This invention relates to the problem of extracting maximum practical flow of formation fluid containing petroleum from oil wells which require the use of pumping equipment to lift the formation fluid from a production zone to the surface.
In most petroleum wells heretofore, and increasingly as petroleum reserves are depleted, petroleum must be withdrawn from an oil producing formation zone of a well by mechanical lifting equipment driven by a motive source at the surface, which is either of the reciprocating or rotary type. In a typical installation, the motive source at the surface comprises, in the case of a reciprocating pump, an electrically driven pump jack, and in the case of a rotary type pump, an electrically driven rotary drive.
In a typical configuration of an oil well, a hole or wellbore is drilled from the surface to a depth somewhat below a geological formation that bears petroleum. Inside this wellbore and extending the full depth of the wellbore a string of pipe is installed that is referred to as casing, consisting of segments of threaded pipe serially connected by couplers. The annulus between the casing and the surrounding earthen wall of the drilled wellbore is filled with cement, and as such, the casing is installed on a permanent basis. At the surface the casing is connected to a wellhead, an apparatus of various connections, valves, and seals, as well as the pump driving system whereby the several operations of the well are isolated and managed by the operator.
At that depth where the casing passes through the oil bearing geological formation, the casing and the cement enclosing it are perforated to allow fluid to flow from the formation into the casing. Within the casing is installed a second smaller diameter string of pipe referred to as tubing. Like the casing, the smaller diameter tubing consists of segments of end threaded pipe connected one to another and extends from the wellhead to the depth at which the pump is installed, near the bottom of the wellbore and casing, and usually below the perforations. At the end of the tubing the pump is installed, an elongated multi-component apparatus which is approximately 30 feet in length, and has a fluid intake element located at its bottom. The pump, be it of the reciprocating type or the rotational type, is powered from the surface by either a pump jack or a rotary drive, with power being transferred down the wellbore to the pump by a sucker rod string. A sucker rod string consists of lengths of solid steel rods threaded on each end and connected one to another with threaded couplings. In the case of a reciprocating type pump, the sucker rod string is attached at the surface to the pump jack, from which point it runs down the inside of the tubing to the plunger element of the reciprocating pump. The pump jack at the surface cyclically lifts and lowers the sucker rod string which in turn lifts and lowers the plunger of the pump below.
In the case of rotary type pumps, the rotary drive at the surface rotates the sucker rod string which is attached to and rotates the rotor element of the rotary pump at the bottom of the well. As either the plunger element of the reciprocating pump cycles up and down or the rotor element of the rotational pump rotates, fluid is pumped up the annulus between the sucker rod string and the tubing to the surface.
Fluid from the oil bearing formation flows through the perforations in the casing and into the annulus between the casing and the smaller tubing. As the pump operates, fluid is drawn into the pump from the annulus between the tubing and the sucker rod string and pumped up the tubing to the wellhead. At the wellhead the fluid branches off to a flowline and is delivered to a storage tank or other facility.
In any well that utilizes any form of pumping apparatus to lift the formation fluid to the surface, long term production is optimized if the rate at which the pump evacuates the fluid to the surface is equal to the rate at which the fluid flows from the formation through the perforations into the well. Due, however, to constantly changing and unpredictable formation flow rates in combination with the shortcomings of existing monitoring equipment, this balance is rarely attained.
To best cope with this situation a procedure involving on-off sequencing of the pumping operation is most frequently employed. In this procedure the pump is allowed to pump at a pace exceeding the formation flow rate until it has emptied the well of fluid. At that point, in the case of reciprocating plunger pumps, the plunger draws a large amount of air rather than fluid into the pump barrel on its upstroke, and then, without the normal cushioning resistance of fluid, pounds forcefully into the air/fluid interface in the barrel on the downstroke. This pounding greatly stresses and ultimately will damage numerous elements of the pump apparatus including the sucker rod string, the barrel and plunger of the pump, the gearbox, motor, and structural components of the pump jack, and to a lesser extent the tubing string.
This condition is referred to in the industry as being “Pumped Off” and pumps are typically equipped with a sensor that detects the shock waves resultant from the Pumped Off condition when it occurs. That particular sensor and the related equipment is known as a Pump Off Controller or POC, which is programmed to automatically shut down the pump jack when it identifies the Pumped Off condition.
