During the completion process of a hydrocarbon-producing well in a subterranean formation, a conduit, such as a casing string, may be run into the wellbore to a predetermined depth and, in some instances, cemented in place to secure the casing string. Various “zones” in the subterranean formation may be isolated via the placement of one or more packers, which may also aid in securing the casing string and any completion equipment, e.g., fracturing equipment, in place in the wellbore. Following the placement and securing of the casing string and any completion equipment in the wellbore, a “pressure test” is typically performed to ensure that a leak or hole has not developed during the placement of the casing string and completion equipment.
Generally, a pressure test is conducted by pumping a fluid into a flowbore of the casing string, such that a predetermined pressure, typically related to the rated casing pressure, is applied to the casing string and completion equipment and maintained to ensure that a hole or leak does not exist in either. To do so, the casing string is configured such that no fluid passages out of the casing string are provided; thus, no ports or openings of the completion equipment, in addition to any other potential routes of fluid communication, may be open or available. After the pressure test is completed, further completion or production of the hydrocarbon-producing well may commence.
Accordingly, in order to either retrieve hydrocarbons and other fluids from the subterranean formation or to stimulate the subterranean formation, for example, via fracturing, one or more flowpaths may be created to provide communication between the flowbore and the wellbore or subterranean formation, or both, through the casing string. One method of providing such flowpaths includes the utilization of a perforating gun. In such a method, a perforating gun, typically including a string of shaped charges, is run down to the desired depth on, for example, E-line, coil tubing, or slickline. The shaped charges are detonated, thereby creating perforations in the casing string and hence the flowpaths between the subterranean formation, wellbore, and the flowbore. However, one disadvantage of perforating is “skin damage,” where debris from the perforations may hinder productivity of the well. Another disadvantage of perforating is the cost and inefficiency of having to make a separate trip to run the perforating gun downhole.
Accordingly, in an effort to reduce the number of trips, another method of providing such flowpaths includes the utilization of a pressure activated tool, such as a differential valve, in the casing string. Generally, the differential valve is designed to open, creating such flowpaths, once a threshold pressure is reached; however, the differential valves generally may often be inaccurate as to the pressure at which they open and such valves also do not allow for closing once they have been opened. Thus, once a pressure test has been performed at or near the threshold pressure, the well will be open, thereby impairing or potentially eliminating the ability to control the wellbore, thereby posing various risks, such as blow-outs or the loss of hydrocarbons.
What is needed, then, is a downhole completion tool capable of undergoing a pressure test and subsequently providing flowpaths for production or stimulation fluids while maintaining wellbore control after the pressure test is completed.
Embodiments of the disclosure may provide a downhole tool. The downhole tool may include a housing at least partially defining a flowbore therethrough and a plurality of fluid apertures. The downhole tool may also include an inner annular casing disposed in the housing and defining in conjunction with the housing an annular space. The downhole tool may further include an annular cover disposed in the annular space and configured to be displaced by a first piston at a first pressure applied to the flowbore and a biasing member at a second pressure applied to the flowbore. The downhole tool may also include a second piston at least partially disposed in the annular space and configured to be displaced by a force provided by a third pressure applied to the annular space via the flowbore, such that the plurality of fluid apertures and the flowbore are fluidly coupled.
Embodiments of the disclosure may further provide a method of servicing a subterranean formation. The method may include applying a first pressure to a first piston via a first port defined in an inner annular casing of a downhole tool including a housing at least partially defining a flowbore extending axially therethrough and in fluid communication with the first port. The method may also include displacing an annular cover axially via a force provided by the first pressure on the first piston, the annular cover shearing a first retention member configured to retain the annular cover prior to the application of the first pressure. The method may further include displacing a locking ring detachably attached to the annular cover, such that the locking ring detaches from the annular cover. The method may also include decreasing the first pressure to a second pressure such that the annular cover is axially displaced and the flowbore is fluidly coupled with an annular space defined at least in part by the housing and the inner annular casing. The method may further include applying a third pressure to the annular space via the flowbore. The method may also include displacing a second piston axially via a force provided by the third pressure on the second piston. The second piston may shear a second retention member configured to retain the second piston prior to the application of the third pressure, thereby fluidly coupling the subterranean formation and the flowbore via a plurality of housing apertures defined in the housing.
