Embodiments of the subject matter disclosed herein generally relate to downhole tools for well operations, and more specifically, to an auto-bleeding setting tool used in a well for actuating an auxiliary tool.
During well exploration, various tools are lowered into the well and placed at desired positions for plugging, perforating, or drilling the well. These tools are placed inside the well with the help of a conduit, e.g., a wireline, electric line, continuous coiled tubing, threaded work string, etc. However, these tools need to be activated or set in place. The force needed to activate such a tool is large, for example, in excess of 15,000 lbs. In some instances, such a large force cannot be supplied by the conduit noted above.
A pyrotechnic setting tool is commonly used in the industry to activate the tools noted above. For example, a Baker style E-4 wireline pressure setting tool utilizes an externally mounted, manually operated, rupture type disc in order to release the internal high pressure gas once the setting tool is returned to the surface.
This setting tool 100 is shown in
A cylinder 110 is attached, through a manual bleeder valve sub 105, having a connection 105A (e.g., threaded connection), to a housing 107 of the pressure chamber 104 and this cylinder fluidly communicates with the pressure chamber. Thus, when the power charge 106 burns, the high pressure gas 108 generated inside the pressure chamber 104 is guided into the cylinder 110. A floating piston 112, which is located inside the cylinder 110, is pushed by the pressure of the gas 108 to the right in the figure. Oil 115, stored in a first chamber 114 of the cylinder 110, is pushed through a connector sub 116 and a metering orifice 117, which are formed in a block 118 that is connected to the cylinder 110, to a second chamber 120, which is formed in a lower second cylinder 121. A second piston 122 is located in the lower second cylinder 121. Under the pressure exerted by the oil 115, the piston 122 and a piston rod 124 move downstream while exerting a large force on a crosslink 126, which transfers that force developed internally to moveable external crosslink sleeve 128. A setting sleeve 131 for the wellbore tool 150 to be set is attached to the lower end of the crosslink sleeve 128. The wellbore tool 150 is attached to the setting mandrel 133 by releasable means such as a partible stud, shear screws, etc.
Thus, when the setting tool is actuated, the setting sleeve 131 pushes components of the wellbore tool 150 to expand gripping members and a rubber packing while, at the same time, the setting mandrel 133 is holding the wellbore tool's interior body. When a predetermined force is reached, the releasing means fails, which frees the setting tool 100 for retrieval while the wellbore tool 150 is set. Note that cylinder 121 has the downstream end 130 sealed with a cylinder head 132 that allows the piston rod 124 to move downstream.
After the setting tool has been recovered to the surface, a large volume of pressurized gas 108 exists internally and must be bled away in order to clean and ready the setting tool for reuse. This high pressure gas 108 has comingled with the oil 115 used to stroke the wellbore tool, therefore rendering the oil too contaminated for reuse. Thus, this oil needs to be removed from the setting tool and be disposed of to prepare the setting tool for another use. To remove the high pressure gas and replace the contaminated oil, the entire setting tool must be disassembled and the parts cleaned and reassembled. This is not only time consuming, but also dangerous (bleeding the gas pressure off), especially at remote locations with improper faculties.
Relieving the high pressure gas 108 inside the pressure chamber 104 is not only dangerous to the health of the workers performing the task, because of the toxic gases left behind by the burning of the power charge, but is also a safety issue because the high pressure gas remaining inside the pressure chamber is high enough to injure the workers if its release procedure is not adhered to.
In this regard, note that the traditional setting tool 100 has a release valve 140 that is used for manually venting the high pressure gas from inside the pressure chamber. However, when the release valve 140 is improperly removed from the pressure chamber, the valve can become a flying projectile and injure the person removing it. For this reason, a dedicated removing procedure is put in place and also a safety sleeve is used to cover the release valve for relieving the pressure from the setting tool.
However, this procedure is cumbersome, time consuming and still, if a person misses any detail of the procedure, that person can get hurt by the release valve. Thus there is a need to create a safe method of automatically bleeding the high gas pressure from inside the setting tool while the setting tool is still inside the well bore. There is also a need to prevent comingling of the high pressure gas with the oil used to create the stroke motion of the setting tool. If these goals can be achieved, then once the setting tool is returned to the surface, all that would be required to do to return the setting tool to service is to wash out the ballistic power charge chamber, replace the expendables, and push the oil/piston back to their original position. Thus, there is a need for such an advanced setting tool.
