In April 2013, the treatment was performed by bullheading
down the production tubing using rate diversion. Extensive engineering was involved in the candidate
selection and planning the operational aspects of the treatment. The execution of the treatment was
divided into stages – sand clean out, performing step rate test, pre-job modeling and pumping the
treatment as per the design. After the treatment, the well was flowed and tested at almost three times
the original maximum sand-free rate (MSFR) at an increased choke without sand production. The well
has now been flowing for more than a year, at significantly higher rate than the previous MSFR sand
free. This paper describes the chemistry of the sand conglomeration, design consideration, execution
and the effect on well performance.
Sand Control
Many oil and gas wells require sand control to stop sand production, either during well construction or
later in well life (often more costly). Sand control can be as follows:
1. Geomechanical methods from day 1, such as oriented or limited perforating, controlling the
drawdown on the well.
2. Traditional mechanical sand control systems such as openhole gravel packing, frac packs, high
rate water packs, high rate water fracs, standalone screens or expandable screens.
3. Other: sand consolidation, and other systems.
This paper will report on a recent sand consolidation application offshore in a gas well.
Background
Chemical sand consolidation has been available to the industry since at least the 1950s (Shaugnessy
1977) but these have generally been solvent-based and often with challenging HSE handling issues. In
the last 10 years or so, there appears to have been a resurgence of interest in such systems, with more
technical papers being published and more operational jobs being executed. One of the key factors in
this has been the development of environmentally friendly consolidation treatments. This has become
possible due to better understanding of the process involved in sand production (Vaziri 2004). One
paper cites lab data where 75 psi of additional unconfined compressive strength (UCS) can withstand a
water flowrate of 275 bwpd through a 0.5” diameter perforation tunnel (Cooper 2010). Wells with a
large number of perforations may therefore not need much additional strength imparted to them to stop
sand production.
Mild, often water based, chemicals have been used for consolidating the weak formations. The merits
of such systems are explained in various publications (Villesca 2010, Cooper 2010, Nguyen 2012, and
Bhasker 2012). That said, other systems include organosilanes, polymers, urea/urease (Kotlar 2005)
and resins (Fuller 2011).
On the 12th of April 2012, EGAS hosted a seminar introducing
Weatherford’s latest SandAid™ Sand Conglomeration Technology.
Presenting the technology was Rami Hamad, Weatherford’s MENA
Region Business Unit Manager. The seminar attracted the attendance
of several petroleum companies such as PHPC, Wastani, Melrose,
Rashpetco, Bapetco, Dapetco and Khalda Petroleum.
Pumping services
High-performance chemicals
Expandable and conventional sand screens
Gravel-pack
Frac-pack
Thru-tubing, gravel-pack
For more information contact us at [email protected] or visit
us online at weatherford.com/pcs for stimulating ideas for production
improvement.
By Weatherford