Kill Weight Mud or Kill Drilling Fluid Density is the mud weight required to balance formation pressure. The kill weight mud may be pumped into the well at different time depending on kill methods (Driller's method, Wait and Weight, Bull head, etc).
How to determine kill weight mud?
With the following equation, you can determine this figure.
Kill Weight Mud (KWM) = Current Mud Weight + (SIDPP ÷ 0.052 ÷ Well TVD)
Where,
Kill Weight Mud (KWM) in ppg
Current Mud Weight in ppg
SIDP stands for "Shut In Drill Pipe Pressure" in psi.
Well TVD is true vertical depth of the well in ft.
If your drilling string has a solid float, you will not be able to read SIDPP right away. So you need to bump the float to get SIDPP. You can read more detail about it via this > float bumping procedure.
Example
Drilling with 9.5 ppg mud and current depth at 9500'MD/9000'TVD. The well takes influx. Operation is stopped and the well is shut in.
Shut in drill pipe pressure = 550 psi.
Shut in casing pressure = 700 psi.
The kill weight mud required to balance formation pressure:
KWM = 9.5 + (550 ÷ 0.052 ÷ 9000)
KWM = 10.7 (round up number)
Why do we need to use SIDPP?
When you take a kick (wellbore influx), the density of fluid in the annulus is very hard to predict because it is a mixture between drilling mud and influx. Therefore, you don't know exactly what the density in the annulus is. Moreover if you take gas kick, shut in casing pressure will increase over time, and you will NOT be able to identify the right shut in pressure to determine formation pressure.
Looking at the drill pipe side, there is only one pure fluid column so you know exactly its density. With the precise mud density, you can apply hydrostatic pressure concept in order to get the formation pressure and kill weight mud (the equation is showed at the beginning of the topic).
No comments:
Post a Comment