This invention relates in general to earth formation and drilling, and more particularly to a reaming and stabilization tool and method for its use in a borehole.
Downhole tools are known, for example underreaming and stabilisation tools to be used in a bore hole (see for example PCT Application No. WO 2005/124094).
Drilling, underreaming or other tools are often lowered with the hollow piston held fixedly inside the tubular body and then, when the tool is in position, the hollow piston can be activated. A system for locking the piston has already been envisaged which, in a closed position, holds the hollow piston axially in an immobilisation position and which is brought into the release position by electrical control.
However, in general terms, it is more usual to control the activation of the hollow piston hydraulically, by means of a fluid formed by drilling mud. When the latter circulates in the string connecting the tool to the surface, the piston immobilised by the activation device is subjected to a differential pressure that acts on the piston upwards or downwards. The activation device provides a tubular extension extending the piston. The end of this extension is kept fixed in a tubular sleeve by shear pins. A sleeve bears on a ring forming a stop and fixed to the tubular body of the tool. This stop prevents the movement of the piston subjected to a differential pressure and therefore producing a traction force on the tubular sleeve, as long as this pressure remains below a predetermined threshold.
The shear pins are calibrated so that a traction force of the piston greater than the above-mentioned threshold causes a shearing of the pins and releases the hollow piston, which can then slide in the axial cavity in the tubular body of the tool. In the case of an underreaming tool, the piston, which has become driving, then allows the deployment of a cutting arm.
The calibrated value of the shear pins is a compromise between on the one hand the limit of use of the tool in its dormant mode, that is to say when the hollow piston is not activated, and the limit of the maximum pressure acceptable for the tool or available through the drilling pumps.
In order not to limit the working capacities of the tool in dormant mode and to prevent, which is not always possible, risks of accidental activation that might be caused for example by a pressure jolt, the calibre of the shear pins is designed so as to be relatively high. The shearing is caused by a temporary closure of the tubular sleeve by a ball and/or a very significant increase in the pressure of the drilling mud. The substantial energy stored by the driving piston must then be dissipated on the release of the piston caused by the rupture of the pins. The shock that results from this may cause deformation of parts and impair the subsequent functioning of the tool.
Moreover, experience has shown that dead volumes and play between parts could present an obstacle to the correct function of the mechanism of the tool. This is because the particles present in drilling mud may compact or cement at these places so as to interfere with or prevent the movement of the parts.
A goal of a particular embodiment of the present invention is to develop an activation device that limits or eliminates the risks of accidental activation of the hollow piston and that allows selective activation of the latter without significant release of energy so as to free the hollow piston in the axial cavity of the drilling tool, in a manner that is appropriate. Advantageously, safety measures may also be provided in order to avoid the movement of the parts of the tool being prevented or interfered with by the drilling mud.
In accordance with a particular embodiment of the application, a downhole tool includes a generally tubular body having a generally axial cavity extending therethrough, and a hollow piston configured to slide along the axial cavity. The downhole tool also includes an activation device for activating the hollow piston.
The activation device may include a trigger element integral with the hollow piston, that is movable from a first position in which the trigger element is held in abutment against a support on the tubular body and the piston is fixed, towards a retracted second position in which the trigger element is not in abutment against the support and the hollow piston is released. The activation device may also include a generally tubular relief sleeve for the trigger element. The sleeve may be coupled with the hollow piston using at least one shear pin when the trigger element is in the first position, to prevent movement of the trigger element from the first position to the second position. The activation device may also include a temporary closure for at least temporarily closing the tubular relief sleeve to cause a rise in hydraulic pressure on the tubular sleeve to shear the at least one shear pin, and to cause a sliding of the tubular relief sleeve into a release position allowing movement of the trigger element from the first position to the second position.
A technical advantage of particular embodiments of the present application is that, in the dormant mode of the tool, the traction forces exerted by the hollow piston under the action of a differential pressure are not directly transmitted to the shear pins of the activation device. On the contrary, in this embodiment, it is the trigger element that keeps the hollow piston immobilised, by abutment on a fixed ring, integral with the tubular body of the tool, the trigger element and the support being in no way intended to be ruptured during use. The risks of accidental activation during the working phase in dormant mode of the tool are thus minimized or eliminated.
