Sand control by perforated wellbore geometry design

Perforation is a hole to provide a good and effective communication channel between the wellbore and the productive zone for an optimum well productivity. To obtain optimum gain in perforated well productivity, perforations must be deep enough to overcome formation damage or barrier caused by dri...

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Main Author: Samsuri, Ariffin
Format: Book Section
Published: Penerbit UTM 2007
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Online Access:http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/14054/
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spelling my.utm.140542011-08-17T07:58:19Z http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/14054/ Sand control by perforated wellbore geometry design Samsuri, Ariffin QD Chemistry Perforation is a hole to provide a good and effective communication channel between the wellbore and the productive zone for an optimum well productivity. To obtain optimum gain in perforated well productivity, perforations must be deep enough to overcome formation damage or barrier caused by drilling operations. Very deep, small diameter perforations will be difficult to clean effectively. The primary objective of perforation for a natural completion is to produce deeper penetration depths to overcome formation damage, higher shot density to reduce pressure drop around the perforations and to increased perforation efficiency. For a natural completion, penetration depth and shot density are very important geometrical factors, followed by phasing. Perforation diameter is relatively insignificant [1]. Penerbit UTM 2007 Book Section PeerReviewed Samsuri, Ariffin (2007) Sand control by perforated wellbore geometry design. In: Improved Oil Recovery. Penerbit UTM , Johor, pp. 43-60. ISBN 978-983-52-0594-1
institution Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
building UTM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
content_source UTM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://eprints.utm.my/
topic QD Chemistry
spellingShingle QD Chemistry
Samsuri, Ariffin
Sand control by perforated wellbore geometry design
description Perforation is a hole to provide a good and effective communication channel between the wellbore and the productive zone for an optimum well productivity. To obtain optimum gain in perforated well productivity, perforations must be deep enough to overcome formation damage or barrier caused by drilling operations. Very deep, small diameter perforations will be difficult to clean effectively. The primary objective of perforation for a natural completion is to produce deeper penetration depths to overcome formation damage, higher shot density to reduce pressure drop around the perforations and to increased perforation efficiency. For a natural completion, penetration depth and shot density are very important geometrical factors, followed by phasing. Perforation diameter is relatively insignificant [1].
format Book Section
author Samsuri, Ariffin
author_facet Samsuri, Ariffin
author_sort Samsuri, Ariffin
title Sand control by perforated wellbore geometry design
title_short Sand control by perforated wellbore geometry design
title_full Sand control by perforated wellbore geometry design
title_fullStr Sand control by perforated wellbore geometry design
title_full_unstemmed Sand control by perforated wellbore geometry design
title_sort sand control by perforated wellbore geometry design
publisher Penerbit UTM
publishDate 2007
url http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/14054/
_version_ 1643646313386999808
score 13.160551