The invention relates to methods and apparatus for indicating the position of the closure members of a subsea blowout preventer (“BOP”).
A BOP is a safety device that closes, isolates, and seals a wellbore to prevent the uncontrolled release of crude oil and/or natural gas from the well. One common type of BOP, a ram-type BOP, uses two opposed closure members, or rams, disposed within a specially designed housing or body having a bore aligned with that of the wellbore. Opposed cavities intersect the bore and support the rams for movement into and out of the bore. A bonnet connected to the body on the outer end of each cavity supports an operator system that provides the force required to move the rams into and out of the bore. The force is usually provided by pressurized hydraulic fluid.
The rams are equipped with sealing members that engage with one another to prohibit flow through the bore when the rams are closed. The rams may be pipe rams, which are configured to close and seal an annulus around a pipe disposed within the bore, or the rams can be blind or shearing rams, which are configured to close and seal the entire bore, and can shear a pipe in the wellbore. A particular drilling application may require a variety of these pipe rams and blind rams assembled as a stack of BOPs.
One issue with ram-type BOPs when used subsea is knowing, with certainty, whether the rams have fully extended once the BOP is activated. “Inside the box” approaches to indicate the position of the rams install electronics directly into the pressurized operating chambers of the BOP and other well control equipment. These installations tend to be complex and the installed electronics can sometimes compromise pressure integrity of the operating chambers.
A preferred embodiment a system for indicating the position of a closure member of a blowout preventer (“BOP”) makes use of an indicator rod that penetrates the pressure chamber of the BOP using well-known shaft sealing technology, and then fixes a non-pressure containing electronic position sensor to the indicator rod. This completely avoids exposing the electronics to the pressure chamber of the blowout preventer or connector.
In one preferred embodiment, the indicator rod is arranged in sliding sealed relationship to the operator system housing of the blowout preventer with one end penetrating a pressurized chamber of the operator system and the other end being located outside of the pressurized chamber. An electronic position sensor, which is located entirely outside of the pressurized chamber, is connected to or positioned relative to the rod to detect a linear movement of the indicator rod.
A method for detecting a position of a BOP's closure members includes the steps of monitoring a linear position of the indicator rod (arranged as above) using the electronic position sensor and inferring the position of the closure member based upon the detected linear movement of the indicator rod.
Objectives of this invention include providing a closure member position indicator that (1) makes use of a mechanical indicator rod sealed relative to the pressurized chamber of the BOP using well known sealing technology; (2) does not use an electronic arrangement that compromises the pressure integrity of the operating chamber; (3) provides for redundant position indication, that is, both visual and electronic; (4) can use less costly non-pressure containing sensor than the pressure containing sensors that must be used inside the operator system; and (5) can be easily retrofitted for use with existing BOP designs.
The preferred embodiments described below provide examples of a closure member position indicator system and method of its use, made according to this invention.
The system preferably includes both a visual and an electronic indication of the closure member's position as the closure member moves between a fully retracted and fully extended position. The electronic indication is accomplished without any electronic penetration of a pressure chamber of the blowout preventer (“BOP”).
Referring now to the drawing figures, a ram-type BOP 10 includes a body 20 having cavities 21 and a bore 23, bonnets 30 connected to the body 20, and operator systems 40 mounted to the bonnets 30. The operator systems 40 use an hydraulic piston 41 and cylinder 43 arrangement to move a respective closure member 60 through cavities 21 and into and out of bore 23.
Typically, the operator systems 40 include three hydraulically isolated pressure chambers, a close chamber 51, an optional slack fluid chamber 53, and an open chamber 55. In general, the extend and retract chambers 51, 55 are in fluid communication with an hydraulic fluid supply regulated by a control system. Slack fluid chamber 53 may be pressure balanced with the surrounding environment, left open to the surrounding environment, coupled to a pressure compensation system that maintains the balanced pressure within the chamber 53, or connected to a control system.
Additional details on the construction and operation of a ram-type BOP and BOP stack can be found, for example, in U.S. Pat. No. 7,533,865 B2 to Whitby et al. and US 2014/0064029 A1 to Jaffrey (“Jaffrey”), both hereby incorporated by reference.
A closure member position indicator system 70 provides a visual indication of the position of piston 41—and, therefore, the position of the closure member 60—as well as an electronic indication of the piston's 41 position without electronic penetration of any of the pressure chambers 51, 53, 55. When piston 41 is in a fully open position, the closure members 60 are ready to deploy. When piston 41 is in a fully closed position, the closure members 60 have been fully deployed.
Visual indication of the piston's 41 position is provided by an indicator rod 71 arranged in a sliding sealed relationship to the operator system housing 47. In a preferred embodiment, the rod 71 is sealed relative to the bonnet flange 31 using sealing means well-known in the art and can ride, if desired, in a clearance groove 49 of the lock or operator housing 47 (depending on its configuration). One end 73 of the indicator rod 71 is connected to the piston 41 (and therefore resides entirely within a pressurized chamber 51, 53, 55 of housing 47) and the other end 75 is located outside of the housing 47.
An electronic position or position measuring sensor 81 is also located outside of the lock or operator housing 47 and positioned relative to the indicator rod 71 to detect a linear movement of the indicator rod 71. Preferably, the sensor 81 is mounted or connected to the rod 71. The sensor 81 can be in communication with, and a part of, a subsea electronic information system like that disclosed by Jaffrey (referenced earlier).
Jaffrey's system includes a subsea-located sensor interface box that includes a processor and a memory device capable of receiving and storing sensor measurement data like that provided by electronic position sensor 81. Additionally, the sensor interface box is in data and power communication with the sensor 81. A subsea retrievable data capsule may be used in connection with the box and recovered from subsea (independently of the other elements of the information system) for forensic analysis of the recorded data.
The indicator rod 71, seal assembly, and sensor 81 can be removed and replaced with a blanking cap (not shown) in order to return to conventional operations and position monitoring.
A method for detecting a position of the closure members 60 includes the steps of monitoring a linear position of the indicator rod 71 using the electronic position sensor 81 and then inferring a position of the closure members 60 based upon a visually detected linear movement of the indicator rod 71. The method can also include the steps of removing the rod 71, seal assembly, and sensor 81 and installing a blanking cap.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20170175927 A1 | Jun 2017 | US |