Title: Compaction Geomechanics: Mechanisms, Screening
 1Compaction Geomechanics Mechanisms, Screening
  2Compaction as a Drive
- Compaction occurs whenever the net stress 
 increases (???????)
- Magnitude depends of the rock stiffness, fabric 
 (some rocks have a quasi-stable f)
- Important in high-porosity sandstones 
- Important in North Sea Chalk (e.g. Ekofisk) 
- Important in Diatomite (California mainly) 
- Recompaction is important in cyclic steam 
 stimulation (porosity cycling)
- Compaction geomechanics is fundamental
3The Case of Ekofisk
- 3000 m deep 
- 7 km wide 
- Very thick reservoir 
- High porosity chalks 
- ? from 25 to 50 
- Overpressured by 1.7 
- Large drawdowns are feasible  large ?s'v 
- Large compactions 
- Would we plan for these nowadays?
EKOFISK 
 4Reservoir Compaction
- Triggered by reduction in pore pressure 
- Important drive mechanism in high ? cases 
 (Maracaibo, Ekofisk, Wilmington, ...)
- But, problems develop with compaction ...
- Casing collapse in the reservoir 
- Surface subsidence from deep compaction 
- Casing shears above the reservoir (Ekofisk) 
- Reservoir simulator predictions are contentious 
- Large stress redistributions, microseismicity
5Major Design Steps
- Identify physical compaction mechanisms 
- Identify susceptible reservoirs 
- Based on experience in other reservoirs 
- Based on geophysical data (logs, seismics) 
- Based on core examination and lab tests 
- Based on geomechanics analysis 
- Based on monitoring information 
- Study the cost-benefit gain to the company 
- Implement mitigation measures in advance
6Screening Strategies
Screening and Analysis
First-order screening
(geology  cases)
Geomechanics assessment
Impact assessment
Mitigation options
-geophysical logs
-well modeling
-pressure maintenance
-petrophysical evaluation
-reservoir modeling
-facilities redesign
-stress history
-production strategies
Risk assessment
Cost-benefit analysis
Cost of options  -  - Bs
-second-order screening
-production predictions
Is compaction beneficial?
Decision making
-Monitoring cases
-experience base
-learning and teaching 
 7Compaction Effects I
- Compaction  Æ’(??ij, E, ?, ...) 
- Is ?p always  ??ij? 
- No, compaction is not uniform 
- Dp is not uniform in reservoir 
- Overburden arching takes place 
- Thus, compaction moves out from production wells, 
 arching delays full ?z development
- This can be modeled quite well
?z
??ij, ?p
Cc (E, ?)
?z  Cc??v 
 8Compaction Effects II
- Compaction and depletion can change both normal 
 stresses and shear stresses
- If sharp gradient of compaction occurs, ?? 
 (shear stress) can be quite large
- This can cause shearing, grain crushing, loss of 
 cohesion, liquefaction (Chalk), etc.
- These factors affect the permeability, often 
 negatively, but shearing can also increase k
9Reservoir Compaction
- Delay of compaction always occurs in early time, 
 before ?p zones intersect (aspect ratio)
initially
after some Q
?p region
no ?p yet 
 10Dz Delay Through Arching
full subsidence response delayed
arching occurs until drawdown zones interact at 
the reservoir scale
in this phase, ??v is not equal to ?p
drawdown zones
compaction impeded
overburden stresses flow around the ?p, ?V zone 
 11Full Compaction
full subsidence develops
when zones meet, arching is destroyed, full 
compaction occurs
full compaction triggered
stresses now flow without arching around zones 
 12Reservoir Compaction
- Compaction sustains production, and can change 
 the production profile substantially
oil lost?
