Well Casing - Another Problem Solved Through the Uses of Explosives

- Organization:
- International Society of Explosives Engineers
- Pages:
- 12
- File Size:
- 278 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 2000
Abstract
The goal: At an industrial site, sever a well pipe containing an interior obstruction in a timely, cost effective manner by using a shape-charge to cut through the casing more than 50 meters below ground surface from the outside, doing so while inside a larger pipe, without damaging the larger pipe. The problem: Pumps and retrieval tools stuck nearly 50 meters below ground surface inside a 305 mm diameter by 9.5 mm wall thickness water well casing. The well, depth of 185 meters, had to be inspected for contaminates then properly decommissioned before industrial expansion could take place overhead. The limitations: A 508 mm diameter pipe had been driven around the 305 mm pipe to a depth of 63 meters. The usable internal diameter of the larger pipe was about 480 mm while the smaller pipe had buckled at one point forming a 350 mm wide spot. The charge thickness was limited to less than one-half the difference. Additionally, water that filled the annular space between the two pipes had to be displaced for the charge to work properly. The solution: Enlist the support of the shape-charge manufacturer to design, build and test a charge to work under the conditions present, then make it work in the field.
Citation
APA:
(2000) Well Casing - Another Problem Solved Through the Uses of ExplosivesMLA: Well Casing - Another Problem Solved Through the Uses of Explosives. International Society of Explosives Engineers, 2000.