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Well Design
PE 413
Casing Design
Casing Design
Introduction
The casing design process involves
three distinct operations:
1.The selection of the casing sizes
and setting depths;
2.The definition of the operational
scenarios which will result in burst,
collapse and axial loads
3.The calculation of the magnitude of
these loads and selection of an
appropriate weight and grade of
casing.
Casing Design
Calculate Loads on the Casing Axial Load
The axial load on the casing can be either tensile or compressive, depending on
the operating conditions.
Casing Design
Calculate Loads on the Casing Axial Load
The force Ften tending to pull apart the pipe is resisted by
the stregth of the pipe walls, which exert a counterforce F2.
F2 yield As
Ften
yield d n2 d 2
4
Example 1
Compute the body-yield strength for 20, K-55 casing with a nominal wall thickness
of 0.635 and a nominal weight per foot of 133 lbf/ft.
Example 1
Solution:
d = 20.00 2(0.635) = 18.73
Ften
yield d n2 d 2
4
Ften
Casing Design
Calculate Loads on the Casing Burst Pressure
The casing will experience a net burst loading if the internal radial load exceeds
the external radial load.
Casing Design
Calculate Loads on the Casing Burst Pressure
ds r sin r
F1 Pbr L
d
d
2
F 2 s tL
F2 s tL
d
2
Casing Design
Calculate Loads on the Casing Burst Pressure
F1 2F2
Pbr
2 s t
d
where s is the nominal steel strength. Equation 3 is used only for thin-wall
casing. In drilling application, it is suggested that one should use Barlows
equation to calculate Pbr for thick-wall casing.
Pbr 0.875
2 yield t
dn
API recommends use of this equation with wall thickness rounded to the nearest
0.001 and the results rounded to the nearest 10 psi.
Prepared by: Tan Nguyen
Casing Design
Calculate Loads on the Casing Burst Pressure
If casing is subjected to internal pressure higher than external, it is said that casing
is exposed to burst pressure. Burst pressure conditions occur during well control
operation or squeeze cementing.
Equation (4) is used to calculate the internal pressure at which the tangential stress
at the inner wall of the pipe reaches the yield strength of the material. The factor
0.875 represents the allowable manufactruing tolerance of -12.5% on wall thickness.
Because a burst pressure failure will not occur until after the stress exceeds the
ultimate tensile strength, using a yield strength criterion as a measure of burst
strength is an inherently conservative assumption.
Example 2
Compute the burst-pressure rating for 20, K-55 casing with a nominal wall thickness
of 0.635 and a nominal weight per foot of 133 lbf/ft
Solution:
Pbr 0.875
Pbr 0.875
2 yield t
dn
2(55,000)(0.635)
3,056 psi
(20)
Casing Design
Calculate Loads on the Casing Collapse Pressure
The casing will experience a net collapse loading if the external radial load exceeds
the internal radial load. The greatest collapse load on the casing will occur if the
casing is evacuated (empty) for any reason.
Casing Design
Calculate Loads on the Casing Collapse Pressure
If external pressure exceeds internal pressure, the casing is subjected to collapse.
Such conditions may exist during cementing operations or well evacuation. Collapse
strength is primarily function of the materials yield strength and its slenderness
ratio, dn/t.
Casing Design
Calculate Loads on the Casing Collapse Pressure
Example 3
Consider a drillpipe of E-75 4 outer diameter with a unit weight of 20 lb/ft inside
a wellbore filled with 9.5 ppg mud. At a location of 3800 ft from the surface,
pressure inside the pipe is 2000 psi, and pressure outside the pipe is 1700 psi.
Determine the tangential and radial stresses at r = ro.
Example 3
E-75 4 and 20 lb/ft drillpipe has an inner diameter of 3.64 in. Considering r is
equal to ro = 2.25
= - 1700 psi
= - 564.4 psi
Casing Design
Collapse Pressure Regimes
The collapse strength criteria consist of four collapse regimes determined by yield strength
and dn/t. Each criterion is discussed next in order of increasing d n/t.
Yield strength collapse:
Yield strength collapse is based on yield at the inner wall. This criterion does not represent
a collapse pressure at all. For thick wall pipes (d n/t < 15), the tangential stress exceeds
the yield strength of the material before a collapse instability failure occurs.
Assumed that the pipe is subjected only to an external pressure p e. From eq. (6), the
absolute value of tangential stress t is always greatest at the inner wall of the pipe and
that for burst and collapse loads. Hence, the yield strength collapse occurs at the inner
wall: r = ri then equation (6) becomes:
Casing Design
Collapse Pressure Regimes
2 pe ro2
t 2
ro ri 2
2 p e ro2
t
t ro ri
Rearrange equation (8) gives equation (9) to calculate the critical pressure for
yield strength collapse, Pcr
d n / t 1
PYP 2 Y
d n / t
Casing Design
Collapse Pressure Regimes
Plastic collapse:
Plastic collapse is based on empirical data from 2,488 tests of K-55, N-80 and P-110
seamless casing. No analytic expression has been derived that accurately models
collapse behavior in this regime. The minimum collapse pressure for the plastic
range of collapse is calculated by equation (10).
