This invention relates in general to electrical submersible well pumps, and in particular to couplings between splined shafts of an electrical submersible pump.
Electrical submersible pumps (ESP) are commonly used for hydrocarbon well production,
The pumping system 10 includes an electrical submersible pump (ESP) 14 with production tubing 24 attached to its upper end. The ESP 14 comprises a motor 16, an equalizer or seal 18, a separator 20, and a pump 22. A fluid inlet 26 is formed in the housing in the region of the ESP 14 proximate to the separator section 20. The fluid inlet 26 provides a passage for the produced hydrocarbons within the wellbore 5 to enter the ESP 14 and flow to the pump 22. Fluid pressurized by the pump 22 is conveyed through the production tubing 24 connecting the ESP 14 discharge to the wellhead 12. The pump 22 and separator 20 are powered by the motor 16 via a shaft (not shown) that extends from the motor 16. The shaft is typically coupled to respective shafts in each of the pump 22, separator 20, and seal 14.
Delivering the rotational torque generated by an ESP motor 16 typically involves coupling a motor shaft (i.e., a shaft connected to a motor or power source) to one end of a driven shaft, wherein the other end of the driven shaft is connected to and drives rotating machinery. Examples of rotating machinery include a pump, a separator, and tandem pumps. One type of coupling comprises adding splines on the respective ends of the shafts being coupled and inserting an annular collar over the splined ends, where the annular collar includes corresponding splines on its inner surface. The rotational force is well distributed over the splines, thereby reducing some problems of stress concentrations that may occur with keys, pins, or set screws. Examples of a spline cross-section include an involute and a square tooth. Typically, splines having an involute cross-section are smaller than square tooth splines thereby leaving more of the functional shaft diameter of a shaft to carry a rotational torque load. Additionally, involute spline shapes force the female spline to center its profile on the male spline, thus coaxially aligning the shafts in the coupling with limited vibration. Square tooth splines are made without specialized cutters on an ordinary mill. However square teeth spline couplings do not align like involute teeth unless the clearance is reduced or the male and female fittings are forced together. However, reducing clearance or force fitting square teeth splines prevents ready assembly or disassembly.
Disclosed herein is a submersible pumping system for pumping wellbore fluid, comprising, a pump motor, a seal section, a motor shaft having an end rotatably affixed within an end of a shaft coupling, the motor shaft rotatable by the motor, a driven shaft having an end rotatably affixed within an end of the shaft coupling opposite to the motor shaft, the respective ends of the motor shaft and driven shaft being substantially coaxial within the shaft coupling, and an alignment element provided in the shaft coupling, the element coaxially engaging the respective terminal ends of the motor shaft and driven shaft within the shaft coupling. Optionally, the alignment element may be disposed on a shaft end. A first centering guide may be included on one side of the alignment element and a second centering guide on the alignment element opposite side, the first centering guide being substantially coaxial with the second centering guide. The first and second centering guides may be one of a protrusion on a side of the alignment element or a recess bored in the alignment element. A motor shaft tip alignment member may be included on the end of the motor shaft within the coupling and a driven shaft tip alignment member provided on the end of the driven shaft within the coupling. The tip alignment members may be a protrusion on the end of a shaft or a recess bored into the shaft. Square tooth splines may be formed on the motor shaft and driven shaft respective ends. An axial bore can be formed through the coupling where square tooth splines are formed on the bore inner diameter. In one embodiment, the driven shaft drives rotating machinery, where the machinery may be a pump, a tandem pump, and a separator. A resilient member may be included with the alignment element. The resilient member can be used to align the shafts with an opposing force in the absence of a shaft thrust load.
Also disclosed herein is a method of using an electrical submersible pump (ESP) in a wellbore involving providing the ESP in the wellbore. The ESP may include a motor, a motor shaft rotatingly affixed to the motor; a rotating device, a driven shaft rotatingly affixed to the rotating device, and a coupling rotatingly affixing ends of the motor shaft and driven shaft. The method may further include energizing the motor thereby rotating the motor shaft, the coupling, and the driven shaft. Additionally, the present method includes substantially coaxially aligning the ends of the motor shaft and driven shaft during shaft rotation. The method optionally further comprises providing an alignment element in the coupling between the shaft ends, and coaxially mating the shaft ends with the alignment element. A resilient member may be includable with the alignment element. The shaft ends can be profiled for coaxial alignment. The shaft end profile might include a protrusion or a recess bored into the shaft end. The method can also include profiling a side of the alignment element to align with the shaft ends. Profiling can involve forming a protrusion on a side of the alignment element and forming a recess bored into a surface of the alignment element.
