Coiled tubing
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Coiled tubing refers to metal piping, normally 1" to 2" in diameter, used for interventions in oil and gas wells and as production tubing in shallow gas wells, which comes spooled on a large drum. The main benefits over wireline are the ability to pump chemicals through the coil and the ability push it into hole rather than relying on gravity. However, it consumes more space and offshore requires a larger and more robust rig, which can make it much more expensive on small platforms, which could support wireline but not coil, and subsea wells, where wireline can be run off a smaller and cheaper light intervention vessel. Onshore, they can be run using smaller service rigs and for light operations, the mobile self-contained coiled tubing rig.
The tool string at the bottom of the coil is often called the bottom hole assembly (BHA). It can range from something as simple as a jetting nozzle, for jobs involving pumping chemicals or cement through the coil, to a larger string of logging tools, depending on the operations.
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[edit] Uses
[edit] Circulation
The most popular use for coiled tubing is circulation. A hydrostatic head (a column of fluid in the well bore) may be inhibiting flow of formation fluids due to its weight (the well is said to have been killed). The safest (though not the cheapest) solution would be to attempt to circulate out the fluid using a gas, frequently nitrogen. By running in coiled tubing to the bottom of the hole and pumping in the gas, the kill fluid can be forced out to production. Circulating can also be used to clean out light debris, which may have accumulated in the hole.
[edit] Pumping
Pumping through coiled tubing can also be used for dispersing fluids to a specific location in the well such as for cementing perforations or performing chemical washes of downhole components such as sandscreens. In the former case, coiled tubing is particularly advantageous compared to simply pumping the cement from surface as allowing it to flow through the entire completion could potentially damage important components, such as the downhole safety valve.
[edit] Drilling
A relatively modern drilling technique involves using coiled tubing instead of conventional drill pipe. This has the advantage of required less effort to trip in and out of the well (the coil can simply be run in and pulled out while drill string must be assembled and dismantled joint by joint while tripping in and out). Instead of rotating the drill bit by using a rotary table or top drive at the surface, it is turned by a downhole motor, powered by the motion of drilling fluid pumped from surface.
[edit] Logging and perforating
These tasks are by default the realm of wireline. Because coiled tubing is rigid, it can be pushed into the well from the surface. This is an advantage over wireline, which depends on the weight of the toolstring to be lowered into the well. For highly deviated and horizontal wells, gravity may be insufficient. Roller stem and tractors can often overcome this disadvantage at greatly reduced cost, particularly on small platforms and subsea wells where coiled tubing would require mobilising an expensive mobile drilling rig. The use of coiled tubing for these tasks is usually confined to occasions where it is already on site for another purpose, for example a logging run following a chemical wash.
[edit] Production
Coiled tubing is often used as a production string in shallow gas wells that produce some water. The narrow internal diameter results in a much higher velocity than would occur inside conventional tubing or inside the casing. This higher velocity assists in lifting liquids to surface, liquids which might otherwise accumulate in the wellbore and eventually "kill" the well. The coiled tubing may be run inside the casing instead or inside conventional tubing. When coiled tubing is run inside of conventional tubing it is often referred to as a velocity string and the space between the outside of the coiled tubing and the inside of the conventional tubing is referred to as the micro annulus. In some cases gas is produced up the micro annulus.
[edit] Coiled tubing rigup
The main engine of a coiled tubing intervention is the injector head. This component contains the mechanism to push and pull the coil in and out of the hole. An injector head has a curved guide beam on top called a gooseneck which threads the coil into the injector body. Below the injector is the stripper, which contains rubber pack off elements providing a seal around the tubing to isolate the well's pressure.
Below the stripper is the blowout preventer, which provides the ability to cut the coiled tubing pipe and seal the well bore (shear-blind) and hold and seal around the pipe (pipe-slip). Older quad-BOPs have a different ram for each of these functions (blind, shear, pipe, slip). Newer dual-BOPs combine some of these functions together to need just two distinct rams (shear-blind, pipe-slip).
The BOP sits on top of the riser, which provides the pressurised tunnel down to the top of the Xmas tree. Between the Xmas tree and the riser is the final pressure barrier, the shear-seal BOP, which can cut and seal the pipe.
[edit] Onshore light coiled tubing unit
A Coil Tubing Unit is a self contained multi-use machine that can approximately do anything a conventional service rig is capable of - with the exception of tripping jointed pipe. There are generally two types in shallow service - Arch and Picker. One uses a vertical elevator with a horsehead on top, and an injector hanging by winch line off it. The Picker units have a picker, and a horsehead bolted directly to the injector.
These type of coil tubing units have a permanent drum mounted amdidships (They are generally tandem drive Class 3 trucks, 40 feet long or so), and a large air compressor, usually good for 2500 psi at 660 CFM, mounted between the drum and cab. In lower pressure, natural gas wells, with no hydrocarbons, the compressor is actually used to blow air to bottom hole in these live natural gas wells, for the purpose of "cleaning out" mud and fluid from the wellbore and perforations. In higher pressure wells, or oil wells, nitrogen or carbon dioxide is the preferred, and much safer method.
[edit] Major coiled tubing service companies
Coil Tubing Services Alice Texas www.coiltubingservices.com *Coil Services
- BJ Services
- Cudd Energy Services
- Halliburton
- Kodiak Coil Tubing
- National Oilwell Varco
- Power Hydraulics
- Qserv
- Sanjel Corporation
- Schlumberger
National Petroleum Servies (www.npsintl.com)
[edit] See also
Weatherford International