Page 210 - Drilling Technology in Nontechnical Language
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Chapter 9 – CASING AND CEMENTING 201
▪ Utility. The inside diameter of the liner is inevitably less than the
ID of the production casing. This allows tools to be run as part of
the completion that would be too large to fit inside the liner but
that could be set higher up, inside the casing.
Disadvantages to liners include the following:
▪ Complexity. The equipment required to run a liner is much more
complex than for a casing, so there is more chance that something
will go wrong.
▪ Obtaining a good cement job. Cement volumes tend to be pretty
small around liners, so a bit of contamination of the slurry by
drilling mud will go a lot further. This was one of the issues with
the Deepwater Horizon blowout in the Gulf of Mexico.
If a casing or liner is run through the reservoir and cemented, the casing
is perforated using shaped explosive charges (fig. 9–3). These charges
create a tunnel through the casing and may continue up to a couple of feet
inside the reservoir. If the casing penetrates several hydrocarbon-bearing
zones, it would be possible to perforate the lowest zone, flow it until it is
depleted, and then cement it off and perforate on a higher zone.
Fig. 9–3. Perforation charges being loaded
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