The present invention pertains to an apparatus for transporting frac sand, and more particularly pertains to apparatus allowing adaptation of an ISO intermodal container for transporting frac sand from its supplier to a well site at which in situ hydrocarbon formation-fracturing operations will be effectuated.
In oilfield applications, pump assemblies are commonly invoked for pumping fluid at high pressures from the surface of the well downhole to a wellbore. Such oilfield operations frequently involve hydraulic fracturing. For hydraulic fracturing (herein abbreviated “fracking” for convenience), an abrasive-containing fluid such as sand and other fracking or frac materials (collectively termed “proppant”) are pumped through the wellbore and into targeted regions thereof, to create side “fractures” within the underlying hydrocarbon formations.
As is will known in the art, in order to create such fractures, frac fluid containing abrasive proppant is pumped downhole at extremely high pressures not only to facilitate fracture-creation, but also to sustain the propped-open structures. As will be appreciated by those skilled in the art, these propped-open structures afford additional pathways for underground oil and gas deposits to flow from underground formations to the well surface, thereby enhancing well production.
Prior art apparatus and methodology for transporting frac fluid containing sand and proppant suffer from several long-standing disadvantages. For instance, after being loaded onto special-purpose pneumatic trucks or railcars, frac sand and proppant have typically not been well sealed from environmental incursions during transfer. As a consequence of such environmental incursions, the integrity of this material has been seriously undermined whereupon significant degradation attributable to cumulative effects of abrasion and friction, and exposure to moisture and rain occur during material transfer operations. Since it has been difficult—if not virtually impossible—for special-purpose railcars and pneumatic trucks to be brought sufficiently close to well sites, it has become a prevalent occurrence for several material transfers to be prerequisite for ultimate delivery of sufficient frac sand and/or proppant to the intended well site so that fracking operations may be initiated. Moreover, pneumatic trucks are frequently unavailable and unloading of frac sand from trucks or railcars is likewise frequently delayed, wherein railcars remain idle, with railroads charging significant demurrage fees.
Accordingly, what is needed in the art is an apparatus and concomitant methodology for improving the logistics for transporting frac sand and proppants proximal to well sites to avoid these several longstanding limitations and disadvantages prevalent in the prior art. This need is fulfilled by embodiments of the present invention which contemplate novel application of standard ISO shipping containers to accommodate an internal structure adapted to support and strengthen the walls and floor of such ISO shipping containers and a valve apparatus configured to efficiently and securely achieve prerequisite sand and proppant material transfer from such adapted containers to fracking operations regardless of the remoteness and limited accessibility of a diversity of well site locations.
Such intermodal shipping or freight containers enable reusable transport and storage units for moving products and raw materials between locations. Containers manufactured to ISO specifications are commonly be referred to as “ISO containers,” wherein, as well known in the shipping art, ISO corresponds to an acronym for the International Organization for Standardization which promulgates worldwide industrial and commercial standards. ISO containers suitable for sand and proppant transfer and delivery to well site locations should preferably be sized with 20-foot length, and with 8½-foot height and 8-foot width. To be able to accommodate the substantial quantity of materials stored and transported to well site locations, often over rough terrain and under exigent conditions, the container's external frame should preferably be reinforced with appropriate bracing and trusses.
Once a standard 20-foot ISO container has been suitably reinforced with an internal bracing structure, an apparatus is needed for timely transferring the enclosed sand or proppant to the high pressure delivery system at the well site, preferably nominally within an hour's time frame. This material transfer apparatus comprises a hopper/valve assembly configured to deliver the material to ports at the well site where in situ fracturing operations will be conducted.
As will be hereinafter described in detail, embodiments of the frac sand and/or proppant transfer apparatus contemplated by the present invention are effectuated by modifying a Standard 20-foot ISO intermodal shipping container by incorporation of a structure therein comprising the following components:
Embodiments of the present invention constitute a module preferably constructed from steel and having intake and discharge ports configured to mate with hopper assembly ports disposed at the well site. This module should preferably be adapted to slide into and out of a standard ISO container contemplated hereunder. Other embodiments may be constructed with a bladder system including high-density firm elastomeric material similar to material incorporated into military fuel storage containers. As will be hereinafter described in detail, a central bladder is configured to hold the sand and proppant material, and the associated side bladders are configured to be inflated in order to control sand and proppant material discharge.
It will be appreciated that an important aspect of the transfer apparatus taught by the present invention is to control the discharge flow rate of frac sand and proppant material whereby the stored material must be completely sealed and then this transported material must be properly discharged such that the container is emptied at well site in 60 minutes or preferably less. As will be understood by those conversant in the art that mere gravity-feed of this material results in inadequate flow rates to perform the unloading and delivery of sand and proppant prerequisite for conventional fracturing operations at the well site. Hence, the efficacy of embodiments of the present invention which invoke either a single-valve system or a double-valve system to achieve prerequisite material transfer in industry standard time.
