The present invention relates to apparati and methods for perforating and/or fracturing a wellbore.
Of interest to one aspect of the present invention relating to selective opening of ports of a plurality of valve subs within a fracking string to allow fracking of a formation at discrete/selected intervals along a wellbore, prior art designs such as those disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,907,936 (esp. FIG. 1b & FIGS. 3A, 3B), U.S. Pat. No. 6,095,541, US 2006/0124310, and SPE 51177 (September 1998) generally teach a number of valve subs each having a sliding cylindrical sleeve and an associated circular ball seat therein, the slidable sleeve generally covering a frac port to keep it closed when the sleeve is in a first (closed position), and the sleeve may be moved to a second (open) position which uncovers the frac port to allow frac fluid to be supplied through a pre-perforated casing to thereby fracture the formation. The ball seat for each slidable sleeve reduces in diameter for each sleeve of an associated valve sub the further downhole the valve sub is placed.
In operation, to progressively open frac ports within each of the valve subs, a first ball of small diameter is injected downhole and flows past larger diameter ball seats in associated valve subs [thereby leaving the slidable sleeve therein in a position covering the frac ports] until the most downhole sleeve is reached having the smallest diameter ball seat, which ball seat is smaller in diameter than the first ball. The first ball's further downhole motion is thus arrested by the smaller-diameter ball seat, and fluid pressure uphole of the ball forces the first ball, the ball seat, and associated slidable sleeve to move downhole, thereby uncovering and thus opening the frac port within the most downhole valve sub. Fluid under pressure is continued to be injected and pumped down the wellbore to frac the formation in the location of the open port in such wellbore. Thereafter, a second ball, of slightly larger diameter, is injected downhole, which second ball is larger in diameter than the ball seat as contained in the second-lowermost (downhole) valve sub. Now the second ball's further downhole motion is thus arrested by the smaller-diameter ball seat, and fluid pressure uphole of the second ball forces the first ball, the ball seat, and associated slidable sleeve to move downhole, thereby uncovering and thus opening the frac port within the second most downhole valve sub.
The above process is repeated, using progressively larger diameter balls, until all of the slidable sleeves in each of the valve subs has been opened, and the formation fractured in the region of the open frac ports of each of the valve subs.
Thereafter, a milling sub is passed through the bore of each of the valve subs to mill out and thereby remove each of the balls and ball seats, to thereby allow hydrocarbons flowing into the valve sub to be freely pumped up to surface.
Such prior art method and apparati possess at least two distinct disadvantages.
Firstly, one shortcoming of the ball valve seat mechanisms as described above is that such mechanism cannot be cemented into place within a casing due to the fact there is no way to then clean or wipe the cement out of the ball seat mechanism for subsequent use. Such prior art systems thus typically need to be used with a liner with open hole packers, which adds to the cost.
A second disadvantage is that due to the progressively decreasing diameter of the ball seat in each of the valve subs, the volume and rate of fracking fluid flow is thus seriously and undesirably restricted in the most downhole regions of the wellbore, and typically a flow rate of 15 cubic meters per minute [with wellbores of the typical 6-9 inch (15-23 cm) diameter] cannot be obtained.
A further disadvantage of the “graduated size ball drop” mechanisms of the prior art is that due to the need to have a plurality of balls of different (but distinct) diameters, the number of valve subs can typically be no greater than 23 stages, and thus typically no more than 23 areas along a wellbore can be fracked at a single time, unless one or more ball seats incorporate a release mechanism such as that disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 4,893,678 (i.e. a “kickover” mechanism) to allow the ball to pass through the associated ball seat after having actuated the sliding sleeve to open the associated port, to allow additional one or more downhole subs to have their respective frac ports opened by the same valve.
In order to overcome the above disadvantages with the prior art graduated-size ball drop mechanisms and methods, US2013/0168098 (CA2,797,821) (having a common inventor to the present invention) teaches in one embodiment a dart 22, as shown in FIGS. 7-9 thereof, having “keys” 42, which keys 42 only engage the keyways 32 of a corresponding valve sub 10 (ref. FIG. 5 and para. [009], [0039], with the keys 42 becoming progressively wider with each successive valve sub 10 disposed in well casing 49 towards the top of well 46. Finer graduations in dart key width and corresponding sleeve groove width can be implanted, and in doing so, it was postulated in such application that the number of valve subs in a single casing string could be increased to something in the range of 16 to 30 or more.
Notably, however, the keyways in such configuration run longitudinally of the valve sub, and are not circumferential, as is clear from FIG. 6 thereof.
