Annular velocity

Annular velocity is the speed of a fluid's movement in a column called an annulus in wells being drilled with circulating drilling fluid.[1] It is commonly measured in feet per minute (ft/min) or meters per minute (m/min). Annular velocity is often abbreviated as AV, though this is not exclusively so, as AV also refers to apparent viscosity which is calculated from rheometer readings from tests that the mud engineer performs.

Scope

For this article, annular velocity is described, as used in drilling fluid applications in the oil exploration industry. There may be other applications in other fields of study such as fluid mechanics (the study of the movement of fluid) or fluid dynamics (the study of the flow of fluid).

Determination

The annular velocity can be calculated using one of the following formulas.

Or

Where:

  • AV = annular velocity in Ft/min (feet per minute)
  • PObpm = pump output in bpm (barrels per minute) 1 barrel = 42 gallons
  • POgpm = pump output in gpm (gallons per minute) 1 gallon = 0.0238095238 barrels
  • ID2 = inside diameter of the wellbore or casing, squared
  • OD2 = outside diameter of the drill pipe or tubing, squared
  • 1029.4 = A conversion factor constant used to calculate the volume between the outside of a tube within the inside of another tube, using barrels.
  • 24.5 = A conversion factor constant used to calculate the volume between the outside of a tube within the inside of another tube, using gallons.
  • Pump Output = Refers to the measurement of the quantity of a fluid (to put that fluid in motion).

Application

The annular velocity is one of two major variables in the process of cleaning solids (drill cuttings) from the wellbore. By maintaining the annular velocity at certain rates (speeds) in conjunction with the rheological properties of the drilling fluid, the wellbore is kept clean of the drill cuttings to prevent them from settling back down to the bottom and causing drilling problems.

The other major variable is the rheology of the drilling fluid. Rheology is sometimes thought of as viscosity to the uninitiated, though improperly. Viscosity (sometimes thought of as its thickness) is a very basic measurement of the fluids resistance to change in movement or flow. The viscosity of a fluid can be measured with a Marsh Funnel. Rheology is the study of viscosity and requires more precise and complicated procedures and equipment for its determination. For drilling fluid applications a rheometer is used.

gollark: Blockchain is not "how society is structured".
gollark: Please reexplain it?
gollark: You may like trusting people you interact with a lot. You can continue doing this. But having options to minimize necessary trust gives people more options, which I think is good.
gollark: Wondrous.
gollark: Although HTTP tries its best to alienate you from the people you interact with via the stateless request/response model, at least with unencrypted HTTP I am still aware that I am interacting with another server. TLS and so on seek to undermine this further, by forcing you to treat everyone as a faceless certificate surrounded by attackers trying to eavesdrop at all times. It thus depersonalizes and alienates you from the people you are interacting with even further.

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.