predicted, assuming Ds?v  Dp
actual Q with delayed Dz
predicted life
actual life
Q - total field
economic cutoff Q
time 
 13Negative Effects of ???ij 
- Productivity can decline with an increase in 
 ???ij , both in normal and shear stresses
- Fracture aperture diminution () 
- Pore throat constriction () 
- The relative importance depends on the rock 
 mechanics properties of the reservoir
- Casing shear or buckling can occur 
- Surface subsidence can take place 
- These can be costly if unexpected 
14Positive Effects of ???ij
- Changes in the effective stress can trigger 
 changes in the porosity
- Compaction can be substantial (UCSS, chalk) 
- Compaction serves to sustain the pressure 
- Much more oil is driven to the wellbores 
- In high f Chalk, a volume change as much as 10 
 can take place, all oil production
- Compaction of high f shales can also expel water 
 into the reservoir, displacing more oil
15Mechanisms I (Sandstones)
- Pore pressure is reduced by production (?p) 
- The vertical effective stress, ??v, rises 
- A sand of high compressibility will begin to 
 compact to a lower porosity
- This maintains drive pressures in 
 liquid-dominated reservoirs, may cause subsidence
- Also, a direct fluid expulsion occurs (?V) 
- Water can be expelled from adjacent shales
16Elastic Compression
- ??? leads to increased contact forces, fn 
- The contact area increases, porosity drops 
- This is a function of compressibility 
- If elastic, DV is recoverable (-DV  DV)
f?i
f?n
E,?
Ap
Ap - A
?p
?f?n 
 17Inelastic Compression
- ??? leads to increased contact forces, fn 
- Grain rearrangement takes place, f drops 
- Perhaps a bit of grain contact crushing 
- In high f sands, this is an irrecoverable DV
f?i
f?n
E,?
Ap
Ap - A
?p
?f?n 
 18Elastic and Inelastic Strain
porosity
Depletion  Ds? Injection  -Ds? 
elastic behavior
inelastic behavior
compaction curve
irrecoverable compaction
elastic behavior
rebound curve
1 MPa
10 MPa
100 MPa
log(s?v) 
 19Mechanisms II (Sandstones)
- For small Dp, grain rearrangement is most 
 important ?V not recoverable. Also,
- Contacts compress elastically, recoverable 
- At intermediate Dp, grain contacts deform 
 elastoplastically, strain is not recoverable
- At high Dp (high Ds?), grain splitting, crushing, 
 and even creep occurs, especially in lithic and
 arkosic sandstones
20Processes and Compaction
porosity
elastic compression at low s?
grain rearrangement at intermediate s? 
elastic recovery
irrecoverable compaction
elastoplastic grain contact behavior
rebound curve
grain crushing at high s?
Ds?
1 MPa
10 MPa
100 MPa
log(s?v)
high ?? 
 21Mechanisms, Chalk (I)
- North Sea Chalks (and a few other materials) 
 exist in a high-porosity state (gt35-40)
- This state is quasi-stable and exists because 
 of cementation between grains
- If grains crush or cement ruptures, massive 
 compaction occurs (gt10 m at Ekofisk)
- This is triggered by the increase in ??v, and 
 also by increased stress difference (?1 - ?3)
- Shear destroys cement, triggers compaction
22Why Does Chalk Collapse?
Hollow, weak grains (coccoliths)
Weak cementation (dog-tooth calcite)
Weak, cleavable grain mineral (CaCO3) 
 23Mechanisms, Chalk (II)
- Threshold stress from cementation in Chalk 
- Grains are also hollow and weak 
- Once collapse happens, the Chalk can even become 
 liquefied locally
- The stresses are transferred to adjacent rock and 
 the process can propagate far
- The whole reservoir compacts when the collapse is 
 at the interwell scale
24North Sea Chalk Collapse
porosity
threshold stress
irrecoverable strain
collapse of fabric
compression curve
rebound curves
1 MPa
10 MPa
100 MPa
log(sv) 
 25Geological History!
