1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to downhole filters, methods of filtering production fluid downhole, and methods of producing downhole filters. Embodiments of the invention relate to downhole filters, such as sand screens, for use in preventing sand or other particulates entrained in production fluid from passing from a producing formation into a wellbore.
2. Description of the Related Art
It is generally desirable that fluids extracted from downhole formations, such as oil and gas produced from hydrocarbon-bearing formations, are substantially free from particulates, or sand. The presence of sand in the production fluid can lead to blockages, premature wear and damage to valves, pumps and the like. Produced sand which has been separated from the produced fluid at surface requires storage and disposal, which can be difficult and expensive, particularly in offshore operations. Furthermore, unchecked production of sand from a formation can result in substantial damage to the formation itself.
Perhaps the most common means for restricting sand production involves the provision of a mechanical sand control device, installed downhole, that causes the sand to bridge or filters the produced liquids or gases. These devices come in many forms, including slotted liners and wire-wrapped screens. The simplest slotted liner is made of oilfield pipe that has been longitudinally slotted with a precision saw or mill. Such liner is relatively inexpensive, and is accordingly preferred for wells having long completion intervals, but does not have high-inlet-flow areas, and may therefore be unsuitable for high-rate wells. Wire-wrapped screens consist of keystone-shaped corrosion-resistant wire wrapped around a drilled or slotted mandrel, the wire being spaced from the mandrel by longitudinal ribs to allow for maximum flow through the screen.
Other sand control devices comprise a filter sheet sandwiched between a perforated base pipe and a perforated outer shroud. By providing the filter sheet in the form of a plurality of overlapping leaves, and providing a diametrically expandable base pipe and outer shroud, it is possible to provide an expandable sand control device, such as is sold under the ESS trade mark by the applicant. In this particular arrangement, overlapping leaves of non-expanding apertured metal filter sheet are sandwiched between a slotted expandable base pipe and a slotted expandable protective shroud. Each leaf is attached to the base pipe along an axially extending weld, and the free edges of the leaves then overlapped to provide an iris-like arrangement. On expansion of the filter, the leaves of filter sheet slide over one another, the circumferential extent of each leaf being selected such that a degree of overlap remains in the expanded configuration, such that there is a continuous wrapping of filter sheet.
While such expandable filter arrangements have been used successfully on many occasions, manufacture of the arrangements is relatively difficult and expensive, and the location and relative movement of the filter sheets during the expansion process introduces a risk of the filter sheets tearing. When installing the sand control device as a completion string within the wellbore, the outer shroud may tear upon coming into contact with an obstruction within the wellbore, rendering the sand control device ineffective for its desired purpose. Installing a filter arrangement downhole is especially problematic when it is desired to drill to the desired depth within the formation using the filter arrangement, as the outer shroud is especially prone to tearing upon portions of the formation while drilling.
Embodiments of the various aspects of the present invention provide alternative sand control devices.
According to embodiments of the present invention there is provided a downhole filter comprising a tubular member having a wall defining a plurality of openings, at least a portion of one or more openings having an outer width less than an inner width. Thus, the parts of the openings defining the smaller width are defined by radially outer parts of the openings, such that particulates or sand prevented from passing through the openings will tend to be retained to the outside of the tubular member.
Preferably, said outer width defines the minimum width of the openings. Preferably, said portions of one or more openings defining said outer width are located on or adjacent an outer circumference of the tubular member.
Conveniently, the openings have a keystone form, that is the openings are of generally trapezoidal section, or wedge-shaped section. However, the openings may take any appropriate form, including a nozzle-like form having convex side walls or other forms having rectilinear or non-rectilinear side walls. Keystone-form openings may be created by laser-cutting, abrasive water jet cutting, or indeed by any conventional cutting or milling techniques.
The form of openings present in the walls of tubular members in accordance with these embodiments of the present invention is of course unlike the form of openings that would be achieved if a normally apertured planar sheet, in which openings have parallel walls, is rolled into a tubular form, which tends to create openings in which the inner width of the openings is less than the outer width. Furthermore, conventional slotted liner, made of oilfield pipe that has been longitudinally slotted with a precision saw or mill, will feature parallel side walls and will tend to have an outer length greater than an inner length. Thus this aspect of the invention provides the preferred form of openings for sand exclusion such as is achieved in wire-wrapped screens, but without the complexity and expense associated with wire-wrapped screens, and in a relatively robust form.
