The U.S. Department of Energy’s National Energy Technology Laboratory (NETL) established an Extreme Drilling Lab to engineer effective and efficient drilling technologies viable at depths greater than 20,000 feet. This paper details the challenges of ultra-deep drilling, documents reports of decreased drilling rates as a result of increasing fluid pressure and temperature, and describes NETL’s Research and Development activities. NETL is invested in laboratory-scale physical simulation. Their physical simulator will have capability of circulating drilling fluids at 30,000 psi and 480 °F around a single drill cutter. This simulator will not yet be operational by the planned conference dates; therefore, the results will be limited to identification of leading hypotheses of drilling phenomena and NETL’s test plans to validate or refute such theories. Of particular interest to the Extreme Drilling Lab’s studies are the combinatorial effects of drilling fluid pressure, drilling fluid properties, rock properties, pore pressure, and drilling parameters, such as cutter rotational speed, weight on bit, and hydraulics associated with drilling fluid introduction to the rock-cutter interface. A detailed discussion of how each variable is controlled in a laboratory setting will be part of the conference paper and presentation.
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ASME 2007 26th International Conference on Offshore Mechanics and Arctic Engineering
June 10–15, 2007
San Diego, California, USA
Conference Sponsors:
- Ocean, Offshore and Arctic Engineering Division
ISBN:
0-7918-4268-1
PROCEEDINGS PAPER
NETL Extreme Drilling Laboratory Studies High Pressure High Temperature Drilling Phenomena
K. David Lyons,
K. David Lyons
U.S. DOE National Energy Technology Laboratory, Morgantown, WV
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Simone Honeygan,
Simone Honeygan
U.S. DOE National Energy Technology Laboratory, Morgantown, WV
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Thomas Mroz
Thomas Mroz
U.S. DOE National Energy Technology Laboratory, Morgantown, WV
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K. David Lyons
U.S. DOE National Energy Technology Laboratory, Morgantown, WV
Simone Honeygan
U.S. DOE National Energy Technology Laboratory, Morgantown, WV
Thomas Mroz
U.S. DOE National Energy Technology Laboratory, Morgantown, WV
Paper No:
OMAE2007-29478, pp. 791-796; 6 pages
Published Online:
May 20, 2009
Citation
Lyons, KD, Honeygan, S, & Mroz, T. "NETL Extreme Drilling Laboratory Studies High Pressure High Temperature Drilling Phenomena." Proceedings of the ASME 2007 26th International Conference on Offshore Mechanics and Arctic Engineering. Volume 2: Structures, Safety and Reliability; Petroleum Technology Symposium. San Diego, California, USA. June 10–15, 2007. pp. 791-796. ASME. https://doi.org/10.1115/OMAE2007-29478
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