Modeling the Temperature and Pressure Variations of Supercritical Carbon Dioxide in Coiled Tubing
2025
Zhixing Luan | Peng Wang
The use of supercritical carbon dioxide (SC-CO2) coiled tubing drilling technology for developing heavy oil and other special reservoirs offers significant advantages, including non-pollution of oil layers, prevention of clay swelling, avoidance of reservoir damage, compact footprint, and enhanced oil recovery, making it a highly promising innovative drilling technology. The thermo-hydraulic coupling characteristics of SC-CO2 in helical coiled tubes are critical to the design of SC-CO2 coiled tubing drilling systems. However, existing models often neglect thermal conduction, variable thermophysical properties, and friction-compression coupling effects, leading to significant deviations in the prediction of temperature and pressure variations. Considering heat transmission and fluid dynamics, a coiled tube heat-transfer model which considers varying properties of both pressure and temperature has been developed based on an optimized convective heat-transfer coefficient. Then, the physical parameters of the carbon dioxide in the helical coiled tubing were researched. Results indicated that the temperature change of carbon dioxide in helical coiled tubing was small due to the low temperature difference between the carbon dioxide and the air as well as the existence of an air interlayer and low natural convective heat-transfer efficiency. The drop in pressure of the carbon dioxide increased with increasing coiled tubing length, and the pressure was half that of the conventional drilling fluid in the same condition due to its low viscosity. The density of carbon dioxide in the helical coiled tubing changed from 1078 kg/m3 to 1047 kg/m3 with increasing coiled tubing length under the conditions stated herein, and the carbon dioxide remained liquid throughout the whole process.
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