Embodiments of the disclosure may further provide a downhole tool configured to be disposed in a wellbore defined in a subterranean formation. The downhole tool may include a housing at least partially defining a flowbore therethrough and a plurality of fluid apertures. The downhole tool may also include an inner annular casing disposed in the housing and defining in conjunction with the housing an annular space. The inner annular casing may further define a casing flowpath and a first port configured to fluidly couple the flowbore and the casing flowpath. The downhole tool may further include an annular cover disposed in the annular space and configured to prevent fluid communication between the annular space and the flowbore during the application of a first pressure and to permit fluid communication between the annular space and the flowbore during the application of a second pressure and a third pressure. The downhole tool may also include a lower piston configured to engage the inner annular casing and prevent fluid communication between the flowbore and the wellbore via the plurality of fluid apertures at the application of the first pressure and the second pressure. The lower piston may be further configured to slidingly disengage with the inner annular casing and thereby permit fluid communication between the flowbore and the wellbore via the plurality of fluid apertures at the application of the third pressure. The downhole tool may further include an upper piston disposed in the casing flowpath and the annular space and configured to axially displace the annular cover at the application of the first pressure. The downhole tool may also include a biasing member configured to axially displace the upper piston and the annular cover to permit fluid communication between the annular space and the flowbore at the application of the second pressure. The downhole tool may further include a plurality of retention members. A first retention member of the plurality of retention members may be configured to retain the upper piston prior to the application of the first pressure and a second retention member of the plurality of retention members may be configured to retain the lower piston prior to the application of the third pressure.
The present disclosure is best understood from the following detailed description when read with the accompanying Figures. It is emphasized that, in accordance with the standard practice in the industry, various features are not drawn to scale. In fact, the dimensions of the various features may be arbitrarily increased or reduced for clarity of discussion.
It is to be understood that the following disclosure describes several exemplary embodiments for implementing different features, structures, or functions of the invention. Exemplary embodiments of components, arrangements, and configurations are described below to simplify the present disclosure; however, these exemplary embodiments are provided merely as examples and are not intended to limit the scope of the invention. Additionally, the present disclosure may repeat reference numerals and/or letters in the various exemplary embodiments and across the Figures provided herein. This repetition is for the purpose of simplicity and clarity and does not in itself dictate a relationship between the various exemplary embodiments and/or configurations discussed in the various Figures. Moreover, the formation of a first feature over or on a second feature in the description that follows may include embodiments in which the first and second features are formed in direct contact, and may also include embodiments in which additional features may be formed interposing the first and second features, such that the first and second features may not be in direct contact. Finally, the exemplary embodiments presented below may be combined in any combination of ways, i.e., any element from one exemplary embodiment may be used in any other exemplary embodiment, without departing from the scope of the disclosure.
Additionally, certain terms are used throughout the following description and claims to refer to particular components. As one skilled in the art will appreciate, various entities may refer to the same component by different names, and as such, the naming convention for the elements described herein is not intended to limit the scope of the invention, unless otherwise specifically defined herein. Further, the naming convention used herein is not intended to distinguish between components that differ in name but not function. Additionally, in the following discussion and in the claims, the terms “including” and “comprising” are used in an open-ended fashion, and thus should be interpreted to mean “including, but not limited to.” All numerical values in this disclosure may be exact or approximate values unless otherwise specifically stated. Accordingly, various embodiments of the disclosure may deviate from the numbers, values, and ranges disclosed herein without departing from the intended scope. Furthermore, as it is used in the claims or specification, the term “or” is intended to encompass both exclusive and inclusive cases, i.e., “A or B” is intended to be synonymous with “at least one of A and B,” unless otherwise expressly specified herein.
Unless otherwise specified, use of the terms “up,” “upper,” “upward,” “uphole,” “upstream,” or other like terms shall be construed as generally toward the surface of the formation or the surface of a body of water; likewise, use of “down,” “lower,” “downward,” “downhole,” “downstream,” or other like terms shall be construed as generally away from the surface of the formation or the surface of a body of water, regardless of the wellbore orientation. Use of any one or more of the foregoing terms shall not be construed as denoting positions along a perfectly vertical axis.