The openings may be of any desired configuration or orientation, or combination of configurations or orientations, including longitudinally extending openings or slots, circumferentially extending openings or slots, helically extending openings or slots, or serpentine openings or slots which may have a wave or step-form.
Preferably, the tubular member is self-supporting such that the member may be handled, and preferably also run into and installed in a bore, without requiring the provision of an additional support member or members. Most preferably, the tubular member incorporates end couplings, to allow the tubular member to be incorporated in a string of tubulars. The tubular member may feature threaded end portions, such as pin and box connections, or may have ends adapted to co-operate with coupling sleeves. The number and form of the openings may be determined with a view to providing the tubular member with a desired strength, and crush resistance, and as such will depend upon, for example, the wall thickness of the tubular member, the diameter of the member, the material from which the member is formed, and whether the member has been or will be heat-treated, cold worked, or its material properties otherwise altered or modified.
In other embodiments, the tubular member may be provided in combination with one or more other tubular members located internally or externally thereof, which other tubular members may serve a support or protection function, or may provide a filtering function. One embodiment of the invention includes an inner support pipe, within the tubular member, but is absent any external protective shroud.
In certain embodiments the tubular member may be diametrically expandable. Such expansion may be accommodated in a number of ways, for example the wall of the member may extend or otherwise deform, which may involve a change in the form of the openings. In one embodiment, the wall of the tubular member may incorporate extendible portions, such as described in our PCT\GB2003\001718, the disclosure of which is incorporated by reference. However, a preferred extensible tubular member features substantially circular openings which, following diametric expansion, assume a circumferentially-extending slot-form of smaller width than the original openings. Preferably, the original openings are laser-cut.
According to another aspect of the present invention there is provided a wellbore filter comprising a tubular member having a plurality of openings therethrough, the openings having a serpentine configuration.
Aspects of the present invention also relate to methods of filtering wellbore fluids, one method comprising placing a downhole filter within a wellbore, with the downhole filter comprising a tubular member having a wall defining a plurality of openings, at least a portion of one or more openings having an outer width less than an inner width, with the outer width sized to filter wellbore particulate matter; and passing wellbore fluids into an interior passage of the tubular member through the openings. According to a yet further aspect of the present invention there is provided a downhole filter arrangement comprising a metal tubular member defining a plurality of laser-cut perforations.
Existing tubular members are slotted to create filters using a precision saw or mill. The use of a precision cutting tool is necessary to provide the accurately controlled slot width required to provide an effective filter with predictable sand control properties. However, the applicant has now achieved the previously unattainable accuracy required of filter slots or openings by laser-cutting. Conventionally, a slot cut by laser has a larger width at the slot ends, where cutting commenced and stopped, producing “dog-bone” slots, which are of little if any utility in filter applications. A conventional laser cutting operation utilises a substantially constant laser energy input, and when cutting commences the laser is held stationary relative to the workpiece until the laser has cut through the depth of the metal, before moving along the workpiece to cut the slot, and then coming to a stop at the end of the slot. Applicant believes that, without wishing to be bound by theory, where the laser is held stationary relative to the workpiece, energy transfer to the workpiece from the laser creates a pool of molten metal surrounding the area of metal which is removed by vaporisation, and this pool of molten metal is removed from the workpiece with the vaporised metal. This has the effect that the width of cut is increased relative to areas where the laser is moving relative to the workpiece, and where less metal is removed by this mechanism. The applicant has found that it is possible to avoid this problem by controlling the laser energy during the cutting process, and more particularly by reducing the laser energy when the laser is stationary relative to the workpiece. By doing so it has been possible to cut slots of consistent width, suitable for use in filtering applications. Other techniques may be utilised to control slot width, including reducing the flow rate of purging gas, and thus reducing the rate of removal of molten metal. Alternatively, or additionally, a pulsed laser may be used, which laser produces discrete energy pulses such that, in use, a laser spot is not focussed on the workpiece for a time which is sufficient to allow thermal energy to be conducted into the metal surrounding the cutting zone.