In an alternative configuration shown in FIGS. 12A-15 of US 2013/0168098, a dart 22 (ref. FIG. 14 thereof) is provided, having a key profile 54 which is biased towards the inner wall of sliding piston (sleeve) 20 (ref. para. [0044]. When the key profile 58 on a particular dart 22 matches a key profile on piston 20 within a particular valve sub 10, the keyways engage and the piston 20 is caused to move. Specifically, as noted at para [0048], in such embodiment dart 22 can travel through casing 49 until it reaches a matching key profile 54, where it then latches into piston 20 and locking shoulder 56. The top of dart cup 44 on dart 22 can form a seal within valve body 12, and shear pins 25 are then caused to shear under fluid pressure exerted on dart 22 which causes engaged piston 20 to move down the well, to thereby open ports 14, which can then supply fluid pressure to the formation at such location. FIGS. 15a, 15B, 15C, 15D show a series of possible key profiles 54 and dart profiles 58 for such embodiment. Notably, however, all of such profiles teach a plurality of grooves in the interior surface of piston (sleeve) 20, with the “keying” dependent on the relative number and spacing of the grooves relative to each other to provide the selective “keying” arrangement.
Disadvantageously, while such above design of US2013/0168098/CA2,797,821 eliminates the problem of reduced bore diameter and consequent restriction of flow of fluid, such as fracking fluid and moreover further increases the number of possible valve subs which can be used due to the infinite number of “key” combinations using different numbers and relative spacing between the circumferential grooves formed on the inner wall of piston 20 which form the key profile 54 [ref. para. 0044], machining of piston/sleeve 20 and darts 22 in the manner disclosed in US2013/0168098 becomes unduly time consuming and expensive.
Accordingly, a simpler manner of allowing a selected dart to locate and engage a respective desired piston/sleeve 20 is thereby needed, to reduce machining costs.
As regards perforating a casing of a well to allow egress of frac fluid from the wellbore to thereby frac the well, in the prior art the casing perforation step is typically accomplished by lowering a series of discrete explosive charges within a wellbore, separated by known distances to perforate the well at desired distances of separation. After perforation such perforating “guns” then need to be removed from the wellbore before associated valve subs can be introduced for the separate fracking operation.
A real benefit would be realized if an apparatus or method could be developed which did not require separate insertion and removal of perforating guns downhole.
Moreover, a real advantage would further be realized if not only could apparatus or a method be developed that did not require separate insertion and removal of perforating guns, but further if such casing perforating step could form part of a fracking operation, and in particular form part of a frac string and associated valve subs, and be able to perforate the casing at the same time and at the same location along the wellbore as the particular fracking of the well occurs.
This background information is provided for the purpose of making known information believed by the applicant to be of possible relevance to the present invention. No admission is necessarily intended, nor should be construed, that any of the preceding information, or the reference in the drawings to “prior art” constitutes prior art against the present invention.
This summary does not necessarily describe the entire scope of the present invention. Other aspects, features and advantages of the invention will be apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art upon a proper review of the entire description of the invention as a whole, including the drawings and consideration of the specific embodiments of the invention described in the detailed description.
In one aspect of the present invention it is an object to provide a simpler apparatus and method for using a dart to selectively open frac ports on various valve subs within a wellbore to frac a formation along a wellbore in such formation, but which does not have the machining complexity and requires less machining operations than does the creation of the particular key profiles on each of the dart and piston (sleeve) as disclosed in US 2013/0168098.
It is a further object of the present invention to incorporate casing perforation means within fracking apparatus, to avoid the time and expense of having to use separate apparatus for performing the casing perforation step as opposed to the fracking operation when completing a well for production.
In a first broad aspect of the invention such invention comprises valve subs and associated darts which are of a novel configuration which requires little machining of both darts and sleeves, but nonetheless allows a dart to be unique from other darts and the associated sleeves to likewise by unique from other sleeves, and still allows each dart to s be able to actuate only a desired selected sleeve and thus open a frac port in only a selected (desired) valve sub.
In a first refinement of such broad aspect a single circumferential groove is machined on the interior surface of each slidable sleeve for the associated valve subs, the width of each circumferential groove in each slidable sleeve being different and unique. Associated darts, having a radially-outwardly biased member thereon of an associated width, may then be used to “locate” a particular dart within a particular desired sleeve so as to thusly uniquely actuate such desired sleeve to open a frac port in such desired valve sub.
