Various types and shapes of earth boring bits are used in various applications in today's earth drilling industry. The earth boring bits have bit bodies which include various features such as a core, blades, and pockets that extend into the bit body. Depending on the application, the drill bits may contain cutting elements such as polycrystalline diamond cutters (PDCs) and therefore be called PDC bits. Other bits have diamonds impregnated into the bit bodies for drilling through earthen formations. Such bits may also contain hot-pressed cutting elements called Grit hot-pressed inserts (GHIs). The cutting elements are received within the bit body pockets and are typically bonded to the bit body by brazing to the inner surfaces of the pockets. Bit bodies are typically made either from steel or from a tungsten carbide matrix. Bits made from the tungsten carbide matrix typically include a separately formed reinforcing member made of steel, and which is bonded to the matrix. The reinforcing member is positioned in the core section of the bit body and protrudes from the bit body.
The matrix bit body is typically formed of a single, relatively homogenous composition throughout the bit body. The single composition may constitute either a single matrix material such as tungsten carbide or a mixture of matrix materials such as different forms of tungsten carbide. The matrix material or mixture thereof, is commonly bonded into solid form by fusing a metallic binder material and the matrix material or mixture.
The drill bit formation process typically includes placing a matrix powder in a mold. The mold is commonly formed of graphite and may be machined into various suitable shapes. Displacements are typically added to the mold to define the pockets. The matrix powder may be a powder of a single matrix material such as tungsten carbide, or it may be a mixture of more than one matrix material such as different forms of tungsten carbide. The matrix powder may include further components such as metal additives. Metallic binder material is then typically placed over the matrix powder. The components within the mold are then heated in a furnace to the flow or infiltration temperature of the binder material at which the melted binder material infiltrates the tungsten carbide or other matrix material. This heating process is commonly referred to as sintering or liquid phase sintering. The infiltration process which occurs during sintering, bonds the grains of matrix material to each other and to the other components to form a solid bit body that is relatively homogenous throughout. The sintering process also causes the matrix material to bond to other structures that it contacts, such as a metallic blank which may be suspended within the mold to produce the aforementioned reinforcing member. After formation of the bit body, a protruding section of the metallic blank may be welded to a second component called an upper section. The upper section typically has a tapered portion that is threaded onto a drilling string.
The bit body typically includes blades which support the PDCs or GHIs which, in turn, perform the cutting operation. The blades may take on various shapes and may be reinforced with natural or synthetic diamonds formed on their respective surfaces, or they may be impregnated with diamond crystals throughout.
The drill bit body is typically formed to include cavities, commonly referred to as pockets, that extend into the bit body. The pockets which receive the cutting elements, are generally formed in the blade regions of the bit body.
The matrix material or materials determine the mechanical properties of the bit body. These mechanical properties include, but are not limited to, transverse rupture strength (TRS), toughness (resistance to impact-type fracture), hardness, wear resistance (including resistance to erosion from rapidly flowing drilling fluid and abrasion from rock formations), steel bond strength between the matrix material and steel reinforcing elements, such as a steel blank, and strength of the bond to the cutting elements, i.e., braze strength, between the finished body material and the PDC insert, GHI, or other cutting element. Abrasion resistance represents another such mechanical property.
The mechanical properties of the formed drill bit body may also be affected by the binder material used as well as the presence of diamond crystals impregnated within the bit body.
According to conventional drill bit manufacturing, a single matrix powder is selected in conjunction with the binder material, to provide desired mechanical properties to the bit body. The single matrix powder is packed throughout the mold to form a bit body having the same mechanical properties throughout. It would, however, be desirable to optimize the overall structure of the drill bit body by providing different mechanical properties to different portions of the drill bit body, in essence tailoring the bit body. For example, wear resistance is especially desirable at regions around the cutting elements and throughout the outer surface of the bit body, high strength and toughness are especially desirable at the bit blades and throughout the bulk of the bit body, superior braze strength is desirable in the pockets to which cutting inserts are brazed, and steel bond strength is desirable in the core region which is bonded to the steel blank. According to the conventional art, the choice of the single matrix powder represents a compromise, as it must be chosen to produce one of the properties that are desirable in one region, generally at the expense of another property or properties that may be desirable in another region.
