Radial drilling is used to drill small-diameter horizontal wellbores. With this coiled tubing conveyed drilling technique, new wellbores are drilled perpendicular from the mother bore and into the reservoir formation. In a cased wellbore, a special cutting bottom hole assembly (BHA) is used to drill a hole in casing. This BHA is run through a jointed tubing workstring equipped with a deflector shoe that points sideways into casing when lowered downhole. The cutter BHA consists of a downhole positive displacement motor, a flexible driveshaft and a drill bit. The flexible driveshaft is designed to bend inside a short-radius curvature channel in the deflector shoe, transmit the force and torque from the PDM to the drill bit.
After the flexible drive shaft and mill have pierced a hole thru the casing and begun to create a new channel often called a radial wellbore or radial channel or radial arm from the mother wellbore—a variety of techniques could be used to extend this radial wellbore.
One of the techniques that could be used is to extend the wellbore with a hydraulic drilling method. In this method hydraulic horsepower is delivered to a nozzle that is fed through the deflector shoe and to the point where the flexible shaft and/or mill stopped progressing. Sufficient hydraulic power to cut into formation and extend the shaft is supplied to the nozzle and the nozzle is moved further into the wellbore cutting forward with hydraulic power.
A propulsion method is often necessary when attempting to reach extended depths within a non-vertical wellbore. Use of larger diameter tubing with greater relative stiffness is often utilized to offset a portion of the mentioned propulsion requisite. Flexible objects which are far less rigid in nature such as a hose connected to the distal end of coiled tubing will often require a propulsion method which imparts tension to and assists the less rigid objects along the well trajectory. In the scenario of attaching a flexible hose to the end of a conventional coiled tubing string, the hose itself can become entangled or damaged while conveying to the bottom of a long or tortuous wellbore. To overcome this the end of the hose is fitted with rubber/flexible cup elements as shown in
Embodiments of the present disclosure are directed to an apparatus including a flexible hose configured to be used in a jet drilling operation in a wellbore, and a protective housing configured to encase and protect the flexible hose. The protective housing having a first interior diameter and a second interior diameter larger than the first interior diameter. The apparatus also includes a collet having an expandable portion movable from a retracted position in which the nose of the flexible hose cannot exit the collet and an expanded position in which the nose of the flexible hose is permitted to exit the collet. The first interior diameter of the protective housing holds the expandable portion of the collet in the retracted position and the second interior diameter permits the collet to move to the expanded position. During running in hole the collet is in the retracted position with the hose within the collet and wherein selectively applied pressure moves the collet to the expanded position and the hose is permitted to exit the collet.
Further embodiments of the present disclosure are directed to a method of running a flexible hose into a wellbore. The method includes positioning a flexible hose in a wellbore within a packoff, wherein the packoff is within a housing, the flexible hose having a first portion above the packoff and a second portion below a packoff, the packoff forming a seal around an exterior of the flexible hose. The housing comprises a hose retainer configured to release the hose axially when the hose retainer reaches a predetermined location in the well. The method also includes providing pressure to the first portion such that the flexible hose is moved down into the wellbore until the flexible hose reaches the predetermined location in the well, and releasing the flexible hose from the hose retainer. The method also includes pumping fluid through the flexible hose whilst controlling, limiting and/or mitigating flow dispensed from deployment housing along the exterior of the hose as the hose is dispensed from the housing.
In other embodiments, the first portion includes a hose head assembly having a selectively closable opening, fluidly coupled to the flexible hose. If pressure is below a threshold pressure, fluid is permitted to enter the flexible hose through the selectively closable opening, and if pressure is greater than the threshold pressure the selectively closable opening is closed. The method also includes selectively applying pressure to open or close the selectively closable opening.
In further embodiments, the present disclosure is directed to an apparatus including a housing having a hose ejection site and a plurality of collars, and a hose assembly. The hose assembly includes a nose at a distal end, a flexible body having an interior bore coupled to the nose, a hose retainer being configured to release the nose from the hose retainer upon reaching the hose ejection site, and a packoff coupled to the flexible body and being configured to fit within the housing, the flexible body extends through the packoff. The apparatus also includes a hose head assembly coupled to the flexible body at a proximal end, the hose head assembly comprising a selectively openable aperture that is biased into an open position in which fluid enters the hose head assembly and the flexible body. The hose head assembly has an outer diameter substantially equal to an interior diameter of the collars. The outer diameter forms a seal with the collars. The seal causes the selectively openable aperture to close. When the selectively openable aperture is closed pressure can be selectively applied to the hose head assembly sufficient to overcome the seal and to move the hose head assembly past the collars.
Below is a detailed description according to various embodiments of the present disclosure. Embodiments of the present disclosure are directed to systems and method for advancing a flexible hose forward and downward into a wellbore including storing the hose inside a housing and ejecting the hose from the housing once the assembly has made contact with a diverter shoe as will be shown and described herein.