According to an embodiment, there is a setting tool for setting an auxiliary tool in a well. The setting tool includes a housing holding a floating piston assembly, an isolation valve assembly in fluid contact with an interior of the housing, and a frangible disc located to prevent a high-pressure gas to pass through a bore of the floating piston assembly.
According to another embodiment, there is a retrofitting kit for a setting tool for setting an auxiliary tool in a well. The retrofitting kit includes an isolation valve assembly to be located in a housing of the setting tool, and a floating piston assembly having a frangible disc. The frangible disc is located to prevent a pressured gas to move past the floating piston assembly into the housing.
According to still another embodiment, there is a method for shutting off a flow of oil and venting out a pressured gas from a setting tool. The method includes a step of lowering a setting tool into a well; a step of activating the setting tool so that a pressured gas is generated in the setting tool, and the pressured gas acts on a frangible disc that seals a bore of a floating piston assembly, where the disc prevents the pressured gas to move past the floating piston assembly; a step of translating an isolation valve assembly located in a housing of the setting tool to shut off a flow of oil; a step of opening a side port formed in the housing; and a step of breaking the frangible disc of the floating piston assembly to expel the pressured gas outside the housing, through the side port.
The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated in and constitute a part of the specification, illustrate one or more embodiments and, together with the description, explain these embodiments. In the drawings:
The following description of the embodiments refers to the accompanying drawings. The same reference numbers in different drawings identify the same or similar elements. The following detailed description does not limit the invention. Instead, the scope of the invention is defined by the appended claims. The following embodiments are discussed, for simplicity, with regard to a setting tool. However, the embodiments discussed herein are also applicable to any tool in which a high-pressure gas is generated and then that high-pressure gas needs to be released outside the tool quickly and in efficient manner.
Reference throughout the specification to “one embodiment” or “an embodiment” means that a particular feature, structure or characteristic described in connection with an embodiment is included in at least one embodiment of the subject matter disclosed. Thus, the appearance of the phrases “in one embodiment” or “in an embodiment” in various places throughout the specification is not necessarily referring to the same embodiment. Further, the particular features, structures or characteristics may be combined in any suitable manner in one or more embodiments.
According to an embodiment, an auto-bleeding setting tool has a floating piston assembly that separates the burnt gas (the gas that creates the residual unwanted pressure) from the oil that is used to set the wellbore device attached to the setting tool. The floating piston assembly incorporates a through bore that is temporally blocked by a frangible o-ring sealed disc that is held in place by a disc retainer. Placed inside the disc retainer is a rupture pin or bleed pin, which is held in a retarded position by two or more frangible shear screws. All elements of the floating piston assembly move as one when subjected to gas pressure produced by the burning pyrotechnic power charge. The floating piston assembly is placed inside a cylinder that is connected to the pressure chamber. The void space inside the cylinder, below the floating piston assembly, is filled with oil and the configuration of the floating piston assembly prevents the generated gas from comingling with the oil. The novel floating piston assembly can be retrofitted to an existing setting tool as now discussed.
The bleed pin 226 has a second end 226B, which is opposite to the first end 226A. The second end 226B has a partial bore 226C extending longitudinally along the bleed pin and starting on a downstream face, and also has a port 226D formed in a side of the bleed pin. Note that the partial bore 226C does not extend through the entire bleed pin. The partial bore 226C and the port 226D fluidly communicate with each other.
