Anchoring systems
There is a need for anchoring systems to provide anchoring in soft ocean floors. A variety of tools are known, some of which rely upon suction to hold an anchor in the sea floor, for example as disclosed in US publication no. 2012/0024535.
There is provided a novel anchoring system having plural piles, each pile defining a longitudinal channel, each longitudinal channel having an open end and a closed end opposite to the open end, a connecting structure maintaining the plural piles in rigid relation to one another, and each pile of the plural piles extending from the connecting structure at least in a first direction, the longitudinal channels extending in the first direction from the respective open ends to the respective closed ends.
In various embodiments, there may be included any one or more of the following features: the connecting structure may comprise a cap. There may be a skirt extending in the first direction from the cap, for example along the full length of the skirt. There may be a suction element and a suction flow channel through the cap defined by the suction element or defined by the cap and connected to the suction element. There may be an additional flow channel through the cap and a valve controlling flow through the additional flow channel. There may be a suspension element connected to the connecting structure. There may be respective walls at the closed ends of the longitudinal flow channels, the flexible walls comprising a material selected to withstand undersea pressure, and each flexible wall separating the respective longitudinal flow channel from a respective air chamber to maintain a pressure differential in use of the anchoring system.
There is also provided a ballasting unit having a housing open at a first end, a flexible wall separating the first end of the housing from a second end to define an air chamber at the second end, the flexible wall comprising a material selected to withstand undersea pressure, and to maintain a pressure differential in use of the ballasting unit.
These and other aspects of the device and method are set out in the claims, which are incorporated here by reference.
Embodiments will now be described with reference to the figures, in which like reference characters denote like elements, by way of example, and in which:
As shown in
In use, it is contemplated that the disclosed anchoring system will be lowered to an ocean floor using tube 12 or another suspension element. Tube 12 or another suction element may be used to suck water and ocean floor material out from under the cap 14. The suction flow may be reversible or an additional downward flow element (not shown) may be provided to stir up ocean floor material to be sucked out. An oscillating shaft (not shown) may also be provided to stir up ocean floor material. Valves 22 may be used to syphon off water or to pump in barite to displace ocean floor material with something heavier. The actions described for sinking the anchoring system into the ocean floor may be carried out until the anchoring system is sunk to a desired level, which may depending on the application be when the cap is flush with the ocean floor.
The flexible wall of the ballasting unit is selected to be of a stiffness such that it will be moved by the pressures encountered when deployed, but will not be sufficiently moved to fully collapse the air chamber at the intended depth of use. The inventor believes that the pressure of the overlying water on the flexible wall of the ballasting unit will act to resist changes in attitude of the anchoring system, when the ballasting unit is placed as shown at the bottom of piles 16, and exposed to the overlying water through the longitudinal channels of the piles.
The designs provided are contemplated to serve as a mooring system in areas of the ocean where poor anchorage or holding ground exists, for example sandy or silt ocean floor. The Gulf of Mexico is one example of an ocean area believed to be suitable. It is believed that this design can be used as a ballasting system in emergency procedures where a blowout has occurred in a Deep-Sea oil field. A neoprene canister suitable for forming a flexible wall 38 as shown has been tested and pressured to over 20,000 psi with no damage. The dimensions and the general shape of the existing unit have been constructed for test purposes only. A working unit can be constructed to conform to the requirements of a subsea structure for the purposes of ballasting or anchoring. Some examples include: hydraulic valve systems, drilling systems or excavation equipment.
The purpose of the pipe flange 44 is to accommodate a pump 48 with the capacity to pump heavy mud, silt, or sand. As already stated, the excavation of the mud, silt, or sand would in turn cause the mooring unit to become completely submerged in the ocean substrate. At the point where the unit would be submerged to its intended depth, in the ocean floor, the pump 48 would be removed and in some applications of the mooring unit, the flange cover 46 would be installed. The pump 48 may form part of a suction element by being secured to the pipe flange 44.
When deployed exclusively as a mooring device, the center access tube 12 of the anchoring system 10 is fitted with a flange cover 46 after being submerged in the ocean substrate 50. The flange cover 46 may be fitted with two valves 22, a check valve, and a gate valve. The gate valve allows dense mud to be pumped into the center tube while the check valve allows water to be forced out of the capped access tube 12 as it fills with the injected mud.
When deployed to include a pump 48, the anchoring system 10 may be connected by hydraulic lines 54 to a hydraulic manifold system 52 placed on a support bed or pod on a bed, bottom or floor 50 of a body of water, such as a sea, ocean, river or lake. The hydraulic manifold system 52 may be charged from a single source located onboard a surface vessel. Hydraulic fluid may then be directed under pressure to the anchoring system 10 to a point where it would open or close an individual valve 22 as required or to power the motor of the pump 48. The hydraulic manifold system 52 may be situated either on board a surface vessel or may be placed on the seafloor whichever arrangement best suited the field conditions and the particular use being made of the mooring unit.
The hydraulic mud pump 48 and valves 22 may be employed in the course of submerging the unit in the seafloor and injecting mud as required. Once the anchor is in place the hydraulic system and pump would not be required again until the process is reversed and water is pumped in to remove and retrieve the anchor unit.
The anchoring system 10 may be fitted with hydraulic knife-gate valves having the capacity to sever drill pipe.
The gate valves 22 may be operated mechanically through the use of Remotely Operated Vehicles. The pump and hydraulics are conventional and need not be further described here.
Immaterial modifications may be made to the embodiments described here without departing from what is covered by the claims.
In the claims, the word “comprising” is used in its inclusive sense and does not exclude other elements being present. The indefinite articles “a” and “an” before a claim feature do not exclude more than one of the feature being present. Each one of the individual features described here may be used in one or more embodiments and is not, by virtue only of being described here, to be construed as essential to all embodiments as defined by the claims.
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Number | Date | Country |
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WO 2015054766 | Apr 2015 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20170233974 A1 | Aug 2017 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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62294290 | Feb 2016 | US |