1. Field of the Invention
Embodiments of this invention are generally related to safety valves. More particularly, embodiments of this invention pertain to subsurface safety valves configured to control fluid flow through a production tubing string.
2. Description of the Related Art
Safety Valves are designed to minimize the loss of reservoir resources or production equipment resulting from catastrophic subsurface events by shutting in the well. The “standard” safety valve achieves this by design with one “active control line”. The normally closed safety valves are controlled from the surface via a hydraulic control line that extends from the valve, through the wellhead to a surface controlled emergency closure system. Hydraulic pressure PC applied through the control line maintains the valve in the opened position. Removal of control line pressure returns the valve to its normally closed position. Setting depth directly affects the operational characteristics of the valve due to the hydrostatic pressures PH created from the normal control system.
Conventional safety valve design incorporates a hydraulic piston and spring to open and close the valve. The hydraulic chamber housing the piston is connected to the surface by a hydraulic control line. Pressure is applied to this control line to hold the valve in the open position. Hydrostatic or “head” pressure PH is always present in the control line due to the column of fluid between the safety valve and the surface.
Functionally, control line pressure PC actuates a piston which is mechanically linked to a “flow tube”. The flow tube traverses across a closed flapper thus opening the flow through the safety valve and its tubing. When the surface pressure is released, a return spring returns the valve back to its closed position. The nature of the design is such that the tubing pressure PT, which acts against the active control line piston effect, will assist in valve closure.
To open the valve, hydraulic pressure PC is applied to the upper end of the piston, via the control line, forcing the flow tube downward, opening the flapper.
To close the valve, the applied hydraulic pressure PC is removed from the upper end of the piston. There are two forces available now to force the flow tube upward allowing the flapper to close. The spring now furnishes an upward force FS sufficient to counteract the downward force due to the hydrostatic pressure PH of the fluid in the hydraulic control line. This causes the flow tube to move upward allowing the flapper to close. Tubing pressure PT at the safety valve will also apply an upward force on the hydraulic piston. This will assist the piston in the upward movement of the flow tube allowing the flapper to close.
In a deep set application, the active control line hydrostatic pressure PH is significant, such that a spring may not be able to overcome the hydrostatic pressure, thus not allowing the flapper to close. To compensate for the active control line's hydrostatic pressure PH, a second “balance” line is used to negate the affect of hydrostatic pressure PH from active control line. In existing balance line valves, the second line acts on the underside of the piston, to balance the hydrostatic pressure PH. However, in this design, since the underside of the piston is in fluid communication with the balance line, it is no longer in fluid communication with the tubing; thereby the beneficial effect of the tubing pressure PT is not utilized.
Therefore, there is a need for a safety valve that balances the control line hydrostatic pressure PH while still utilizing the tubing pressure PT to aid in closure of the valve.
The present invention generally relates to a subsurface safety valve configured to control fluid flow through a production tubing string. In one aspect, a safety valve for deployment beneath a surface of a wellbore is provided. The valve includes a control piston and a balance piston. The valve is configured to be connected to a controller at the surface by a control line so that the control piston is actuatable between a first position and a second position in response to receiving pressurized fluid from the controller through the control line. The balance piston is configured to compensate for hydrostatic pressure in the control line. The valve may have a bore therethrough and the control piston may be configured to utilize tubing pressure within the valve bore to urge the control piston towards the second position.
In another aspect, a subsurface safety valve is provided. The valve includes a flow tube having a bore therethrough; a control piston having two sides isolated from each other by a seal assembly and coupled to the flow tube; and a balance piston having two sides isolated from each other by a seal assembly and selectively coupled to the flow tube. The valve is configured so that the control piston will receive a control pressure on the first side and the balance piston will receive a hydrostatic pressure on the second side.
The flow tube may be actuatable between a first position and a second position and the balance piston may be selectively coupled to the flow tube so that the balance piston may urge the flow tube towards the second position but not towards the first position. The second side of the control piston may be in fluid communication with the flow tube bore. The second side of the balance piston may be in fluid communication with the flow tube bore. The valve may further include at least one housing, wherein the flow tube, the control piston, and the balance piston are disposed within the housing and the balance piston may be selectively coupled to the housing. The valve may further include a flapper coupled to the housing and a flapper spring coupled between the flapper and the housing, wherein the flapper may be actuatable by the flow tube between a first position and a second position and the flapper spring biases the flapper in the second position.
In another aspect, a subsurface safety valve is provided. The valve includes a control piston configured to open the valve by receiving pressurized fluid from a control line and means for compensating for hydrostatic pressure in a control line to the valve while utilizing tubing pressure within the valve to assist in closure of the valve.
So that the manner in which the above recited features of the present invention can be understood in detail, a more particular description of the invention, briefly summarized above, may be had by reference to embodiments, some of which are illustrated in the appended drawings. It is to be noted, however, that the appended drawings illustrate only typical embodiments of this invention and are therefore not to be considered limiting of its scope, for the invention may admit to other equally effective embodiments.
