The present invention relates to an apparatus and method for use downhole to provide power to two or more pumps and more particularly relates to a switch mechanism operable to allow a single power cable to supply electrical power to two or more downhole electrical motors alternatively.
Many oil and gas wells must be provided with artificial lift in order to extract the hydrocarbons in an effective manner, otherwise the relatively low natural reservoir pressure (particularly in the middle and latter years of some wells) is not sufficient to flow the well. Conventionally, the artificial lift can be provided by a variety of methods including injection of CO2 into the well to force the hydrocarbons up to the surface and by providing downhole pumps to suck in the hydrocarbons and pump them up production tubing to the surface. An Electrical Submersible Pump (ESP) is a form of artificial lift pump designed to draw fluid from a well in the absence of pressure to suit the production rate required. Typically ESPs, in the oilfield, have been run as single units on the end of the production tubing. A power cable, attached to the electrical motor unit of the ESP extends to the surface of the well alongside the production tubing and terminates at the wellhead.
The power cable will often need to be fed through a packer (a downhole barrier adapted to seal the annular gap between the production tubing and the casing) prior to extending to the surface of the well where the power cable also needs to be fed through the wellhead. At both of these junctions, the power cable usually has to be deployed with an electrical penetrator which seals the cable into the wellhead and packer. It should be noted however that not all ESP wells use packers but all require wellheads and such a typical/conventional configuration of a well having an ESP deployed therein is shown in
In more recent years, it has become more customary for an operator to want to use a dual ESP configuration, where one ESP is run on top of the other, with a spacing therebetween. This configuration allows one ESP unit to be operated or run to the end of its life and then the second ESP unit is switched on. The benefits of dual ESP systems are considerable in terms of saved workover (well completion replacement), costs and avoidance of oil well downtime.
Conventional dual ESP configurations require a dedicated power cable from each of the dual ESPs to the surface of the well and therefore two power cables are required from the ESP's to the surface.
The power cable feed for the lower ESP motor extends from a plug-in connection at the lower ESP motor, up beyond the upper ESP and is joined by the power cable feed for the upper ESP. From there, both cables extend to the surface of the well and such a typical/conventional configuration of a well having a dual ESP system deployed therein is shown in
In wells where the power cable has to pass through a packer as well as through the wellhead, special electrical “penetrators” (units which seal the power cable into a steel body) are required.
Dual ESP systems therefore require two penetrators, both for the packer and for the wellheads. Unfortunately, standard wellheads and packers are manufactured with only a single penetrator and cannot be modified to accept twin penetrators. Accordingly, packers and wellheads have to be specially manufactured to suit twin penetrators.
Accordingly, for new wells, packers and wellheads can be specially ordered to accommodate the twin penetrator requirement. However, existing wells would require a conversion and this leads to significant costs due to the large variety of wellhead types and the engineering required. Furthermore, the existing customer owned and very expensive wellheads and packers would therefore be scrapped.
This extra (significant) cost plus the associated lead time in obtaining such new and special wellheads currently makes conversion to dual ESPs non-viable for many existing wells or at least, presents a barrier to conversion to duals ESP systems.
It would therefore be desirable if the existing wellhead (and packer if required) can be utilised; if this was the case then conversion to dual ESPs becomes more viable and presents a significant opportunity to improve ESP viability in all manner of wells.
According to a first aspect of the present invention there is provided a downhole switch mechanism for inclusion in a production string located in a wellbore, the downhole switch mechanism comprising:
an inlet for electrical power;
at least two outlets for electrical power; and
an actuator mechanism which is capable of being actuated from the surface of the wellbore to selectively move between at least two positions in order to provide a selective electrical connection between the said inlet and one of the said outlets.
According to the first aspect there is provided a method of powering at least two electrically operated devices associated with or included in a production string located downhole in a wellbore via a single electrical cable, the method comprising the steps of:
providing a switch mechanism in the production string, the switch mechanism being supplied with electrical power from the surface of the wellbore by means of the single electrical cable and further being coupled to at least two downhole devices; and
actuating, at the surface, the switch mechanism to move between two or more positions, each position being associated with one of the said downhole devices,
such that electrical power is selectively supplied from the single electrical cable to the selected downhole device.
Preferably, the switch mechanism is incorporated into the production string before it is run into the wellbore.
Preferably, the actuator mechanism further comprises a switch arm mechanism moveable between the at least two positions, and more preferably, each position is associated with one of the said electrical power outlets. Typically, the actuator mechanism is capable of being actuated from the surface, of the wellbore to selectively move the switch arm mechanism between the two positions.
Typically, the downhole devices comprise electrically operated downhole pumps and more preferably the downhole pumps are electrically submersible pumps (ESPs).
Preferably, the switch arm is actuated by means of an actuator mechanism. Preferably, the actuator mechanism is also powered from the surface. In one preferred embodiment, the actuator mechanism comprises a hydraulic fluid powered actuator mechanism and in this preferred embodiment, the actuator mechanism comprises a hydraulic cylinder and piston arrangement, wherein fluid can be injected into or withdrawn from the hydraulic cylinder in order to move the piston. In this preferred embodiment, the piston is mechanically coupled to the switch arm.
