Oil-well and other exploration applications employ various techniques for obtaining information related to downhole devices, formations, operations, etc. The information may be collected downhole by one or more sensors and then be collected and processed downhole and/or transmitted to the surface for processing.
For example, vibration sensing and monitoring may be performed on an electric submersible pump (“ESP”) to monitor the status of the pump during operation. Traditionally, peak-to-peak or average vibration values are obtained and transmitted to the surface, thus supplying information regarding the amplitude of vibration during operation of a pump. Such information may be used to provide an indication of the operational health of the ESP or other downhole device.
A method of managing data obtained in a borehole is provided. The method includes monitoring a characteristic with at least one sensor and obtaining raw data therefrom; indexing the raw data with the at least one sensor; recording the indexed data with the at least one sensor; forming a data packet with the at least one sensor, the data packet including at least a portion of the indexed data and index information; and transmitting the data packet in a predetermined segment of a communication protocol.
A system for managing data from a downhole device is provided. The system includes at least one sensor configured to monitor a characteristic of a downhole device or formation. The sensor is configured to collect raw data related to the downhole device or formation; store said collected data; and index said collected data. The system further includes a processing unit configured to request information from the at least one sensor. The at least one sensor is further configured to generate a packet including at least part of the collected data and information about the index of the at least part of the collected data and transmit the generated packet in a segment of a communication protocol.
The subject matter, which is regarded as the invention, is particularly pointed out and distinctly claimed in the claims at the conclusion of the specification. The foregoing and other features, and advantages of the invention are apparent from the following detailed description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in which:
The detailed description explains embodiments of the invention, together with advantages and features, by way of example with reference to the drawings.
Systems and methods for communicating data from a downhole tool to the surface are provided. Such system and methods are used, in some embodiments, to provide raw data collected during monitoring of a monitored element, e.g., device, formation, etc. In some embodiments, such systems and methods are used to obtain raw data related to a monitored characteristic and transmit such raw data for processing. In some embodiments, a communication system includes at least one sensor configured to monitor a characteristic of a downhole device or formation. The sensor is configured to collect raw data related to the downhole device or formation; store said collected data; and index said collected data. The system further includes a processing unit configured to request information from the at least one sensor. The at least one sensor is further configured to generate a packet including at least part of the collected data and information about the index of the at least part of the collected data and transmit the generated packet in a segment of a communication protocol.
In other embodiments, a method of managing data obtained in a borehole is provided. The method includes monitoring a characteristic with at least one sensor and obtaining raw data therefrom; indexing the raw data with the at least one sensor; recording the indexed data with the at least one sensor; forming a data packet with the at least one sensor, the data packet including at least a portion of the indexed data and index information; and transmitting the data packet in a predetermined segment of a communication protocol.
Referring to
The system 100 and/or the borehole string 104 include any number of downhole tools 108 for various processes including drilling, hydrocarbon production, and formation evaluation for measuring one or more physical properties, characteristics, quantities, etc. in and/or around a borehole 102. For example, the tool 108 may include a drilling assembly and/or a pumping assembly. Various measurement tools may be incorporated into the system 100 to affect measurement regimes such as wireline measurement applications and/or logging-while-drilling (LWD) applications.
In one embodiment, the tool 108 represents an electrical submersible pump (ESP) assembly connected to the borehole string 104, which may be formed from production string or tubing, as part of, for example, a bottom-hole assembly (BHA). The ESP assembly is utilized to pump production fluid through the borehole string 104 to the surface. The ESP assembly includes various components 110, such as motor(s), seal(s), pump(s), inlet or intake portion(s), etc. The motor(s) drives the pump(s), and the pump(s) is configured to take in fluid (typically an oil/water mixture) via an inlet(s) and discharge the fluid at an increased pressure into the borehole string 104. The motor, in some embodiments, is supplied with electrical power via an electrical conductor such as a downhole power cable 112, which is operably connected to a power supply system or other power source such as surface power sources and/or downhole power sources.