The present disclosure also includes an electrical submersible pump (ESP) comprising a pump motor, a motor shaft mechanically affixed to the pump motor, a seal portion, a pump, a pump shaft mechanically affixed to the pump, a connector assembly rotatingly coupling respective terminal ends of the motor shaft and the pump shaft, and an aligning pin in the connector assembly axially engaged on one end with a terminal end of the pump shaft and axially engaged on another end with a terminal end of the motor shaft, wherein the pump shaft, motor shaft, and aligning pin axes are substantially aligned. A profile can be included on the aligning pin configured to engage the shaft ends, wherein the profile may be a protrusion or a recess. A resilient member may be included with the aligning pin.
a is an exploded view of a shaft coupling for use with the system of
b is an assembled view of the shaft coupling of
a is an exploded view of an alternative shaft coupling for use with the system of
b is an assembled view of the shaft coupling of
a is an exploded view of an alternative shaft coupling for use with the system of
b is an assembled view of the shaft coupling of
The present invention will now be described more fully hereinafter with reference to the accompanying drawings in which embodiments of the invention are shown. This invention may, however, be embodied in many different forms and should not be construed as limited to the illustrated embodiments set forth herein; rather, these embodiments are provided so that this disclosure will be thorough and complete, and will fully convey the scope of the invention to those skilled in the art. Like numbers refer to like elements throughout. For the convenience in referring to the accompanying figures, directional terms are used for reference and illustration only. For example, the directional terms such as “upper”, “lower”, “above”, “below”, and the like are being used to illustrate a relational location.
It is to be understood that the invention is not limited to the exact details of construction, operation, exact materials, or embodiments shown and described, as modifications and equivalents will be apparent to one skilled in the art. In the drawings and specification, there have been disclosed illustrative embodiments of the invention and, although specific terms are employed, they are used in a generic and descriptive sense only and not for the purpose of limitation. Accordingly, the invention is therefore to be limited only by the scope of the appended claims.
The present disclosure includes a square tooth spline coupling with vibration control. The coupling disclosed herein provides sufficient clearance between the respective male and female splines providing ready assembly and disassembly. With reference now to
The coupling assembly 30 of
Centering guides (62, 63) are shown extending from the upper and lower surface of the alignment element 54. In this embodiment, the centering guides (62, 63) comprise conically shaped protusions. Above and below the coupling assembly 30 are an upper shaft 32 and lower shaft 40. The upper shaft 32 lower end 36 is provided with male splines 34 configured for coupling engagement with the female splines 52 of the coupling assembly 30. Similarly, the lower shaft 40 upper end 44 includes male splines 42 configured for coupling engagement with the female splines 52. The shafts (32, 40) are profiled on their terminal ends for centering engagement with the centering guides (62, 63) of the alignment element 54. In the embodiment shown, the profiling on the shafts comprises recesses or bores (38, 46) extending from the terminal mating tips of the shafts and substantially aligned with the respective axes (ASH, ASL) of the upper or counterbore lower shafts (32, 40). Each recess (38, 46) has a conical entry way with a taper matching the centering guides (62, 63). The recess and protrusion provide examples of guide profiles formed on the shaft ends and alignment element for engaging the shaft ends to the alignment element. During pumping operations, impellers in the pump create an axial thrust force in the pump shaft forcing the shafts (32, 40) together and engaging the centering guides (62, 63) with the recesses (38, 46).
Referring now to
a shows an alternative embodiment of a shaft coupling 30a for coupling an upper shaft 36a to a lower shaft 44a. In this embodiment, the alignment element 54a has a largely disc-like cross-sectional area and is seated on the shoulder 56. The insert 60 retains the element 54a within the collar 48. The centering guides (62a, 63a) comprise a conical profile bored into the body of the alignment element 54a. Similarly, the terminal tips of the upper shaft 36a and lower shaft 44a include conically profiled protrusions (39, 47) formed to engaged the bores of the centering guides (62a, 63a).
Yet another embodiment of a shaft coupling 30b is provided in side cross-sectional view in
As shown in
Another embodiment illustrating ESP shaft coupling is provided in a side partial cut-away view in
A coupling assembly is presented in side partial cross sectional view in
The present invention described herein, therefore, is well adapted to carry out the objects and attain the ends and advantages mentioned, as well as others inherent therein. While a presently preferred embodiment of the invention has been given for purposes of disclosure, numerous changes exist in the details of procedures for accomplishing the desired results. These and other similar modifications will readily suggest themselves to those skilled in the art, and are intended to be encompassed within the spirit of the present invention disclosed herein and the scope of the appended claims. While the invention has been shown in only one of its forms, it should be apparent to those skilled in the art that it is not so limited but is susceptible to various changes without departing from the scope of the invention.