It is therefore a shortcoming of the conventional art that a drill bit cannot be formed to include different desirable mechanical properties in different regions of the drill bit body. The present invention addresses these shortcomings.
The present invention is directed to a solid structural body, such as a drill bit body, that is formed of different matrix materials and is optimized to include different functional properties in different spatial locations. The present invention also provides methods for forming such a structural body.
In an exemplary embodiment, the present invention is directed to a drill bit body. The drill bit body is a solid structural body having a portion formed of a first composition and a further portion formed of a second composition. The first composition differs from the second composition. The portion may be the core, a blade, or the liner of a cavity extending into said solid structural body for receiving a cutting element therein. The first composition may consist primarily of a first matrix material and the second composition primarily of a second matrix material, the first matrix material being different from the second matrix material. The first and second compositions provide different functional properties to respective portions of the bit body.
In another exemplary embodiment of the invention, a method for forming such a drill bit body is provided. The method includes providing a mold and packing or filling at least part of the mold with a first matrix powder and a second matrix powder to produce a drill bit body having a portion formed of the first matrix powder and a further portion formed of the second matrix powder. The first matrix powder differs from the second matrix powder, and the portion may be the core, a blade or the liner of a cavity extending into the drill bit body for receiving a cutting element.
The invention is best understood from the following detailed description when read in conjunction with the accompanying drawings. It is emphasized that, according to common practice, the various features of the drawing are not to scale. On the contrary, the dimensions of the various features may be arbitrarily expanded or reduced for clarity. Like numbers denote like features throughout the specification and drawings. Included are the following figures:
The present invention provides a solid structural body of matrix material, such as a drill bit body, in which a feature of the bit body is formed from a matrix powder that is different from the matrix powder used to form other portions of the bit body. The feature may be the core, blades, or teeth of the bit body, the linings of a pocket that extends into the bit body for receiving cutting elements or surface portions adjacent the pocket. The different matrix powders produce different compositions that provide different functional properties. The present invention also provides a method for forming the bit body by packing a mold using different matrix powders in different portions of the mold.
Each of matrix powders 10, 14, 16, and 18 consists of at least one matrix material such as tungsten carbide, and an optional metal additive or additives. Cobalt (Co), iron (Fe), nickel (Ni), or other transition metals are suitable metal additives. The metal additives may be present in various weight percentages within the particular matrix powder. One or more metal additives may be used. In an exemplary embodiment, each metal additive may be present at a weight percentage of up to 10% by weight and the total weight percentage of all metal additives may be up to 15% by weight.
Various suitable materials may be used as matrix materials. In one exemplary embodiment, the matrix material may be formed of tungsten carbide, WC. More specifically, the matrix material may be a particular type of tungsten carbide such as macro-crystalline tungsten carbide, cast tungsten carbide, carburized tungsten carbide or sintered tungsten carbide. The sintered tungsten carbide may be crushed or pelletized. In another exemplary embodiment, the matrix powder may include two or more matrix materials. For example, the matrix powder may include a mixture of two or more of the aforementioned types of WC. The two or more types of matrix materials may be combined in various weight proportions. In other exemplary embodiments, materials other than tungsten carbide may be the matrix material or may form part of the matrix material included in the matrix powder. As such, one matrix powder may differ from another matrix powder by having one or more of the above-described attributes being different.
Furthermore, one matrix powder may differ from another matrix powder only in particle size. Similarly, one matrix powder may differ from another matrix powder because a component included in both matrix powders has different particle sizes in the two matrix powders. The “particle size” may be the average particle size of the overall matrix powder or component, or it may represent the particle size distribution within the overall matrix powder or component. Matrix powders will differ from one another if a particular component, i.e. a matrix material and/or metal additive, is included in each of the matrix powders but includes different average particle sizes or different particle size distributions. Similarly, matrix powders will differ from one another if they include different weight proportions of components having different particle sizes. In addition, the matrix powders may include diamond crystals, also known as diamond grit, in various concentrations and having various particle sizes.