The POC is further programmed to, after a pre-set period of time, turn the pump jack back on whereby pumping can resume. The pre-set period of time is set by the operator and is intended to be long enough to allow the formation flow to refill the well to a level that provides a practical reservoir of pump-available fluid.
Dependent on the particular well characteristics, this on/off cyclic pumping method may be programmed to cycle as frequently as six times per hour. Several disadvantages are inherent in this procedure.
Due to the inertia of the pump jack equipment and the counterweight, the pump is likely to pound several strokes prior to stopping completely after the POC has switched it off. This pounding results in shorter equipment life, longer downtime, and more maintenance requirements in all respects. Also for a brief time upon startup an electric motor uses from three to six times the electrical power required for normal continual running. Hence, the energy consumption in a start-stop operation greatly exceeds that used in constant operating conditions.
The most fundamental factor as to the quantity of production from a well is the rate at which fluid from the oil bearing zone of the geological formation initially flows through the perforations into the well to become available to be pumped to the surface. The rate of this flow of fluid into the casing/tubing annulus is a consequence of the degree of natural formation pressure available at the depth of the casing perforations. If the casing/tubing annulus into which the fluid flows is empty at the level of the perforations, the flow rate will take full advantage of the natural formation pressure and such flow will then be at the maximum rate possible, at least for a time. If, however, the casing is not empty at the perforation depth and has filled to some height above the perforations, the natural formation pressure and the consequent flow rate will be opposed by the backpressure or head pressure created by the height of the fluid already in the casing/tubing annulus. Hence, the rate of flow is directly influenced by the amount of backpressure exerted on the formation by the head of the column of produced fluids in the casing at any given time. The more head pressure against the formation flow, the slower that flow will be. Consequently, the most productive flow from the formation into the well occurs if the column level is constantly held at the very minimum height required for continuous pumping. The typical on/off cyclic pumping method described above fails in this respect. During a large percentage of the shut down times, when the well is refilling itself, and during the initial period of pumping after the timer has restarted the pump jack, the fluid level in the well is higher than necessary, and the formation flow is thereby unnecessarily retarded by the excessive back pressure.
The flow of fluid through the geological formation surrounding the well is also disadvantaged by the on/off cyclic pumping method. While the flow of fluid in the formation is a complex and multifaceted subject, it is generally accepted that maintaining constant movement without stoppages will enhance the flow rate of producible fluid delivered to the well.
Workers in the art have long been aware of the benefits of matching pumping extraction rates to formation fluid inflow rates. Techniques have been devised for detecting a variety of information concerning changes in flow rates and other operating conditions of the well in addition to the shock waves produced by the Pumped Off condition. Using such instrumentation, pumps have been run with variable speed drives or with on/off duty cycle timing in an effort to match formation inflow to pump output flow rates. Such systems have not, however, been directly responsive to production conditions or flow rate variations, and consequently have not been as efficient as theorized.
An advanced system of this nature is sold as a “well manager” under the “SAM” trademark, being manufactured by Lufkin Automation in Lufkin, Tex. This system carries out a number of functions in order to improve the pumping operation of sucker rod based marginally producing wells. It comprises a pump controller which monitors the operation of various mechanical components in addition to the condition and performance of the sucker rod string and downhole plunger pump. The “SAM” system senses the Pumped Off event by a strain gage and signals the motor to shut off. This again cannot be done immediately due to inertia in the system, so that a number of undesired shock impacts will follow each shut off command. The system then shuts down for a pre-selected length of time, varying with the conditions, to allow replenishment from the production zone.
This so-called “well manager” unit utilizes downhole detectors positioned near the down hole production zone level and line connected along the tubular system to the control system at the wellhead. These detectors provide real time and direct electrical inputs to the system as to the fluid levels in the pumping zone. To do this, the system must utilize expensive, sensitive and delicate pressure sensing gages and connect them by electric wire strung the entire length of the tubing string up the well to the wellhead. The system is difficult to install and maintain in satisfactory operating condition because of the non-robust components and the long electrical connection through the wellbore that is needed. It is adequate for real time monitoring of conditions in the production zone, but is subject to shock waves generated by the Pumped Off conditions. It is also very expensive and consequently is not widely utilized in well production installations.
There is therefore a need for a mechanical system which can monitor actual fluid level variations in the pumping zone and transmit operating data reliably from downhole locations to surface pump controls for maximizing production under varying operating conditions.