- Diagenesis  pressure solution, densification, 
 grain-to-grain cementation
- Cementation can preserve a rock at a very high 
 porosity (collapsible, like Chalk)
- Densification and pressure solution can make the 
 rock stiffer at the same s? value
- Overcompaction (deep burial history) can make the 
 rock stiffer, little compaction
- Geological history is a vital factor 
26Cementation, Compaction
porosity
apparent threshold Ds
normal densification
collapse if cement is ruptured
cementation effect
virgin compression curve
stiff response
log(sv) 
 27Diagenetic Densification
porosity
apparent threshold Ds
diagenetic porosity loss _at_ constant s
virgin compression curve
present state
log(sv) 
 28Precompaction Effect
porosity
apparent threshold Ds
virgin compression curve
present state
stiff response
log(sv)
Deep burial followed by uplift and erosion lead 
to precompaction 
 29Threshold Drawdown
- Usually, some threshold drawdown must occur 
 before significant compaction starts
- There are three effects responsible 
- These are hard to quantify without careful 
 geological studies and laboratory testing
- Short-term well testing can be misleading!
- The sand may be geologically pre-densified 
- There may be a cementation to overcome (Chalk) 
- The Dp may not yet be at the reservoir scale 
 (arching)
30Cementation, Diagenesis
stresses
pressure solution, 25-32
time temperature chemistry
initial state, 35 porosity
cementation, 25-32
Both solution and cementation reduce porosity, 
increase stiffness 
 31Additional Mechanisms
- Compaction can lead to loss of some permeability 
 in natural fractures
- Grain crushing can occur as well, k? 
- Depletion ? loss of lateral stress, increase in 
 mean ??, increase in shear stress t
- Increase in shear stress usually causes k? 
- Compaction can release fines from strata 
- Are there other effects in your reservoirs?
32Fracture Aperture, ???, ?k
- Fracture aperture is sensitive to ??n 
- Permeability is highly sensitive to aperture 
- Shear displacement and asperity crushing can 
 develop with ??
???n
- It appears that a homo-geneous constitutive 
 macro-scopic law is required for good predictions
 in analysis
effective aperture
p
p  ?p
asperities 
 33Fracture Permeability Loss
- In many cases, fracture permeability decreases by 
 a factor of 1.5 to 3
- This is to a degree a compaction effect (loss of 
 aperture as net stress increases)
- It also retards compaction (e.g. fractures in 
 Chalk)
- It is important in coal, North Sea Chalk, but not 
 in sandstones
34Grain Crushing and ?k 
- Depletion or differential volumetric strain 
 causes high ??, high fn on individual grains
- Weak (lithic) or cleavable (felspathic) grains 
 crush and fragment
- Pore throats then become smaller or blocked by 
 fragments, k drops
35Depletion Effect on sh
wellbore
?h stress trajectories
?h concentration
far-field stresses
?h along wellbore
Zone after production (Dp)
final ?h
Operational consequences -low pfrac in 
reservoir -higher pfrac above reservoir
initial ?h
Z 
 36Shear, Fracture Opening
Zone of pressure decline, -Dp
s?v
s?h
- Pressure decline leads to an increase in the 
 shear stress
- This leads to shearing, which causes fractures 
 and fissures to open
- This leads to increases in permeability, better 
 reservoir drainage
37Pore Blockage Mechanisms
Geochemical effects!
Fines migration can block pores
Mineral deposition 
 38Most Sensitive Cases
- Highly fractured reservoirs 
- Reservoirs with asphaltene precipitation, scale 
 deposition, or fines migration potential
- Tectonically stressed reservoirs (high ?) 
- Reservoirs with crushable grains or collapsible 
 fabric (North Sea chalk, coal)
- Thermal shock in unconsolidated sands (?) 
- Other cases?
39Porosity vs Depth
porosity
sands  sandstones
mud
clay
clay  shale, normal line
mud- stone
shale
The specific details of these relationships are a 
function of basin age, diagenesis, heat flow ... 
effect of overpressures on porosity
4-6 km
depth 
 40Subsidence MacroMechanics 
 41 Subsidence Bowl
(Vertical scale is greatly exaggerated)
subsidence bowl, L
compression
extension
?zmax
?
compaction, T
depth, Z
width, W 
 42Subsidence Magnitude
- If W lt Z, arching, little subsidence (lt25 T) 
- If Z lt W lt 2Z, partial arching (25-75 of T) 
- If W gt 2Z, minimal arching (gt75 of T) 
- Bowl width L  W  2Zsin? 
