Proceedings Article10.2118/101231-MS
State-of-the-Art in Coalbed Methane Drilling Fluids
Leonard V. Baltoiu,Brent K. Warren,Thanos A. Natros +2 more
- 01 Jan 2006
TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe the development of a unique drilling fluid to drill coalbed methane wells with a special emphasis on horizontal applications, and two of which were tested on three horizontal coal-bed methane (CBM) wells.
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Abstract: The production of methane from wet coalbeds is often associated with the production of significant amounts of water. While producing water is necessary to desorb the methane from the coal, the damage from the drilling fluids used is difficult to assess, because the gas production follows weeks to months after the well is drilled. Commonly asked questions include the following: • What are the important parameters for drilling an organic reservoir rock that is both the source and the trap for the methane? • Has the drilling fluid affected the gas production? • Are the cleats plugged? • Does the “filtercake” have an impact on the flow of water and gas? • Are stimulation techniques compatible with the drilling fluids used? This paper describes the development of a unique drilling fluid to drill coalbed methane wells with a special emphasis on horizontal applications. The fluid design incorporates products to match the delicate surface chemistry on the coal, a matting system to provide both borehole stability and minimize fluid losses to the cleats, and a breaker method of removing the matting system once drilling is completed. This paper also discusses how coal geology impacts drilling planning, drilling practices, the choice of drilling fluid, and completion/stimulation techniques for Upper Cretaceous Mannville-type coals drilled within the Western Canadian Sedimentary Basin. A focus on horizontal coalbed methane (CBM) wells is presented. Field results from three horizontal wells are discussed, two of which were drilled with the new drilling fluid system. The wells demonstrated exceptional stability in coal for lengths to 1000 m, controlled drilling rates and ease of running slotted liners. Methods for, and results of, placing the breaker in the horizontal wells are covered in depth.
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Citations
Water-Based Drilling Fluid Containing Bentonite/Poly(Sodium 4-Styrenesulfonate) Composite for Ultrahigh-Temperature Ultradeep Drilling and Its Field Performance
TL;DR: Wang et al. as mentioned in this paper revealed the role of polymeric additives in improving the ultrahigh-temperature tolerance of bentonite-based drilling fluids, aiming to provide practical and efficient solutions to the failure of drilling fluids in severe conditions.
55
Carbon nanotube enhanced water-based drilling fluid for high temperature and high salinity deep resource development
Jingping Liu,Xian-Fa Zhang,Wen-Chao Zhang,Kaihe Lv,Yin-Rui Bai,Jintang Wang,Huang Xianbin,Jin Jiafeng,Jinsheng Sun,Jinsheng Sun +9 more
TL;DR: In this article, 0.05-wt% carbon nanotubes are introduced into a 4% bentonite drilling fluid under conditions where the temperature and concentration of added NaCl reach 180°C and 10wt%, respectively.
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Decreasing coalbed methane formation damage using microfoamed drilling fluid stabilized by silica nanoparticles
TL;DR: Wang et al. as mentioned in this paper discussed the possibility that a clay free microfoamed drilling fluid could be stabilized by silica nanoparticles (CFMDF-NP) so as to avoid formation damage of coal seams.
Enhancing wellbore stability of coal measure strata by electrical inhibition and wettability control
TL;DR: In this article, an optimized water-based drilling fluid based on electrical inhibition and wettability control (EW-WBDF) was proposed to enhance the wellbore stability of coal measure strata.
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TL;DR: In this article, a suite of commonly used research coal technologies is presented. But they focus on coal structural and chemical properties rather than the physical properties of the coal itself, and do not discuss the application of these technologies in coal structural characterisation.
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Numerical simulation of the transient behavior of coal-seam degasification wells
TL;DR: In this paper, a series of finite difference models which simulate the two-phase, transient behavior of coal seam degasification wells are presented. Butts and faces of coal seams are modeled with mesh centered models in radial-cylindrical coordinate geometry.
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Indonesia: Coalbed Methane Indicators and Basin Evaluation
Scott H. Stevens,_ Hadiyanto +1 more
- 01 Jan 2004
TL;DR: In this article, the authors identified 12.7 trillion m (450 Tcf) of prospective coalbed methane (CBM) resources within eleven onshore coal basins in Indonesia.
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