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What are MWD in Oil and Gas?

What are MWD in Oil and Gas?

When drilling a long lateral well, it is very important to know the position of the drilling bit.

It is equally important to know the formation geology to ensure that the well is being drilled in the right zone.

Before tools like MWD or LWD were invented wireline was used instead.

Wireline is just a flexible metal cable used to run various downhole tools in the well.

To run a wireline the drill pipe needs to be pulled to the surface which means measurements cannot be taken in real-time while drilling.

In addition, wireline is not very effective in long lateral wells.

That’s why nowadays tools like MWD and LWD are commonly used instead.

What is MWD?

Measurement while drilling (MWD) is used in the oil and gas industry to get real-time information about wellbore trajectory as well as other downhole data.

This data is sent via pressure pulses to the surface where it is received by surface transducers.

Later the data gets decoded and can be used to make real-time decisions during a drilling operation.

Precise control of the wellbore trajectory is very important when drilling horizontal wells because the well has to be drilled in the right zone and there is not much room for error.

Two measurements that are commonly used to figure out a well trajectory are azimuth and inclination.

In addition, drilling bit information can be transferred to the surface as well.

This helps to gauge the condition of the bit and improve drilling efficiency. 

Main MWD Tool Components

MWD tool is usually placed above the drilling bottom hole assembly.

The typical components of the MWD tool:

Power source

There are two main types of power sources that are used on MWD tools: battery and turbine.

Usually, lithium batteries that can operate at high temperatures are used.

The turbine generates electricity when mud flows through it.

It is great for longer operations but the downside is that fluid circulation is required for it to generate electricity.

Sensors – common sensors on the MWD tool are an accelerometer, magnetometer, temperature, strain gauge, pressure, vibration, and gamma-ray sensors.

Electronic controller

Transmitter – transmits data to the surface by creating mud pulses in the drill string.

There are three ways in which MWD tools transmit the data to the surface:

Positive pulse – created by increasing the pressure in the drill pipe by restricting the fluid flow in the tool.

Negative pulse – created by decreasing the pressure in the drill pipe by releasing fluid from the drill pipe into the annulus.

Continuous-wave – sinusoidal type pressure wave generated by closing and opening the valve on the tool.

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Post time: Mar-03-2024