A petroleum well production maximizing tool in accordance with the invention utilizes mechanical energy generated by the pump mechanism to provide useful pressure wave indications or sonic impulses signaling in real time the presence or absence of fluid at one or two specific downhole levels relative to the pumping system. The impulses are of distinguishable characteristics and generated periodically during sucker rod cycling. These impulses have such time-based variations and energy that they not only propagate readily up the fluid column to the wellhead, but are readily discernible there. Instrumentation at the wellhead can therefore process the received signal information, along with inputs from other sources, and use these data to control pumping variables. The system employs reliable and sensitive components having long life characteristics, so that production management for a petroleum well can be maximized, for substantial time periods, while taking into account the numerous variables that can exist in well production.
The directly transmitted, real time fluid level readings can be used not only to maximize production, but also to identify changing conditions, and monitor well operation. Since this detection and signaling system is operated passively and remotely using the pumping action itself, it requires no other source of energy to transmit signals to the wellhead. The controller at the wellhead can therefore modulate the variable speed drive and thus the pumping rate, or it can command entry into the Pump Off mode in sufficient time to avoid shock impacts in the system.
In addition to direct readings of fluid levels derived at the production site, the system can also incorporate other features, such as flow meters for monitoring the production rate, short and long term, and a phase timing system synchronized to the pumping system, for distinguishing the downhole locations and conditions based upon the signals transmitted from the downhole site.
In one example of a system and method in accordance with the invention, two downhole sensors and generators are mounted in the tubing system at one or more elevations proximate the production zone in a manner to cooperate with the reciprocating sucker rod string. Trigger elements form physical parts of the moving sucker rod string and signal generators activated by the triggers are reciprocable along the static tubing. Each signaling device is activated by an associated trigger as it reciprocates with the cycling sucker rod string. The reciprocating triggers reliably engage pistons slidable in the tubing, forcing them against a compression spring mechanism, which drives the piston forcibly through a short travel. The spring actuated piston action impacts against a receiving surface to generate pressure waves in one example and sonic signals in another, transmitting a signal along the fluid column in the tubing to the wellhead that can be interpreted there to indicate the presence or absence of production fluid at the one or two sensing elevations.
The mechanisms utilized for both pressure and sonic transmissions meet modern oil field operational demands, in terms of reliability and operating life. In general, each signal generator, of both pressure wave and sonic types, includes a cylindrical piston with an elastomeric inner sleeve that is sized to yieldably grip the surface of a cylindrical trigger mounted on and moving with the sucker rod. The piston is forced down to a limit position as it compresses a spring, but the trigger ultimately forces through the sleeve, and the spring then energetically drives the piston up to initiate a pressure wave or sonic signal.
At the wellhead, it is convenient to incorporate substantial useful instrumentation for pumping control, and the wellhead equipment thus may include not only a signal receiver for detecting and processing pressure or sonic variations, but also circuits or software for defining time-based windows to synchronize the sucker rod cycles with actuation of the downhole detectors. The system can also incorporate a Pump Off Controller and can operate satisfactorily for many purposes using only one downhole detector.
Control of the pumping system in accordance with the information derived from the detectors enables a greater degree of precision than has heretofore been achievable. For example, after initial flow from the production zone into the well and subsequent starting of the downhole pump, a period of time is required for the pump to approximate the production rate and to deliver excess fluid that may have accumulated. Using the signals from the downhole sensors, the system can calculate the duration needed for fluid level changes, and adjust the flow rate to a first approximation. Thereafter, variations in the flow from the formation may take the level of accumulated fluid to the elevation of a sensor, so that more precise recalculations can be made and the flow readjusted. By thus maintaining the fluid level in a controlled range the back pressure from the fluid volume within the tubing/casing annulus is kept to a minimum, maximizing the formation flow and reducing power usage. In addition, the Pumped Off condition can be minimized or avoided, the formation flow can be continuous, and the pump jack can be allowed to run virtually constantly with a minimum of energy consumed in start-up cycles.
