Embodiments of the subject matter disclosed herein generally relate to downhole tools related to perforating and/or fracturing operations, and more specifically, to an actuated plug element and associated method for controlling an actuation timing of the plug element.
Once a well 100 is drilled to a desired depth H relative to the surface 110, as illustrated in
The process of connecting the wellbore to the subterranean formation may include the following steps: (1) placing a plug 110 with a through port 112 (known as a frac plug) above a just stimulated stage 104A, (2) perforating the new stage 104B above the plug 110, (3) dropping a ball 120 to seal the frac plug 110 after the perforation is successfully completed, and (4) fracturing the new stage 104B by pumping from the surface a slur 113 with a pump 114.
Once all of the stages 104A, 104B, etc. are completed, the plugs 110 and balls 120 (only one is shown in the figure for simplicity, but those skilled in the art would know that each stage has its own plug and ball) are milled out of the well during a “cleanout run.” Then, the well 100 can be brought into production.
The cleanout run takes time and skill, which add to the cost of operating the well. Thus, it is desirable to bring the well onto production without having to complete a cleanout run or with a shorter cleanout run. A solution to this problem is a special ball that is configured to “disappear” (i.e., degrade) after a certain time period, so that problems where the well is unable to take fluid injection into the new stage can be resolved by opening access to the recently stimulated next stage down. Degradable materials used for this special ball, called herein “degradable ball,” appeared initially to be able to fill the role of not completing the cleanout run, but since their introduction they have proven to be unreliable.
For example, as illustrated in
More recently, a more reliable “actuated” ball (or plugging element) has been proposed. The actuated ball includes an internal mechanism that can be activated by changing a pressure or another parameter of the well. As a result of the actuation of the ball, a time delay is triggered after which the ball is broken up into parts, typically by an explosion. The time delay is a time that is considered to be safe for the well, i.e., after all the necessary operations associated with the fracturing of the well have been performed. For example, the time delay is about 8 h.
Thus, although the ball 120 is degradable and supposed to “disappear” after a certain time, the precipitates 124 left by the degradation reaction act as a new ball and they need to be removed with a coil operation. If an actuated ball is used, because the actuated ball combines a degradable ball with an actuating mechanism, the same precipitates may form in one or more stages upstream the plug, still blocking the plug.
Therefore, with the existing balls and technology, it is not straight-forward to remove the ball to achieve an open port 112 at a desired time, unless further cleanout operations are carried out, which is undesirable.
Thus, there is a need to provide a better ball and method that can open the port of the plug at a desired time during the fracturing process.
According to another embodiment, there is a ball for sealing a plug in a well. The ball includes a body, an actuation mechanism located inside the body and configured to break the body into parts, and a sensor connected to the actuation mechanism and configured to measure a parameter outside the body. The actuation mechanism includes a first timer that is triggered by a first measured value of the parameter, and also includes a second timer that is triggered by a second measured value of the parameter.
According to another embodiment, there is a ball for sealing a plug in a well. The ball includes a body, an actuation mechanism located inside the body and configured to break the body into parts, a first sensor connected to the actuation mechanism and configured to measure a first value of a parameter outside the body, and a second sensor connected to the actuation mechanism and configured to measure a second value of the parameter outside the body. The actuation mechanism includes a first timer that is triggered by the first sensor, and also includes a second timer that is triggered by the second sensor.
According to still another embodiment, there is a method for breaking a ball. The method includes selecting up a hydrostatic pressure corresponding to a depth in a well where the ball is intended to be deployed; selecting up a trigger pressure, which is larger than a fracturing pressure to be applied to the ball while in the well; releasing the ball into the well; measuring a well pressure with a first sensor when the ball has reached a corresponding plug; actuating a first timer inside the ball when the measured pressure is equal to or larger than the hydrostatic pressure, the first timer counting a first time period; applying the trigger pressure to the well while the first timer is still counting; actuating a second timer inside the ball when the measured pressure is equal to or larger than the trigger pressure, the second timer counting a second time period; and actuating, at the end of the second time period, an energetic material (508) located inside an internal chamber of the ball to break the ball into parts. The hydrostatic pressure is a pressure exerted by a fluid in the well at a location of the ball, and the trigger pressure is a pre-determined pressure, higher than the hydrostatic pressure.