- If W gt 2Z, ?zmax approaches T 
- ? (angle of draw) usually 25 to 45 degrees 
-  In cases of complex geometry and stacked 
 reservoirs, numerical approaches required
43Casing Impairment
- Either loss of pressure integrity, or excessive 
 deformations (dogleg, buckling)
- Problem in massively compacting reservoirs 
- These are vexing and difficult problems 
- More compliant casing and cement?
- Compaction can distort and even buckle casing 
- Threads can pop open, casing can be ovalized 
- Triggering of faults shear casing which pass 
 through
- Overburden flexure causes shear planes to develop 
- Casings cannot withstand much shear
44Casing Shearing!!
- It is a major problem in all compacting reservoir 
 cases
- Will deal with this in greater detail in another 
 presentation, as it is important for many new
 production technologies
- CHOPS 
- Thermal methods 
- Etc. 
45Measuring Compaction 
 46Measuring Compaction
- In the reservoir 
- Radioactive bullets, casing collar logs, 
 gravimeter logs, behind-the-casing precision
 logs, magnetic devices, extensometers, strain
 gauges on casing, and other devices
- At the surface (subsidence) 
- Precision surveys, aerial photos, differential 
 GPS, InSAR, depth gauges (offshore sea floor
 subsidence), tiltmeters, and other methods
47Radioactive Bullets
- The zone of interest is selected 
- Before casing, radioactive bullets are fired into 
 the adjacent strata
- Casing is placed, garbage removed 
- A baseline gamma log is run (slowly!) 
- At intervals, logging is repeated, and the 
 difference in gamma peaks is measured
- Strain  ?L/L, accuracy of about 1-2 cm
48Casing Collar Logs
- Casing moves with the cement and the rock 
- The casing collar makes a thicker steel zone 
- This can be detected accurately on a log 
 sensitive to the effect of steel (magnetic)
- Logs are run repeatedly, strain  ?L/L 
- Short casing joints can be used for detail 
- If casing slips, results not reliable 
- If doglegged, cant run the log
49Borehole Extensometers
- Wires anchored in the casing 
- Brought to surface, tensioned 
- Attached to a transducer or to a mechanical 
 measuring tool
- Reading taken repeatedly 
- Resistant to doglegging 
- Logs cant be run in the hole 
- Other instruments installed
wire 3
wire 1
sheaves
wire 2
W
anchor 3
casing
anchor 2
anchor 1 
 50Other Borehole Methods
- Strong magnets outside fibreglass casing are used 
 (fibreglass just over the interest zone)
- Strain gauges bonded to the casing, inside or 
 outside (best), leads to surface
- Gravity logs (downhole gravimeter) 
- Other behind-the-casing logs which are sensitive 
 to the lithology changes
- Tilmeters can be placed in boreholes 
51Surface Dz Measurements
- Differential GPS can give accuracies about one cm 
 on land, not as good offshore
- Precision aerial photos with stable targets give 
 down to perhaps one cm, a bit less
- Surface monument array with surveying can give 
 precisions of less than a millimetre
- Tiltmeters measure inclination extremely 
 precisely, give electronic readout
- Other methods?