Accordingly, in such refinement an apparatus for placement in a wellbore for fracturing an underground formation along said wellbore is provided, such apparatus comprising:
In one embodiment thereof, the circumferential grooves in said slidable sleeves are each of a different width relative to each other, said width progressively decreasing for each valve sub positioned downhole, with each uphole valve sub having a slidable sleeve with a cylindrical groove of a lesser width than the cylindrical groove within a slidable sleeve within an adjacent downhole valve sub, to allow displacement of selective of said slidable sleeves from said first position to said second position by a plurality of darts having radially-outwardly biased members of a corresponding width.
In an alternative embodiment, where it is desired to open, using a single dart, a number of valve subs substantially simultaneously, the circumferential groove in a slidable sleeve within an uphole cylindrical member is of the same width as a cylindrical groove of a slidable sleeve within an adjacently coupled downhole cylindrical member; and said uphole cylindrical member and/or said adjacently coupled downhole cylindrical member further having a contact surface for depressing inwardly said radially-outwardly biased member on said dart member when said uphole slidable sleeve has repositioned to said second open position, so as to permit said dart to be disengaged from said uphole slidable sleeve within said uphole cylindrical member and thereafter continue to progress downhole for further engagement with one or more slidable sleeves of downhole cylindrical members.
In a further refinement of the invention, the dart is provided with a mechanism, activated by a retrieving tool, to allow it to be removed from engagement with a sliding sleeve of an associated valve sub, to allow the dart, once it has served its purpose of activating an associated sleeve to move such sleeve from the first position to the second position, to be removed from the valve sub and from the wellbore. Accordingly, in such embodiment, the apparatus further comprises coupling means on said dart at an uphole end thereof for permitting coupling of said dart to a retrieving tool; and a longitudinally moveable wedge-shaped member on said dart,
wherein when said retrieving tool is coupled to said dart and thus to said wedge-shaped member and said retrieving tool is withdrawn for a short distance uphole, said withdrawal longitudinally repositions said wedge-shaped member uphole which then depresses said radially-outwardly-biased member to allow disengagement thereof with said groove to thereby allow said dart to be withdrawn uphole.
The invention further comprises a method for using the apparatus as described above for fracking a well.
Accordingly, in one aspect of the invention for fracking a well using the apparatus described above, a method for inserting valve subs within a wellbore and progressively, from downhole to uphole, opening frac ports therein using a plurality of darts and further fracturing said formation is disclosed, such method comprising the steps of:
In a second refinement of the above apparatus for fracking a well, which accomplishes the same result as the first refinement but in a different manner, a single circumferential groove is instead alternatively machined on the exterior surface of each dart, the width of each circumferential groove in each dart being different and unique. The various sleeves in each valve sub are each provided with a radially-inwardly biased member thereon of an associated width, may then be used to “locate” a particular dart within a particular desired sleeve so as to thusly uniquely actuate the sleeve to open a frac port in a desired valve sub.
Accordingly, in such alternative refinement of the above apparatus, the invention comprises an apparatus for placement in a wellbore for fracturing an underground formation in a region along said wellbore, comprising:
The invention further comprises a method using the apparatus of the above alternative embodiment for fracking a well. Accordingly, in such further (alternative) method for inserting valve subs within a wellbore and progressively opening frac ports therein using a plurality of darts so as to frac the formation along the wellbore, such alternative method comprises the steps of:
In another broad aspect of the present invention, apparatus for perforating a well casing is disclosed. In a broad aspect, such apparatus for perforating a wellbore casing when inserted in a wellbore surrounded by said casing comprises:
In a preferred embodiment/refinement, a cylindrical dart is provided for insertion in said bore, having engaging means thereon for engaging said slidable sleeve and causing longitudinal downhole slidable movement of said slidable sleeve when fluid pressure is exerted at an uphole end of said dart.
In one further refinedment, the engaging means on said dart comprises a radially-outwardly biased member, said slidable sleeve having a single circumferential groove in an interior surface thereof of sufficient width for receiving therewithin said radially-outwardly biased member.
In an alternative refinement, the engaging means on said dart comprises a single circumferential groove in an exterior surface thereof, said slidable sleeve having a radial-inwardly biased member, said radially-inwardly biased member of sufficient width for receiving therewithin said radially-inwardly biased member.
In a preferred refinement of each of the alternative embodiments, the dart further possesses, at an uphole end thereof, latch means to permit coupling to a retrieval tool, to permit said dart to be withdrawn from said wellbore.
