The field of the invention relates to downhole tools that deliver abrasive slurries into a surrounding annulus in the tool and/or into an annular space in the well surrounding the tool and more particularly design features that minimize the erosive effects of slurry passing through openings in the tool.
Certain completions use screens and fill the annular space around the screens with particles known as proppant as an aid to controlling production of sand or other particulates from the formation and fracturing the formation. The proppant is prepared at the surface as a slurry and pumped downhole into a bottom hole assembly that extends through an isolation packer to the zone of interest. The bottom hole assembly has a series of screens. Inside the screens is a tool called a crossover that allows the slurry pumped down from the surface to get through the packer and then exit into an annular space below the packer and outside the screens. The gravel remains in the annular space outside the screens and the carrier fluid for the slurry enters a wash pipe inside the screen and goes into different porting in the crossover tool to get to the upper annulus above the set packer for the return trip back to the surface.
While proppant slurry is abrasive, its erosive effects are also directly related to its velocity which is also related to the pumped pressure. When delivery rates were lower, such as with gravel packing at lower flow rates and pressures, the erosion problem was present but manageable. More recently, the need for higher delivery rates and higher operating pressures such as when proppant delivery was also combined with formation fracturing has made the erosion problem more acute. The evolution to higher flow rates and operating pressures has also caused erosion to an outer tubular that extended around the crossover exit ports and which supported the screens below. The slurry had to impact this tubular before making an exit to the annular space around the screens. To protect this outer tubular from direct impingement from the high flow and high pressure slurry, abrasive resistant liners were placed inside made of a hardened material to extend the operating life of the assembly.
One response to the erosion problem, which is generally more severe at the location where the slurry is forced to change direction, has been to use inserts that are hardened and which are positioned literally in the ports where the slurry has to exit. This design is shown in U.S. Pat. No. 6,491,097 FIGS. 4A-4E. This approach was offered as an alternative to an earlier design that used a hardened ported sleeve inside the crossover with the sleeve ports aligned with ports in the crossover housing but having a smaller periphery so as to protect the edges of the crossover body ports from erosion by flowing slurry. This design is shown in U.S. Pat. No. 5,636,691. Other downhole valve designs have used inserts in ported sleeves that are shifted into and out of alignment with ports in a surrounding housing. One such design is shown in FIG. 4 of U.S. Pat. No. 6,973,974. Other designs of crossovers have attempted to reduce erosion after the exiting flow goes through the crossover ports and into an annulus defined by an outer tubular by reducing the energy of the flowing stream in that annular space by placing a hardened rotating member that is turned by the slurry stream as shown in U.S. Pat. No. 7,096,946. Protective sleeves at an inlet to a crossover have been used as shown in U.S. Pat. No. 5,597,040.
One of the issues with using an internal hardened sleeve is that it left the actual ports in the crossover housing unprotected in the portion of those ports that extended through the crossover wall. While an internal sleeve protected the crossover housing port interior edge at the inside housing wall, once the slurry got into the housing wall, the peripheral surface of the port through the wall and at the outer surface of the housing wall was left unprotected and suffered from erosion. That early design shown in U.S. Pat. No. 5,636,691 had these issues. The later design that put the inserts into the wall such as U.S. Pat. No. 6,491,097 protected the inside of the housing wall as the slurry passed through it but it had other disadvantages. The older internal sleeve design protected the inside surface of the crossover housing and going to just inserts in the ports through the wall of the crossover housing left the entire inside surface of the crossover housing exposed to erosive flow. Not only that but since the inserts were at most just flush with the internal housing wall at the housing ports and the interior housing wall was exposed, it left open an erosion path to start by removal of the interior housing wall around the periphery of the insert that was only in the wall. This opens a possibility of starting a bypass stream on the outside of the wall insert as the surrounding wall was eroded away. In severe cases the housing port could be enlarged enough to undermine the support for the insert.
The present invention seeks to overcome these shortcomings of the prior design by allowing an insert assembly to be employed that protects the passage through the housing wall where the slurry exits through ports and also affords interior wall protection to the housing inside wall and inside edges of the wall ports in the housing. A series of erosion resistant inserts are inserted into wall openings. The inserts include a segment that extends through the wall opening and an interior flange that straddles the wall opening on the inside surface and in the preferred embodiment covers the inside wall from erosive effects. The inserts can be configured to keep each other in position or they can be secured to the housing or to each other. Edges of the inserts can be made to overlap inside the crossover housing to hold them in place or to better secure the interior housing wall from erosion from slurry that might otherwise work a path to the inside housing wall between abutting inserts. These and other features of the present invention will become more clear to those skilled in the art from a review of the discussion of the preferred embodiment and the associated drawings while recognizing that the full scope of the invention is determined from the associated claims.
