Mitigation of torsional vibrations in drilling systems
A robust control approach
Thijs Vromen (Eindhoven University of Technology)
Cam Hing Dai (Eindhoven University of Technology)
Nathan van de Wouw (Team Bart De Schutter, University of Minnesota, Eindhoven University of Technology)
Tom Oomen (Eindhoven University of Technology)
Patricia Astrid (Shell Global Solutions International B.V.)
Apostolos Doris (Nederlandse Aardolie Maatschappij B.V.)
Henk Nijmeijer (Eindhoven University of Technology)
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Abstract
Stick-slip vibrations decrease the performance, reliability, and fail safety of drilling systems. The aim of this paper is to design a robust output-feedback control approach to eliminate torsional stick-slip vibrations in drilling systems. Current industrial controllers regularly fail to eliminate stick-slip vibrations, especially when multiple torsional flexibility modes play a role in the onset of stick-slip vibrations. As a basis for controller synthesis, a multimodal model of the torsional dynamics for a real drill-string system is employed. The proposed controller design strategy is based on skewed-μ DK iteration and aims at optimizing the robustness with respect to uncertainty in the nonlinear bit-rock interaction. Moreover, a closed-loop stability analysis for the nonlinear drill-string model is provided. This controller design strategy offers several benefits compared with existing controllers. First, only surface measurements are employed, therewith avoiding the need for down-hole measurements. Second, multimodal drill-string dynamics are effectively dealt with in ways inaccessible to state-of-practice controllers. Third, robustness with respect to uncertainties in the bit-rock interaction is explicitly provided and closed-loop performance specifications are included in the controller design. Case study results confirm that stick-slip vibrations are indeed eliminated in realistic drilling scenarios using the designed controller in which state-of-practice controllers fail to achieve this.