The present invention generally relates to subsurface valves. More particularly, the present invention relates to an apparatus and method to operate a subsurface valve with a capillary tube extending from a surface station. More particularly still, the present invention relates to an apparatus and method to operate a subsurface valve with a capillary tube extending from a surface station from within the tubing string upon which the valve is mounted. The valve may be a safety valve, a storm check valve, or a choke valve. The flow interrupting device or valve may be formed from a flapper, a ball valve, or a gate valve or any other type of flow diverting valve assembly which may be actuated from the surface.
Subsurface valves are typically installed in strings of tubing deployed to subterranean wellbores to prevent the escape of fluids from one production zone to another, including the surface. The application of the present invention relates to all types of valves, but for the purposes of this disclosure the illustrative application shall be safety valves used to shut in a well in the absence of continued hydraulic pressure from the surface. This limitation on the scope of this disclosure should not be used to limit the scope of the disclosure for non-safety valve applications which may be readily apparent from the disclosure made herein to a person having ordinary skill in this art.
Absent safety valves, sudden increases in downhole pressure can lead to catastrophic blowouts of production and other fluids into the atmosphere. For this reason, drilling and production regulations throughout the world require safety valves be in place within strings of production tubing before certain operations can be performed.
One popular type of safety valve is known as a flapper valve. Flapper valves typically include a closure member generally in the form of a circular or curved disc that engages a corresponding valve seat to isolate one or more zones in the subsurface well. The flapper disc is preferably constructed such that the flow through the flapper valve seat is as unrestricted as possible. Usually, flapper-type safety valves are located within the production tubing and isolate one or more production zones from the atmosphere or upper portions of the wellbore or production tubing. Optimally, flapper valves function as large clearance check valves, in that they allow substantially unrestricted flow therethrough when opened and completely seal off flow in one direction when closed. Particularly, production tubing safety valves prevent fluids from production zones from flowing up the production tubing when closed but still allow for the flow of fluids (and movement of tools) into the production zone from above.
Flapper valve disks are often energized with a biasing member (spring, hydraulic cylinder, etc.) such that in a condition with zero flow and with no actuating force applied, the valve remains closed. In this closed position, any build-up of pressure from the production zone below will thrust the flapper disc against the valve seat and act to strengthen any seal therebetween. During use, flapper valves are opened by various methods to allow the free flow and travel of production fluids and tools therethrough. Flapper valves may be kept open through hydraulic, electrical, or mechanical energy during the production process.
Examples of subsurface safety valves can be found in U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/522,360 filed Sep. 20, 2004 by Jeffrey Bolding titled “Downhole Safety Apparatus and Method;” U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/522,500 filed Oct. 7, 2004 by David R. Smith and Jeffrey Bolding titled “Downhole Safety Valve Apparatus and Method;” U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/522,499 filed Oct. 7, 2004 by David R. Smith and Jeffrey Bolding titled “Downhole Safety Valve Interface Apparatus and Method;” all hereby incorporated herein by reference.
This application further incorporates by reference U.S. Non-Provisional application Ser. No. 10/708,338 Filed Feb. 25, 2004, titled “Method and Apparatus to Complete a Well Having Tubing Inserted Through a Valve” and U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 60/319,972 Filed Feb. 25, 2003 titled “Method and Apparatus to Complete a Well Having Tubing Inserted Through a Valve”.
One popular means to counteract the closing force of the biasing member and any production flow therethrough involves the use of a capillary tube to operate the safety valve flapper through hydraulic pressure. Traditionally, production tubing having a subsurface safety valve mounted thereto is disposed down a wellbore to a depth of investigation. In this circumstance, the capillary tubing used to open and shut the subsurface safety valve is deployed in the annulus formed between the outer profile of the production tubing and the inner wall of the borehole or casing. A fitting outside of the subsurface safety valve connects to the capillary tubing and allows pressure in the capillary to operate the flapper of the safety valve.
Furthermore, because former systems were run with the production tubing, installations after the placement of production tubing in the wellbore are invasive. To accomplish this, the production tubing must be retrieved, the safety valve installed, the capillary tubing attached, and the production tubing, safety valve, and capillary tubing run back into the hole. This process is expensive and time consuming, so it is typically performed on wells having enough long-term production capability to justify the expense.
The present invention is directed to a downhole safety valve apparatus with a bypass-conduit, for example. In one embodiment a valve comprises a flow interruption device operable between an open position and a closed hydraulically sealed position and a bypass-conduit extending from a surface location through the valve to a zone below the valve, the bypass-conduit wholly contained within a bore of a string of tubing carrying the valve. The valve can be a subsurface safety valve or a storm choke valve. The zone below the valve can be a production zone. The flow interruption device can be a flapper. The flapper can be pivotably operable between the open position and the closed hydraulically sealed position.
In another embodiment, the bypass-conduit is in communication with the surface location and the zone below the valve when the flow interruption device is in the closed hydraulically sealed position. The operating conduit can be in communication with a source of an energy, the operating conduit extending from the surface location to the valve and the energy actuating the flow interruption device from the closed hydraulically sealed position to the open position. The bypass-conduit can be a capillary tube. The capillary tube can be a fluid injection capillary tube in communication with the surface location and the zone below the valve. The fluid can be a liquid or gas. In another embodiment, the fluid is selected from the group comprising surfactant, acid, miscellar solution, corrosion inhibitor, scale inhibitor, hydrate inhibitor, and paraffin inhibitor.
