This United States application is the National Phase of PCT Application No. PCT/NO2017/050017 filed 18 Jan. 2017, which claims priority to Norwegian Patent Application No. 20160278 filed 17 Feb. 2016, each of which is incorporated herein by reference.
The invention relates to a downhole tractor comprising a hydraulic supply line for actuating hydraulic components. The downhole tractor further comprises a hydraulic power pack coupled to the hydraulic supply line, a first hydraulic component and a second hydraulic component. The hydraulic components are coupled to the hydraulic supply line in parallel and configured for being actuated by the hydraulic supply line.
Downhole tractors are typically used in the oil industry to gain access and perform operations inside oil wells. Downhole tractors are used as a conveyance platform to transport other well logging or well intervention equipment into the otherwise inaccessible highly deviated or horizontal sections of oil wells. In addition, downhole tractors can be used as a conveyance platform for milling and rotational equipment—not only in highly deviated and horizontal sections of oil wells, but also in more vertical sections. Milling and rotational equipment needs to be held in position, both in the axis of the well bore but also in against counter rotation torque generated by the milling bit rotation. Also especially for milling, the amount of force applied in an axial direction to the milling bit needs to be carefully controlled to provide the most effective milling action. The downhole tractor can provide both of these anchoring and weight on bit functions, in addition to acting as a general conveyance platform as described earlier.
There are a number of challenges in the operation of current downhole tractor technology, which are critical for the success or performance of a tractor conveyed operation.
A typical downhole tractor with hydraulic drive consists of the following elements: normally connected together in the following order: a control section with controls switching on and off the tractor function (either electronically or by mechanical means), a downhole motor (electrically powered or fluid driven turbine), a hydraulic pump with one or more outlets, a manifold block which controls the hydraulic functions, such as maximum pump pressure and the sequential deployment of the pump outputs. These elements constitute a hydraulic ‘power pack’ whose output consists of one or more controlled hydraulic supply lines and a hydraulic fluid return line.
Normally the tractor drive sections are modules, which can be added in parallel to the hydraulic supply lines provided by the power pack, so that sections can be added or removed as required. Due to the modular nature of the construction, drive sections can be added to provide more pulling force as needed, but although this does give more driving force for the same pump output pressure, it also means that more motors are consuming the available pump flow so that the available flow per motor reduces and thereby the conveyance speed of the tractor reduces.
With this type of construction in the current art, the tractor is built up from a certain number of modules based on the predicted job maximum requirements, but there is very little or no control of the configuration once the tractor is deployed in the well.
As is obviated in the discussion above the current prior art there is a need for further improving downhole tractor technology.
The invention has for its object to remedy or to reduce at least one of the drawbacks of the prior art, or at least provide a useful alternative to prior art.
The object is achieved through features, which are specified in the description below and in the claims that follow.
The invention is defined by the independent patent claims. The dependent claims define advantageous embodiments of the invention.
In a first aspect, the invention relates to a downhole tractor comprising a hydraulic supply line for actuating hydraulic components. The downhole tractor further comprises a hydraulic power pack coupled to the hydraulic supply line, at least one hydraulic component and at least one further hydraulic component, wherein the said hydraulic components are coupled to the hydraulic supply line in parallel and configured for being actuated by the hydraulic supply line. The hydraulic supply line comprises a controllable valve placed at a location in between the at least one hydraulic component and the at least one further hydraulic component such that a first part of the hydraulic supply line is coupled to a second part of the hydraulic supply line via the controllable valve.
The effects of the downhole tractor in accordance with the invention may be understood as follows. The downhole tractors of the prior art use their hydraulic power pack to drive the hydraulic supply line (or lines). In the known downhole tractors this hydraulic supply line is subsequently used for delivering hydraulic fluid to the individual hydraulic components (i.e. hydraulic motors for the tractor wheels, hydraulic cylinders for the tractor arms, and even further pressure regulating valves in some embodiments of this invention), which are coupled to the hydraulic supply line in parallel (in case of a unidirectional hydraulic supply line the individual hydraulic components feed their hydraulic fluid back to the hydraulic tank via a return line). All hydraulic components receive hydraulic fluid at substantially the same pressure. There is no control on the individual components. The addition of the controllable valve in the hydraulic supply line as envisaged in the invention, makes it possible to couple the second part to the first part in a first operational mode (rendering all hydraulic components active) and for decoupling the second part from the first part in a second operational mode (rendering the at least one further hydraulic components deactivated).