The present invention is generally directed to a subsurface safety valve assembly for controlling fluid flow in a wellbore. To the extent a term used in a claim is not defined below, it should be given the broadest definition persons in the pertinent art have given that term, as reflected in printed publications and issued patents. In the description that follows, like parts are marked throughout the specification and drawings with the same reference numerals. The drawings may be, but are not necessarily, to scale and the proportions of certain parts have been exaggerated to better illustrate details and features of the invention. One of normal skill in the art of subsurface safety valves will appreciate that the various embodiments of the invention can and may be used in all types of subsurface safety valves, including but not limited to tubing retrievable or wireline retrievable valves.
For ease of explanation, the invention will be described generally in relation to a cased vertical wellbore. It is to be understood; however, that the invention may be employed in an open wellbore, a horizontal wellbore, or a diverging wellbore without departing from principles of the present invention. Furthermore, a land well is shown for the purpose of illustration, however, it is understood that the invention may also be employed in offshore wells.
The wellbore 100 has been lined with a string of casing 105. A plurality of perforations 110 has been disposed through the casing 105, thereby establishing fluid communication between a formation 115 and the production tubing 120. Thereafter, the production tubing 120 with the safety valve 200 disposed therein is deployed in the wellbore 100 to a predetermined depth. Next, the production tubing 120 is secured in the wellbore proximate a desired zone of interest or a formation 115. Hydrocarbons (illustrated by arrows) flow into the production tubing 120 through the safety valve 200, through a valve 135, and out into a flow line 130. The flow of hydrocarbons may be stopped at any time during the production operation by switching the valve assembly 200 from the open position to the closed position as will be described in more detail in the following paragraphs.
The valve 200 further includes a chamber housing 255 disposed adjacent the top sub 270 and a spring housing 280 coupled to the chamber housing 255. An annulus 240 is formed between the spring housing and a flow tube 225. The chamber housing 255 includes a control chamber 245A and a balance chamber 245B. An upper end of the control chamber 245A is in fluid communication with the control line 145A and a lower end of the balance chamber 245B in fluid communication with the balance line 145B (only a port shown for the line, line not shown in this view). Routing of a passage through the chamber housing 255 from the balance line 145B to the balance chamber 245B may be accomplished in several ways and is not shown as it would be well within one of ordinary skill in the art. Disposed in the control chamber 245A is a control piston 205A. The control piston 205A is movable between an upper position and a lower position in response to control pressure PC in the upper end of the control chamber 245A. A seal assembly 215A is disposed on an upper end of the control piston 205A to isolate the upper end of the control chamber 145A. The lower end of the control piston 205A is exposed to pressure PT within the valve assembly 200.
Disposed in the balance chamber 245B is the balance piston 205B. The balance piston 205B is movable between a lower position and an upper position in response to hydrostatic pressure PH in the balance chamber 245B. A seal assembly 215B is disposed on a lower end of the balance piston 205B to isolate the lower end of the balance chamber 245B. A cap 211 is coupled to the chamber housing 255 to form a bottom of the balance chamber 245B. A block 207 is coupled to an upper end of the balance piston 205B to mate with a shoulder 214 of the chamber housing 255 and a shoulder 209 of the flow tube 225 (see
As illustrated in
Disposed below the spacer bearing 265 is a flapper 220. The flapper 220 is rotationally attached by a pin 230 to a flapper mount 290. The flapper 220 may move between an open position and a closed position in response to movement of the flow tube 225. In the open position (see
Further illustrated in
For the sake of simplicity, and for further discussion of the operation of the valve 200, the tubing pressure PT within the valve 200 will be assumed to be equal to the pressure on an underside of the flapper 220 when the flapper 220 is closed so that there is no pressure difference across the flapper 220.
To open the valve from the closed position, where the balance piston 205B is active, the control pressure PC is exerted on the control piston 205A as discussed above. The force exerted by the control pressure PC that will be applied will now have to overcome only FS to open the valve but without the aid of the hydrostatic pressure PH (since it is effectively cancelled by the activity of the balance piston 205B).
In the embodiment of
In another alternative embodiment of the valve 200, the balance piston 205B would be modified to receive a second seal assembly between the balance seal assembly 215B and the block 207. This would create an intermediate pressure chamber between the two seal assemblies. A port would be provided to this pressure chamber and the port would be connected to the control line 145A. This would create a “fail safe” valve. The failure of balance seal assembly 215B would then be of little consequence to valve closure since the intermediate pressure chamber would be at the hydrostatic pressure PH when attempting to close the valve 200. Failure of the second seal assembly would have a similar result to actuation of the override device 305 in the embodiment of
In yet another alternative embodiment of the valve 200, a plurality of balance pistons would be included in the event of failure of one of the balance pistons. Additional balance lines could be run in with the valve or the additional balance pistons could be connected to the single balance line with bypass valves.
In yet another alternative embodiment of the valve 200, the cross sectional area of the balance piston 205B is larger than that of the control piston 205A and the biasing member 210 is removed. The greater closing force of the larger balance piston compensates for the missing force generated by the biasing member 210.
Although the invention has been described in part by making detailed reference to specific embodiments, such detail is intended to be and will be understood to be instructional rather than restrictive. It should be noted that while embodiments of the invention disclosed herein are described in connection with a subsurface safety valve assembly, the embodiments described herein may be used with any well completion equipment, such as a packer, a sliding sleeve, a landing nipple and the like.
While the foregoing is directed to embodiments of the present invention, other and further embodiments of the invention may be devised without departing from the basic scope thereof, and the scope thereof is determined by the claims that follow.
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