The field of this invention is well completions and more particularly liner cementing of a well drilled with electric line coiled tubing using the same coiled tubing as was used to drill the well.
One way a wellbore can be drilled is to use a downhole motor supported by coiled tubing. A drill bit is powered by the downhole motor and flow through the coiled tubing operates the motor. Part of the bottom hole assembly includes known tools to steer the bit so that the well is drilled with the desired orientation. The communication between the bottom hole assembly (BHA) and the surface takes place through an electric line inside the coiled tubing. After the well was drilled to the target depth, the BHA was removed with reeling in the coiled tubing and a separate coil of coiled tubing without an electric line was connected to a liner to be run in to hole bottom and then cemented.
The reason that two separate coils were required was that the coil used for drilling had the electric line in it and when it came time to displace cement that had to go through the coiled tubing a wiper plug that was typically used for cement displacement could not go down the coiled tubing because the electric line was in it. To get around this problem in the past, a separate coiled tubing reel was kept at the surface of the well so that at the conclusion of the drilling operation the reel of coiled tubing without the electric line could be deployed along with a liner running tool so that the liner could be delivered to hole bottom. Once on bottom the liner was released but remained in a sealed relation to the running tool so that cement could be delivered in the required volume into the liner. The liner had a cementing shoe on bottom. Typically, the liner had a wiper plug on top with a passage through it through which the cement was delivered. After delivery of a measured volume of cement a dart would be launched to land in the wiper plug and pressure was built up to launch the wiper plug to land it just above the cement shoe at the liner bottom. This would push all the cement into the annular space surrounding the liner. The coiled tubing could then be released from the liner and the excess cement circulated out. The coiled tubing would then be coiled up on the reel at the surface. While this procedure got the job done it was expensive to keep two coiled tubing reels at the well site and the present invention addresses a way to get the same job done without employing the second coiled tubing assembly. It can also provide an assurance that uncontaminated cement is delivered to the annulus around the liner to be cemented and a way to remove an excess amount of barrier cement from the coiled tubing to insure its continuing functionality for other jobs. These and other aspects of the present invention will be more readily apparent to those skilled in the art from a review of the detailed description of the preferred embodiment and the associated drawings while recognizing that the full scope of the invention is to be determined by the literal and equivalent scope of the attached claims.
An open hole is drilled with coiled tubing that has an electric line. At the conclusion of drilling the drilling bottom hole assembly is removed and a liner running tool is connected between the coiled tubing and the liner. The electric line remains in the coiled tubing but spacers can be added to keep the lower end of the electric line away from the running tool. A wiper plug has a passage therethrough and a movable stinger that can hold open a pair of flapper valves. The liner is released from the running tool and cement is delivered through the stinger with a bit of excess that is above the running tool. The lifting of the stinger with the coiled tubing closes the flappers and allows circulation out of excess cement. Setting down on the coiled tubing allows a seal to re-engage in the deployment sleeve, allowing pressure to be placed against the wiper plug, such that it can be launched to displace the remaining cement within the liner into the annulus around the liner.
Referring to
The running tool 20 has a housing 46 that has external seals 48 to engage the liner 50 as well as a gripping mechanism 52 to engage groove 54 for run in and to selectively release from groove 54, as shown in
The various parts of the apparatus now having been identified, the operation of the tool will be reviewed in greater detail. In
Those skilled in the art will appreciate that the coiled tubing with electric line can now do double duty. The wiper plug can have one or more valves of different designs. The excess cement delivery is optional but helps to confirm that the tail end of the cement delivered below the wiper plug is not contaminated by the fluid behind it that delivered it. Alternatively the running tool can have a ported sleeve to allow excess cement to be circulated out. In broad terms the invention allows the reuse of electric line coiled tubing to cement after the same coiled tubing is used to make the hole. This saves the operator significant sums of money by not needing a second coiled tubing reel to be retained on site. Other modes of delivering the sealing material past the plug and then closing off the plug so it can be launched are contemplated. With the electric line in the coiled tubing, delivering a sealing member through the coiled tubing is challenging but is an alternative mode of operation contemplated by the present invention.
The above description is illustrative of the preferred embodiment and various alternatives and is not intended to embody the broadest scope of the invention, which is determined from the claims appended below, and properly given their full scope literally and equivalently.
This application claims priority from U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/122,914, filed on Dec. 16, 2008.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
7325606 | Vail et al. | Feb 2008 | B1 |
7857052 | Giroux et al. | Dec 2010 | B2 |
20080128128 | Vail et al. | Jun 2008 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20100218951 A1 | Sep 2010 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
61122914 | Dec 2008 | US |