This section provides background information to facilitate a better understanding of the various aspects of the disclosure. It should be understood that the statements in this section of this document are to be read in this light, and not as admissions of prior art.
Many downhole tools are actuated by stored mechanical energy sources such as springs or compressed gases. The energy is used to do work on a movable element of the tool, such as a piston or a sliding sleeve. When such tools are operated at great depths, the hydrostatic pressure of the wellbore fluid may apply pressures on the movable element that are comparable to or even greater than the pressure applied by the stored energy.
An example of a method of changing the state of a tool disposed in a well in accordance with an embodiment includes applying differential pressure cycles to an actuating device disposed in a wellbore, the actuating device comprising a tool operator having a first side open to a first chamber and a second side open to a second chamber; moving the tool operator to a first position in response to applying the differential pressure cycles; actuating the tool operator from the first position to a second position in response to depleting pressure in the second chamber; and changing the state of a tool element in response to actuating the tool operator to the second position.
An example of an actuating device according to one or more embodiments includes a tubular body comprising an axial bore and an annular region, a confined diameter container disposed within the annular region, a tool operator having a first side open to a first chamber and a second side open to a second chamber, the tool operator moveable from a first position to a second position in response to a pressure differential between the first chamber and the second chamber, a trigger valve having a valve piston operable from a closed position to an open position, an input pressure port in hydraulic communication with the first chamber and the second chamber through the trigger valve, and an exhaust port in hydraulic communication with the second chamber and the confined diameter container when the trigger valve piston is in the open position.
An example of an actuating method according to one or more embodiments includes applying an input pressure to a first side of a tool operator and to a second side of the tool operator; depleting the input pressure applied to the second side while maintaining the input pressure applied to the first side, moving the tool operator from a first position to a second position in response to depleting the input pressure applied to the second side, and changing the state of a tool element in response to moving the tool operator to the second position.
This summary is provided to introduce a selection of concepts that are further described below in the detailed description. This summary is not intended to identify key or essential features of the claimed subject matter, nor is it intended to be used as an aid in limiting the scope of claimed subject matter.
Embodiments of actuating devices and methods are described with reference to the following figures. The same numbers are used throughout the figures to reference like features and components. It is emphasized that, in accordance with standard practice in the industry, various features are not necessarily drawn to scale. In fact, the dimensions of various features may be arbitrarily increased or reduced for clarity of discussion.
It is to be understood that the following disclosure provides many different embodiments, or examples, for implementing different features of various embodiments. Specific examples of components and arrangements are described below to simplify the disclosure. These are, of course, merely examples and are not intended to be limiting. In addition, the disclosure may repeat reference numerals and/or letters in the various examples. This repetition is for the purpose of simplicity and clarity and does not in itself dictate a relationship between the various embodiments and/or configurations discussed. Moreover, the formation of a first feature over or on a second feature in the description that follows may include embodiments in which the first and second features are formed in direct contact, and may also include embodiments in which additional features may be formed interposing the first and second features, such that the first and second features may not be in direct contact.
As used herein, the terms “up” and “down”; “upper” and “lower”; “top” and “bottom”; and other like terms indicating relative positions to a given point or element are utilized to more clearly describe some elements. Commonly, these terms relate to a reference point as the surface from which drilling operations are initiated as being the top point and the total depth of the well being the lowest point, wherein the well (e.g., wellbore, borehole) is vertical, horizontal or slanted relative to the surface.
Wellbore 16 is depicted extending from a surface 20 into the subterranean earthen formations 22. Wellbore 16 may or may not be cased, for example via a casing string 24. Although tool 14 is depicted as being disposed in a vertical wellbore 16, tool 14 may be disposed in a lateral or deviated section of wellbore 16 without departing from the scope of the disclosure. An annulus 26 is located between an exterior surface of the tool 14 and the interior surface of wellbore 16. The pressure in annulus 26 may be referred to in some embodiments as a casing pressure and the pressure in the bore 17 of tubular string 18 as tubing pressure. Casing pressure is associated with the hydrostatic column of the fluid in annulus 26 and the formation pressures communicated to annulus 26. The tubing pressure can be manipulated via pumps 28 located for example at surface 20.