Referring to the tractor performance requirements as previously described, the invention makes it possible to control downhole tractor performance in an advantageous manner which is currently not possible. For instance, when the hydraulic components are hydraulic motors each driving a tractor wheel, then the tractor may switch between, for instance, 2-wheel drive at high conveyance speed with low pulling force, and, for instance, all-wheel (4-wheel) drive at low conveyance speed with high pulling force.
A few terms used in this specification will be explained hereinafter.
Wherever the wording “hydraulic supply line” is used, this refers to either a unidirectional hydraulic supply line or a bidirectional hydraulic supply line. In case of a unidirectional hydraulic supply line, there is also a return line connected to connected hydraulic components for delivering the hydraulic fluid back to the hydraulic tank. In case of a bidirectional hydraulic supply line, the hydraulic fluid is delivered back to the hydraulic tank through the hydraulic supply line itself (typically, a sequence valve in the hydraulic power pack needs to be switched to its other mode for reversing the hydraulic fluid flow). It is also important to note that the hydraulic supply line may be a main hydraulic supply line or a branch thereof, which supplies hydraulic fluid to further hydraulic components (hydraulic cylinders, hydraulic motors, relief valves, etc.). The principle of the invention still applies in such cases.
An embodiment of the downhole tractor in accordance with the invention further comprises a valve control unit coupled to the controllable valve for controlling opening and closing of the controllable valve to switch between said operational modes. This embodiment conveniently provides for a downhole tractor capable of dynamically switching between its operational modes. Such operational mode switching may be carried out done under control of the tractor operator, or it may be triggered by the tractor itself based upon sensor inputs and the like. In an embodiment, the valve control unit may be integrated as an extra function into the existing control units of the tractor.
An embodiment of the downhole tractor in accordance with the invention further comprises a further controllable valve in at least one of said parts of the hydraulic supply line for dividing said part into a respective subparts, wherein each subpart is configured for driving at least one hydraulic component. This embodiment illustrates that the principle of the invention can be repeated in that the hydraulic supply line can be divided into more than two (sub-)parts separated by a controllable valve, wherein each (sub-)part drives at least one hydraulic component. In the earlier given example of a four-wheeled tractor, this implies that this embodiment of the invention enables to use one, two, three or four wheels for driving the tractor. Expressed differently, this embodiment of the invention enables the use of more than two operational modes per hydraulic supply line. In case of embodiments having more than one hydraulic supply line having controllable valves, this implies even more permutations, i.e. operational modes.
An embodiment of the downhole tractor in accordance with the invention further comprises a further valve control unit coupled to the further controllable valve. Similar to the earlier-mentioned embodiment this embodiment conveniently provides for a downhole tractor capable of dynamically switching between its operational modes. Such operational mode switching may carried out done under control of the tractor operator, or it may be triggered by the tractor itself based upon sensor inputs and the like. In an embodiment, further valve control unit may be integrated into another control unit of the tractor.
In an embodiment of the downhole tractor in accordance with the invention the hydraulic supply line comprises a unidirectional hydraulic supply line. The controllable valve in accordance with the invention may be conveniently placed in a unidirectional hydraulic supply line.
In an embodiment of the downhole tractor in accordance with the invention the at least one hydraulic component comprises a plurality of hydraulic motors each configured for driving a respective tractor wheel. In this embodiment the number of tractor wheels is increased, i.e. more tractor wheels are driven by the first part of the hydraulic line. In this embodiment, the different operational modes of the downhole tractor relate to the number of tractor wheels that are driven to convey the tractor.