There are a number of advantages gained by utilising laser to cut the perforations. Firstly, the perforations may be of forms other than those achievable by means of a conventional rotating cutting tool, and in particular it is possible to cut narrow slots of a serpentine form. Secondly, laser cutting tools may operate in conjunction with a gas purge, which carries away the vaporised and molten metal, and cools the surrounding material. An oxygen purge may be utilised to help the exothermic reaction at high temperatures, but for the present application an inert gas purge is preferred. However, in addition to merely cooling the metal, the gas purge jet has been found to produce a quenching effect at the edges of the cut, tending to increase the hardness of the metal surrounding the cut, particularly the outer edges of the perforations. Of course this is the area of the perforation which is likely to have to withstand the greatest erosion.
According to another aspect of the present invention there is provided a method of creating a downhole filter arrangement comprising laser-cutting a plurality of perforations in a metal filter member. According to a still further aspect of the present invention there is provided an expandable downhole filter arrangement comprising an expandable base tube and a deformable metal filter sheet mounted around the base tube, the filter sheet defining a plurality of laser-cut perforations.
Surprisingly, it has been found that relatively thin laser-perforated metal filter sheet may be deformed, and in particular extended, with minimal risk of tearing. It has been found that the perforations, which are typically originally substantially circular, tend to deform on diametric expansion of the filter sheet to assume the form of elongate slots of width less than the diameter of the original perforations.
Laser-cut perforations tend to have a keystone or trapezoidal section, and the filter sheet is preferably arranged such that the smaller diameter end of each perforation in the filter sheet is adjacent the outer face of the sheet. It has been found that the laser-perforated sheet is sufficiently robust to obviate the requirement to provide a protective shroud around the exterior of the sheet, thus simplifying the manufacture of the expandable filter arrangement and allowing installation of the laser-perforated sheet within the wellbore without the tear-prone protective shroud. The laser-perforated sheet may be initially provided in planar form, and then wrapped or otherwise formed around the base tube. The edges of the sheet may be joined by any convenient method, such as a seam weld.
In another aspect, embodiments of the present invention provide a method of completing a wellbore, comprising providing a tubular string, a first portion of the tubular string comprising one or more non-porous tubulars and a second portion of the tubular string comprising one or more porous tubulars; and installing the tubular string within the wellbore such that the second portion is located adjacent a fluid-producing formation within the wellbore. In yet another aspect, embodiments of the present invention include an apparatus for use in drilling and completing a wellbore, comprising a drill string, a first portion of the drill string comprising one or more non-porous tubulars and a second portion of the drill string comprising one or more porous tubulars; and an earth removal member operatively connected to a lower end of the drill string.
So that the manner in which the above recited features of the present invention can be understood in detail, a more particular description of the invention, briefly summarized above, may be had by reference to embodiments, some of which are illustrated in the appended drawings. It is to be noted, however, that the appended drawings illustrate only typical embodiments of this invention and are therefore not to be considered limiting of its scope, for the invention may admit to other equally effective embodiments.
a is an enlarged schematic sectional view on line I—I of
Reference is first made to
The filter 10 comprises a metal tubular in which a large number of longitudinally-extending slots 16 have been cut. The slots 16 have a keystone or trapezoidal form, that is the width of the slots increases from the exterior of the tubular wall W0 to the interior W1. This feature is shown in
Reference is now made to
Reference is now made to
The head 40 and tubular 48 are mounted for relative movement to permit the desired slot forms to be cut, whether these are longitudinal slots, circumferential slots, or serpentine slots. The energy input to the head 40 from the associated power source 50 is controlled by a computer-controlled unit 49 such that, when the head 40 is producing an energy beam and is stationary relative to the tubular 48, the energy input is reduced such that the resulting slot width is the same as that produced when the head 40 is cutting a slot while moving relative to the tubular 48.
The laser-cutting head 40 is provided in conjunction with a purge gas outlet, from which a jet of inert gas 52 is directed onto and around the cutting area. This gas 52 protects the hot metal from oxidation and also carries away the vaporised and molten metal produced by the cutting operation. The gas 52 also has the effect of rapidly cooling the hot metal in the vicinity of the cut. The resulting quenching effect has been found to harden the metal, and in particular has been found to harden the slot outer edges 54. The hardening of the metal in the vicinity of the cut may cause the slot to become more resistant to erosion.
