Quantitative Study on the Anticollapse Ability of Casing in Shale Gas Wells under Complex Load Conditions

Implementing novel technologies, including the “well factory” model and zipper fracturing techniques, has become prevalent in shale gas development. During completion operations such as lowering casing and multistage fracturing, the casing is subjected to many complex loads, reducing its strength an...

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Veröffentlicht in:ACS omega 2024-09, Vol.9 (36), p.37856-37868
Hauptverfasser: Huang, Jianbo, Li, Yiqiang, Chen, Rui, Zhang, Xiaojun, Lian, Wei, Han, Guangyao, Li, Jun
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Implementing novel technologies, including the “well factory” model and zipper fracturing techniques, has become prevalent in shale gas development. During completion operations such as lowering casing and multistage fracturing, the casing is subjected to many complex loads, reducing its strength and increasing the risk of casing deformation. By establishing a casing wear model and conducting multistage cyclic loading experiments and numerical simulations, we analyzed the change rule of casing anticollapse strength under complex loads, developed a calculation method for casing comprehensive anticollapse ability under complex loads, and applied the method to an illustrative calculation. The study shows that the wear effect during completion has a negligible impact on the strength of the casing. The casing anticollapse strength exhibits a linear decline in correlation with the number of cycles. The zipper fracturing operation resulted in a nonuniform distribution of geo-stress around the well, and the casing anticollapse strength demonstrated a nearly linear decline in correlation with the nonuniformity of geo-stress. In the presence of both internal and external effects, the casing anticollapse strength exhibited a decline exceeding 15%, thereby increasing the risk of casing deformation. This research method can provide computational guidance for preventing casing deformation in field fracturing construction.
ISSN:2470-1343
2470-1343
DOI:10.1021/acsomega.4c03836