According to still another embodiment, there is a ball for sealing a plug in a well. The ball includes a body, an actuation mechanism located in the body and configured to break the body into parts, and a ball sensor located on the body and configured to activate the actuation mechanism. The ball sensor is configured to measure a parameter that is generated by a tool sensor, which is located on a downhole tool.
According to another embodiment, there is a system for sealing a stage in a well. The system includes a frac plug located inside the well and having a through port, a ball seated at an upstream end of the through port and sealing the frac plug, a first actuation mechanism located in a body of the ball and configured to break the body into parts, and a downhole tool that actuates the first actuation mechanism when the downhole tool is positioned adjacent to the ball.
According to yet another embodiment, there is a method for actuating a ball and/or plug located in a well. The method includes lowering within the well, a downhole tool having a tool sensor, until adjacent to the ball or the plug, actuating the tool sensor of the downhole tool, sending a signal from the tool sensor to a corresponding sensor that is located on the ball or on the plug, in response to the signal, actuating an actuation mechanism of the ball or the plug, and breaking the ball or the plug into parts.
According to another embodiment, there is a ball for sealing a plug in a well. The ball includes a body, an actuation mechanism located inside the body and configured to break the body into parts, and a sensor connected to the actuation mechanism and configured to detect a presence of a base outside the body. The base is attached to another plug upstream the plug.
The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated in and constitute a part of the specification, illustrate one or more embodiments and, together with the description, explain these embodiments. In the drawings:
The following description of the embodiments refers to the accompanying drawings. The same reference numbers in different drawings identify the same or similar elements. The following detailed description does not limit the invention. Instead, the scope of the invention is defined by the appended claims. The following embodiments are discussed, for simplicity, with regard to a ball that seals a plug in a horizontal portion of a well. However, the embodiments discussed herein are applicable to any well, vertical, horizontal, or slanted and also to any other actuated plug element, not only a ball.
Reference throughout the specification to “one embodiment” or “an embodiment” means that a particular feature, structure or characteristic described in connection with an embodiment is included in at least one embodiment of the subject matter disclosed. Thus, the appearance of the phrases “in one embodiment” or “in an embodiment” in various places throughout the specification is not necessarily referring to the same embodiment. Further, the particular features, structures or characteristics may be combined in any suitable manner in one or more embodiments.
According to an embodiment illustrated in
In this regard, U.S. Patent Application Publication nos. 2015/0184486 and 2016/0130906 disclose that sensor 510 may be a pressure sensor that is set up to generate an activation signal to the actuation mechanism 506, to actuate the energetic material 508, when the ball reaches its desired position in the well. The desired position in the well is associated with a corresponding hydrostatic pressure PH in the well, which depends with the depth “h” of the ball in well, the density ρ of the fluid in the well, the gravity constant “g,” and the atmospheric pressure Patm, i.e., the hydrostatic pressure is given by Ph=ρgh+Patm.
Actuation mechanism 506 may also include a timing mechanism 512 that is triggered when the pressure sensor 510 measures a predetermined hydrostatic pressure. This means that after the ball 500 arrives at its intended destination in the well (i.e., at the corresponding plug), the pressure sensor 510 measures the predetermined hydrostatic pressure and sends a signal to the actuation mechanism 506. Timing mechanism 512 is actuated and starts counting a given time period (e.g., 8 h). At the end of the given time period, the actuation mechanism 506 actuates the energetic material 508 and the ball is broken into parts. This mechanism and associated time period is a fail-safe mechanism designed to eventually actuate the ball.
However, this mechanism offers no flexibility to the operator of the system, i.e., no capability to select the actuation of the ball based on the needs of the various phases of the fracturing operation. In other words, if the current stage fails to fracture or needs to be terminated as soon as possible, the operator has to wait for the timer to count down the 8 h time period until the ball is broken into parts. Thus, although the fracturing operation has been finalized early, for example, 6 h before the time that the ball is supposed to be actuated, the operator has not control of the actuation mechanism of the ball and cannot break the ball into parts earlier. This is valuable time that is wasted because the breaking of the ball into parts cannot be achieved earlier.