Another technical advantage of particular embodiments of the present application is that a hydraulic pressure can be applied to the sleeve only when the latter is closed. There is therefore selective activation of the piston, since it can take place only through an intended closure of the sleeve, which is controlled from the surface. Since there is no direct link between the traction forces exerted by the piston and the shear forces of the pins, the latter can be calibrated to a much lower resistance value than before and the activation pressure necessary for rupturing them can be relatively low, which makes it possible to avoid excessive involvement of energy and therefore potential damage to the equipment.
According to another embodiment of the application, the tubular relief sleeve may be inserted between the trigger element integral with the hollow piston and an extension of the hollow piston, so as to be able to slide between them after shearing of the at least one shear pin.
According to yet another embodiment of the application, the tubular sleeve comprises a first part with a wall having a first thickness and a second part with a wall having a second thickness less than the first and, in its position of immobilisation of the hollow piston, the trigger element is in abutment radially on the first wall part of the tubular sleeve and, in its retracted position, it is in abutment radially on the second wall part.
According to still another embodiment of the application, the trigger element is formed by a ring of blades that extend axially around the first part of the tubular sleeve in the position of immobilisation of the trigger element and that come into abutment radially on the second part of the tubular sleeve when the trigger element is in the retracted position.
In this embodiment, the tubular extension extending the hollow piston is therefore provided with a ring of blades, which may be made of metal, for example spring steel. The rigid tubular sleeve may be held so as to be fixed to this extension by shear pins. In this position the blades rest on the thick part of the sleeve and are therefore kept distant from one another. The ends of these blades, which may be thick and project radially towards the outside, are therefore in axial abutment against a retaining ring projecting radially inside the tubular body. This arrangement limits or prevents any movement of the piston and the tool is kept in its dormant mode.
According to yet another embodiment of the invention the temporary closure means is a ball launched in the axial cavity, the tubular relief sleeve comprising a seat for receiving this ball and lateral openings for re-establishing a circulation of hydraulic fluid when the tubular sleeve is in its release position. In this embodiment, a hydraulic pressure obtained by closure of the drilling mud passage by means of the ball exerts a force on the sleeve. This force, which may be minimal, causes the shearing of the shear pins and releases the sleeve, which is able to move away. The blades of the trigger element are then opposite the thin part of the sleeve and can flex radially inwards, for example under a radial thrust of the retaining ring or under the action of an elastic return force. In this flexed position, the blades can slide inside the retaining ring under the action of the traction of the released hollow piston. The tool is then activated.
According to still another embodiment of the application, the tool may also include a chamber in a dead end that extends annularly between the tubular body and the hollow piston and/or a tubular extension thereof where drilling mud passes, a surface of the hollow piston axially delimiting this dead-end chamber, on a first side. The tool may also include an annular ring that axially delimits the dead-end chamber, on a second side opposite to the above-mentioned first side, and which is connected to the tubular body by at least one shear pin.
This embodiment may allow for communication for a fluid between the inside of the hollow piston and/or its tubular extension and the dead-end chamber, the surface of the hollow piston being thus subjected to the variable differential hydraulic pressures of the drilling mud. In this embodiment, the hollow piston, released by retraction of the trigger element, may be capable of sliding between the first position in which the dead-end chamber has a first volume and a second position in which the dead-end chamber has a second volume greater than the first. The tool may also include return means that act on the hollow piston in order to return it to its first position. In this embodiment, the at least one shear pin, when an obstacle prevents the hollow piston returning to its first position and thus increases the pressure applied to the annular ring beyond a predetermined threshold, may be sheared, releasing the annular ring and thus allowing the hollow piston to return to its first position.
Other details of the invention will emerge from the description given below, non-limitingly, of an embodiment of the downhole tool provided with an activation device according to the invention.
In the various drawings the identical or similar elements bear the same references.
The description of
The tool illustrated in
In the example illustrated, a knife element 4 is housed in each housing 3 and comprises two cutting arms 5 and 6 articulated on each other and on a transmission means in the form of a slide 7. In the position illustrated, the arms 5 and 6 are retracted into their housing and the tool is in dormant mode.
In the example illustrated, a drive means designed in the form of a hollow piston 8 is arranged inside the tubular body 1, allowing circulation of the mud without hindrance inside the tubular body. The hollow piston 8 is coupled with the slide 7.