It will be noted that the perforations 76 are substantially circular, and on expansion of the filter arrangement 70 to a larger diameter, with corresponding diametric expansion of the filter sheet 74, the perforations 76 assume the form of elongate slots 76a, as illustrated in
The laser-cut perforations 76 have a keystone or trapezoidal section, which form is retained in the extended slots 76a, and the filter sheet 74 is arranged such that the narrower or smaller diameter end of the perforations is adjacent the outer face of the filter sheet. It has been found that the laser-perforated filter sheet 74 is sufficiently robust to obviate the requirement to provide a protective shroud around the exterior of the sheet 74, thus simplifying the manufacture of the expandable filter arrangement 70 and allowing installation of the filter arrangement 70 within the wellbore 12 without the tear-prone protective outer shroud.
The tubular string 105 includes a non-porous tubing portion 115 and a porous tubing portion 18 operatively connected to one another, preferably connected to one another by a threaded connection 125. The porous tubing portion 18 preferably acts as a downhole filter for fluid entering a bore of the tubular string 105 from the formation 14. One or more openings 16, which are preferably one or more perforations or one or more slots, are located within the tubular wall of the porous tubing portion 18.
The openings 16 are preferably formed in the porous tubing portion 18 in the same manner as described in relation to
Because the tubular string 105 shown in
In the alternate embodiment in which the wellbore 12 is drilled to the desired depth prior to insertion of the tubular string 105 into the wellbore 12, the earth removal member 120 is preferably not included at the lower end of the tubular string 105. Moreover, in the alternate embodiment, the tubular string 105 does not have to be rotated, and drilling fluid does not have to be circulated during lowering of the tubular string 105.
In operation, the tubular string 105 is assembled at the surface of the wellbore 12 so that the porous tubing portion 18 will ultimately be disposed substantially adjacent to the fluid-bearing portion of the formation 14, which is the “area of interest” in the formation 14. The tubular string 105 may include any number of porous tubing portions 18 and any number of non-porous tubing portions 115 connected in any order to one another. In assembling the tubular string 105 at the surface, the porous tubing portion 18 is selected based on the quantity, shape, and size of openings 16 needed to filter the fluid flowing from the area of interest in the formation 14 to the desired extent, and the length of the porous tubing portion 18 is selected based on the desired flow-filtering area of the downhole filter.
Instead of assembling the tubular string 105 at the surface, the tubular string 105 may be assembled as portions of the tubular string 105 are lowered into the wellbore 12, for example by threadedly connecting porous and non-porous tubing portions 18, 115 as the upper end of the preceding tubular portion becomes accessible. Whether assembled at the surface or while the tubular string 105 is lowered into the wellbore 12, the porous tubing portions 18 need not be alike in quantity, shape, or size of the openings 16 or length over which the openings 16 extend along the tubular string 105. For example, if more than one area of interest exists in the formation 14, one porous tubing portion 18 may be configured in one way, while another porous tubing portion 18 may be configured in another way, so that each porous tubing portion 18 is configured to adequately filter the different area of interest to which it is disposed adjacent.
As shown in
The tubular string 105 is used to drill the wellbore 12 until the porous tubing portion 18 is positioned at least substantially adjacent to the area of interest in the formation 14. In one embodiment, the earth removal member 120 may remain within the wellbore 12 after drilling the tubular string 105 to the area of interest. In an alternative embodiment, the earth removal member 120 may be retrieved from the wellbore 12, for example by any fishing tool known to those skilled in the art capable of retrieving a drill bit. In a further alternative embodiment, the earth removal member 120 may be drilled through by another cutting tool.
If the wellbore 12 was drilled prior to insertion of the tubular string 105 into the wellbore 12, as in the alternate embodiment, the tubular string 105 is lowered into the previously drilled-out wellbore 12 to a position substantially adjacent to the area of interest within the formation 14. Because the earth removal member 120 is not present in this embodiment, no procedure is necessary to remove the earth removal member 120 from the wellbore 12.
At this point in the operation, the fluid may flow through the openings 16 from the area of interest in the formation 14 into the bore of the tubular string 105. As the fluid flows through the openings 16, the fluid is filtered so that wellbore particulate matter is prevented from entering the bore of the tubular string 105 to the extent desired. The filtered fluid may then flow up through the bore of the tubular string 105 to the surface of the wellbore 12.
