Introduction to Casing and Tubing Design (ICD)
This course is designed for those who want to understand the fundamentals of tubular design. ICD is focused on working stress design, giving participants an in-depth understanding of tubular strength, in addition to illustrating how well construction activities and well operations affect casing and tubing. As a suggested prerequisite to Advanced Casing Design (ACD), ICD introduces some of the advanced design methods discussed in ACD. The objective of the ICD course is to provide engineers with a fundamental grounding in the mechanics of tubulars as applied to casing and tubing design. Some of the key areas covered in the course include:- The purpose of casing and required casing properties.
- Working Stress Design (WSD) and an introduction to Reliability Based Design (RBD).
- Strength theories including the ISO TR 10400 and API 5C3 limit states.
- Design and selection of connections, with emphasis on ISO 13679 approach to connection limits.
- Materials selection and fracture mechanics-based criteria for sour designs (including NACE MR0175 sour limits).
- An extensive overview of some special problems encountered in casing and tubing design, including buckling, thermal effects, annular pressure build-up, wellhead movement, casing wear, worn casing strength, design economics, etc.
- Hand calculations and visualization of design loads and strengths, in order to appreciate the physics behind the design process.
- Numerous examples are used to illustrate the design process.
November 9, 2020—November 19, 2020 Nine days of online instruction. Two hours per day. Tuition: $1400 Presented online in the Blade Academy environment Register Now!