The present invention relates to the technical field of the exploitation of oil and gas deposits. It applies more particularly, but not exclusively, to the exploitation of offshore deposits, for example from platforms known more generally as “offshore” platforms.
The invention applies in particular to the components used in landing strings, for positioning tubes for casing, tubing or also various tools such as for example wellheads.
A landing string is formed principally by a series of tubular components, hereafter called landing tubes, and is attached to the string to be positioned. This landing string is thus generally intended to remain outside of the well, the main functions of this string being in particular to route the casing string to its final position in the well or also to cement the casing in the well, etc.
Conventionally, a landing tube differs from other operational tubes or casings by specific dimensional characteristics. In fact, the landing tubes must have a large tensile capacity. To this end, a landing tube generally has a diameter greater than 127 mm (or 5 inches) and a thickness greater than 12.7 mm (or 0.5 inches). However, the landing tube can be formed by a standard drilling tube used for a landing application.
In general, in order to form a landing string, landing tubes are placed end to end. Thus, a landing tube generally comprises a body rotating about a longitudinal axis of the component and two connectors, also called “tool-joints”, connected respectively to the ends of the body for attaching the tube to another tube. The connectors comprise for example male and female threaded elements that allow the tubes to be attached to each other by make up.
For positioning tubes, in the case of offshore operations, a certain length of string is extended from the platform to the seabed, from which the well is sunk, this length depending on the depth of the sea beneath the platform, which can sometimes reach several hundred metres, or even several kilometres.
The casing string is suspended from the landing string being formed, itself held on the platform by the last tube connected, hereafter called “surface tube”, the latter being held temporarily on the platform for the time it takes to add one or more tubes to the string being formed, increasing as much as the length of the latter.
The surface tube is secured to the platform using retaining means, themselves integral with a rotary table of the platform, which grip the tube like a vice. The retaining means generally comprise a plurality of slips having gripping elements on the surface, such as for example jaws, capable of being secured to the tube in order to retain it.
As a result, because of its function, the surface tube is subjected to very high axial tensile forces associated in particular with the mass of the string in the course of formation. This mass increases as the landing string forming operation progresses. This mass is of course greatest at the end of the operation and corresponds to the mass of the string extended between the surface and the bottom of the well and, in the case of the landing string, to the mass of the string extended between the surface and the seabed added to the mass of the tube string to be positioned in the well. The mass can then reach several thousand tonnes.
The clamping of the surface tube increases as the mass of the string increases. Thus, under the effect of very high tensile forces, the gripping elements leave an impression around the surface tube, promoting the appearance of cracks and other mechanical damage which embrittle the tube and reduce its period of use.
It has already been proposed in the state of the art, in particular in the document U.S. Pat. No. RE37,167 E filed by Grant Prideco, to solve the problem of the resistance of drilling tubes to the force exerted by the slips. This document teaches remedying this problem by manufacturing the tubes from a martensitic steel in order to limit the penetration of the slips into the material.
It has also been proposed in the state of the art, in particular in the document U.S. Pat. No. 3,080,179 filed by C. F. Huntsinger, to insert a portion of protective tube with an increased thickness between the connector and the main body of the component, at the level of a zone for clamping the component. However, the creation of an additional weld at the junction between this additional portion of tube and the body of the component presents an increased risk of the component breaking.
The purpose of the invention is in particular to propose a solution for best protecting the tubes of the landing strings against the mechanical damage to which the means of retaining on the platform are subjected without the drawbacks of the prior art.
To this end, a subject of the invention is a tubular component of a landing string for oil or gas extraction from an operating facility comprising a main body of rotation about a longitudinal axis of the component provided, at least at one of its ends, with a first connector for attaching the component to another tubular component, the component moreover being intended to be at least temporarily gripped in a peripheral zone by means for retaining the component on the facility, characterized in that the component comprises, inside the clamping zone, a coating for protecting the component against mechanical damage likely to be caused by the retaining means, the coating being produced from a material with a hardness greater than the hardness of the material forming the component but less than a value of 70 HRC.
Thanks to the invention, the coating, arranged as an interface between the tubular component and the retaining means, makes it possible to reduce the depth of the grooves likely to be formed by the retaining means on the component and thus to preserve the integrity of the component. This thus makes it possible to mitigate any defect that has begun to appear, but also to reduce any risk of crack initiation in the component clamping area.