In the embodiment depicted in
With reference to
Refer now to
Tool operator 36 is operationally connected to tool element 12, such that movement of tool operator 36 causes tool element 12 to actuate thereby changing the state of tool element 12 and tool 14. In the depicted embodiment, tool operator 36 is operationally connected to tool element 12 (
Actuating device 10 may be connected within tubular string 18 (
When actuating device 10 is suspended in the wellbore, the out of balance pressure situation exists in trigger 42 and not across tool operator 36 which may provide for longer suspension times than available with conventional actuating devices. Locating the pressure differential (i.e., the energy to actuate tool operator 36) in trigger 42 may reduce the seal area utilized at tool operator 36 relative to some contemporary actuating devices thereby reducing the leakage across the seals and increasing the available suspension time of the tool in the wellbore relative to the suspension time of some contemporary wellbore tools.
Tubular body 30 forms an annular region 50 between a mandrel 52 defining a portion of axial bore 32 and a housing 54. In accordance with one or more embodiments, confined diameter container 34 and trigger valve 38 are disposed in annular region 50 as illustrated for example in
In
In accordance with one or more embodiments, actuating device 10 is adapted for use in high pressure wells. Confined diameter container 34 is at atmospheric pressure internally and high external pressure acts on the exterior surface of confined diameter container 34, thus confined diameter container 34 is configured with a small internal diameter and corresponding small external surface area to resist crushing in high pressure environments. For example, the internal diameter and the external surface area of confined diameter container 34 is smaller than the respective internal diameter of annular region 50 and the external surface area of tubular body 30 in which confined diameter container 34 is disposed. It is noted that when actuating device 10 is disposed in a wellbore, annular region 50 may be in hydraulic communication with the wellbore and not subject to a differential pressure.
The configuration of the confined diameter container 34 may be selected for operational characteristics. For example, the actuation of tool operator 36 may be controlled differently by a coiled embodiment of confined diameter container 34 relative to the same internal volume bottle embodiment of a confined diameter container 34. For example, a bottle configuration of confined diameter container 34 may provide an accelerated transfer of hydraulic fluid 116 from second chamber 68 and corresponding accelerated actuation of tool operator 36 upon opening of trigger valve 38 relative to a same volume helical coil embodiment. In a helical coil configuration, the curvature of the coil governs the centrifugal force and the pitch (e.g., helix angle) influences the torsion to which the hydraulic fluid 116 is subjected while flowing. While the total force on the hydraulic fluid 116 flowing into the bottle and the helical coil may be the same, the force is distributed over a longer period of time in the helical coil configuration which may create a longer duration axial movement of tool operator 36 and corresponding longer duration pull on tool element 12. A longer duration actuation may be beneficial in opening a tool element 12 that is stuck relative to a more instantaneous actuation force which may be provided with a bottle configuration.
Valve piston 82 comprises a first seal 84 spaced apart from a second seal 88 to form a sealed section 96. Valve piston 82 has a first seal surface 86 proximate first seal 84 upon which hydraulic pressure acts and a second seal surface 90 proximate second seal 88 upon which hydraulic pressure acts. In accordance with one or more embodiments, first seal surface 86 has a larger surface area than second seal surface 90.
Valve piston 82 and trigger valve 38 are illustrated in
Trigger 42 is illustrated in
The depicted trigger 42 includes a cycling piston 98 that is in fluid communication with input pressure port 40 via tubing compensator 48 (
Cycling piston 98 is cycled up and down in response to cycling the tubing pressure which is applied to cycling piston 98 through tubing compensator 48. Tubing pressure is communicated through tubing compensator 48 and port 110 urging cycling piston 98 downward and against the counter-force of the annulus 26 pressure communicated to cycling piston 98 via annulus compensator 106 and, in this embodiment, the force of spring 112. After a determined number of cycles, indexing mechanism 100 reaches a position that permits rod 102 to move upward disconnecting from collet 104 thereby releasing valve piston 82 so that it can move from the closed position to the open position as further described below with reference to
Pressure applied at input pressure port 40 acts on floating piston 114 of compensator 48 and hydraulic fluid 116 communicating the pressure at input pressure port 40 to first seal surface 86 of valve piston 82. When actuating device 10 is in the static position, for example disposed in wellbore 16, trigger 42 maintains valve piston 82 in the closed position. In the closed position, first seal 84 and second seal 88 straddle exhaust port 94, thereby blocking exhaust port 94 and sealing hydraulic communication to confined diameter container 34.
Valve piston 82 moves downward, shifting from the closed position to the open position in response to the downward force on valve piston 82 overcoming the upward force on valve piston 82. First seal surface 86 has a larger surface area than the surface area of second seal surface 90 to provide the force differential for movement of valve piston 82 in response to an equal hydraulic pressure on both sides of valve piston 82. Movement of valve piston 82 to the open position opens hydraulic communication between second side 72 and confined diameter container 34 permitting the flow of hydraulic fluid 116 from second chamber 68 to confined diameter container 34. In the second position, sealed section 96 is positioned across second side port 60 and exhaust port 94 opening the flow path between passage 95 and second passage 76. Input pressure is maintained on first side 70 of tool operator 36 while tool operator 36 moves toward the second position and hydraulic fluid 116 is bled from second chamber 68 into confined diameter container 34.