The bleed pin 226 is attached to the retainer nut 225 with two or more breakable pins 227. The bleed pin 226 has a shoulder 231 that mates with a corresponding shoulder 230 formed in the passage 228 of the piston body 221, when the bleed pin moves towards the retainer nut. However, in the initial configuration shown in
One or more o-rings 234 may be located on the outer part of the body 221 to seal an interface between the body and the housing 210, when the floating piston assembly 220 is placed inside the housing. Note that the floating piston assembly 220 of
The isolation valve assembly 240 is now discussed with regard to
Sleeve insert 444, in turn, has its own bore 446 into which a moveable isolation valve 450 is located. The moveable isolation valve 450 is attached in
Oil 115 from the hydraulic chamber 104 (see
However, at a location approximately mid-way of the setting tool stroke, the burning power charge 106 will have produced enough gas pressure to fully set and release, in step 604, from the wellbore tool 150. The setting tool 200 stroke travel will continue to its design limit and the automatic oil flow shut-off begin to occur in step 606.
As the floating piston assembly 220 continues to move downstream toward the isolation valve assembly 240, the disc bleed pin 226 contained inside the floating piston body 221, contacts and pushes against the upstream end of the isolation valve 250. As the force and movement is increased, the frangible shear screw 448 (see
As the isolation valve 450 is being pushed downstream inside the body 441 as illustrated in
As the gas pressure in the pressure chamber 104 continues to exert a downstream push force on the floating piston assembly 220, the downstream end 226B of the bleed pin 226 is still pushing on the now immovable isolation valve 450 (see
In this respect,
The setting tool 200 discussed in the previous embodiments may be used in a well as now discussed with regard to
The typical process of connecting the casing to the subterranean formation may include the following steps: (1) connecting the plug 1120, which has a through port 1140 (known as a frac plug), to the setting tool 200, (2) lowering the setting tool 200 and the plug 1120 into the well, (3) setting up the plug by actuating the setting tool, and (4) perforating a new stage 1170 above the plug 1120. The step of perforating may be achieved with a gun string 1200 that is lowered into the well with a wireline 1220. A controller 1240 located at the surface controls the wireline 1220 and also sends various commands along the wireline to actuate one or more gun assemblies of the gun string or the setting tool 200, which is attached to the most distal gun assembly.
A traditional gun string 1200 includes plural carriers 1260 connected to each other by corresponding subs 1280, as illustrated in
The setting tool discussed above may be manufactured to have the configuration illustrated in the previous figures. However, one skilled in the art would understand that the novel features shown in the above figures may also be implemented retroactively into the existing setting tools. Thus, in one embodiment, the floating piston of a traditional setting tool may be replaced with the floating piston assembly 220 shown in
A method for shutting-off the oil flow and bleeding off the gas in a setting tool, as illustrated above, is now discussed with regard to
The method may further include a step of translating the floating piston assembly along the housing under pressure from the pressured gas, to force a hydraulic liquid, which is stored between the floating piston assembly and the isolation valve assembly, to move past the isolation valve assembly, and/or a step of contacting the floating piston assembly with the isolation valve assembly, a step of pushing a moveable isolation valve of the floating piston assembly relative to a sleeve insert of the isolation valve assembly, to shut off the flow of the hydraulic liquid past the isolation valve assembly, and/or a step of further pushing the moveable isolation valve with the floating piston assembly so that a bleed pin of the floating piston assembly breaks from a connection with a body of the floating piston assembly and breaks the frangible disc to release the pressured gas outside the setting tool.
The disclosed embodiments provide methods and systems for automatically bleeding off a pressurized gas from a setting tool while located in a well and also shutting off a valve for preventing the pressurized gas to commingle with the oil used to actuated the setting tool. It should be understood that this description is not intended to limit the invention. On the contrary, the exemplary embodiments are intended to cover alternatives, modifications and equivalents, which are included in the spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims. Further, in the detailed description of the exemplary embodiments, numerous specific details are set forth in order to provide a comprehensive understanding of the claimed invention. However, one skilled in the art would understand that various embodiments may be practiced without such specific details.
Although the features and elements of the present exemplary embodiments are described in the embodiments in particular combinations, each feature or element can be used alone without the other features and elements of the embodiments or in various combinations with or without other features and elements disclosed herein.
This written description uses examples of the subject matter disclosed to enable any person skilled in the art to practice the same, including making and using any devices or systems and performing any incorporated methods. The patentable scope of the subject matter is defined by the claims, and may include other examples that occur to those skilled in the art. Such other examples are intended to be within the scope of the claims.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20200256156 A1 | Aug 2020 | US |