To resolve this defect of the existing balls,
Having two distinct sensors 510 and 520, it is possible to have the first sensor 510 set up to react to the hydrostatic pressure Ph (e.g., about 1,000 to 3,000 psi, depending on the depth location of the ball) and the second sensor to a higher pressure, called trigger pressure herein, Ptrigger. Although the following embodiments are discussed with regard to pressure sensors and various pressures triggering various timers in the ball, one skilled in the art would understand that other “triggers” may be used, as for example, an acoustic signal, an optical signal, a change in the density of the slur, a pH of the slur, etc. For these reasons, when another sensor than a pressure sensor is used, the various pressures noted herein should be replaced by a measured value of a parameter, where the parameter may be an electromagnetic field, acoustic wave, optical field, etc. In this embodiment, a first measured value of the parameter may be the hydrostatic pressure and a second measured value of the parameter may be the trigger pressure, as the parameter is the pressure. The trigger pressure Ptrigger needs to be selected to not interfere with the fracturing pressure Pf that is applied during the fracturing stage, so that the destruction of the ball is not initiated by the fracturing operations. As an example, consider that the fracturing pressure is 10,000 psi and the hydrostatic pressure is about 3,000 psi. For this specific example, the trigger pressure Ptrigger can be selected to be 12,000 psi so that is does not interfere with the fracturing pressure. The above noted pressures are exemplary and not intended to limit the application of the invention. Other values may be used. In general, the trigger pressure is selected to be higher the fracturing pressure. Note that the hydrostatic pressure is always smaller than the fracturing pressure.
Having the benefit of receiving information from the sensors 510 and 520, a processor or circuitry 514 of the actuation mechanism 506 is configured to actuate two different timers, one by the hydrostatic pressure and the other one by the trigger pressure. A method for actuating such a ball is discussed with regard to
The fracturing operation is performed in step 610, with the fracturing pressure reaching various values. If during the fracturing operations there is any need to break the ball earlier than the 8 h time period triggered by the first pressure sensor 510, the operator of the well may instruct in step 612 the frac pump at the surface to increase the well pressure to the trigger pressure Ptrigger, so that the second pressure sensor 520 measures this pressure in step 614. In step 616 the second pressure sensor 520 sends the measured trigger pressure Ptrigger to the processor or circuitry 514. The processor or circuitry 514 compares in step 618 the measured trigger pressure with the stored trigger pressure. If the measured trigger pressure is equal to or larger than the stored trigger pressure, processor or circuitry 514 actuates in step 620 a second timer 520′. The second timer is pre-programed before the ball is released into the well to count a second time period. Once the second period has elapsed, the energetic material 508 is activated to break the ball into pieces.
The second time period is different from the first time period, usually smaller than the first time period. For example, the second time period may have any value from a second to 2 h. It is noted that the second time period makes the ball to be broken into parts earlier than the first time period and the purpose of the second time period is to offer the operator an opportunity to break the ball, when a certain event occurs during the fracturing stage, but before the first time period expires. Thus, in one application, the first time period is in the range of hours while the second time period is in the range of minutes. In still another application, the first time period is in the range of hours while the second time period is in the range of seconds.
The functionality discussed above may be implemented with no processor and memory, i.e., only with circuitry that associates the first sensor 510 with the first timer 510′ and the second sensor 520 with the second timer 520′. In an alternative embodiment, more than two sensors may be used, for example, if first and second different trigger pressures are desired to be implemented. For example, the first trigger pressure may be linked to an ambient pressure of 12,000 psi and starts a timer having a time period of about 2 h and the second trigger pressure may be linked to an ambient pressure of 14,000 psi and starts another timer having a time period of about 1 min. These numbers are exemplary and those skilled in the art would understand that any other values for the time periods and pressures may be used. In one application, the trigger pressure is higher than the fracturing pressure. In the same application, the hydrostatic pressure for any depth of the well is smaller than the fracturing pressure. In the same application or another one, the first time period is larger than the second time period. In the same application or another application, the second time period is substantially zero, i.e., an instant destruction of the ball can be achieved. For this case, the ball is coated with a non-degradable layer or the exposed surface of the ball is made/processed to not degrade.