F1
F2 F3
dn / t
PP Y
10
Casing Design
Collapse Pressure Regimes
Transition Collapse:
Transition collapse is obtained by a numerical curve fitting between the plastic and
elastic regimes. The minimum collapse pressure for the plastic-to-elastic transition
zone is calculated by equation (11)
F4
F5
dn / t
PT Y
11
Casing Design
Collapse Pressure Regimes
Elastic Collapse:
Elastic collapse is based on theoretical elastic instability failure; this criterion is
independent of yield strength and applicable to thin-wall pipe (dn/t > 25). The
minimum collapse pressure for the elastic range of collapse is calculated by using
equation (12)
46.95 10 6
PE
d n / t d n / t 1 2
12
Most oilfield tubulars experience collapse in the plastic and transition regimes.
Casing Design
Collapse Pressure Regimes
Casing Design
Collapse Pressure Regimes
F1 2.8762 0.10679 10 5 Y 0.21301 10 10 Y 0.53132 10 16 Y
2
F2 0.026233 0.50609 10 6 Y
F3 465.93 0.030867Y 0.10483 10 7 Y 0.36989 10 13 Y
2
3 F2 / F1
46.95 10
2 F2 / F1
F4
3 F2 / F1
Y
F2 / F1
2 F2 / F1
F5 F4 F2 / F1
3 F2 / F1
1
2 F2 / F1
Casing Design
Collapse Pressure Regimes
Example
Compute the collapse pressure rating for 20, K-55 casing with a nominal wall
thickness of 0.635 and a nominal weight per foot of 133 lbf/ft.
Solution:
dn/t = 20/0.635 = 31.49
This is the transition collapse
F4
F5
dn / t
pT Y
1.989
pT 55,000
0.036 1,493 psi
31.49
Casing Design
Combined Stress Effects
All the pipe strength equations previously given are based on a zero axial stress
state. This idealized situation never occurs in oilfield applications because pipe in
a wellbore is always subjected to combined loading conditions.
The fundamental basis of casing design is that if stresses in the pipe wall exceed
the yield strength of the material, a failure condition exists. Hence the yield
strength is a measure of the maximum allowable stress. To evaluate the pipe
strength under combined loading conditions, the uniaxial yield strength is
compared to the yielding condition.
Casing Design
Combined Stress Effects
The most widely accepted yielding criterion is based on the maximum
distortion energy theory, which is known as the Huber-Von-Mises Theory. This
theory states that if the triaxial stress exceeds the yield strength, a yield failure
is indicated. Note that the triaxial stress is not a true stress. It is a theoretical
value that allows a generalized three-dimensional stress state to be compared
with a uniaxial failure criterion (the yield strength).
Casing Design
Combined Stress Effects
VME
1
2
z t 2 t r 2 r z 2
Where
Y minimum yield stress, psi
VME triaxial stress, psi
VME: Von Mises Equivalent
z, t, r axial tress, tangential
stress, and radial stress, psi
13
Casing Design
Combined Stress Effects
Setting the triaxial stress equal to the yield strength and solving equation (13)
give the results:
t pi
3 pi
1 z
Y
4 Y
1 pi
z
2 Y
14
Equation (14) is for the ellipse of plasticity. Combining Eq. (14) and eq. (6)
together and let r = ri, will give the combinations of internal pressure, external
pressure and axial stress that will result in a yield strength mode of failure.
Casing Design
Combined Stress Effects
critical
increases
burst-pressure
and
the
critical
collapse-pressure decreases.
In
contrast,
as
the
axial
burst-pressure
Example
Compute the nominal collapse pressure rating for 5.5, N-80 casing with a nominal
wall thickness of 0.476 and a nominal weight per foot of 26 lbf/ft. In addition,
determine the collapse pressure for in-service conditions in which the pipe is
subjected to a 40,000 psi axial tension stress and a 10,000 psi internal pressure.
Assume a yield strength mode of failure.
Example
For collapse pressure rating, r = ri then eq. (6) becomes
pi ro2 ri 2 2 p e ro2
t
ro2 ri 2
pi ro2 ri 2 2 p e ro2
pi
2
2
t pi
ro ri
Y
Y
t pi 2ro2
2
2
Y
ro ri
pi p e
2
pi pe
t pi
2 5.5
2
2
Y
80
,
000
5
.
5
4
.
548
t pi pi p e
pe
Y
12,649 12,649
Prepared by: Tan Nguyen
Example
From eq. (14) with z pi 0 we have
t pi
1
Y
pe
1
12,649
p e 12,649 psi
Example
For in-service conditions of z = 40,000 psi and pi = 10,000 psi
t pi 10,000 p e
Y
12,649
z pi 40,000 10,000
0.625
Y
80,000
Solving eq. (14) gives
t pi 10,000 pe
0.5284
Y
12,649
p e 16,684 psi