In a pressure wave signal generator system in accordance with the invention, the trigger device forming a part of the sucker rod and movable with it engages an compliant interior actuator sleeve on an axially slidable signal piston to force it down against an associated compression spring. Further downward movement of the sucker rod releases the piston actuator from the trigger and initiates the pressure wave action as the piston is driven upward by the compression spring. The piston abruptly moves to engage the facing end of a fixed connector and close an internal signal chamber that is open to the tubing/casing annulus through ports geometrically placed in the casing wall. If fluid is not then present at this level in the tubing/casing annulus, the piston movement abruptly moves a volume of fluid upwardly within the tubing to send a pressure wave up the column of fluid in the tubing, to the wellhead.
The piston design incorporates apertures in a fixed barrel surrounding the piston and also external chambers defined between the piston exterior and the surrounding barrel, which are so designed as to blunt and buffer the shock of the piston as it closes if the fluid level in the tubing/casing annulus is above the sensor. If so no pressure wave signal is sent. To this end, the pressure wave generating mechanism is designed so that the chamber, between the barrel and the piston is divided into a stroke section and a stall section, variably defined by opposite sides of a fixed split ring attached to the barrel. Ingress to and egress from the chamber are determined by pores in the barrel wall. With fluid in the tubing/casing annulus, spring energy is taken up in transferring fluid out of the ports in the barrel wall from the stroke chamber, thus attenuating the pressure wave received at the wellhead so much that the signal cannot be detected.
Sonic signaling devices in accordance with the invention also employ a cylindrical signal piston having a compliant actuator sleeve engaged by a trigger on the sucker rod string, and a compression spring that is cocked by movement of the sucker rod trigger, to drive the piston upward when released. When thus fired, the piston strikes like a hammer against a fixed anvil concentric with the tubing which is in contact with the fluid column leading to the wellhead. The anvil includes an acoustic lens which creates sonic impulses at selected frequencies to identify thereby the different detectors and also to identify whether or not there is petroleum at that elevation. The sources of these impulses can also be interpreted using the phase relation of the received signals to the phase of the sucker rod cycle.
A better understanding of the invention may be had by reference to the following description, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
A petroleum well installation incorporating a production maximizer system in accordance with the invention is shown (
The signal receiver 21 detects pressure or sonic signals transmitted in accordance with a predetermined signaling protocol from downhole locations, as described hereafter. The output flow line 24 branches out from the downhole production tubing at a level above the shunt line 22, and includes a flow meter 26 which also provides an input signal to the controller 20.
The remainder of the system at the wellhead 31 is largely conventional, and will therefore only be summarized. The horsehead end of the pump jack 12 is coupled via a horsehead bridle 27 to the upper end of a polish rod 28 that extends through a rod seal 29 into the interior of the downhole tubing system which begins at the tubing head 30.
The tubing head 30 at the top of the wellhead 31 structure encompasses the string of tubing 32 which extends down through the wellbore 40 to adjacent its deepest elevation. The tubing 32 contains the fluid column 35 of produced fluids that is being lifted from the production zone. The encompassing casing 34 is spaced from the tubing 32 to define a tubing/casing annulus 33 and is itself typically encased in a cement packing 42 within the wellbore 40. The tubing 32 and casing 34 are assembled from strings of sectional pipe with interspersed couplings 38 in the conventional form. Along its center axis, the well system includes the longitudinal string of sucker rods 36 which are interconnected principally by conventional couplings.
The wellbore installation is shown in
Conventional couplers 38 are incorporated in the tubing string down to the upper sensor 52, but below that zone two tubing 32 sections are coupled together by sensor and signaling devices 52, 54 at specific levels above the pump (which may be set below or above the production zone 44). Alternatively, only one sensor/signaler may be used placed at a selected elevation above the pump, as described below. The devices 52, 54 cooperate with piston triggers 56, 57 on the sucker rod string 36, which triggers are precisely placed to control timing of the signals generated. Also they are positioned in relation to the sucker rod cycle so that when the lower sensor 54 is sending a pressure wave up the fluid path through the upper sensor 52 is open. The upper sensor and signaling device 52 and the lower sensor and signaling device 54 also act as mechanical couplers which support the mass of the lower portion of the tubing 32, as well as the plunger pump 60 which is reciprocated by the sucker rod 36 string. Dependent on known production history of the well, the upper sensor 52 is generally spaced about 30-50 ft. above the lower sensor 54, which itself is generally about 18 feet above the plunger pump intake 62 at its lower end.