Turning now to the Figures,
As shown, the wellbore 10 is in fluid communication with the surface 22 via a rig 24 and/or other associated components positioned on the surface 22 around the wellbore 10. The rig 24 may be a drilling rig or a workover rig and may include a derrick 26 and a rig floor 28, through which the casing string 12 is positioned within the wellbore 10. In example embodiments, the casing string 12 includes the downhole completion tool 18 coupled to a first sub component 30 and a second sub component 32 (
The rig 24 may be a conventional drilling or workover rig and may utilize a motor-driven winch and other associated equipment for lowering the casing string 12 and the downhole completion tool 18 to the desired depth. Although the rig 24 is depicted in
As noted above, in some embodiments, the downhole completion tool 18 is referred to as being coupled to components of a casing string 12, e.g., first and second sub components 30,32; however, it will be appreciated by one or ordinary skill in the art that the downhole completion tool 18 may be incorporated into other suitable tubular members. In at least one other embodiment, the downhole completion tool 18 may be incorporated into a liner. Further, the downhole completion tool 18 may be incorporated into a work string or like component.
Referring now to
The first sub component 30 may be further coupled to another portion of the casing string 12, a packer 14, or other associated drilling or completion component(s). The second sub component 32 may be further coupled to another portion of the casing string 12, the float shoe 16, or other associated drilling or completion component(s). In an exemplary embodiment, the downhole completion tool 18 may be coupled to the casing string 12 proximate the end portion or “toe” of the casing string 12.
As shown in
The inner annular casing 46 further may define in conjunction with the cylindrical housing 36 an annular space 64 therebetween. In some embodiments, a biasing nut 66, a biasing member 68, a first annular component 70, a second annular component 72, an annular cover 74, a plurality of seal components 76,78, and at least a portion of an upper piston 80 may be disposed within the annular space 64. The annular space 64 may be in fluid communication with a casing flowpath 82 defined by a first end portion 84 of the inner annular casing 46. The upper piston 80 may include a piston head 86 and a piston rod 88, such that the piston head 86 may be disposed in the casing flowpath 82 and the piston rod 88 may be partially disposed in each of the annular space 64 and the casing flowpath 82. The upper piston 80 may be further configured to axially displace the annular cover 74 subject to forces applied to the piston head 86 by the first threshold pressure. The first end portion 84 of the inner annular casing 46 further defines a first port 90 in fluid communication with the casing flowpath 82 and the flowbore 34.
An end portion 92 of the piston rod 88 may be coupled or integral with a first end portion 94 of the annular cover 74 and configured to actuate the annular cover 74 such that the annular cover 74 moves axially within the annular space 64. One or more retention members 96, illustrated as shear screws, may be configured to retain the annular cover 74 in an initial position prior to the application of the first threshold pressure. The first annular component 70, illustrated as a shear ring in
In some embodiments, the first annular component 70 and the annular cover 74 may be a unitary piece; however, in other embodiments, the first annular component 70 and the annular cover 74 are respective individual components and arranged within the annular space 64 such that a fluid passageway 97 is defined therebetween, as shown in
In the initial position, in one or more embodiments, the annular cover 74 may cover a second port 98 defined in the inner annular casing 46 and prevent the second port 98 from fluidly communicating with the annular space 64 as shown in
A recessed end portion 100 of the first annular component 70 may form a shoulder 102 configured to seat the second annular component 72, illustrated as a locking ring, when the annular cover 74 is in the initial position. The locking ring 72 may be detachably attached to a second end portion 104 of the annular cover 74. In another embodiment, annular cover may include a plurality of components including a spring spacer (not shown) spaced apart from a main body of the annular cover 74 in the initial position. Accordingly, the locking ring 72 may be detachably attached to the spring spacer adjacent the main body of the annular cover 74.
In the initial position, the locking ring 72 may be detachably attached to the annular cover 74 such that the annular cover 74 is fixed. The recessed end portion 100 of the first annular component 70 may further form a lip 106, such that the lip 106 may be configured to seat the locking ring 72 after the locking ring 72 has been axially displaced. The locking ring 72 may be further configured to release or detach from the second end portion 104 of the annular cover 74 when seated on the lip 106. In an embodiment in which the first annular component 70 and annular cover 74 are a unitary piece, the annular space 64 may include a protrusion disposed therein and integral or coupled with the inner surface 50 of the housing 36 to seat the locking ring 72 after the locking ring 72 is displaced axially downstream by the unitary piece including the first annular component 70 and the annular cover 74.