An example of an actuating method 10 in accordance with an embodiment is now described with reference to
Referring to FIGS. 1 and 11-14, an example of a tool 14 implementing an actuating device and method 10 according to one or more embodiments is described. Actuating device 10 comprises a tool operator 36 that is axially moveable in response to a pressure differential between a first chamber 66 and a second chamber 68. In a tool 14, actuating device 10 is operationally connected to a tool element 12, for example via a latch 44, to actuate and change the state of tool element 12 in response to movement of tool operator 36 from a first position to a second position. In the illustrated embodiment, latch 44 comprises an operator connector 122 of tool operator 36 and a latch connector 123. According to one or more embodiments, actuating device 10 is selectively operated from the first position to the second position by a time counter depleting a hydraulic pressure applied to the second chamber 68.
With reference to
Referring to
Referring to
An example of an actuating device and method 10 is now described with reference to FIGS. 1 and 11-14. Tool 14, illustrated as a downhole wellbore tool, is disposed in wellbore 16 on tubular string 18 where it can remain in a static position until it is desired to operate tool element 12 of tool 14 to a different state. For example, tool element 12 may comprise a valve moveable between an open state and a closed state blocking the continuous axial bore formed through tubular string 18 and tool 14.
In accordance to one or more embodiments, casing pressure, the pressure in annulus 26, acts through input pressure port 108 on floating piston 114 of annulus compensator 106 communicating annulus 26 pressure via first passage 74 to first chamber 66 and first side 70 of tool operator 36. Tubing pressure, the pressure in tubular string 18 (bores 17, 32), acts on the floating piston 114 of tubing compensator 48 and is communicated via second passage 76 to second chamber 68 and second side 72.
In this embodiment, well 5 is underbalanced and the pressure in annulus 26 (casing pressure, reservoir pressure) is greater than the tubing pressure (pressure in bore 17 of tubular string 18). In the static position, hydraulic fluid 116 has flowed from second chamber 68 to first chamber 66 through flow restrictor 126 permitting tool operator 36 to move to the static position wherein either the force across tool operator 36 is equal or tool operator is physically stopped for example by a shoulder of tool operator 36 contacting a shoulder of housing 54. An example of a tool shoulder 138 and corresponding housing shoulder 139 are illustrated in
When it is desired to change the state of tool 14, tool operator 36 is actuated from the static position to a first position by increasing the volume and pressure in second chamber 68. The volume and pressure of second chamber 68 is increased in response to applying differential pressure cycles to actuating device 10, in particular to hydraulic system 7. In an example, a differential pressure cycle includes applying a first tubing pressure in excess of the casing pressure, for example by operation of pump 28, and then reducing the tubing pressure back below the annulus 26 pressure. When the tubing pressure is increased above the casing pressure, the upward force on tubular operator 36 from second side 72 overcomes the downward force from first side 70 causing tool operator 36 to move uphole as hydraulic fluid 116 is pumped into second chamber 68. A vacuum may be created in third chamber 124 between second seal 119 and third seal 118 as tool operator 36 is urged upward. In accordance to one or more embodiments, seals 117, 118, 119 and 120 are high pressure seals. Tool operator 36 is subsequently actuated from the first position to the second position in response to depleting the pressure in second chamber 68. Annulus 26 pressure acts on first side 70 when the pressure in second chamber 68 is depleted. The vacuum created in third chamber 124 may act on tool operator 36, urging it downward from the first position toward the second position. Actuation of tool operator 36 from the first position to the second position changes the state of operationally coupled tool element 12. Tool operator 36 may be located in substantially the same location when it is in the static position and when it is in the second position.
Each differential pressure cycle creates an incremental upward movement, or stroke, of tool operator 36 when the tubing pressure exceeds the casing pressure. The reduction of tubing pressure below the casing pressure portion of the differential pressure cycle facilitates the next differential pressure induced incremental upward stroke. For example, when the tubing pressure exceeds the casing pressure, hydraulic fluid 116 and pressure are communicated from tubing compensator 48 through second passage 76 and first check valve 128 into second chamber 68 increasing the volume of second chamber 68. First check valve 128 blocks the backflow of hydraulic fluid 116 from second chamber 68 to tubing compensator 48 and second check valve 130 blocks the flow of hydraulic fluid 116 from tubing compensator 48 into annulus compensator 106. The volume and pressure of second chamber 68 remains substantially unchanged during the second portion of the differential pressure cycle when the casing pressure exceeds the tubing pressure and hydraulic fluid 116 can flow from annulus compensator 106 to tubing compensator 48 through second check valve 130.