Signal-Sensor Device Components for Pressure Wave Example
The following describes the elements of the downhole signal/sensor combination listed generally in order from the top and outermost components of the tool to the bottom and innermost. The first practical example is of a system, shown in
70 Top Connector—The Top Connector 70 is equipped with a standard female tubing threaded connection 71 facing upward whereby the signal sensing tool is connected into the existing tubing string at the selected downhole level. The top connector 70 is a robust adapter that carries and transfers the tensile load and mechanical stresses present in the lower end of the tubing string 32. The type of top connector used will be optional but is chosen to match to the existing tubing string 32 in the well. Below the upward facing standard female threaded connection 71 which joins to the length of tubing 32 above, the top connector 70 swages out to a larger diameter male threaded connection whereby more interior space is provided for the device components below. At the bottom of the top connector 70 an exterior circumferential relief or groove is cut such that a circumferential chamber is defined when the top connector 70 is made up (threaded) into a depending cylindrical carrier barrel 72 coaxial with and slightly greater in diameter than the tubing 32. This circumferential chamber, open to the downward side is referred to as the fluid cushion chamber 74 and serves to receive and decelerate a movable signal piston 78 slidable within the barrel 72 during operation. The interior wall of the top connector 70 defining the fluid cushion chamber 74 is perforated near its lower end by a series of circumferentially equally spaced holes 76 radially drilled through the chamber wall into the annulus 39 between the tubing and rod string. These holes serve to bleed the fluid cushion chamber 74 and are referred to as deceleration ports 76.
72 Barrel—The barrel 72 encloses and contains the tool components and also carries and transfers the tensile load from the top connector 70 to a bottom connector 110 (
73 Split Ring—The split ring is a two piece ring attached to the internal surface of the barrel 72 by screws that pass through the barrel 72 and thread into the two pieces of the split ring 73. The split ring 73 serves to movably separate upper and lower sections of a cavity or relief cut circumferentially into the external surface of the closely adjacent signal piston 78, into two chambers of variable size, depending on the axial position of the signal piston. The open stall chamber 88 is shown in
78 Signal Piston—The signal piston 79 is a hollow cylindrical element positioned inside the barrel 72 and capable of sliding bidirectionally axially, within limits, in the barrel 72. The signal piston 78 is supported externally along its entire length by the barrel 72 and internally along its lower portion by a piston slide tube 98. Dynamic external lip seals 94 mounted on the signal piston 78 contact the internal surface of the barrel 72 while internal lip seals (not numbered) contact the external surface of the piston slide tube 98 to permit axial movement with minimal leakage. The external lip seals 94 and internal lip seals are so small they cannot readily be depicted in these views within the grooves that are shown. The upper end of the piston 78 is shaped with an internal relief or groove cut so as to create an external ring referred to as the piston cushion ring 80. The piston cushion ring 80 is designed to, with some clearance, fit matingly into the lower end of the top connector 70 proximate the fluid cushion chamber 74 when the signal piston 78 is at the end of its upward stroke. Internal to the signal piston 78 slightly below the mid-region is a second internally facing horizontal ledge referred to as a stop shoulder 92. At the limit of the signal piston's 78 downward movement the stop shoulder 92 encounters and is restricted by the upward facing end of the piston slide tube 98.
Toward the lengthwise center and on the external surface of the signal piston 78 a recessed area of a predetermined length is formed into the outside surface of the piston body. With the signal piston 78 installed inside the barrel this recessed area is enclosed externally by the barrel 72 wall to create a circumferential chamber or cavity that is bounded internally by the undercut wall of the signal piston 78. This circumferential chamber encloses the split ring 73 and the internal diameter of the split ring 73 matches, with some clearance, the internal surface of the chamber. When the signal piston 78 is driven to its maximum downward position the position of the circumferential chamber relative to the split ring 73 creates a circumferential cavity below the split ring 73, here referred to as the stall chamber 88. At that maximum downward position the stall chamber 88 is open to the stall ports 86 at its top level and the stall drain ports 90 at its lowest level. When the signal piston 78 is released axially, it is driven upward by a compression spring 102 to its maximum upward position. The position of the circumferential chamber relative to the split ring 73 then creates a cavity above the split ring 73, here referred to as the stroke chamber 89. At that position the lowest level of the stroke chamber 89 is in communication with the stroke ports 84 in the barrel 72 wall.