The downhole tool 108 and other downhole components (not shown) are not limited to those described herein. In various embodiments, the tool 108 may include any type of tool or component that experiences strain, deformation, vibration, stress, or other impact downhole. Examples of tools that experience strain, vibration, and other impacts include motors or generators such as ESP motors, other pump motors and drilling motors, as well as devices and systems that include or otherwise utilize such motors. Further, the downhole components may be any downhole tool or element that is of sufficient length that vibration or other impact may influence the life and/or usefulness of the tool or element, such as packers, etc. Further, in various embodiments, the downhole tool may be configured to monitor and/or obtain information related to the formation 106. Thus, although described herein as an ESP, the tool 108 may be any downhole tool or device, and the ESP is presented for illustrative and explanatory purposes; the invention is not limited thereby. Further, the data collected and transmitted as described herein may be any information collected by sensors and/or devices associated with downhole devices and/or equipment and/or borehole and formation characteristics.
The system 100 also includes one or more sensors 114 configured to perform various functions in the system 100, such as communication and sensing various parameters related to the downhole tool 108. For example, sensors 114 may be configured as vibration sensors distributed over the surface of the tool 108. The sensors 114, configured as vibration sensors, may be accelerometers configured in different orientations at several axial locations, as shown in
Thus, the power cable 112 may be configured to transmit data and commands between two or more sensors 114 and/or between the sensors 114 and components 110 of the tool 108 and/or between one or more downhole components and one or more surface components, such as a surface processing unit (not shown). In alternative embodiments, the communication aspect over or on the power cable 112 may be replaced and/or supplemented with discrete or dedicated communications lines, such as copper wires, by wireless communication mechanisms and/or other types of wired communication.
Although shown with the sensors 114 external to the components 110 of the tool 108, the sensors may be configured to be clamped to the tool 108, or in some embodiments the sensors may be configured integral with the tool 108 or with components 110 of the tool 108. Each of the sensors 114 is configured to transmit data that is obtained by the respective sensor 114. In some embodiments, as shown in
Traditionally, each of the sensors 114 (or the processing unit 116) will monitor real-time vibrations and determine a gross peak-to-peak vibration sample of the tool 108 during operation. From this sample, a maximum vibration measurement may be extracted and sent to the surface. Thus, a limited overall vibration level reading may be determined, and may be useful for trending with respect to the structural and/or operational health of the downhole tool 108. Under current schemes, this may be the extent of the information that is transmitted to the surface due to bandwidth constraints in the communications protocols that are employed for data transfer in downhole applications. However, obtaining raw data or information (rather than a representative peak value) may be advantageous.
Turning now to
In this example, there may be sixteen sensors (Sensor 1, Sensor 2, Sensor 3 . . . Sensor 16). In order to obtain information from each sensor and to not exceed bandwidth constraints of the system, each tool may transmit a packet containing information collected by a sensor during a specific time interval. For example, the communications protocol may be configured as a time division multiplex protocol, where each sensor is assigned a specific address and time slot within the bandwidth for communication. Time-division multiplexing (TDM) is a method of transmitting and receiving independent signals over a common signal path by means of synchronized switches at each end of the transmission line so that each signal appears on the line only a fraction of time in an alternating pattern. An exemplary pattern of the invention is shown in
The communication process may be controlled by a processing unit that is in communication with the sensors, e.g., the processing unit 116 of
When a sensor receives or detects the sync pulse, the sensor may be configured to perform a specific function. For example, the sensor may recognize that the sync pulse has been detected and immediately transmit data in response to the sync pulse. However, because of limited bandwidth, each sensor cannot transmit data at the exact same time. Thus, a sensor may wait a predefined or predetermined period of time before transmitting one or more packets of data. The time delay may be determined by the sensor address. Specifically, each sensor may be addressable over the communications network, and based on the address, the time delay may be preset such that more than one sensor does not transmit data at a time. Each sensor will have a different address such that only one sensor may be transmitting data in a time slot.
As shown in
Those of skill in the art will appreciate that the length of the packet may be configured for optimal transmission of the data contained within the packet while maximizing usage of available bandwidth in the system. Thus, in operation, the packet of Sensor 1 will be transmitted, a predetermined wait period will occur, and then the packet from Sensor 2 will be transmitted. Thus, in sequence, each packet from the sensors will be transmitted, with a wait period between each transmission. In the exemplary embodiment shown in
Referring now to
The preamble 302 is followed by a first data element 304. The data contained in the first data element 304 may be any data collected or generated by the sensor that is sending the packet. For example, in an exemplary embodiment, the first data element 304 may include spectrum values and/or selected spectrum values, such as peak-to-peak vibration data, of a device that the sensor is monitoring. The first data element 304 is then followed by a first parity element 306. First parity element 306 may be configured as a bit or bits within the packet that is provided for error detection purposes. For example, the first parity element 306 may be employed to ensure that the data of the packet 300 is not corrupted during the transfer process.