These and other objects of the present invention will become apparent from the following specification and accompanying drawings, wherein like numerals refer to like components.
Embodiments of the present invention comprise specially configured assembly adapted for modifying a standard 20-foot ISO intermodal shipping container and the like. More particularly, as will become evident to those skilled in the art, embodiments of the instant frac sand transport apparatus are configured to enable each of its plurality of intake ports and similar plurality of discharge ports to be conveniently coupled with preexisting conventional input channels and output channels located in situ not only at the processing facility where the frac sand is produced, but also at the well site where fracturing operations will be conducted.
Referring collectively to
As can be readily seen specifically from
Now focusing collectively upon
Referring again to
It will be appreciated by practitioners conversant with handling ISO containers 2 and the like that the caps 3A situated atop the 20-inch manways should preferably be situated flush atop such intermodal containers. Accordingly, the lids 3A would preferably be situated just beneath the container roof 8 and, once manually opened, frac sand would be delivered into the hopper portion of apparatus 1. To assure that contained frac sand remains devoid of water incursion, it is contemplated that the apparatus lid could be enclosed within a hingedly-opened cut-out.
It will also be appreciated that a 24″×24″ gate valve or the like is particularly advantageous under circumstances in which frac sand is being unloaded into a mobile hopper unit or the like. But, it should be understood that, if such mobile hopper units are apt to be unloaded under the influence of a blower or the like through 4 inch piping, then use of such a gate valve would probably be unnecessary. Of course, those skilled in the art will readily appreciate that, if and when a gate valve were used in conjunction with an embodiment of the present invention, then frac sand would be unloaded or dumped into a dolly hopper or the like. Under such circumstances, the top of the dolly hopper should preferably be constructed from two thin-gauge sheet metal telescoping tubes in order to facilitate sliding thereunder and then being raised to meet the flange disposed on the bottom of the large hopper unit 50.
Referring now to
Now referring to the preferred embodiment of the dual-valve system 75 depicted in
This cycle, with flip-flop relationship of the valve pair V, continues throughout the sand and proppant material offloading process. It will, of course, be clearly understood that the sand material empties into longitudinal discharge pipe under constant pressure to sustain continuous flow from the compressor. This cycling continues preferably every 3 seconds under circuit board control. The dotted line on each of upper valve VU and lower valve VL depicts the relative expanded and compressed state of the valve which alternates compression and expansion with each cycle. It will be appreciated that there is a plate situated from the hopper assembly to the top of the valve body, at an angle of about 31° to promote sand flow.
The space atop the valve assembly is open except for a tension bar member of the brace and truss assembly, for holding the valve body together as its double valve apparatus causes sand to continuously flow downwards into the injection chamber and ultimately downhole. This tension bar should preferably be invoked every 6 inches to afford sufficient stability to the hopper assembly and implicated valve apparatus. It should, of course, be clearly understood that, while the cyclical reversal of the double pneumatic valve configuration of the present invention causes the injection chamber to constantly be full of sand and proppant and to enable efficient downward flow into discharge pipe H, the hopper assembly must be sealed from the high pressure manifest in the discharge pipe. Ergo, a key aspect of embodiments of the present invention is that the adapted ISO container frac sand apparatus is completely sealed throughout its participation in the fracturing process—from end to end. Obviously, there can never exist positive pressure from the discharge pipe back into the container per se. The suction provided by an external compressor achieves the crucial function of alternatively compressing each of the valve pair as herein described in detail. It is also seen that there is a preferably self-threaded knurled knob K emplaced on a side of the valve apparatus for inserting and removing the 19-foot silicone balloon or hose members. There is also displayed a stabilizer bar S and hopper plate Q
It will be appreciated that the container must be sealed throughout sand material loading and unloading in order to avoid vigorously blowing sand upwardly in the wrong direction. Obviously, the proper protocol is to unload the sand material under pressure into the discharge pipe and ultimately downhole at the well site. There must be inherent safeguards, as in embodiments of the instant invention, against such unacceptable contrary sand flow.
Thus, since it is well known in the art that gravity flow is inadequate for feeding sand and proppant material to well sites for fracking, the present invention teaches how to reliably achieve prerequisite sand flow rates under the influence of suction supplied externally by a mobile commercially-available compressor. Still referring to the tabulation of sand valve discharge flow rates enumerated in
This table is subdivided into four portions having cycles per minute from as high as 60 to as low as 4. The first portion consists of rows 1-10 corresponding to a single valve apparatus having valve volume of 0.25 cubic feet; in order to attain sand flow discharge in an hour or less, 33 minutes, with a discharge rate of 1500 pounds per minute, a cycle time per minute of 60 is prerequisite (first row of first portion). In the third portion of this tabulation, consisting of rows 21-30 corresponding to a single valve apparatus having valve volume of 0.4 cubic feet; in order to attain sand flow discharge in an hour or less, 41 minutes, with a discharge rate of 1208 pounds per minute, a cycle time per minute of 30 is prerequisite (second row of third portion).