As shown in
The different matrix powders may be packed into the discrete regions within the mold as illustrated in
After the multiple matrix powders are packed into mold 2, a binder material or materials may be added over the packed mold, and the arrangement sintered. That is, a heating process is carried out to elevate the temperature of mold 2 and the components in interior 6 of mold 2 and to cause the binder materials, usually copper or nickel based alloys (not shown) to infiltrate and cement the matrix powders. By infiltration, it is meant that the molten binder material flows through the spaces between the matrix material grains by means of capillary action. More particularly, the infiltration process bonds the grains of the matrix material within the matrix powder to each other to solidify the components within the mold to produce a solid bit body, and also bonds the matrix material to other structures that it contacts. For example, the infiltration process also causes the interfacial portion of matrix powder 16 to bond to metallic blank 20. Conventional sintering processes are available and may be used.
Each of the matrix powders illustrated in
Each of the matrix powders illustrated in
One exemplary matrix powder may consist of cast tungsten carbide at 30% by weight, carburized tungsten carbide at 62% by weight, and nickel powder as a metal additive at 8% by weight. The exemplary matrix powder may include an overall particle size distribution as follows: 2% wt. of 80 mesh particle size (177 μm average particle size); 14% wt. of 120 mesh particle size (125 μm average particle size); 19% wt. of 170 mesh particle size (88 μm average particle size); 20% wt. of 230 mesh particle size (63 μm average particle size); 14% wt. of 325 mesh particle size (44 μm average particle size); and 33% wt. of 400 mesh particle size (30 μm average particle size). In an exemplary embodiment, a solid bit body formed by this exemplary matrix powder is characterized as having a toughness of about 32 in/lb., a braze push-out load of about 18,000 pounds, a transverse-rupture strength (TRS) of 140 ksi, and a steel bond push-out load of about 70,000 pounds.
Another exemplary matrix powder may consist of carburized tungsten carbide at 70% by weight and having a particle size range of 20-60 μm; cast tungsten carbide with a particle size range of 30-150 μm at 20% by weight; and, cast tungsten carbide with a particle size range of 5-20 μm at 10% by weight. This exemplary matrix powder is solidified to form a solid bit body that exhibits a braze push-out load of about 22,300 pounds. This represents an 11% to 24% improvement over a typical braze push-out load of 18,000 to 20,000 pounds.
Other matrix powders may be used in other exemplary embodiments. The various matrix powders may include different components at various weight percentages and the matrix powders and the components within the matrix powders may include different average particle sizes and various particle size distribution ranges.
Each of
It should be understood that the above-described and illustrated exemplary embodiments are exemplary and not restrictive of the present invention. According to other exemplary embodiments, the formed drill bit body may be formed using two or more different matrix powders disposed in various locations in the mold that will form various features in the formed bit body. Each of the different matrix powders corresponds to a different composition with different functional properties in the formed drill bit body.
The preceding merely illustrates the principles of the invention. It will thus be appreciated that those skilled in the art will be able to devise various arrangements which, although not The preceding merely illustrates the principles of the invention. It will thus be appreciated that those skilled in the art will be able to devise various arrangements which, although not explicitly described or shown herein, embody the principles of the invention and are included within its scope and spirit. Furthermore, all examples and conditional language recited herein are principally intended expressly to be only for pedagogical purposes and to aid in understanding the principles of the invention and the concepts contributed by the inventors to furthering the art, and are to be construed as being without limitation to such specifically recited examples and conditions. Moreover, all statements herein reciting principles, aspects, and embodiments of the invention, as well as specific examples thereof, are intended to encompass both structural and the functional equivalents thereof. Additionally, it is intended that such equivalents include both currently known equivalents and equivalents developed in the future, i.e., any elements developed that perform the same function, regardless of structure. The scope of the present invention, therefore, is not intended to be limited to the exemplary embodiments shown and described herein. Rather, the scope and spirit of the present invention is embodied by the appended claims.
This application is a divisional application of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/454,924, filed on Jun. 5, 2003, which is related to co-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/455217, filed on Jun. 5, 2003, and co-pending U.S. application Ser. No. 10/455,281, filed on Jun. 5, 2003, the contents of each of which are hereby fully incorporated by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10454924 | Jun 2003 | US |
Child | 11250097 | Oct 2005 | US |