In an embodiment of the downhole tractor in accordance with the invention the at least one further hydraulic component comprises a further plurality of hydraulic motors each configured for driving a respective tractor wheel. In this embodiment the number of tractor wheels is further increased, i.e. more tractor wheels are driven by the second part of the hydraulic line. Also in this embodiment, the different operational modes of the downhole tractor relate to the number of tractor wheels that are driven to convey the tractor.
In an embodiment of the downhole tractor in accordance with the invention the hydraulic supply line comprises a bidirectional hydraulic supply line. The controllable valve in accordance with the invention may be conveniently placed in a bidirectional hydraulic supply line.
In an embodiment of the downhole tractor in accordance with the invention the at least one hydraulic component comprises a plurality of hydraulic cylinders each configured for driving a respective tractor arm. In this embodiment the number of tractor arms is increased, i.e. more tractor arms are driven by the first part of the hydraulic line. In this embodiment, the different operational modes of the downhole tractor relate to the number of tractor arms that are activated to convey the tractor.
In an embodiment of the downhole tractor in accordance with the invention the at least one further hydraulic component comprises a further plurality of hydraulic cylinders each configured for driving a respective tractor arm. In this embodiment the number of tractor arms is further increased, i.e. more tractor arms are driven by the second part of the hydraulic line. Also in this embodiment, the different operational modes of the downhole tractor relate to the number of tractor arms that are activated to convey the tractor.
An embodiment of the downhole tractor in accordance with the invention further comprising a further hydraulic supply line. Some downhole tractors have only one hydraulic supply line and others have two or more. The invention may be conveniently applied in each of the hydraulic supply lines. Such hydraulic supply lines may be either a unidirectional or bidirectional as already discussed in view of the other embodiments. The same embodiments and variants apply to this second or further hydraulic supply line, and therefore these embodiments will not be discussed in detail.
In an embodiment of the downhole tractor in accordance with the invention the at least one hydraulic component and/or the at least one further hydraulic component comprises a relief valve. Even though the hydraulic power pack may already comprise one or more controllable relief valves, this embodiment provides for additional advantage by providing such relief valve for one or more of said parts of the hydraulic supply line. This means that the hydraulic pressure can locally be reduced, for instance for reducing the pulling or pushing force of the downhole tractor. Expressed differently, the pulling force may be adapted, not by varying the number of wheels that are driven, but by reducing the force applied by at least one of the driven wheels.
In the following is described an example of a preferred embodiment illustrated in the accompanying drawings, wherein:
The current invention can be used to improve some or all of the above operational challenges as described in the introduction. The invention applies to downhole tractors, which employ one or more hydraulic circuits with functions like actuating the drive mechanism (tractor arm) so that it engages with the well bore, and/or driving the drive mechanism (tractor wheel) itself. In this figure description a lot of implementation details have been omitted, such details being known to the person skilled in the art of downhole tractors and hydraulic systems for downhole tractors. More implementation details can also be found in EP2,505,772 A1 for example.
Normally, as illustrated in
Due to the modular nature of the construction of the downhole tractor, drive sections can be added to provide more pulling force as needed, but although this does give more driving force for the same pump output pressure, it also means that more motors are consuming the available pump flow so that the available flow per motor reduces and thereby the conveyance speed of the tractor reduces. With this type of construction of the current art, the tractor is built up from a certain number of modules based on the predicted job maximum requirements, but there is very little or no control of the configuration once the tractor is deployed in the well. At the end of the hydraulic supply lines 200, 300 there is provided a termination module 600 for ensure proper termination of said hydraulic supply lines 200, 300.
The invention addresses this issue by adding new functionality to the hydraulic circuit. In the examples hereinafter this functionality has been integrated into a new module, one or more of which can be selectively placed above, between or below the drive sections due to the modular construction.