The second portion consists of rows 11-20 corresponding to a double valve apparatus having valve volume of 0.5 cubic feet; in order to attain sand flow discharge in an hour or less, 50 minutes, with a discharge rate of 1000 pounds per minute, a cycle time per minute of 20 is prerequisite (third row of second portion). In the fourth portion of this tabulation, consisting of rows 31-40 corresponding to a double valve apparatus having valve volume of 0.8 cubic feet; in order to attain sand flow discharge in an hour or less, 51 minutes, with a discharge rate of 966 pounds per minute, a cycle time per minute of 12 is prerequisite (fifth row of fourth portion).
But, this double-valve arrangement with total valve volume of 0.8 cubic feet would be optimal at 15 cycle per minute wherein 1208 pounds of sand are transferred per minute and unload time of about 41 minutes to unload about 50,000 pounds.
Accordingly, assuming transfer of 50 pounds of sand into the injection chamber with each 4 second cycle, then 750 pounds enter per minute. In a one-hour time period, 45,000 pounds of sand are transferred. It will be readily observed by those conversant in the art that this is essentially the practical capacity of standard ISO shipping containers for transport over highway and rail. As herein described, industry standard requires that this load be emptied within one hour. As demonstrated herein, preferred embodiments of the present invention have achieved this objective.
Thus, it can be readily appreciated that embodiments of the present invention comprise internally modified conventional ISO intermodal shipping containers wherein a plurality of brace members and truss members have been interconnected to strengthen the lateral walls thereof. Furthermore, this plurality of brace members and truss members are affixed to each of container interior side walls, front walls, and rear walls to allow attachment of the steel or aluminum plates that form the contemplated hopper-funnel assembly and enclosed valve control apparatus. It is seen that embodiments of this hopper assembly enable sand and/or proppant to be expeditiously funneled to a central collection trough member. In so doing, the hopper assembly respective long side and short side are angulated at a 30-31° relative to the horizontal to promote downward flow of sand material.
Now referring to
Besides the hereinbefore described steel/aluminum frac sand transport and delivery module, another embodiment of the modular apparatus contemplated by the present invention corresponds to a bladder apparatus using high-density elastomer and like material. Those skilled in the art will recognize that the instant bladder apparatus is constructed with material similar to what is typically used in military fuel storage facilities. For such an embodiment, the central bladder would hold frac sand material and a plurality of side-bladders would be inflated to control both the rate and extent of frac sand and proppant discharge.
It should be understood by those practitioners conversant in the art that, regardless of which frac sand apparatus embodiment is invoked for a particular well site fracking scenario, the present invention teaches adapting a suitably modified ISO intermodal shipping container or like container specifically for achieving efficient frac sand transportation heretofore not contemplated in the art. A particular benefit of herein described embodiments is facilitating maximum payload delivery of the enclosed materials, and, in so doing, assuring economical delivery thereof. For instance, the instant apparatus and concomitant methodology are designed to deliver nearly 50,000 pounds of sand/proppant per trip. It will be readily appreciated that any greater payload exceeds highway weight limitations allowed for safe trucking. Of course, any substantially lesser payload adversely impacts transportation economics.
It is also within the teachings of the present invention to effectuate fracking operations invoking an embodiment having two pairs of double pneumatic valves implemented with four hard durometer silicone rubber tubes disposed throughout the 19-foot length of the suitably-adapted ISO shipping container. Other things being equal, this plurality of double pneumatically-controlled valves has the potential of achieving reliable, environmentally-safe sand material flow rates heretofore unknown in the art.
It should also be appreciated that a major economic advantage of the instant modified intermodal container methodology is virtual elimination of pneumatic truck wait/down time at drilling sites. Embodiments of the present invention comprising the container/hopper/trailer assembly structures taught herein can be immediately separated from a truck or the like for subsequent suitable well site positioning and payload delivery. Moreover, elimination of truck idling/waiting time at the drill-site dramatically reduces carbon dioxide emissions—with clear benefit to the environment and to drill-site workers' health.
As will also be appreciated by those skilled in the art, the trailer-and-container assemblies contemplated hereunder are inherently more mobile and consume considerably less space than more cumbersome pneumatic trucks. Indeed, a flatbed trailer chasis is more easily aligned and positioned for faster material transfer at the well site.
Furthermore, there is no need for expensive bulk-carrying rail hopper cars to transport the material. A more efficient, reliable and inexpensive methodology according to the teachings of the present invention now exists for maintaining frac fluid inventory—with virtually unlimited storage.
Other frac sand transport apparatus variations and modifications will, of course, become apparent from a consideration of the structures and techniques hereinbefore described and depicted. Nevertheless, it should be clearly understood that the present invention is not intended to be limited by the particular features and structures hereinbefore described and depicted in the accompanying drawings, but that the present invention is to be measured by the scope of the appended claims.
This application claims priority based upon U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 61/429,046 filed Dec. 31, 2010.
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