52GPS - Fixed Monuments Visits
Antenna
Monument 
 53InSAR - IOL - Cold Lake
285 mm
200
-210
100
Vertical displacements (mm) over 86 days
260
130 mm
-165
km
heave
subsidence
mod. Stancliffe  van der Kooij, AAPG 2001 
 54Belridge Field, CA - Subsidence
30-40 cm per year 
 55Belridge Rate - ?z/?t
  56Shell Oil Canada  Peace River
Multi-lateral CSS
Surface uplift / tilt data
reservoir inversion grid with 50x50m grid cells
ref. Nickles New Technology Magazine, Jan-Feb 
2005 
 57NAM, Netherlands - Ameland 
- - Gas Field 
- - 3350m reservoir depth 
- - 22cm subsidence
58Measurement Parameters
- Precision must be acceptable (5 of ?zmax) 
- No systematic errors if possible (random only) 
- The number of measurement stations must be chosen 
 carefully, depending on goals
- If inversion needed, array designed rigorously 
- Array must extend beyond reservoir limits to 
 capture the subsidence bowl
- Stable remote benchmark needed, etc.
59Compaction Analysis
- Prediction, measurement, and analysis is almost a 
 solved problem nowadays
- Good data remain essential 
- Better coring and lab work needed 
- Screening criteria should always be applied 
- Can use subsidence to monitor processes 
- Casing/cement design to resist compaction and 
 shear collapse can be greatly improved
60Discussion of Some Case Histories 
 61Case Histories
- Maracaibo in Venezuela 
- Groeningen in Netherlands 
- Niigata in Japan (gas) 
- Ekofisk in the North Sea (Norway Sector) 
- Ravenna in Italy (gas) 
- Many examples elsewhere as well 
- Good examples in the hydrogeological and 
 geotechnical literature are interesting
62Ekofisk (I)
- 3000 m deep Chalk reservoir, very thick 
- Exceptionally high porosities, 48-49 at the top, 
 30-35 at the base
- Overpressured, ?v  65 MPa, po  54 MPa 
- Moderate lateral stresses, extensional regime 
- Chalk slightly cemented 
- Overlying shales overpressured 
- Large width with respect to depth (W gt 3D)
63Ekofisk (II)
- Lengthy well tests failed to detect compaction 
- Subsidence assumed minor because of depth 
- Casing shearing became a problem in 1980s 
- Wells had to be redrilled, some twice 
- Subsidence first noted from platform legs 
- 4.2 m in 1987, predicted max of 6.2 m 
- Platforms raised, 1987 (US485,000,000.00) 
- Subsidence exceeded 6.0 m in early 90s
64Ekofisk (III)
2.3 billion 
- Redevelopment decision in 1994, S  6.4 m 
- Pressure maintenance tried in 1980s, but it 
 seemed quite ineffective, in use now
- More casing shear, most wells redrilled twice 
- Numerical analysis showed 80-85 of compaction 
 was appearing as subsidence
- Microseismic activity in overburden, along zones 
 where casing was shearing regularly
65Ekofisk (IV)
- However, it is a fabulous reservoir! 
- 100 of initial predicted production was 
 surpassed in early 1990s!
- Life predicted to 2011, extended 30 years 
- Good compaction drive continues (Dz gt 9 m) 
- Max ?z now thought to be greater than 15 m 
- Field may produce more than twice as much oil as 
 initially thought!
- Ekofisk has been a major learning experience
66Ekofisk Continues ....
- Casing shearing not fully ceased or cured 
- Will high-angle flank faulting develop? 
- Redrilling wastes injection (Where? How?) 
- Surface strains and subsea pipelines will there 
 be impairment of these facilities
- Oil storage facilities relocated? 
- Can we reasonable predict these events? 