From the first position tool operator 36 is actuated to the second position, for example downhole, through the controlled leakage of the pressure build-up in second chamber 68 as hydraulic fluid 116 flows from second chamber 68 through flow restrictor 126 to first chamber 66. Flow restrictor 126 serves as a time counter for actuation of tool operator 36 from the first position to the second position. Annulus 26 pressure acts on first side 66 urging tool operator 36 toward the second position against the upward force of tubular string 18 pressure acting on second side 68. According to some embodiments, the vacuum created in third chamber 124 may act to urge tool operator toward the second position.
In accordance with embodiments, actuating device 10 and tool element 12 are operationally connected, or coupled, to permit movement of tool operator 36 from the static position to the first position without changing the state of tool element 12 and to translate movement of tool operator 36 from the first position to the second position to change the state of tool element 12. Actuating device 10 is illustrated in the static position in
An example of a method 10 of changing the state of a tool 14 disposed in a well 5 is now described with reference to FIGS. 1 and 11-14. Method 10 in accordance with one or more embodiments, comprises applying differential pressure cycles to an actuating device 10 disposed in a wellbore 16, the actuating device 10 comprising a tool operator 36 having a first side 70 open to a first chamber 66 and a second side 72 open to a second chamber 68; moving the tool operator 36 to a first position in response to applying the differential pressure cycles; actuating the tool operator from the first position to a second position in response to depleting pressure in the second chamber 68 of the tool operator 36; and changing the state of a tool element 12 in response to actuating the tool operator 36 to the second position.
Tool operator 36 may be moved to the first position, for example from a static position, by increasing the volume of the second chamber 68. According to one or more embodiments, the pressure may be depleted from second chamber 68 by communicating hydraulic fluid 116 from second chamber 68 to first chamber 66. For example, hydraulic fluid 116 may flow from second chamber 68 through a flow restrictor 126 to first chamber 66.
In accordance to one or more embodiments of the disclosure, first chamber 66 is defined between tool operator 36 and housing 54 and between first seal 117 and second seal 119; second chamber 68 is defined between tool operator 36 and housing 54 and between third seal 118 and forth seal 120, and a third chamber 124 is defined between tool operator 36 and housing 54 and between second seal 119 and third seal 118. A vacuum may be created in third chamber 124 in response to moving tool operator 36 to the first position. The created vacuum may urge tool operator 36 toward the second position from the first position.
According to one or more embodiments, actuating device 10 may comprise a first compensator 106 in communication with the first chamber 66 through a first passage 74 containing hydraulic fluid 116, wherein the first compensator 106 is acted on by a first well pressure; a second compensator 48 in communication in with the second chamber 68 via a second passage 76 containing hydraulic fluid 116, wherein the second compensator 48 is acted on by a second well pressure; a first one-way valve 128 permitting flow of the hydraulic fluid 116 from the second compensator 48 to the second chamber 68; and a flow restrictor 126 communicating hydraulic fluid 116 from the second chamber 68 to the first chamber 66. The first well pressure may be one of a tubing pressure or a casing pressure for example, and the second well pressure the other of the tubing pressure and the casing pressure. In the depicted embodiments, the first well pressure is described as annulus 26 pressure and the second well pressure is described as the pressure in tubular string 18.
Although only a few example embodiments have been described in detail above, those skilled in the art will readily appreciate that many modifications are possible in the example embodiments without materially departing from this invention. Accordingly, all such modifications are intended to be included within the scope of this disclosure as defined in the following claims, means-plus-function clauses are intended to cover the structures described herein as performing the recited function and not only structural equivalents, but also equivalent structures. Thus, although a nail and a screw may not be structural equivalents in that a nail employees a cylindrical surface to secure wooden parts together, whereas they screw employees a helical surface, in the environment unfastening wooden parts, a nail and a screw may be equivalent structures. It is the express intention of the applicant not to invoke 35 U.S.C. §112, paragraph 6 for any limitations of any of the claims herein, except for those in which the claim expressly uses the words “means for” together with an associated function. The term “comprising” within the claims is intended to mean “including at least” such that the recited listing of elements in a claim are an open group. The terms “a,” “an” and other singular terms are intended to include the plural forms thereof unless specifically excluded.