82 Piston Actuator—On the internal surface of the signal piston 78 and integrally attached to the signal piston 78 is a flexible sleeve or actuator of frictional, resilient material that protrudes inwardly from the piston adjacent its vertical centerline. This sleeve is referred to as the piston actuator 82 and it operates in conjunction with the rod string 36 mounted trigger 56 which is received within it. The internal diameter of the piston actuator 82 at rest is smaller than the external diameter of the trigger 56 over a lower section (approximately half its length) of a dimension adequate for a chosen span of movement of the signal piston 78. The upper part (approximately half) of the piston actuator 82 has a larger inner diameter and provides less purchase on the trigger 56 and therefore less restraint. When the trigger 56, moving down axially, encounters the lower half of the piston actuator 82, a dimensional interference ensues which, as the trigger 56 engages, creates a restraining friction between the two parts. This restraining friction is enough to drive the signal piston 78 axially downward against the compression spring 102, the lower end of which engages the spring supports or support lugs 100. The piston 78 compresses the spring 102 until the piston encounters the limit of its movement, defined by engagement of the stop shoulder 92 against the upper end of the interior piston slide tube 98. At this point also the trigger 56 diameter has changed so there is less surface interference with the piston actuator 82, the friction is overcome and the trigger 56 passes on through the piston actuator 82 thereby releasing it as seen in
102 Compression Spring—The signal piston 78 is driven in the upward direction, when released, by the compression spring 102 which is sleeved over the piston slide tube 98. The compression spring 102 is supported below by the spring support lugs 100 which are integral with the piston slide tube 98. The compression spring 102 engages the signal piston 78 base at its upper end, and has a spring force or mechanical compliance sufficient to enable it when released to propel the signal piston 78 forcefully upward to its limit position, in engagement against the bottom ring wall of the top connector 70. The signal piston 78 is accelerated sufficiently to transmit a discernible pressure wave signal up the tubing string to the wellhead, provided that fluid is not present in the tubing/casing annulus at that elevation at that time. If the production level is higher than the detector, however, the chambers and ports provided diminish the pressure wave energy sufficiently to damp the signal.
98 Piston Slide Tube—The piston slide tube 98 is externally threaded on its lower end where it makes up into the internal threads of the bottom connector 110. A series of entry windows 101 are positioned circumferentially in the piston slide tube 98 just above the bottom connector 110 to allow full communication of fluid from the tubing/rod string annulus 39 into the lower portion of the tool. Integral to the piston slide tube 98 are the spring supports 100 which consist of four circumferentially equally spaced lugs that extend radially out from the outside diameter of the tube 98 to a diameter just short of the inside diameter of the barrel 72. The external surfaces of the piston slide tube 98 are of a smooth finish to accommodate the sliding lip seals 94 of the signal piston 78 and the O-ring seals of an equalizer piston 106.
106 Equalizer Piston—The equalizer piston 106 (
110 Bottom Connector—The bottom connector 110 is equipped at its upward end with outward facing male threads to accept the barrel 72 and inward facing female threads to accept the piston slide tube 98. On the downward end of the bottom connector 110 are standard male tubing threads whereby the tool is reconnected to the tubing string 32.
Signal-Sensor Device Operation with Pressure Wave Transmission
As discussed previously, the production maximizer system functions by monitoring fluid levels at one or more elevations in the well and responsively directing the operation of the pump in accordance with that knowledge. Two sensor/signal devices 52, 54 can be used to monitor fluid levels, but one device at a chosen level in conjunction with a POC (Pump Off Controller) can provide adequate information for many purposes, albeit without the advantage of completely avoiding the potentially damaging pumped off condition. This approach is particularly useful where production rate variations are relatively long term or minor in character. All the sensor/signal devices detect the presence or absence of fluid in the well at, in the case of the sensor/signal device, the device position, and, in the case of the POC, the pump intake 62. By this information the fluid level can be constantly maintained in a position between the two devices, or between one device and the pump intake 62.
When there is no production fluid in the tubing/casing annulus 33 at the level of a detector, the detector produces a specific and identifiable signal in the form of a shock-generated pressure wave that travels through the fluid column along the tubing/rod string annulus 39 to the signal receiver 21 at the wellhead. When there is fluid present in the tubing/casing annulus 33, no such detectable signal is produced, because of shock-reducing fluid transfers between the annulus 33 and the stroke chamber 89 and stall chamber 85 defined by the exterior of the signal piston 78 and the adjacent surface of the barrel 72. The absence of a pressure wave is a reliably detectable event, determined by the binary state of zero signal in the appropriate predetermined time window.
