The present application relates to downhole oilwell equipment, and more particularly, to corrosion and cracking material determination.
Fluids and gasses are contained in the earth. Many of these fluids and gasses are desirable and valuable for consumption purposes, e.g., gas, oil and water. To extract these fluids, a well is drilled into the earth. The wells can be very deep and often up to a mile or more in depth. These wells can be vertical or horizontal or a combination thereof.
Once a well is drilled, at least a portion of the well is generally lined with a metal casing. This metal casing can have cement filled between the outside of the casing and the earth formation to fill empty spaces.
After the casing is implemented, completions are located in the well to relay tools, packers, and to produce fluids. The completions often include piping or tubing, valves, and/or other well known instruments.
There are production areas along the wellbore, e.g., where oil is present, and others where oil is not present or present to a lesser degree. Given that, it is often desirable to only extract fluids from one section of the well. When that is the case, packers are used to isolate a portion of the wellbore from other portions for fluid extraction purposes. Often, the portion of the wellbore that is to be produced is perforated with a perforating gun while that portion remains separate.
Downhole environments can be very harsh. The fluids that are extracted are often quite harsh themselves, and additional fluids are often present. These additional fluids can be acidic and otherwise degrade various materials used to make completions and other equipment. In addition, high temperatures and pressures can be present. Frictional degradation and physical wear (e.g., from abrasives present in a well) can also be faced. In sum, tools placed downhole in wells face a number of factors that can all contribute to degradation of a tool material.
Accordingly, it is desirable to gain knowledge of potential degradation of various materials when exposed to actual wellbore environments.
An embodiment according to the present application includes a tool string sub. A longitudinally extending tubular housing has an outside surface and an inside surface. A stepped circumferential portion of the inside surface of the housing bisects the interior surface of the housing. A degradation part is connected adjacent to the stepped portion of the housing and is supported by the housing and at least one moveable support part protruding inward and beyond the inner surface of the housing. The support part has a first position where the degradation part is at one stress and a second position where the degradation part is at a second stress greater than the first stress. The present application relates to embodiments that can be capable of varying the stresses on the degradation part from zero to beyond its yield strength. Also the stresses can be induced not only using screws, sliding keys or wedges, but by the geometry of the housing itself. At least one end of the tool string sub is adapted to connect with a tool string.
The brief description of the figures is not meant to unduly limit any claims in this or any related application.
The following description concerns a number of embodiments and is meant to provide an understanding of the embodiments. The description is not in any way meant to limit the scope of any present or subsequent related claims.
As used here, the terms “above” and “below”; “up” and “down”; “upper” and “lower”; “upwardly” and “downwardly”; and other like terms indicating relative positions above or below a given point or element are used in this description to more clearly describe some embodiments. However, when applied to equipment and methods for use in wells that are deviated or horizontal, such terms may refer to a left to right, right to left, or diagonal relationship as appropriate.
Corrosion and environmental cracking of downhole alloys in fit for service tests are generally conducted in simulated bottomhole fluids at P-T conditions. Equilibrium of co-existing phases is normally a question in the time scale of a test (30 to 90 days) in contrast to geological time (millions of years). Also, exposure can be in fluids that are static (extremely difficult to simulate high flow rates and associated dynamic flow effects (eddies' etc.)). It is apparent that simulated bottomhole tests along these lines have various drawback that would make actual bottomhole testing preferable.
Various embodiments in the present application relate to apparatus and methods for monitoring corrosion and cracking of alloys during live well testing. These can improve understanding of survivability of materials, particularly that of lower alloys and coatings, when exposed to downhole wellbore environments. According to embodiments, a sub containing corrosion and stressed C-rings (degradation parts) could be integrated and deployed with a testing tool string or be an integrated part of any other tool string. The tool string could be deployed on drill pipe, production tubing, coil tubing, or wireline. The C-ring or corrosion coupons or any other stressed degradation parts could then be removed with the tool string, drill pipe or tubing, and evaluated. The information gathered would have value to those involved in the selection of materials for use in a particular well completion string or other tooling. This could also apply to selection of coatings for tooling and completions in wells.
According to embodiments, a number of factors for the C-ring or corrosion coupons or any other stressed or unstressed degradation parts (degradation part) can be evaluated such as corrosion and cracking of the part itself and of any coatings applied there to during exposure to downhole environments. The degradation part can be made from any material which is to be investigated.
Looking more specifically at the drawings,
A degradation part 2 (C-Ring in
Perforations 6 are shown extending through the housing 7 of the tool string sub 1 from the outside of the tool string sub 1 to the inside surface of the tool string sub proximate the degradation part 2. The perforations can be designed to allow flow of well fluids from outside the tool string sub 1 to the inside of the tool string sub 1 to contact the degradation part 2 or from inside and also prevent outside to inside flow if needed. The perforations can have a diameter of approximately 0.25 to 1 inch or slots.
The tool string sub will also allow a study of stressed degradation parts to be exposed to annulus fluids above the packer to study effects of corrosion and environmental cracking in completions brines, such as Cesium Formate and Acetate, etc. The flexibility to run this tool string sub (design based) anywhere along the tubing, above or below the packer will be relevant in acquiring corrosion data at various temperatures, pressures and locations (below or above dew point of produced vapors), to help design upper-middle or lower completions.
The preceding description is meant to help one skilled in the art understand the embodiments described herein and is not in any way mean to unduly limit the scope of any present or subsequent claims.
The present document is based on and claims priority to U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 61/334,170, filed May 12, 2010.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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61334170 | May 2010 | US |