While the ball shown in
Returning to the ball 500 of
In another embodiment illustrated in
This and the previous embodiments use multiple pressure settings for starting plural timers, depending on the need of the operator. Such a ball configuration is flexible, which is not the case for the traditional balls, which can be broken at a single given time, which is dictated by the single timer that is present on the ball and started at the hydrostatic pressure. Note that the above embodiments discuss a timer that delay breaking the ball after a certain pressure is measured. However, it is possible that the above embodiments are implemented with no timer for the second sensor 520, which means that the ball is broken as soon as the operator applies the trigger pressure and the sensor measures such pressure. While this embodiment has been discussed assuming that the timer is an electronic mechanism, it is possible to apply the teachings of the embodiments of this document to any timer, even timers without electronics. For example, it is possible to actuate the ball by simply applying the trigger pressure, which when measured by the pressure sensor, automatically actuates the energetic material 508. This embodiment and any of the embodiments discussed herein may make use of materials for the ball that are degradable or not.
According to any of the embodiments discussed above, the ball 500 would not actuate a timer associated with the second sensor 520 until the trigger pressure is reached.
According to another embodiment illustrated in
According to this embodiment, the plural sensors are distributed throughout the body of the ball to ensure that the pressure Pu in the upstream casing is detected. Note that the pressure Pd in the downstream casing is not the same as the pressure Pu that the frac pumps are applying to the well and thus, in order that the ball detects the trigger pressure (which is the upstream pressure Pu), at least one sensor needs to face the upstream portion of the casing. The same is true if the trigger pressure is a differential pressure, i.e., at least one sensor needs to face the upstream part of the casing for measuring the upstream pressure Pu and at least one sensor needs to face the through port 112 to measure the downstream pressure Pd. Those skilled in the art would know what is the minimum number of sensors that a ball would need to satisfy these conditions.
According to still another embodiment illustrated in
In this regard,
Based on the observation that the current stage's pressure after time t4 will decrease, either because one or more frac pumps may fail or because the formation may absorb some more fluid from the well, it is possible in one embodiment to program the actuation mechanism in the ball based on an anticipated pressure profile. Thus, in this application, it is possible to actuate the ball when two conditions are satisfied: (1) the fracturing pressure has been achieved, and (2) after a certain pressure tolerance window, the current pressure is falling. For example, suppose that the fracturing pressure is expected to be 10,000 psi. The operator of the ball can program the actuating mechanism to determine when the fracturing pressure has been achieved, within a certain pressure range (e.g., between 9,500 and 10,000 psi), determine that the pressure is falling (e.g., current pressure is measured to be 9,000 psi), and if the difference between the lowest value of the fracturing pressure range and the current pressure is larger than the pressure tolerance window (e.g., 300 psi), then actuate the actuation mechanism. Because in this particular example, the difference between the current pressure 9,000 psi and the fracturing pressure 9,500 psi is larger than the pressure tolerance window (300 psi), the actuation mechanism is triggered. The configuration in this embodiment can be considered as a safety feature, where the ball is always actuated when the pump loses pressure or is ramped down, or when the stage otherwise loses injectivity.
After the perforation operation is completed at time t5, the pressure in the stage is decreasing until reaching the formation pressure again, at time tsecond. Later, when the well needs to be put into exploration, the ball needs to be removed. Thus, the well enters into a flowback stage, when the frac pumps remove the fluid inside the well to lower its pressure. At this time t6, the pressure inside the well decreases. When the processor or circuitry 514 determines the second time the formation pressure Pform, e.g., at time tsecond, the energetic material 508 is actuated or first a timer is started and then the energetic material is actuated. The time period of the timer may have any value (i.e., predetermined value). Those skilled in the art would understand that while this embodiment discussed an implementation that uses a processor or circuitry, it is also possible to use a mechanical element, e.g., a J-slot actuation requiring a high-low pressure cycle. Other implementations may be used as discussed above.