As the block diagram of
Because the reciprocating trigger 56 is attached to the sucker rod string 36, which is reciprocated by the pump jack 12 in a constant repetitive manner, the trigger(s) 56, 57 will always encounter the associated sensor signal device 52 or 54 at the predetermined stroke positions of the pump jack 12. For this reason the necessary distinction between a signal coming from the top sensor and one coming from the lower signal can be determined by the location of the horse head in the pump stroke cycles. For example, an installation configuration may be arranged whereby the upper trigger 56 encounters the upper sensor 52 within a position range of between 100 and 110 degrees on the downstroke of the pump jack 12, and the lower trigger 57 encounters the lower sensor 54 within a position range of between 230 and 240 degrees. The capacity to consistently anticipate the position of the pump jack 12 when either sensor device 52, 54 is triggered provides the means by which the system computer 20 can always distinguish whether it is receiving a binary “one” or binary “zero” signal. Thus, in the example given, if the signal receiver 21 and computer 20 receive a signal when the pump jack 12 is passing between 100 and 110 degrees on its downstroke and then receives no signal when it passes between 230 and 240 degrees, it will know that there is no fluid at the top sensor 52 level and that there is fluid on the bottom sensor 54 level.
Proper fluidic action for damping the signal piston 78 stroke and diminishing a pressure wave when the signal piston 78 is driven up by the spring 102 is achieved by the ports 84, 86 and 90 which allow fluid communication between the casing/tubing annulus 83 and the stroke chamber 89 and stall chamber 88. These chambers are of variable volume on opposite sides of the split ring 73 as the signal piston 78 moves. If liquid is present in the stroke chamber 89 it is evacuated through the stroke ports 84 as the signal piston 78 moves downward to close the gap with the split ring 73. The same downward movement fills stall chamber 88 through the stall ports 86 with liquid as the stall chamber 88 expands. The stall ports 86 and stroke ports 84 are sized such that if air or gas is present in the annulus 33 instead of liquid there is no impediment to movement of the signal piston 78. Whether or not encountering liquid from the annulus 33 the signal piston 78 is forced down against the compression spring 102 to the point where the stop shoulder 92 on its inside edge encounters the upper end of the fixed piston slide tube 98. At that point the signal piston 78 is cocked and it stops, so the friction grip of the piston actuator 82 on the moving trigger 56 is overcome as the trigger 56 passes through, losing contact with the piston actuator 82 as the sucker rod 38 continues the downward movement in its cycle. When it does so the signal piston 78 is released and propelled sharply upward by the compression spring 102 causing a vigorous liquid expulsion along the tubing if fluid is not present in the annulus 33 between the casing and tubing at that downhole level. This almost instant upward movement serves to displace fluid in the area of the signal chamber 104, communicating a pressure wave through the fluid in the tubing/rod string annulus 39 up to the signal receiver 21 at the surface. As referenced previously and below, however, if fluid is in the tubing/casing annulus 33 at that elevation, the ingress and egress of fluid through the various ports along the stroke chamber 89 and the stall chamber 88 oppose the spring action sufficiently to reduce the energy in the pressure wave to below a discernible level at the receiver 31. At the very end of the spring 102 powered upward stroke of the signal piston 78, the piston cushion ring 80 located at the very top of the piston 78 enters into the fluid cushion chamber 74 where, to some degree, it briefly traps a quantity of fluid. The entrapped fluid is discharged from the fluid cushion chamber 74 through the deceleration ports 76 back into the tubing/rod string annulus 39 as the piston decelerates and finally comes to rest against the top connector 70. By this arrangement and configuration the piston 78 is slowed to a near stop prior to hitting the top connector 70, thereby avoiding damage to both components.
The open areas within the barrel 72 surrounding the compression spring 102 and above the equalizer piston 106 are filled with a lubricant at the time of installation. Seals on the equalizer piston 106 isolate that lubricant from the formation fluid in the tubing/rod string annulus 39. The equalizer piston 106 moves freely up and down between the barrel 72 and the piston slide tube 98, so as to equalize the pressure in the lubricant filled interior area with the pressure in the tubing/rod string annulus 39 at all times including during the rapid upward stroke propelled by the spring 102 that generates the signal. By these means the lubricant is kept intact and the formation fluid is allowed to displace the exchange of volume caused by the piston 78 movement. Entry windows 101 in the piston slide tube 98 and windows in the positioning skirt 108 allow displacement fluid access to the equalizer piston 106 area.