As is clear from
As depicted in more detail in the example embodiment illustrated in
A tubular relief sleeve 16 may be inserted between the blades 15 of the trigger element 14 and the tubular extension 13 of the hollow piston 8. This sleeve may be connected to the extension 13 by shear pins 17, only one of which is shown.
In the example illustrated, in its downstream part 18, the tubular sleeve 16 has a greater thickness than in its upstream part 19 and the transition between the downstream and upstream parts may be effected on a slope. In the position illustrated in
In this separation position, the free end 20, which may be thickened, of the blades 15 comes axially into abutment against a retaining ring 21, integral with the tubular body 1 of the tool.
When the tool has descended in dormant mode, even if the hydraulic pressure of the mud exerted on the piston 8 is high and develops an upward traction force, this is counteracted by the abutment of the blades 15 against the retaining ring 21.
At its downstream end the tubular relief sleeve 16 is provided with a reception seat 22 intended to receive a closure means 23, for example a ball in the case illustrated, which may be launched from the surface. The sleeve 16 may also be provided with lateral openings 24, only one of which is depicted in
As is clear from
As is clear from
A communication for fluid, in the form of orifices 25, enables the drilling mud inside the hollow piston 8 to enter the annular chamber 10. The surface 11 of the piston 8 is thus subjected to the variations in pressure of the drilling mud passing through the tool. The hollow piston 8, released by retraction of the trigger element, is thus capable of sliding between a first position depicted in
Each movement of the drive piston 8 causes suction (an increase in the volume of the chamber 10 when the piston is in the high position) and rejection (a reduction in the volume 10 when the piston is in the lowered position) of the drilling mud through the orifices 25 into and respectively out of the dead-end chamber 10. These movements of mud, associated with the effects of settling of solid particles from the mud and/or centrifugal effects of the solid particles in the mud, may cause excessive fouling of the volume of the chamber 10. In addition, the percentage of the volume of stagnant mud, which is not renewed, may present a cementation phenomenon. The packing of the volume of the chamber 10 may thus prevent complete travel of the movement of the drive piston, by impeding the complete withdrawal of the cutting arms 5 and 6.
In this configuration, the cutting arms partially exposed outside the principal tubular body 1 form an obstacle to the rising of the tool, when passing a restriction in the diameter of the well. The reaction on the cutting arms due to the traction force of the tool blocked by the restriction in the diameter of the hole, transmits, by means of the slides 7, an additional return force to the drive piston. The increase in the effect of compacting of the particles in the dead space of the chamber 10 generates a pressure on the ring 26. This pressure force on the ring 26 causes, beyond a predetermined threshold, a shearing of the pins 27 of this ring 26. The ring, no longer being integral with the principal tubular body 1, may, under the effect of the pressure of the compacting, move downwards, then allowing complete movement of the drive piston and consequently the complete withdrawal of the cutting arms.
In accordance with another example embodiment, provision can be made for filling in the clearances between parts and the dead volumes of the mechanism with a given grease or gel. This prevents the drilling mud from coming to occupy these spaces and interfering with the functioning of the tool. It may be advantageous consequently to fill the annular dead-end chamber 10 with such a material, this chamber being able to be considered as a dead space.
Moreover, it can be seen that the longitudinal movements of the mechanism cause variations in volume at various places on the tool, as is the case for example in the annular chamber 10. These variations in volume cause effects of suction and discharge of the drilling mud with the aforementioned known drawbacks.
It may therefore be advantageous to size the part so as to obtain a dead space as large as possible in comparison with the variation in volume caused by the mechanical movements, in order to limit the effects of compacting of the mud.
It must be understood that the present invention is in no way limited to the embodiment described above and that many modifications can be made thereto without departing from the scope of the accompanying claims.
It is for example possible to provide for the piston and its tubular extension to be arranged so as to undergo, on the part of the drilling mud, a pressure directed downwards.
This application is a Continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/995,495 filed Jan. 11, 2008 now U.S. Pat. No. 8,251,161, which is a U.S. National Stage Application of International Application Ser. No. PCT/BE2007/000004 filed Jan. 11, 2007, which designates the United States of America, and the contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20120318497 A1 | Dec 2012 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11995495 | US | |
Child | 13594220 | US |