In a still further refinement where the dart is adapted to be capable of being disengaged from the associated sleeve and withdrawn from the wellbore, in similar fashion to the manner of adapting the dart to be removed from valve subs used in a fracking operation, when a dart is used in a perforating operation it too may be likewise modified to provide for removal. In such embodiment a longitudinally moveable wedge-shaped member is provided on the dart. When the retrieval tool is coupled to said dart and thus to said wedge-shaped member and said retrieving tool is withdrawn for a short distance uphole, said withdrawal longitudinally repositions said wedge-shaped member uphole which then depresses said radially-outwardly-biased member to allow disengagement thereof with said groove to thereby allow said dart to be withdrawn uphole.
Regardless of whether the dart is used for actuating a sliding sleeve to open a frac port or to actuate an explosive charge in an associated sub, the darts will generally be provided with a seal means such as a cup seal thereon to assist, when fluid pressure is applied thereto, in pushing the dart through the bore and sliding the sliding sleeve. However, when removing the dart from the wellbore and drawing it uphole, fluid above the dart makes it difficult to remove the dart from the well without swabbing the entire distance of wellbore uphole of the dart due to the seal (cup seal). Also, without a bypass which may be opened when removing the dart from the well, it frequently is difficult to remove the dart from within the wellbore due to a created suction.
Accordingly, in a refinement of the apparatus of the invention, either for use in fracking a well, or perforating a well, or both, where it is desired to remove the dart, and where as is typical the dart possesses seal means thereon, the dart is further provided with a bypass port situated uphole from said cup seal to allow fluid above said cup seal to bypass said cup seal when said dart is withdrawn uphole and prevent swabbing of such well when such dart is withdrawn; and the dart having a valve member sleeve covering said bypass port, which valve member is adapted to be displaced by said retrieval tool when said retrieval tool is coupled to said dart to thereby open said bypass port.
In a preferred embodiment of the sub used to perforate a casing of a wellbore, the ability to frac the wellbore at the same time is further provided. Accordingly, in a preferred embodiment, such sub member of the perforating apparatus is further provided with at least one frac port extending therethrough proximate an uphole end thereof, with the slidable sleeve closing said at least one frac port when said sleeve is in said first uphole position and opening said port so as to allow said port to be in fluid communication with said bore when said slidable sleeve is longitudinally displaced to said second downhole position.
In a preferred embodiment, the directional shaped explosive charge is positioned on the slidable sleeve immediately beneath said frac port when said slidable sleeve is displaced to said second downhole position. This allows the explosive charge to direct its energy, upon detonation, through the (now open) frac port, and immediately perforated the casing in the precise location immediately above the frac port, which is the precise and best location in the casing for the perforation to be located for optimum and most expedient fracting of the formation, and draining of hydrocarbons into the wellbore.
Alternatively, the directional shaped explosive charge may be positioned on an exterior of said sub member immediately proximate the frac port thereon, to thereby provide perforation of the wellbore casing in the immediate vicinity of the frac port.
In one embodiment, the actuation means for detonating the explosive charges in each of the subs comprises a battery for supplying an electrical voltage, and said slidable sleeve upon moving to said second downhole position contacts and thus closes an electrical circuit in communication with said battery and the charge to allow said voltage to be supplied to said shaped charge to detonate said shaped charge.
In another embodiment, the actuation means comprises a mechanical percussion pin member within said slidable sleeve, and wherein said percussion pin member is moved when said slidable sleeve is displaced to said second position and thereby caused to contact and ignite said shaped explosive charge on said slidable sleeve.
Accordingly, in another aspect of the invention, the invention comprises a method for perforating a casing of a wellbore, comprising the steps of:
In addition for disclosing an apparatus for advantageously both perforating and fracking a wellbore with a single “string”, the present invention provides a method for doing same using the apparatus as disclosed herein.
Accordingly, in such further greatly preferred refinement, the above method may further be modified to advantageously both perforate and frack a wellbore with a single “string”. In such method the sub member further comprises at least one frac port within said sub member situated proximate an uphole end thereof; and the method further comprises the step of applying fluid pressure at said uphole end of said dart and causing said slidable sleeve to move from said first uphole position to said second downhole position to simultaneously detonate said shaped charge and open said frac port.
As seen from
An integral feature of key profile 54 which allows the individual circumferential grooves 6 in each sleeve 4a, 4b to be a unique profile is the width of the spacing “S” between the individual circumferential grooves 6 (ref.
Disadvantageously the creation of a plurality of circumferential grooves 6, of different unique spacing “S” therebetween, as well as the corresponding plurality of ridges 7 on dart 2, requires considerable machining time. A simpler and less machining-intensive apparatus and method to allow a sleeve 4a, 4b to be selectively actuated by a given dart 2 is needed.
The present invention, in each of its various apparati and methods, achieves such objective, and will now be described.