If fluid is present in the tubing/casing annulus 33, the stall ports 86 allow restricted flow of fluid into the stall chamber 88, thereby requiring much more downward force to cock the signal piston 78. Consequently the friction between the trigger 56 and the piston actuator 82 is overcome much earlier in the downward stroke and the piston 86 only partially compresses against the compression spring 102. Further, when the piston 86 is released, the stall chamber 88 has been filled with fluid which must be evacuated through the stall ports 86. This also serves to slow the piston 86 dramatically, such that no discernible pressure signal will be generated.
This sequence of fluid transfers generates a pressure wave by rapidly ejecting over 8 in3 of fluid (in this example) upward in the fluid column in the tubing 32 up to the wellhead. The energy of the impulse is little attenuated in moving up thousands of feet, because the sucker rod/tubing annulus 39 is substantially open and introduces little impedance until the receiver 21 is reached. If two downhole detectors are used, the controller 20 identifies the signal on the basis of the phase information from the phase sensor 37 seen only in the system diagram of
Sonic Systems
The system of
Details of the sensing and sonic signal generator devices 52′, can be seen in the views of
One end of the sonic device may include a fluid inlet into the spacing between the carrier barrel 72 and the piston slide tube 98 to enable operation of the pressure equalized piston 106 as previously described in conjunction with
Further details of a sonic or acoustic generator 180 activated by the sucker rod 36 can be noted as seen particularly in the perspective views of
The acoustic lenses 184 for each of the upper and lower sensors 52′, 54′ are accordingly selected to be uniquely different for the upper and lower sensors respectively. With the devices 52′, 54′ properly spaced, pairs of some signals are transmitted along the fluid column in the wellbore to the signal receiver 21 and controller 20 at the wellhead (
Details of the cylindrical triggers 56, 57 implanted in the sucker rod 36 string which engage the inwardly protruding piston actuators 82 in the sensor and signaling devices 52′, 54′ are therefore similar to the actuator elements in the system of
An example of the operation of the system of
In the present system, production can be maximized by use of the real time detection of fluid presence at two different elevations above the pump intake 62. When the upper level is below the fluid level, the signal patterns are substantially constant. When the fluid level, however, drops below the upper sensor 54′, the pump 60 velocity can be decreased, using the level indication received at the wellhead receiver 21 and provided to the controller 20. Subsequently, the pumping rate can be lowered by reducing the pumping velocity. Ideally the pumping rate will be at a long term level which maintains the upper level of fluid somewhere between the two sensors 52′, 54′ above the pump intake 62. Given the variations in flow rates and pumping conditions that can apply, this stabilized condition is not likely to exist as a practical matter for a substantial length of time. However by using software which attempts to estimate pumping rates needed to match output production, settings may be arrived at that provide maximized flow over a period of time.
The controller 20 of
The propagation velocity of sonic impulses in petroleum is about 5 times faster than in air, so there is true real time operation even in wells of substantial depth. Air and gas mixed into the fluid column do not significantly slow or attenuate the signal.
It should be appreciated that these examples disclose systems and methods for remotely signaling the fluid level within a petroleum production site, using available energy sources only and requiring foreknowledge for installation only of production zone levels. Methods and apparatus in accordance with the invention can incorporate transducers which respond to the presence or absence of fluid at their elevation to generate a transmission, that carries to the wellhead any may be detected. The detectable energy may comprise a pressure impulse, an acoustic frequency or some variant of that may be initiated locally, transmitted through fluid and identified remotely.
This application is based on previously filed Provisional Application Ser. No. 60/904,289 filed Mar. 1, 2007 by Kenneth J. Carstensen and entitled “APPARATUS AND METHOD FOR MAXIMIZING PRODUCTION OF PETROLEUM WELLS”.
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5230607 | Mann | Jul 1993 | A |
5406482 | McCoy et al. | Apr 1995 | A |
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20090114396 | Kusko et al. | May 2009 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60904289 | Mar 2007 | US |