An additional embodiment of the present invention is shown in
Referring to
The downhole filter portion 70 of
In the alternative, the openings 75 and 76 of the slotted base tube 72 and surrounding filter sheet 74 may be configured and formed by other methods shown or described herein or in any other manner known to those skilled in the art. Specifically, the openings 75, 76 may be formed by laser-cutting or abrasive water jet cutting, or by any conventional cutting or milling techniques.
The downhole filter 70 may be expandable as shown and described in relation to
The tubular string 150 may be a drill string as shown in
In operation, the tubular string 150 is assembled at the surface of the wellbore 12 or, instead, as it is being lowered into the previously-drilled wellbore 12 so that the porous tubing portion 70 will be located substantially adjacent the area of interest in the formation 14, as described above in relation to the embodiment of
When assembling the tubular string 150, the porous tubing portions 70 are selected and formed based on the quantity, shape, and size of openings 75, 76 necessary to filter the fluid flowing from the area of interest in the formation 14 to the desired extent, and the length and location of the porous tubing portions 70 in the tubular string 150 are selected based on the desired flow-filtering area of the downhole filter 70. If the tubular string 150 is expandable, the size and shape of the openings 75, 76 of the porous tubing portions 70 subsequent to expansion are taken into account when selecting the characteristics of the openings 75, 76 of the pre-expansion porous tubing portions 70.
After or while the tubular string 150 is assembled, the tubular string 150 is lowered into the wellbore 12. If the tubular string 150 is used to drill into the formation 14, as shown in
In the embodiment in which the tubular string 150 is not expanded, the earth removal member 120 may optionally be removed from the wellbore 12 by retrieving it with the fishing tool, as described above in relation to
In the alternate embodiment where the tubular string 150 is installed within the wellbore 12 after the wellbore 12 has previously been formed, the porous tubing portion 70 is merely positioned substantially adjacent to the area of interest within the previously drilled-out wellbore 12. Fluid may then flow through the tubular string 150 as described in the previous paragraph.
When the earth removal member 120 (see
While the embodiment shown in
If it is desired to retrieve the earth removal member 120 utilized in embodiments shown and described in relation to
In the embodiments shown above with regards to
As described above, the “tubular” and “tubing” may comprise any type of pipe, casing, or other tubular body. The above embodiments of downhole filters may be employed in open hole wellbores as well as cased wellbores. Furthermore, although the above description uses directional terms such as “lowering” and “depth”, embodiments of the present invention are not limited to these particular directions or to a vertical wellbore, but are merely terms used to describe relative positions within the wellbore. Specifically, it is within the purview of embodiments of the present invention to be applied to use in a lateral wellbore, horizontal wellbore, or any other directionally-drilled wellbore to describe relative positions of objects within the wellbore and relative movements of objects within the wellbore.
Those of skill in the art will appreciate that the above-described embodiments are merely exemplary of the present invention, and that various modifications and improvements may be made thereto without departing from the scope of the invention. For example, although the various filters and filter arrangements are described above with reference to downhole filtering applications, other embodiments may have utility in sub-sea or surface filtering applications.
While the foregoing is directed to embodiments of the present invention, other and further embodiments of the invention may be devised without departing from the basic scope thereof, and the scope thereof is determined by the claims that follow.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
9828234.6 | Dec 1998 | GB | national |
0224807.8 | Oct 2002 | GB | national |
This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/693,185 filed Oct. 24, 2003 now U.S. Pat. No. 7,093,653, which is herein incorporated by reference in its entirety. U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/693,185 claims benefit of Great Britain Patent Application No. 0224807.8 filed Oct. 25, 2002, which is also herein incorporated by reference in its entirety. This application is also a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/853,498 filed on May 25, 2004, which is herein incorporated by reference in its entirety. U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/853,498 is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/364,718 filed on Feb. 11, 2003, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,742,606, which is herein incorporated by reference in its entirety. U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/364,718 is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/469,643 filed on Dec. 22, 1999, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,543,552, which is herein incorporated by reference in its entirety. U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/469,643 claims benefit of Great Britain Application No. 9828234.6 filed on Dec. 22, 1998, which is also herein incorporated by reference in its entirety.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20050121232 A1 | Jun 2005 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10364718 | Feb 2003 | US |
Child | 10853498 | US | |
Parent | 09469643 | Dec 1999 | US |
Child | 10364718 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 10693185 | Oct 2003 | US |
Child | 10900076 | US | |
Parent | 10853498 | May 2004 | US |
Child | 10693185 | US |