- I believe petroleum geomechanics has advanced 
 enough so that we can predict
67Maracaibo, Venezuela (I)
- Moderate depth UCSS, thick sequence 
- 30-35 ? in situ 
- Lithic to arkosic strata 
- Geologically quite young 
- In a monotonically sedimenting basin, no tectonic 
 compression, no unloading
- po slightly above hydrostatic 
- No cementation, no pre-compaction
68Location
MARACAIBO
N
Lago de
Maracaibo 
 69Maracaibo Setting
- Sandstone reservoirs 
- Late Cretaceous to Tertiary 
- Normally pressured 
- High porosity for the present burial depth 
- Clay cement usually 
- Asphaltene present in heavier oils (lt30API) 
MARACAIBO
Subsidence area
CABIMAS
TIA JUANA
LAGUNILLAS
I
BACHAQUERO
II
XIV
XII
X
IX
MENE GRANDE
III
VIII
IV
VI
V
XI
V
VII
XIII
Central development areas 
 70Maracaibo, Venezuela (II)
- Subsidence up to 6.5 m, broad bowl 
- Adjacent to the coast, extensive dykes had to be 
 constructed
- Some visible tension cracks developed at the 
 surface, on subsidence bowl crest
- Thermal recovery methods seem not to have 
 triggered new subsidence of consequence
- Casing loss has been moderate
71Ravenna, Niigata
- Italy, Japan, some other places 
- Intermediate depth gas sands, only water present 
 as a second phase, no oil
- High porosity (gt30), arkosic sands, several 
 stacked reservoirs, water influx
- Compaction in the reservoirs, plus water was 
 expelled from bounding silts and clays
- Serious problem was subsidence, as these are both 
 coastal cities
72Wilmington, California (I)
- Intermediate depth, many stacked reservoirs 
- Great aggregate producing thickness 
- UCSS, porosity gt 30, arkosic 
- Extensional tectonics (LA Basin) 
- No cementation, no geological history of deeper 
 burial followed by erosive unloading
- Medium weight oil, liquid reservoir drive 
- Large area, but edges relatively smooth
73Wilmington. California
- Bowl shaped 
- Shear of casings occurred mainly on the shoulders 
 of the subsidence bowl
- Few shears in the middle, where Dz greatest 
- Few on flanks 
- Associated earthquakes
74Wilmington, California (II)
- Sudsidence reached 9.5 m 
- Minor earthquakes triggered, and in one case, gt 
 100 casings simultaneously sheared
- On the sea coast  great problems with naval 
 shipyards, inundation
- Railway tracks buckled, fissures opened, 
 buildings cracked sometimes, etc.
- Pressure maintenance in 1960s 
75Little-Compacting Cases
- Groeningen, Holland - competent rock 
- Deeper oil sands, Alberta - low overall stresses 
 geological pre-compaction and mild diagenesis,
 but no cementation
- Faja del Orinoco, Venezuela - thick quartzose 
 sands, similar to Alberta, so compaction will not
 be substantial
- We can also learn from these cases
76Surface Heave from ?T  ?p
Surface heave  ?z  above a SAGD project
320 mm ?z
1 km
Surface heaves cannot be explained by ?T  ?p 
alone there must be shear dilation taking place. 
 Therefore, there are massive changes in the 
reservoir properties  k, Cc, ?, 
 77How Much Compaction?
- Depends on compressibility, Z, p, Dp, f 
- Qualitative screening criteria (geology!)
- If porosity gt 25 (gt 35 is virtually certain) 
- If the reservoir is geologically young (little 
 diagenesis)
- If it is at its maximum burial depth (no 
 over-compaction)
- If the mineralogy is arkosic or lithic (weak 
 grains)
- If Dp will be large, and particularly if 
 overpressured
- Mainly in extensional regimes and continent 
 margin basins
- If largely uncemented by SiO2 or CaCO3 
- If reservoir width gt depth to reservoir (no 
 arching)
- Other criteria are probably of little relevance
78Will the Reservoir Compact?
- All reservoirs compact, but how much? 
- Best is to test truly undisturbed core samples in 
 the laboratory under representative uniaxial and
 triaxial loading conditions
- Failing this, a detailed comparison to other 
 cases of compaction is carried out (logs, etc.)
- Predictions of compaction can be expected only to 
 be /-25 at best (sampling problems, long-term
 creep, etc.)
79Prediction by Comparison
- Other case histories are carefully studied 
- Quantitative comparisons are made 
- A probability estimate is made
- Geological setting, thickness, etc. 