The apparatus of the present invention, in one embodiment and as shown in
Each of valve subs 30a, 30b are typically provided with corresponding frac ports 50a, 50b which are opened when a corresponding hollow slildable sleeve 40a, 40b within a respective corresponding valve subs 30a, 30b moves (when actuated by a corresponding dart 20a, 20b) from a first position (as shown in
Integral to this embodiment of the invention 10 is the provision of a single circumferential groove 60a, 60b in an interior surface 61a, 61b of each of respective slidable sleeves 40a, 40b (best shown in
Complementary to the above feature, unique darts 20a, 20b are correspondingly adapted to actuate respectively, slidably sleeves 40a, 40b, by each being provided with a radially-outwardly biased member 80a, 80b of a respective width adapted to allow mating engagement with corresponding circumferential/radial groove 60a, 60b. In such manner, by inserting a dart with a radially-outwardly biased member of greatest width, such dart will bypass valve sub 20a, and only engage the sleeve contained in the most downhole valve sub. Thereafter, in similar fashion, additional darts having radially-outwardly biased members of progressively lesser widths, can be successively injected downhole, to actuate respective sleeves in progressively further and further uphole valve subs, until all sleeves have been progressively opened and the wellbore progressively fracked in a manner from downhole to uphole. Radially-outwardly biased members 80a, 80b may be radially-biased outwardly by any known means such as by leaf springs or a plurality of helical coil springs 77, as shown in
In a refinement of the above apparatus and method, it is occasionally desired to simultaneously open a number of adjacent valve subs within a frack string comprised of a plurality of valve subs, to allow simultaneous fracking of the formation along a given length of the wellbore.
Accordingly, in such further refinement and as shown in
Specifically in this refinement, and with reference to
Upon reaching downhole sub 30c and engaging circumferential groove 60c (of same width as circumferential groove 60b) on slidable sleeve 40c and causing slidable sleeve 40c to move to the second position thereby opening frac port 50c, further “kick-over” of dart 20b′ may be prevented by eliminating contact surface 66 on coupling means 65′ and providing a milled region 69 thereon, as shown in
Corresponding to the alternate configuration of the sleeves 40a′, 40b′, modified darts 20a′, 20b′ each having respectively a single circumferential groove 101a, 101b, where the width of groove 101a is approximately equal to or slightly greater than the width W2 of radially-inwardly biased member 103a, both of which are greater than the width W1 of radially-inwardly biased member 103b in downhole sleeve 40b′. Likewise, the width of groove 101b in downhole dart 20b′ is approximately equal to or slightly greater than the width or radially-inwardly biased member 103b, but such is less than the width of either radially-inwardly biased uphole member(s) 103a or groove 101a in dart 20a′.
In such manner radially-inwardly biased members 103a, 103b are especially adapted to matingly engage respective circumferential groove 101a, 101b on respective darts 20a′, 20b′, to allow actuation of respective valve subs 30a′, 30b′.
In operation,
In such embodiment as may be seen from
Due to the presence of cup seal 45 on dart 20 when removing the dart 20 from the wellbore and drawing it uphole, fluid above dart 20 makes it difficult to remove the dart 20 from the well without swabbing the entire distance of wellbore uphole of the dart 20.
Accordingly, in a refinement of the apparatus of the invention, also shown in
Specifically,
The explosive charge 302 to be employed is preferably a directional shaped explosive charge. Explosive charge 302 may be situated within a milled area 303 on the exterior of perforating sub member 300, as shown in
In the embodiment shown in
Upon a dart 20 having radially-outwardly biased member 80b of corresponding width to circumferential groove 60b engaging groove 60b and slidably repositioning sleeve 30b to a second position, as shown in
Alternatively, as best shown in
Use of examples in the specification, including examples of terms, is for illustrative purposes only and is not intended to limit the scope and meaning of the embodiments of the invention set out and described in the disclosure. Numeric ranges are inclusive of the numbers defining the range. In the specification, the word “comprising” is used as an open-ended term, substantially equivalent to the phrase “including, but not limited to,” and the word “comprises” has a corresponding meaning.
The scope of the claims should not be limited by the preferred embodiments set forth in the foregoing examples, but should be given the broadest interpretation consistent with the description as a whole, and the claims are not to be limited to the preferred or exemplified embodiments of the invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2842568 | Feb 2014 | CA | national |
This application is a continuation of U.S. Ser. No. 14/178,056 filed Feb. 11, 2014.
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Site Oil Tools Ltd.—1981-82 Wireline Production Equipment Catalogue. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20170198561 A1 | Jul 2017 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 14178056 | Feb 2014 | US |
Child | 15470703 | US |