Aspects of the present disclosure are directed to the following systems, components, and methods as shown and described herein including a protective housing that can hold a flexible hose inside it during conveyance into a wellbore. Other embodiments are directed to a method of protecting a flexible hose from buckling, abrasion, kinking, or crushing while it is being conveyed into a wellbore. Other embodiments are directed to hardware and associated methods for retaining a flexible hose inside a protective housing until a pre-determined buildup of pressure or force is exerted on the housing or an adjacent assembly. In other embodiments the hardware is configured to exert an axial force on a flexible hose to eject it from a protective housing to propel it forward from the housing in a pre-determined direction. In yet other embodiments the present disclosure is directed to a method of controlling the axial force that is exerted on the flexible hose while it is being ejected from a protective housing. Further embodiments of the present disclosure are directed to a method of determining the extent of extraction of a hose from a protective housing, and a method of determining the rate of penetration of the end of a flexible hose into a wellbore. In some embodiments the components and method of exerting torsional load on a flexible hose to rotate it while it is ejected from a protective housing are disclosed. In other embodiments the present disclosure is directed to components and methods of resisting the axial advance of a device (flexible hose) with a constant resistance force of a known magnitude. Other embodiments are directed to hardware and associated methods of attaching and aligning a housing to a diverter shoe or other device inside a wellbore.
In other embodiments the collet 106 has an inward bias which causes the fingers to define an opening that is small enough to provide some resistance onto the hose assembly. The collet 106 can be opened by sufficient pressure applied to the hose or by a mechanical opening means. The collet 106 can be run on to a hard surface with sufficient shape and rigidity to permit the selective opening of the collet fingers 106 to permit the hose to extend beyond the collet 106.
The contact angle on the inside surface of the collet 106 and the end of the flexible hose 102 can be adjusted so that more or less radial force is generated for a given axial force. By this means the axial force required to begin ejection of the hose can be controlled. The thickness and shape of the collet fingers can also be adjusted so that more or less radial force is required to expand it and allow the ejection process to begin. The amount of axial force applied to the hose 102 can be controlled by controlling the pressure that is applied from the surface to the system 110. The strength of the shear screw 112 can be adjusted so that the set down weight on the nose of the assembly can be controlled and no ejection of the hose 102 (hence no expansion of the collet 106) can take place until that set down weight is applied from surface, thereby achieving selective, deliberate ejection of the hose 102 from the housing 110. In some embodiments the hose 102 is ejected by applying fluid pressure into the hose 102 which causes the hose to move the collet 106 forward, releasing the hose. In other embodiments a mechanical pressure or movement can urge the collet 106 forward to free the hose.
F=PA
F is the force, P is the inlet pressure, and A is the full hose area. The friction force can be limited and does not exceed that ejection force and can also be prevented from becoming so low that the ejection force is too excessive and damages the hose 102.
The pressure build up above the labyrinth seal 128 will exert a force on the hose 102 proportional to the pressure multiplied by the area defined by a disc sized to the outside diameter of the hose 102. This force can be substantial and will eject the hose 102 rapidly. A means of controlling (increasing or reducing) the amount of net axial force on the hose is useful because if the force is too excessive the hose may be damaged. Excessive axial force could push the hose 102 too hard against the end of the channel that is being formed and cause damage. Likewise if the axial force is not adequate the hose 102 will not overcome friction and will not progress axially.
Thus if the hose ejection force remains constant (this is normally true in that the hydraulic force to eject the hose is the product of pressure at the inlet to the hose and the full cross-sectional area defined by the OD of the hose 102) then the system 130 reduces the net force on the hose 102 when it is in compression and increases the net force on the hose 102 when the hose 102 is in tension below it.
In this configuration the self-propelled aspect of the nozzle head on the hose 102 is the only means of generating tension in the hose 102 below the packoff 138. Thus a compressed or buckled hose will have less net force thrusting it forward (which will protect it from buckling). Conversely a hose 102 that is pulling itself forward will have a high net force pushing it forward.
Since the spacing between the collars 158 can be known in advance, and each time the hose head assembly 142 passes into a collar 158, a pressure spike gives the rate of travel as well as the distance traveled. The distance between collars 158 divided by the time between pressure spikes is equivalent to the rate of advancement of the hose assembly 142.
In another embodiment with reference to
The preceding description has been presented with reference to presently preferred embodiments. Persons skilled in the art and technology to which these embodiments pertain will appreciate that alterations and changes in the described structures and methods of operation may be practiced without meaningfully departing from the principle, and scope of these embodiments. Furthermore, the foregoing description should not be read as pertaining only to the precise structures described and shown in the accompanying drawings, but rather should be read as consistent with and as support for the following claims, which are to have their fullest and fairest scope.
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