Preferably, the switch mechanism is located downhole in the wellbore below a wellhead of the wellbore, where the wellhead of the wellbore is typically located at the surface thereof. Typically, where an annular sealing device such as a packer is included in the production string, the switch mechanism is typically located below the annular sealing device.
Typically, a first branch electrical cable is arranged to connect the first outlet of the switch mechanism to a first ESP and a second branch electrical cable is arranged to connect the second outlet of the switch mechanism to a second ESP. Preferably, the single electrical cable is electrically coupled to the inlet of the switch mechanism such that the single electrical cable supplies power from the surface of the wellbore to the inlet of the switch mechanism, through the switch arm to the selected downhole ESP.
Embodiments of the present invention will now be described, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings.
An embodiment of an apparatus and a method for distributing power downhole with only one electrical cable in accordance with the present invention is shown in
A hydraulic switch module 26B is conveniently located close to the upper ESP 24BU.
In general, the hydraulic switch 26B can be actuated with hydraulic fluid supplied through the hydraulic line 16 from the surface to move an electrical connector or switch arm 38 such that the electrical power delivered through the electrical cable 14 can be delivered to either the upper ESP 24BU or the lower ESP BL. More details of the hydraulic switch 26 are shown in
The motor of the upper ESP 24U comprises 3 electrical power inputs D, E, F and the motor of the lower ESP 24L comprises 3 electrical power inputs G, H, I.
The hydraulic switch 26 has two configurations or positions:
position 1 shown in
position 2 of the switch arm 38 is shown in
Consequently, the operator can, from the surface, select which of the two ESPs 24BL, 24BU to operate by actuating the hydraulic switch 24B with surface control equipment to move the piston 32 against the return spring 33 to move the switch arm 38 to the desired position 1 or 2, all the while only having to run one electric cable from the surface down to the dual ESPs 24BU, 24BL. The operator can lock the pressure in the hydraulic fluid at the surface to hold the position 1 or 2 of the switch arm 38.
An alternative lower half of the completion 9C is shown in
A further alternative arrangement of ESPs is shown in
A further alternative arrangement of ESPs 24FU, 24FL is shown in
Accordingly, the embodiments described herein provide the great advantage that power can be remotely switched between an upper ESP 24U and a lower ESP 24L where the power is supplied via one electric cable 14 and this provides the further advantage that only one power cable 14 is required to penetrate the wellhead 10 and therefore allows existing standard wellhead equipment 10 to remain in place, unlike the prior art dual ESP system shown in
Importantly, although an additional hydraulic line 16 to surface is required over a prior art single ESP system such as that shown in
Importantly, it should be noted that the downhole switch 26 can be located anywhere under the wellhead 10 but, the lower it is positioned in the well, the less cable 14 is deployed downhole which means lower cabling costs. In fact, the choice to position the switch 26 directly under the wellhead 10, or at the upper dual ESP 24U will differ from case to case. Cable 14 is more vulnerable the deeper it goes so some users may wish to double the cable 14 on the underside of the wellhead 10 to maximize the reliability of the system and to avoid the potential failure on the cable 14 leading to both ESP units 24U, 24L being inoperable. Typically, if a packer 22 is used the cable 14 below the packer 22 is more vulnerable to downhole conditions than the cable 14 above the packer. Accordingly, the choice of positioning the switch 26 above or below the packer 22 will be made on a case by case basis depending on the operator's requirements.
If desired, the switch 26 could be modified by those skilled in the art without departing from the scope of the invention to provide third and fourth positions to allow further ESPs 24 to be added if, for instance, a triple or quadruple ESP 24 system was required by an operator.
Accordingly, the key benefits of embodiments of the present invention are:
1. Only one power cable 14 to surface is required and thus the cable 14 cost is potentially halved;
2. Only require a single penetrator at packer 22 and thus a standard ESP packer 22 can be used;
3. Only require a single penetrator 12 at wellhead 10 and thus a standard ESP wellhead 10 can be used, giving greater flexibility for hanger size;
4. Standard protector clamps 20 can be used (in the case of a deep set switch 26);
5. Minimal cost and disruption to convert to dual ESPs 24U, 24L thus benefiting from improved cost improvements on well production; and
6. Brings in the potential to deploy more than two ESPs 24U, 24L downhole such as triple ESP systems or quadruple ESP systems.
Modifications and improvements may be made to the embodiments hereinbefore described without departing from the scope of the invention. For instance, the hydraulically operated switch 26 could be modified or replaced with an electrical solenoid actuator that could be operated from the surface by, for instance, modulating instructions/control signals onto the three phase electrical supply provided through the electrical cable 14 and this would have the advantage that the hydraulic line 16 could then be omitted and such an electrical solenoid actuator could be powered from the electrical cable 14 itself.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0801156.1 | Jan 2008 | GB | national |