The biasing member 68, illustrated as a spring in the embodiments of
The annular space 64 may be pressurized to be or include a pressurized chamber. In an exemplary embodiment, the annular space 64 is a pressurized chamber having a pressure substantially equal to one atmospheric unit (1 atm). In another embodiment, the pressurized chamber may have a pressure greater than 1 atm. To provide the pressurized chamber at atmospheric pressure, the pressurized chamber may be sealed prior to the downhole completion tool 18 being run downhole, such that the pressurized chamber may be maintained at atmospheric pressure at the predetermined depth of the downhole completion tool 18 at the initial position.
Operation of the downhole completion tool 18 may now be disclosed herein, according to at least some embodiments of the present disclosure. As shown in
Depending on the design of the hydrocarbon-producing well, none, a portion of, or substantially all of the casing string 12 may be cemented in place to secure the casing string 12 in the wellbore 10. Optionally, one or more packers 14 and/or the float shoe 16 may be provided in the wellbore 10 as shown in
As initially positioned in the wellbore 10 and prior to the initiation of the pressure test, the downhole completion tool 18 may be configured as depicted in
In the embodiment illustrated in
The second end portion 104 of the annular cover 74 may be detachably attached to the locking ring 72 as shown in
The locking ring 72 may be a circlip, snap ring, or any other retaining ring capable of retaining the annular cover 74 in the initial position. The locking ring 72 may be disposed and seated on the shoulder 102 formed on the first annular component 70 in the initial position. The locking ring 72 may utilize the support of the shoulder 102 to counter the forces provided by the spring 68 against the annular cover 74 retained by the locking ring 72.
The spring 68 may apply a force consistent with the spring rate and the location of the biasing nut 66 in the pressurized chamber of the annular space 64. The spring rate and the placement of the biasing nut 68 may be determined based in part on at least one of the first threshold pressure, the third threshold pressure, and the pressure in the pressurized chamber of the annular space 64. In the initial position, the spring 68 may apply a force to the annular cover 74; however, the force provided by the spring 68 based on the aforementioned parameters may not be sufficient to displace the annular cover 74 based at least on the locking ring 72 being disposed and seated on the shoulder 102 of the first annular component 70.
The lower piston 48 is depicted in
After the casing string 12 and downhole completion tool 18 are run in the wellbore 10, a pressure test may be performed. Accordingly, a first threshold pressure may be applied to the casing string 12 and the downhole completion tool 18 as depicted in
As the first threshold pressure is applied to the casing string 12 and the downhole completion tool 18 via fluid pumped through the casing string 12 from the surface 22, fluid is flowed through the first port 90 causing a force correlating to the first threshold pressure to be applied to the piston head 86 of the upper piston 80 disposed in the casing flowpath 82. The force is sufficient to displace the annular cover 74 via the piston rod 88 and to shear the shear screws 96 retaining the annular cover 74 in the initial position. As the annular cover 74 is axially displaced, the locking ring 72 coupled to the second end portion 104 of the annular cover 74 is axially displaced downstream from the seated position on the shoulder 102 of the first annular component 70 and is axially shifted along the first annular component 70. As the locking ring 72 reaches the lip 106 of the first annular component 70, the locking ring 72 expands and presses against an inner surface 50 of the housing 36 and abuts or is seated on the lip 106 of the first annular component 70 such that the locking ring 72 is prohibited from moving axially upstream. As the locking ring 72 expands, the locking ring 72 detaches from the second end portion 104 of the annular cover 74, such that the annular cover 74 and the locking ring 72 are no longer attached to one another. The annular cover 74 may be retained adjacent the locking ring 72 seated on the lip 106 of the first annular component 70 until the application of the first threshold pressure is ceased and the pressure in the flowbore 34 begins to bleed down.
In the first threshold position, the annular cover 74 may be urged by the upper piston 80 with a magnitude of force sufficient to further compress the spring 68 in the position as indicated in
As the first threshold pressure in the flowbore 34 may be applied only to the casing flowpath 82 and upper piston 80 via the first port 90 in the first threshold position, the pressurized chamber may remain at atmospheric pressure. Accordingly, the lower piston 48 may remain statically disposed and seated on the shoulder 56 of the second end portion 54 of the inner annular casing 46. In the first threshold position, the lower piston 48 prevents fluid communication between the housing apertures 41 and the flowbore 34 of the downhole completion tool 18. Thus, the downhole completion tool 18 may allow for a pressure build up in the flowbore 34 indicative of a pressure test without allowing for any leakage or flow to and/or from the subterranean formation 20 in the first threshold position.