Thanks to the physical hardness properties of the coating, the latter is ductile enough to deform, substantially following the profile of the galling surface of the retaining means, while being hard enough to ensure an effective protection of the tubular component. The relative ductility ensures a more homogeneous distribution of the stresses and thus a reduction in the stress concentration factor. The length of the coating is adapted for example as a function of the needs and dimensional constraints associated in particular with the retaining means and the practices of the user.
A component according to the invention can moreover comprise one or more of the following features:
Other characteristics and advantages of the invention will become apparent in the light of the following description, made with reference to the attached drawings, in which:
A drilling facility denoted by the general reference 10 and in which the present invention can be used advantageously is shown in
This platform 12 is conventionally equipped with a certain number of accessories used for the drilling of the well and subsequent operation of the well. In the described example and as illustrated in detail in
As illustrated in
For the operation, the drilling, or also the manufacture of the well, the facility 10 also comprises a set of tubular components connected to one another in order to form strings with varying functions. Thus, for example, the strings can be intended for drilling the well. In this case, the term “drill string” is more accurately used. They can also be intended to produce a casing of the drilled well, or also to actually exploit the well or also to route such strings inside the well (landing strings). All of these strings are generally produced by placing tubular components end to end from the drilling platform 12.
As illustrated in
In the example illustrated in the figures, the string being formed shown in
Thus, a portion of the landing string 24, in dismantled state, comprising three tubular components 30 is shown in
In this example, the tubular component 30 is also provided, at the other of its ends, with a second connector 36A with a male thread. As illustrated in
Generally, the tubular components 30 used to form the landing string 24 have a diameter greater than the diameter of the standard tubular components. For example, a diameter usual for this type of tube is greater than 127 mm (5 inches). Moreover, such a component generally has an increased thickness, for example greater than 12.7 mm (0.5 inches). Moreover, the tubular components are preferably produced from a material of a grade higher than 105 KSI (725 MPa) and more commonly higher than 135 KSI (931 MPa). Such properties allow them to withstand the very high tensile forces associated with the mass of the string that they are supporting. However, as a variant, the landing tube can be formed by a drilling tube.
As illustrated in
The lower 42 and upper 44 heads of the retaining means 40 are shown in detail in
A detailed view of a slip 46 is shown in
As can be seen in
Generally, a tubular component 30 has a length comprised between eight and fourteen metres (i.e. approximately 25 to 45 feet). In the example illustrated, the tubular component 30 has a standard length of ten metres (approximately thirty feet). In this case, the zone Z extends for example as far as two metres (eighty inches), i.e. less than one-third of the standard length of the component 30. Preferably, the zone Z starts at 0.5 metres (nineteen inches) from the end edge of the female connector 36B, which corresponds approximately to the standard length of the female connector 36B of such a tube. The zone Z extends in this case over a length of 1.5 metres (sixty inches) along the axis X of the tubular component 30. Moreover, the first zone Z1 extends for example over 0.5 metres (approximately 20 inches) and the same applies to the second zone Z2. These two zones Z1 and Z2 are distinct in the described example. However, optionally, in a variant not illustrated, the two zones Z1 and Z2 can overlap at least partially. The delimitation of this zone Z or of these two zones Z1 and Z2 depends on different parameters, such as the dimension of the tubular components, the retaining surface of the retaining head, the connector length 36B, etc.
According to the invention, in order to protect the component 30 against mechanical damage likely to be caused by the retaining means 40, and in particular by the jaws of the lower head 42, the component 30 comprises a protective coating 58. More particularly, the coating 58 is produced from a material with a hardness greater than the hardness of the material forming the component 30 but less than a value of seventy Rockwell, on the C scale (unit known by the acronym HRC), preferably less than a value of fifty HRC.
In this example, the jaws are produced from a material with a hardness substantially equal to 55 HRC and preferably, the coating 58 is produced from a material with a hardness less than the hardness of the material of the jaws, therefore less than 55 HRC. During the clamping of the component by the jaws the relative ductility of the coating 58 compared with the jaws causes a deformation of the coating 58 according to the surface profile of the jaws and thus a homogeneous distribution of the stresses. Moreover, the relative hardness of the coating 58 compared with the tubular component 30 ensures an effective protection of the component 30. Thus, for example, the tubular component 30 has a hardness value substantially equal to twenty-eight HRC.