As will be explained with reference to the following figures, the invention (i.e. a module) connects to the hydraulic supply lines 200, 300 and adds the ability selectively control the line pressure, and/or to switch on and off the continuity of the hydraulic lines. This is done by means of electrically controlled hydraulic valves. Several types of module are envisaged, depending on the exact challenges faced by the tractor for a particular operation. Only a few example of particular solutions are described hereinafter.
The hydraulic switch module 400 comprises a first controllable valve 410-1 placed in the first hydraulic supply line 200 and a second controllable valve 410-2 placed in the second hydraulic supply line 300, wherein said controllable valves 410-1, 410-2 are controlled by a control unit 420 as illustrated. The controllable valves 410-1, 410-2 may be latching, meaning that they hold their state even when no voltage or current applied (advantageous for low-power consumption of the tractor). Alternatively, the valves may be non-latching in that they need a voltage or current to be applied in order to hold their state (advantageous for better control of the tractor). Each controllable valve 410-1, 410-2 effectively divides the respective hydraulic supply line 200, 300 into two parts 200-1, 200-2, 300-1, 300-2 as illustrated. Closing the respective valves 410-1, 410-2 (meaning opening the symbolic switches) will disconnect the respective second parts 200-2, 300-2 from the first parts 200-1, 300-1. In this way, the hydraulic switch module 400 can be used to disconnect the hydraulic supply to the two drive sections 150-3, 150-4 connected after the module as illustrated. This allows the tractor to be driven using only two of the driving sections 150-1, 150-2 for the first lighter duty part of the operation, allowing the individual tractor motors to receive more flow each and thus increasing the conveyance speed. When a depth into the well is reached where more tractor force is required, the selective module can be actuated (valve opened, switch closed) to connect the remaining drive sections 150-3, 150-4 to the supply lines 200, 300, thus increasing available tractor force and proportionally reducing tractor conveyance speed. In this manner, the total operational efficiency of the tractor can be improved by using the invention. It goes almost without saying that any other number of tractor drive modules 150-1 . . . 150-4 can be used, as well as any other division by place the hydraulic switch module 400 at a different location in the chain. In addition, the downhole tractor may have more non-driven wheels.
It must be stressed at this moment that even if the valves 410-1, 410-2 (switches) have been placed in the main hydraulic supply lines 200, 300, this is not essential. The valves 410-1, 410-2 (switches) may also be placed in side or sub hydraulic supply lines (not shown in the drawings), in addition to or instead of the main hydraulic supply lines 200, 300. In the latter case the main hydraulic lines 200, 300 are not interrupted by the valves 410-1, 410-2.
An additional benefit of the embodiment of
In a variant of this embodiment of the invention, the controllable valve 410-2 may be placed outside the main hydraulic supply line 300 in the side branch leading to the pressure relief valve 520 for example. All such variants fall within the scope of the protection as claimed.
In this figure description, it has been illustrated that by the use of controllable valves in the hydraulic supply lines, and the use of relief valves, many more possibilities for fine-tuning the tractor are opened up in particular for demanding downhole operations. In view of
It should be noted that the above-mentioned embodiments illustrate rather than limit the invention, and that those skilled in the art will be able to design many alternative embodiments without departing from the scope of the appended claims. In the claims, any reference signs placed between parentheses shall not be construed as limiting the claim. Use of the verb “comprise” and its conjugations does not exclude the presence of elements or steps other than those stated in a claim. The article “a” or “an” preceding an element does not exclude the presence of a plurality of such elements. The mere fact that certain measures are recited in mutually different dependent claims does not indicate that a combination of these measures cannot be used to advantage. In the device claim enumerating several means, several of these means may be embodied by one and the same item of hardware.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20160278 | Feb 2016 | NO | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/NO2017/050017 | 1/18/2017 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2017/142415 | 8/24/2017 | WO | A |
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20100307832 | Mock et al. | Dec 2010 | A1 |
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20150167416 | Ludwig | Jun 2015 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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0110182 | Nov 1983 | EP |
2505772 | May 2013 | EP |
0046471 | Aug 2000 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20190040700 A1 | Feb 2019 | US |