Rank Wildcat Drilling Risks & Drilling Time Reduced in Ultra Deepwater Offshore Namibia with the Application of Seismic & Formation Pressure While Drilling Technology

Author(s):  
Anthony Jervis ◽  
Julia Kemper ◽  
Martin Richards ◽  
Mathew Taylor ◽  
Colin Clarke ◽  
...  
2015 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maxim Ivashin ◽  
Andrey Truba ◽  
Vladimir Zhernakov ◽  
Mariya Gluschenko ◽  
Valeriy Pavlov ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Samat Ramatullayev ◽  
Akikat Makhmotov ◽  
Muratbek Zhabagenov ◽  
Michele Cesari ◽  
Salvatore Torrisi ◽  
...  

2015 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maxim Ivashin ◽  
Andrey Truba ◽  
Vladimir Zhernakov ◽  
Mariya Gluschenko ◽  
Valeriy Pavlov ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Antonio Galgaro ◽  
Eloisa Di Sipio ◽  
Giorgia Dalla Santa ◽  
Adela Ramos Escudero ◽  
Jose Manuel Cuevas ◽  
...  

<p>The overall goal of the EU funded project GEO4CIVHIC is the development of more efficient and low cost geothermal systems for conditioning retrofitting civil and historical buildings.</p><p>The assessment of the most suitable drilling technology for a given geological context could be very useful from both the technical and the economic point of view. In fact, the installation costs are one of the main economical barrier for a wider application of shallow geothermal systems, and they are mainly covered by the drilling time and costs (drilling machine and labour costs).</p><p>Generally, the drilling technology suitable on a given site and the related most proper ground heat exchanger are mainly dictated by the local stratigraphy (kind of materials/rocks, state of consolidation) and the local hydrogeological conditions, also affecting the drilling times and costs by requiring the application or not of the casing.</p><p>The ‘drillability’ concept has been defined as the prediction of the most suitable drilling technique related to a given underground for a certain borehole heat exchanger type, by taking into account the estimated drilling and installation time. Therefore, a ‘drillability’ map has been conceived at European scale in order to support the preliminary design phase of new ground source heat pump systems and to provide a first evaluation of the drilling costs and time for a given location. The map is based on the European geological map released by the European Geological Data Infrastructure (EGDI), freely available in the web, that complies with the INSPIRE (INfrastructure for Spatial InfoRmation in Europe) Directive. It is an ESRI Shape (vector file), Scale 1:1.500.000, Projection ETRS 1989 LCC. The EGDI map is connected to a list that collect all the geological context that can be found all around Europe; the list contains 203 different geological settings. The association among ‘drillability’ techniques and geological sequence was conducted by considering the knowledge of the partners that are expert in drilling operations in several European countries.</p><p>The classical drilling methods are here distinct into percussing, rotating, and combined percussion-rotation methods. The proposed map compares traditional drilling methods usually applied to install vertical ground heat exchangers as the rotary drilling with tricone or chevron bit and the traditional down-hole hammer (with or without casing) with the new drilling techniques developed within the EU funded project Cheap-GSHPs and GEO4CIVHIC.</p><p>So far a first ‘drillability’ map has been released with the drilling time and costs; further development will report the regulatory constraints related to drilling in specific areas.</p><p>The ‘drillability’ map at European scale is connected to a ‘drillability’ app still under development that will provide a first assessment of the most suitable drilling technique in a specific geological context both to direct users such as designers, drillers, administrators. Depending on the local geology identified by the users, the app will help to estimate the required drilling time and related costs, providing a preliminary information to start decision making and authorization processes.</p><p><em>Goo4Civhic Project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program under grant agreement No. 792355.</em></p>


2013 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ali AlSaleh ◽  
Adnan Shehab ◽  
Sanjeev BaiJal ◽  
Nellay Karthikeyan ◽  
Mohamed Mobasher ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Samat Ramatullayev ◽  
Akikat Makhmotov ◽  
Muratbek Zhabagenov ◽  
Michele Cesari ◽  
Salvatore Torrisi ◽  
...  

2011 ◽  
Author(s):  
Diogo Camara Salim ◽  
Evie Freitas ◽  
Julio Cesar Cesar Oliveira ◽  
Oscar Augusto Lozada ◽  
Jesus Alberto Canas

2012 ◽  
Vol 57 (2) ◽  
pp. 363-373
Author(s):  
Jan Macuda

Abstract In Poland all lignite mines are dewatered with the use of large-diameter wells. Drilling of such wells is inefficient owing to the presence of loose Quaternary and Tertiary material and considerable dewatering of rock mass within the open pit area. Difficult geological conditions significantly elongate the time in which large-diameter dewatering wells are drilled, and various drilling complications and break-downs related to the caving may occur. Obtaining higher drilling rates in large-diameter wells can be achieved only when new cutter bits designs are worked out and rock drillability tests performed for optimum mechanical parameters of drilling technology. Those tests were performed for a bit ø 1.16 m in separated macroscopically homogeneous layers of similar drillability. Depending on the designed thickness of the drilled layer, there were determined measurement sections from 0.2 to 1.0 m long, and each of the sections was drilled at constant rotary speed and weight on bit values. Prior to drillability tests, accounting for the technical characteristic of the rig and strength of the string and the cutter bit, there were established limitations for mechanical parameters of drilling technology: P ∈ (Pmin; Pmax) n ∈ (nmin; nmax) where: Pmin; Pmax - lowest and highest values of weight on bit, nmin; nmax - lowest and highest values of rotary speed of bit, For finding the dependence of the rate of penetration on weight on bit and rotary speed of bit various regression models have been analyzed. The most satisfactory results were obtained for the exponential model illustrating the influence of weight on bit and rotary speed of bit on drilling rate. The regression coefficients and statistical parameters prove the good fit of the model to measurement data, presented in tables 4-6. The average drilling rate for a cutter bit with profiled wings has been described with the form: Vśr= Z ·Pa· nb where: Vśr- average drilling rate, Z - drillability coefficient, P - weight on bit, n - rotary speed of bit, a - coefficient of influence of weight on bit on drilling rate, b - coefficient of influence of rotary speed of bit on drilling rate. Industrial tests were performed for assessing the efficiency of drilling of large-diameter wells with a cutter bit having profiled wings ø 1.16 m according to elaborated model of average rate of drilling. The obtained values of average rate of drilling during industrial tests ranged from 8.33×10-4 to 1.94×10-3 m/s and were higher than the ones obtained so far, i.e. from 181.21 to 262.11%.


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