Paper: Field Measurements of Annular Pressure And Temperature During Primary Cementing

Paper: Field Measurements of Annular Pressure And Temperature During Primary Cementing
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Abstract

Field Measurements of Annular Pressure And Temperature During Primary Cementing

Presenters

R. Medrano, C.E. Cooke Jr., & M.P. Kluck; Exxon Co. U.S.A.

To investigate the causes of fluid migration behind the casing after primary cementing, pressure and temperature measurements were made in the annulus of seven wells during cementing operations. Sensors were attached to the outside of the casing as it was run into each well; in this way data were obtained from several depths. A logging cable, also clamped to the casing, was used to bring data from the sensors to the surface. In some of the wells these annular measurements were continued during subsequent completion or workover operations. The pressure data could be used to determine conditions that either prevented or allowed fluid entry into the wellbore. Generally, pressure in the cement column began to decrease shortly after the cement was pumped. The success of the cementing operation depended on the cement attaining sufficient strength to exclude pore fluids from the cement before the pressure somewhere in the cement column declined to pore pressure at that depth. Pressure in the cement generally appeared to decline to the pore pressure in adjacent formations after the cement had set. In one well, however, pressure in the cement opposite a "tight streak" steadily declined to far less than a water hydrostatic gradient as the cement set.

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