- Porosity from cores and density logs 
- Comparison of seismic velocities (vP, vS) 
- Study of diagenetic fabric and stress history 
- Geometry and scale of the reservoir wrt depth 
- Mineralogy and lithology of the sediment 
- Stresses, pressures, drawdowns, timing 
- Other factors?
80Reservoir  Overburden
- Compaction delay due to reservoir ? arching 
- Later, arching destroyed, subsidence starts 
- If WgtZ, 85-90 ?h transmitted to surface 
- Strain transmittal to the surface is essentially 
 instantaneous (if there is no arching)
- Geometry is very important (next slides) 
- Overburden distortion leads to massive ??? and 
 shear potential (next slides)
81Geometry Effects
- Everything depends on aspect ratios (W,L,Z) 
- A deep narrow sand will cause no ?z 
- A wide reservoir (W gt 1.5Z) will always transmit 
 compaction to the surface as ?z
- The subsidence bowl is wider than the width of 
 the compacting reservoir
- If very wide, ?zmax approaches ?hmax 
- Simple models OK, but complex geometries and 
 stacked reservoirs ? numerical models
82Modeling Compaction
- Best approach is a fully coupled 
 flow-geomechanics simulation (FEM or DD), giving
 all stresses and strains directly
- Next best approach is a reservoir simulator 
 coupled to a stress-strain FEM or DD model,
 iterating between them to solve ?z
- A simple but limited approach is to get ?p from a 
 simulator, calculate ?V, then project the ?V to
 surface using nucleus-of-strain
83Coupling Stresses, Flow
- The assumption ??v  ?p is usually wrong 
- It ignores redistribution of stresses in the 
 reservoir and through overburden stiffness
- Thus, a full stress-flow solution is needed 
- Calculate ?p, use in a ??? model (one step) 
- A ??? model iteratively coupled to flow model 
- A fully-coupled finite element approach 
- Use of DD  flow model for ??? is most efficient 
- Also gives overburden shear stresses changes
84Stress Trajectories, -?V Case 
 85Overburden Arching
- Delay of compaction always occurs in early time, 
 before ?p zones intersect (aspect ratio)
stress arching
initially
after some Q
?p region
aspect ratio is W/H if Wgt3H, arching is 
disappearing 
 86Reduced Lateral Stresses
wellbore
?h stress trajectories
?h concentration
far-field stresses
?h along wellbore
Zone of high drawdown
final ?h
Operational consequences low pfrac in 
reservoir higher pfrac above reservoir
initial ?h
Z 
 87Prediction of ???ij
- A flow-coupled geomechanics model is required to 
 correctly solve for ??ij and ??p
- FEM, FEM  FD, DD  FD, Hybrid models using 
 analytical solutions  FEM, DEM
- Material constitutive behavior is critical 
- Non-linear E (granular and fractured media)? 
- Potential for shear of weak rocks, fractures? 
- Fabric changes  yield (grains, shearing )? 
- Boundary conditions and initial conditions!
88Coupled Modeling
- Coupling requires that the volume changes from 
 ??? be analyzed along with ?p
- Only limited closed-form solutions exist 
- Coupling can be achieved numerically by (at 
 least) two different approaches
- The complete coupled differential equations are 
 written and solved, usually by FEM
- Or, an iterative approach can be used 
- Latter is instructive, as it shows principles...