A crossover tool that resists the erosive forces of high velocity slurry streams of gravel in downhole fracturing and gravel packing operations employs erosion resistant inserts that protect the inside face of the housing as well as the openings through the crossover housing wall. The inserts have an extending portion that goes through housing openings preferably to the outer surface of the housing. The inserts also have inboard flanged surfaces that preferably abut or overlap to give preferably full inner wall protection to the housing from the flow of abrasive slurry. The inserts can be secured to each other or to the interior of the housing to hold them firmly in place.
Each insert can be secured within housing 10 by welding or some other form of permanent attachment or a removable method of securing the inserts 16 can be devised. In the
Turning back to
While the openings 14 are shown as elongated and rectangular the openings can also be a series of ports in alignment with the inserts 16 shaped to still protect the inner passage 30 as shown in
Those skilled in the art will now appreciate that the inserts 16 effectively protect the inside walls 22 by creating a passage 30 that has openings 44 that are located in the leading components 38 of the inserts 16. In this manner the wall of the housing 10 in the openings 14 is also protected especially where the extension of the leading components 38 is to or beyond the outer wall 42 of the housing 10. It eliminates the shortcomings of the discrete designs in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,636,691 and 6,491,097 as discussed in the background of the invention.
The above description is illustrative of the preferred embodiment and many modifications may be made by those skilled in the art without departing from the invention whose scope is to be determined from the literal and equivalent scope of the claims below:
This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/999,374, filed on Dec. 4, 2007.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3145776 | Pittman | Aug 1964 | A |
4782896 | Witten | Nov 1988 | A |
5577559 | Voll et al. | Nov 1996 | A |
5597040 | Stout et al. | Jan 1997 | A |
5636691 | Hendrickson et al. | Jun 1997 | A |
5829539 | Newton et al. | Nov 1998 | A |
6155342 | Oneal et al. | Dec 2000 | A |
6227303 | Jones | May 2001 | B1 |
6491097 | Oneal et al. | Dec 2002 | B1 |
6973974 | McLoughlin et al. | Dec 2005 | B2 |
7096946 | Jasser et al. | Aug 2006 | B2 |
7373989 | Setterberg, Jr. | May 2008 | B2 |
7503384 | Coronado | Mar 2009 | B2 |
7559357 | Clem | Jul 2009 | B2 |
7841396 | Surjaatmadja | Nov 2010 | B2 |
20020108752 | Morey et al. | Aug 2002 | A1 |
20060022073 | King et al. | Feb 2006 | A1 |
20060151174 | Cantin et al. | Jul 2006 | A1 |
20070062686 | Rouse et al. | Mar 2007 | A1 |
20080314588 | Langlais et al. | Dec 2008 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
0935050 | Aug 1999 | EP |
Entry |
---|
Pedroso, C.A., et al., “Lighweight Proppants: Solution for Gravel Packing Horizontal Wells Under Extreme Conditions”, SPE 98298; Feb. 2006; 1-12. |
Porter, D.A., et al., “Designing and Completing High-Rate Oil Producers in a Deepwater Unconsolidated Sand”, SPE 58735; Feb. 2000; 1-19. |
Ross, Colby M., “New Tool Designs for High Rate Gravel Pack Operations”, SPE 29276; Mar. 1995; 227-234. |
Hill, Leo E, “Completion Tools Proven Successful in Deepwater Frac Packs and Horizontal Gravel Packing”, IADC/SPE 74492; Feb. 2002, 1-15. |
Mendez, A, et al., “A Quantum Leap in Horizontal Gravel Pack Technology”, SPE 94945; Jun. 2005; 1-7. |
Burton, R.C., et al., Innovative Completion Design and Well Performance Evaluation for Effective Frac-Packing of Long Intervals: A Case Study from the West Natuna Sea, Indonesia, SPE 74351; Feb. 2002; 1-24. |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20090255667 A1 | Oct 2009 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 11999374 | Dec 2007 | US |
Child | 12250065 | US |