The coating 58 is for example produced from a metal alloy in which:
For example, an alloy composition suitable for the invention comprises 45% chromium, 6% boron as main elements and silicon (2%), carbon, iron and sulphur (less than 0.1%) as secondary elements. A hardness of 58 HRC is measured.
Another suitable composition comprises 20% chromium, 15% molybdenum, 10% tungsten as main elements and carbon (<2%), manganese (<5%), silicon (<2%), boron (<5%) and iron as secondary elements. A hardness of 54 HRC is measured.
Preferably, the coating 58 is produced by thermal spraying. This is a method consisting of spraying heated particles of the material to be applied to a surface of the tubular component, for example prepared beforehand by sanding or shot-blasting. The accumulation of the particles on the component 30 forms the coating 58. This method has in particular the advantage of preventing the tubular component 30 from being exposed to temperatures that are too high and may damage its mechanical integrity. In fact, the particles are heated and cooled again when sprayed onto the surface of the tubular component 30.
For example, the coating 58 can be produced by means of an electric arc thermal spraying method. This method is based on melting one or more wires formed by the material to be sprayed, by means of an electric arc. Preferably, the molten material is atomized by a compressed gas, for example air, and is thus sprayed onto the part to be hard-surfaced. This method makes it possible to obtain a coating with a high adherence and low porosity thanks in particular to the combination of a high spraying speed and a high temperature.
As a variant, the coating 58 can be produced by electroplating. In this case, the product used is generally a composition based on nickel sulphamate. The coating 58 obtained then in this example has a Rockwell hardness of fifty HRC.
Preferably, the hardness of the coating 58 increases progressively in the direction from the component 30 to the coating 58. This property of the coating 58 makes it possible in particular to ensure better adhesion of the coating to the body of the tube. In order to produce this hardness progression, it is desirable to form a coating 58 comprising a plurality of layers, each of the layers being produced from a material with a predefined hardness and a value that increases in the direction from the component 30 to the coating 58.
Moreover, in the described example, the coating 58 has a thickness greater than 1 mm and preferably greater than 2 mm. This minimum thickness makes it possible to ensure a sufficient protection of the component with regard to the depth of the imprints likely to be produced for example by the jaws of the lower head 42.
According to the invention, the coating 58 extends inside the peripheral clamping zone Z. In this example, the coating 58 very largely, or even completely, covers the first zone Z1 and preferably also the second zone Z2. It may be envisaged to cover all of the zone Z or only the first zone Z1 or also only the first Z1 and second Z2 zones. A person skilled in the art knows how to suitably adjust the dimensions of the coating 58 in order to reap the benefits provided by the invention as a function of the different constraints of the facility. The delimitation of the zones Z1 and Z2 and thus of the zone Z depends on the dimensional constraints of the retaining means and/or on the practices of the users.
Moreover, the coating 58 preferably leaves the joint support 38 exposed. For example, the coating 58 extends below the joint support 38 of the female connector 36B and the body 30 as illustrated in
Preferably, the coating 58 is a sacrificial coating. It can thus optionally be replaced in the event of its significant degradation.
In order to facilitate the adherence or securing of the lower head 42 to the component 30, the coating 58 preferably has a roughness greater than the surface roughness of the tubular component 30. For example, in order to achieve the desired roughness, various technical means can be implemented, such as machining, localized or wide-spread grinding, etc.
The main aspects of operation of a tubular component 30 according to the invention will now be described. Initially, the landing string 24, as illustrated in
Thanks to the invention, the last temporarily-gripped surface component is protected by the coating 58 against mechanical damage likely to be caused in particular by the gripping elements of the retaining head. Moreover, when this coating 58 is too damaged and its efficacy is consequently reduced, it can advantageously be replaced without damaging the component 30 itself. This makes it possible to prolong the life of such tubular components 30.
Of course, other embodiments can be envisaged without exceeding the scope of the invention. Thus, various modifications can be made by a person skilled in the art to the invention which has just been described by way of example.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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11 03484 | Nov 2011 | FR | national |