After the first parity element 306, a second data element 308 may be provided. The data contained in the second data element 308 may be any data collected or generated by the sensor that is sending the packet. For example, in an exemplary embodiment, the second data element 308 may be configured as temperature data related to the monitored device. After the second data element 308, a second parity element 310 is provided.
The second parity element 310 is followed by a spectral index element 312 and spectral data 314. The data contained in the spectral index element 312 and the spectral data 314 may be any data collected or generated by the sensor that is sending the packet. For example, in an exemplary embodiment, the spectral index element 312 may be configured as an indexing element related to the spectral data 314. As shown in
As shown in
Although shown in
Referring now to
At step 404 the raw data is stored in a memory in the sensor. During step 404 the raw data may be indexed, such that each element of raw data may be identified relative to all the other elements of raw data collected. At step 406 a frequency spectrum may be obtained from the raw data collected at step 402 (whether stored or continuously obtained) and spectrum values and/or selected spectrum values, such as a peak-to-peak value, may be saved into the memory of the sensor. Those of skill in the art will appreciate that steps 402-406 may occur simultaneously or nearly simultaneously, or may occur in various sequences. Thus,
A step 408 a request for data may be received at the sensor. The request may originate from a downhole component or from a surface component. When the request is received, the sensor may construct a data packet at step 410, including both (i) the spectrum values and/or selected spectrum values data and (ii) the raw data or a portion thereof, e.g., as shown in
At step 414, a processor uses the index of the raw data to recreate a raw data image based on the raw data. In some embodiments, multiple requests for data and/or multiple transmissions of data packets may be required before reconstruction or recreation of a raw data image may be possible. Once the raw data image is created at step 414, post-processing may be performed at step 416 to determine various characteristics, events, or trends related to the sensed data and the device or formation that is monitored. For example, the raw data image may be used and/or processed to reveal markers that indicate the health of a pump and/or motor of an ESP.
The systems and methods described herein provide various advantages. The systems and methods provide a mechanism to transmit raw data that can be used to reconstruct actual vibration spectra of a monitored device, in addition to obtaining the traditional peak-to-peak vibration data.
Further, advantageously, embodiments of the invention may be employed with various types of sensors, such as vibration sensors, accelerometers, temperature sensors, stress and strain sensors, etc., and be used to understand near-real-time operation of a monitored device.
In support of the teachings herein, various analyses and/or analytical components may be used, including digital and/or analog systems. The system may have components such as a processor, storage media, memory, input, output, communications link (wired, wireless, pulsed mud, optical or other), user interfaces, software programs, signal processors (digital or analog) and other such components (such as resistors, capacitors, inductors and others) to provide for operation and analyses of the apparatus and methods disclosed herein in any of several manners well-appreciated in the art. It is considered that these teachings may be, but need not be, implemented in conjunction with a set of computer executable instructions stored on a computer readable medium, including memory (ROMs, RAMs), optical (CD-ROMs), or magnetic (disks, hard drives), or any other type that when executed causes a computer to implement the method of the present invention. These instructions may provide for equipment operation, control, data collection and analysis and other functions deemed relevant by a system designer, owner, user or other such personnel, in addition to the functions described in this disclosure. Further, such analytical components may be configured on the surface, downhole, or a combination of these.
While the invention has been described in detail in connection with only a limited number of embodiments, it should be readily understood that the invention is not limited to such disclosed embodiments. Rather, the invention can be modified to incorporate any number of variations, alterations, substitutions or equivalent arrangements not heretofore described, but which are commensurate with the spirit and scope of the invention. Additionally, while various embodiments of the invention have been described, it is to be understood that aspects of the invention may include only some of the described embodiments and/or features.
For example, although described herein as an ESP, the downhole tool may be any downhole tool that may undergo vibration or other operational changes, indicators, characteristics, etc. during operation within a formation. Thus, for example, the monitoring system may be configured to monitor, collect, and transmit raw data related to any desired operational or health characteristic.
Accordingly, the invention is not to be seen as limited by the foregoing description, but is only limited by the scope of the appended claims.
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