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You are here: Home / Articles / Service Life

by Doug Lehr 1 Comment

Service Life

Service Life

 Your team is developing a new downhole chemical injection valve for a client’s offshore well. The valve’s service life target reflects its electro-mechanical (EM) content and is much shorter than the well’s economic life. But the valve housing has an estimated structural service life that exceeds well economic life, so structural integrity will exist well beyond electro-mechanical failure. Will the shorter life of the electro-mechanical content satisfy client requirements? 

The target service life for any downhole tool must be based on a relevant parameter. For example, if the tool is customized for a specific well, the target may need to match that well’s economic life or its workover (service) interval. But once a target is selected, the estimate must meet or exceed the target. Here are some aspects of service life to keep in mind: 

Economic life vs design life vs. service life. Economic life is the time over which a product is useful. Design life is the time over which a product can perform as advertised. Service life is the time over which a product remains serviceable or remains in service. Within the upstream community, the terms design life and service life are frequently used interchangeably. 

A comparison of relevant parameter,
service life target, and service life estimate 

Service life estimation. Various methods exist for estimating downhole tool service life including simulation, cyclic testing, materials aging tests, field history, or combinations of these. 

Control equipment for downhole tools. Surface equipment (e.g., fiber optic interrogators, or hydraulic control panels) could have a service life estimate different from the equipment it controls. Service life for surface equipment is affected by enclosure temperature, humidity, and other factors. 

The service life target for the downhole injection valve must support mission critical and business critical requirements. Mission critical requirements always include structural integrity, but business critical requirements may reflect a minimum duration for chemical injection. Valve redundancy may be necessary to meet business critical requirements. 

TRUTH: Service life expectations must be known before beginning product development. 

 This is the 3rd of six articles on Design for Reality for downhole tools and systems. 

  1. Exceeding Expectations
  2. The Statement of Requirements
  3. Service Life
  4. Designing with Margin
  5. Survivability

Filed Under: Articles, Equipment Risk and Reliability in Downhole Applications, on Risk & Safety

About Doug Lehr

Doug Lehr is the Founder and Principal of Integris Technology Services LLC. He has over 40 years of experience in the development of downhole tools for oil and gas wells and has built a track record of success in technical management, innovation, and industry leadership.

« Reliability Testing – Product vs. Materials
Chronic Failures: Hidden Treasures! »

Comments

  1. JD Solomon says

    April 7, 2022 at 5:29 AM

    Good post!

    Reply

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Articles by Doug Lehr, P.E., Founder and Principal, Integris Technology
in the Equipment Risk and Reliability in Downhole Applications series

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