89Iterative Coupled Models
- Pressures are solved for a single time step 
- ?p  pi1 - pi calculated in flow model 
- Assume ???  ?p, solve a FEM ??? model 
- Calculate ?V for all reservoir point 
- Use ?V as flow model source-sink terms 
- Get new ?p and iterate until error is small 
- Take another time step and continue 
- (Robust and rapid convergence) 
90Mitigating Casing Shear
- Stronger cement and casing are not useful 
- There are three possible approaches 
- Avoid placing wells in zones of high shear 
- Manage reservoir development to reduce incidence 
- Create a more compliant casing-rock system 
- Avoidance  management require modeling 
- Under-reaming  no cement delays distress 
- Better sealing cements to reduce p migration 
91Under-Reaming to Reduce Shear
casing cemented, but not in the under-reamed zone
sand stratum
interface slip
under-reamed zone
casing
bedding plane slip
shale stratum 
 92Under-Reaming of Hole
100
Wilmington
90
80
70
Percent of Total
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
Undamaged
Damaged
Failed 
 93Risk Mitigation Approaches
- Pressure maintenance 
- Water injection 
- Gas injection 
- CO2 sequestration, and use as an enhanced oil 
 recovery approach
- Structural design of platforms 
- Judicious placement of wellbore to reduce the 
 incidence of casing shear
- Special completion techniques 
- Monitor, monitor, monitor 
94Modeling Compaction
- Best approach is a fully coupled 
 flow-geomechanics simulation (FEM or DD), giving
 all stresses and strains directly
- Next best approach is a reservoir simulator 
 coupled to a stress-strain FEM or DD model,
 iterating between them to solve ?z
- A simple but limited approach is to get ?p from a 
 simulator, calculate ?V, then project the ?V to
 surface using nucleus-of-strain
95Prediction of ???ij
- A flow-coupled geomechanics model is required to 
 correctly solve for ??ij and ??p
- FEM, FEM  FD, DD  FD, Hybrid models using 
 analytical solutions  FEM, DEM
- Material constitutive behavior is critical 
- Non-linear E (granular and fractured media)? 
- Potential for shear of weak rocks, fractures? 
- Fabric changes  yield (grains, shearing )? 
- Boundary conditions and initial conditions!
96Coupled Modeling
- Coupling requires that the volume changes from 
 ??? be analyzed along with ?p
- Only limited closed-form solutions exist 
- Coupling can be achieved numerically by (at 
 least) two different approaches
- The complete coupled differential equations are 
 written and solved, usually by FEM
- Or, an iterative approach can be used 
- Latter is instructive, as it shows principles...
97Iterative Coupled Models
- Pressures are solved for a single time step 
- ?p  pi1 - pi calculated in flow model 
- Assume ???  ?p, solve a FEM ??? model 
- Calculate ?V for all reservoir point 
- Use ?V as flow model source-sink terms 
- Get new ?p and iterate until error is small 
- Take another time step and continue 
- (Robust and rapid convergence) 
98Analyzing Special Compaction Joints
9,743
9,743
Telescoping joint
9,818
9,818
Telescoping Joint
450 ft
450 ft
450 ft
9980
9980
for ?  0.2, Cp  9?10-6 psi-1 ?p  2600 psi 
?H/H  1
Screen, basepipe, couplings
210 ft
210 ft
210 ft
Screen, base
-
pipe, couplings
Screen, base
-
pipe, couplings
10,192
10,192
Sump packer
Sump Packer
Sump Packer 
 99Mathematical Modeling of Strains 
 100Modeling a 600' Compacting Section 
 101Elastoplastic Zone Generation 
 102The Design Paths
Common
Well 
Well 
Common
Analytical
Analytical
Performance
Design 
Performance
Design 
Analysis
Analysis
Comparison 
Analysis
Comparison 
Analysis
Tool
Tool
Tool
Database
Database
Tool
Simple 
Simple 
Decision
Decision
Analysis Tool
Proprietary
Proprietary
Proprietary
Proprietary
Proprietary
Proprietary
Decision
Well Damage 
Well Damage 
Decision
Reservoir 
Reservoir 
Analysis
Analysis
Analysis
Analysis
Analysis
Analysis
Optimum Well Design 
 103Combining the Elements 
 104Decision Analysis Techniques
An economic decision tree model can be applied to 
compare the costs and benefits of alternative 
well designs, while taking into account the 
inherent uncertainties in geomechanical model 
input data, well damage location, and 
effectiveness of various mitigation 
strategies. In some instances the appropriate 
action is not to change completion design and 
simply accept and account for damage risk in 
economic projections. 
 105Example of Decision Analysis
Probability x Consequences  Risk Cost
Simple Decision Analysis Example