After performing the pressure test and achieving the first threshold pressure in the downhole completion tool 18 and the casing string 12, the first threshold pressure may be allowed to bleed down to reduce the pressure in the downhole completion tool 18 and casing string 12 to a bleed down pressure, or second threshold pressure. As positioned in the wellbore 10 after the pressure has been bled down from the first threshold pressure to the second threshold pressure, the downhole completion tool 18 may be configured as depicted in
As shown in
As shown in the embodiment of
In the embodiment illustrated in
As depicted in
Thus, as depicted in
After the third threshold pressure may be applied to the casing string 12 and the downhole completion tool 18 in the second pressure cycle, the downhole completion tool 18 may be configured as depicted in the respective embodiments of
The arrangement of the downhole completion tool 18 as depicted in
The third threshold pressure may be determined at least in part by design parameters, including, for example, the rating of the shear screws 62 retaining the lower piston 48 in place and the pressure in the pressurized chamber of the annular space 64. In another embodiment, the third threshold pressure may be determined at least in part by the characteristics of the subterranean formation 20, e.g., type of rock, porosity, and permeability. In an operative example, the third threshold pressure may be at least about 2000 psig. In another operative example, the third threshold pressure may be at least about 500 psig. Still yet, in other operative examples, the third threshold pressure may be at least about 1000 psig, at least about 1500 psig, at least about 2500 psig, at least about 3000 psig, at least about 3500 psig, at least about 4000 psig, at least about 4500 psig, or at least about 5000 psig.
In an exemplary embodiment, the third threshold pressure may be applied to the casing string 12 and the downhole completion tool 18, such that the third threshold pressure is greater than the pressure in the pressurized chamber. Accordingly, the third threshold pressure may be introduced to the pressurized chamber via the second port 98 and the annular cover flowpath 108 as illustrated in
The displacement of the lower piston 48 in the downstream axial direction allows for the fluid communication of the flowbore 34 of the downhole completion tool 18 with the subterranean formation 20 or wellbore 10, or both, via the housing apertures 41. In the final position, stimulants and/or production fluid may flow therebetween via the housing apertures 41. Thus, the downhole completion tool 18 as described herein provides for the application of a pressure test and a subsequent fluid pathway for stimulation and/or production of the hydrocarbon well without the requirement of separate trips downhole.
In another embodiment, the casing string 12 may include a plurality of downhole completion tools 18 coupled with one another in series, commonly referred to as “daisy-chained.” In another embodiment, the downhole completion tools 18 may be separated by portions of the casing string 12. By arranging the downhole completion tools 18 in series along a portion of the casing string 12, multiple pressure tests may be conducted before the production or stimulation of the well without further trips downhole. Thus, multiple pressure cycles may be provided in instances in which two or more pressure tests may be required.
As shown in
The method 200 may also include decreasing the first pressure to a second pressure such that the annular cover is axially displaced and the flowbore is fluidly coupled with an annular space defined at least in part by the housing and the inner annular casing, as at 208. The method 200 may also further include applying a third pressure to the annular space via the flowbore, as at 210. The method may further include displacing a second piston axially via a force generated by the third pressure on the second piston, the second piston shearing a second retention member configured to retain the second piston prior to the application of the third pressure, thereby fluidly coupling the subterranean formation and the flowbore via a plurality of housing apertures defined in the housing, as at 212.
The foregoing has outlined features of several embodiments so that those skilled in the art may better understand the present disclosure. Those skilled in the art should appreciate that they may readily use the present disclosure as a basis for designing or modifying other processes and structures for carrying out the same purposes and/or achieving the same advantages of the embodiments introduced herein. Those skilled in the art should also realize that such equivalent constructions do not depart from the spirit and scope of the present disclosure, and that they may make various changes, substitutions and alterations herein without departing from the spirit and scope of the present disclosure.
The present application claims priority to U.S. Prov. Appl. No. 61/883,156, filed on Sep. 26, 2013. The contents of the priority application are incorporated herein by reference to the extent consistent with the present disclosure.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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20090095486 | Williamson, Jr. | Apr 2009 | A1 |
20150041148 | Greenan | Feb 2015 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20140299329 A1 | Oct 2014 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61883156 | Sep 2013 | US |