Having the trigger pressure to be the formation pressure in this embodiment, which is associated with the flowback stage of the well and not the fracturing stage, may be advantageous because the operator may be able to see each ball actuate and each stage coming back online. This could provide useful well diagnostic clues.
In still another embodiment illustrated in
In this embodiment, sensor 1350 is a radio-frequency identification (RFID) chip that uses electromagnetic fields to communication with a base. The base may be mounted on the upstream plug, not the plug that is housing the ball. In this respect,
According to an embodiment illustrated in
According to another embodiment illustrated in
The actuation mechanism 1606 may have any of the configurations discussed above, i.e., have circuitry or processor 1614, memory 1616, one or more timers 1610′ and energetic material 1608. However, one or more of these elements may also be removed as long as the actuation mechanism 1606 can break the ball into parts. In one embodiment, the ball may also include sensors 510 and/or 520 discussed above, that respond to the various pressures (or other signals) for actuating the actuation mechanism. Because sensors 510 and/or 520 are optional, they are illustrated with a dash line in
When there is a desire to remove the ball, the downhole tool 1650 is lowered into the well until the coil sensor 1652 is in the vicinity of the ball. At this time, the coil sensor 1652 is activated from the surface to send a pre-determined code (e.g., an RF signal or optical signal or acoustic signal) to the ball sensor 1610. Upon detection of the predetermined signal, the ball sensor 1610 sends this information to actuation mechanism 1606, which actuates the ball with a given time delay, as discussed in the previous embodiments. The actuation may be mechanical or implemented in circuitry, as discussed in the previous embodiments. If the actuation is implemented in circuitry, the timing of the actuation may be instantaneous or time delayed, as dictated by a corresponding timer.
In one embodiment, the coiled tubing 1650 may be run with a mill, to mill the frac plug 110 and/or the ball 1600. The ball may be made to be degradable or not. If the ball is not degradable, the coiled tubing may be able to circulate the debris from the ball, if the debris is small enough. Thus, the cleanout operation may be significantly faster and the ball is positively actuated, i.e., not relying on a pressure or another condition in the well to happen. If the coiled tubing is used without a mill, the coiled tubing may be sized to pass through a large bore frac plug 110.
In one embodiment, the plug 110 itself may have an actuation mechanism 116 and a frac sensor 118, similar or not to the actuation mechanism 1606 and the sensor 1652 of the balls discussed herein. If the actuation mechanism 116 is present, after the coiled tubing 1650 has actuated the ball 1600, the coil sensor 1652 may be moved closer to the plug 110 and instructed to communicate with the frac sensor 118 (which may be similar to ball sensor 1610) to actuate the frac plug. In this way, the coiled tubing may be used to actuate all the balls and frac plugs present in the well or only a part of them. For this situation, the cleanout process is further simplified and the time required for this process is shortened.
A method for actuating a ball and/or plug with a sensor located on a downhole tool is now discussed with regard to
The disclosed embodiments provide methods and systems for controlling more accurately a breaking time of a ball that mates with a plug in a well. It should be understood that this description is not intended to limit the invention. On the contrary, the exemplary embodiments are intended to cover alternatives, modifications and equivalents, which are included in the spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims. Further, in the detailed description of the exemplary embodiments, numerous specific details are set forth in order to provide a comprehensive understanding of the claimed invention. However, one skilled in the art would understand that various embodiments may be practiced without such specific details.
Although the features and elements of the present exemplary embodiments are described in the embodiments in particular combinations, each feature or element can be used alone without the other features and elements of the embodiments or in various combinations with or without other features and elements disclosed herein.
This written description uses examples of the subject matter disclosed to enable any person skilled in the art to practice the same, including making and using any devices or systems and performing any incorporated methods. The patentable scope of the subject matter is defined by the claims, and may include other examples that occur to those skilled in the art. Such other examples are intended to be within the scope of the claims.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62598071 | Dec 2017 | US | |
62587592 | Nov 2017 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 16134147 | Sep 2018 | US |
Child | 16437147 | US |