Effects of Longwall-lnduced Stress and Deformation on the Stability and Mechanical Integrity of Shale Gas Wells Drilled through a Longwall Abutment Pillar

International Conference on Ground Control in Mining
Daniel W. H. Su
Organization:
International Conference on Ground Control in Mining
Pages:
7
File Size:
1747 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2016

Abstract

"This paper presents results from a recent study conducted to evaluate the effects of longwall-induced stresses and deformations on the mechanical integrity of shale gas wells drilled over a longwall abutment pillar. The primary objective is to demonstrate that a properly constructed gas well in a standard longwall mining abutment pillar can maintain mechanical integrity during and after mining operations. Successful designs would allow for the safe recovery of both coal and gas reserves. Major elements of this comprehensive study include: (1) modeling of rock movements to predict impacts on gas wells, (2) measurements of actual rock movements at the surface and in the subsurface, (3) measurements of actual impacts on test wells designed similarly to real shale gas wells, ( 4) comparison of modeling results to actual rock movements to validate the model, and (5) employing the validated models to evaluate various casing and cementing designs to minimize casing deformations and absorb longwall-induced strains along the intermediate and production casings.A study site was selected over a southwestern Pennsylvania coal mine, which extracts 1,500-ft-wide longwall faces under about 600 feet of cover. Four test wells and four monitoring wells were drilled and installed over an abutment pillar with 125-ft by 275-ft centers. The four test wells were drilled to a depth of 642 ft, or 42 ft below the Pittsburgh seam, and were designed like a real shale gas well, except that only three casings (namely the surface, water protection and coal protection casings) were installed in each well. Casing steel grades, wellbore diameters and annular spaces were purposely varied in each of the four test wells to evaluate the effect of different well designs. The four monitoring wells - one vertical extensometer and three in-place inclinometers (IPI) - were drilled to different depths to measure the vertical settlement and horizontal displacements as a result of longwall mining on both sides of the abutment pillar. In addition to the test wells and monitoring wells, surface subsidence measurements and underground coal pillar pressure measurements were conducted as the 1,500-ft-wide longwall panels on the south and north sides of the abutment pillar mined by."
Citation

APA: Daniel W. H. Su  (2016)  Effects of Longwall-lnduced Stress and Deformation on the Stability and Mechanical Integrity of Shale Gas Wells Drilled through a Longwall Abutment Pillar

MLA: Daniel W. H. Su Effects of Longwall-lnduced Stress and Deformation on the Stability and Mechanical Integrity of Shale Gas Wells Drilled through a Longwall Abutment Pillar. International Conference on Ground Control in Mining, 2016.

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