In another embodiment the bypass-conduit is a logging conduit, a gas lift conduit, an electrical conductor, or an optical fiber. In yet another embodiment, the bypass-conduit is a hydraulic passage. The bypass-conduit can further comprise a check valve attached below the valve or a check valve attached between the valve and a wellhead.
In another embodiment, the operating conduit is a hydraulic passage. The operating conduit can further comprise a check valve located between the valve and a wellhead. The energy supplied by the operating conduit can actuate a packer element of the valve to an engaged position. The energy supplied by the operating conduit can actuate a packer element of the valve to a disengaged position. The operating conduit can be a continuous tube. The operating conduit can be a capillary tube.
In yet another embodiment, the operating conduit and the bypass-conduit can be concentric. The operating conduit and the string of tubing can be concentric. The bypass-conduit and the string of tubing can be concentric. The valve can further comprise a second operating conduit extending from the surface location to the valve, the second operating conduit in communication with the source of the energy, the energy actuating the flow interruption device from the open position to the closed hydraulically sealed position. The second operating conduit can extend from the surface location to the valve from outside the string of tubing.
In yet another embodiment, a method to communicate with a zone below a valve can comprise installing a valve at a downhole location within a string of tubing, connecting an operating conduit inside a bore of the string of tubing between the valve and a surface location, extending a bypass-conduit wholly contained within a bore of a string of tubing carrying the valve from the surface location, through the valve, and to the zone below the valve, selectively opening and closing a flow interruption device with the operating conduit, and communicating with the zone below the valve via the bypass-conduit when the flow interruption device of the valve is in a closed hydraulically sealed position. The valve can be a subsurface safety valve. The flow interruption device can be a flapper.
In another embodiment, the method can further comprise communicating with the zone below the valve through the bypass-conduit when the flow interruption device of the valve is in an open position. The bypass-conduit can be a continuous tube. The bypass-conduit can be a capillary tube. The method can further comprise constructing the bypass-conduit from a section of jointed pipe deployed from the surface location. The method can further comprise locating a check valve in the bypass-conduit above the valve. The method can further comprise locating a check valve in the bypass-conduit below the valve. The method can further comprise locating a check valve in the operating conduit.
In yet another embodiment, the method can further comprise injecting a foam to the zone below the valve through the bypass-conduit. The method can further comprise injecting a fluid to the zone below the valve through the bypass-conduit. The fluid can be selected from the group consisting of corrosion inhibitor, scale inhibitor, hydrate inhibitor, paraffin inhibitor, surfactant, acid, and miscellar solution. The bypass conduit can be a logging conduit, a gas lift conduit; an electrical conductor, or an optical fiber. The bore of the logging conduit can be greater than one and a half inches in diameter.
In another embodiment, the method can further comprise deploying the string of tubing, the bypass-conduit, the operating conduit, and the valve simultaneously. The method can further comprise deploying the valve, the bypass-conduit, and the operating conduit simultaneously into a pre-existing string of tubing. The valve can be installed by actuating a packer element of the valve. The method can further comprise actuating the packer element with the operating conduit. The method can further comprise actuating the packer element with the operating conduit. The method can further comprise actuating the packer element with the bypass-conduit.
Referring initially to
Safety valve assembly 100 acts to prevent flow from lower zone 110 to upper zone 108 and typically includes a valve body 120, a flapper disc 122, a valve seat 124, and a flow bore 126. While a flapper-type design is typical and common for safety valves deployed to subterranean wells, it should be understood that any type of valve assembly known to one skilled in the art may be used. When flapper disc 122 is open, production fluids and other tools and materials are free to flow from zone 108 to zone 110 and vice versa through flow bore 126. However, when flapper disc 122 is closed and in contact with valve seat 124, fluids in zone 110 cannot migrate to zone 108 within production tubing 102. Ideally, flapper disc 122 is biased by a spring (or equivalent) into contact with valve seat 124 so flapper disc 122 will close in the absence of any opening force.
The operation of flapper disc 122 from closed position in engagement with valve seat 124 to open position allowing flow through bore 126 is accomplished through operating conduit 130. Operating conduit 130 extends from the surface through bore 104 of tubing string 102 to safety valve assembly 100. Formerly, operating conduits would extend from the surface to safety valves through an annulus 132 between tubing 102 and wellbore 134, but operating conduit 130 reaches safety valve 100 through the inner bore of tubing string 102. Operating conduit 130 can be of any type and style of conduit known to one skilled in the art and can transmit hydraulic, electrical, pneumatic, and mechanical power from the surface to operate flapper disc 122. Preferably, operating conduit 130 is a hydraulic capillary tube containing fluid at sufficient pressure to operate a cylinder (not shown) in connection with flapper disc 122. When energized, hydraulic pressure in conduit 130 would overcome any biasing force urging flapper disc 122 closed thereby opening flapper disc 122. Alternatively, increases in pressure within operating conduit 130 can open flapper disc 122 by displacing a tubing mandrel (not shown) through flow bore 126 to thrust disc 122 open. Alternatively still, operating conduit 130 can include an electrical conductor configured to actuate a downhole motor capable of displacing flapper disc 122 into an open position.
In addition to an operating conduit 130 located within bore of production tubing 102, safety valve assembly 100 also preferably includes a bypass-conduit 140. Bypass-conduit 140 can be of various sizes, shapes, and types and can perform various types of functions, but bypass-conduit 140 is configured to communicate with lower zone 110 regardless of the position (open or closed) of flapper disc 122. Bypass-conduit 140 can be a straight, curved or otherwise tortuous conduit and is not limited to the shape shown in
Regardless of its function and configuration, bypass-conduit 140 is preferably configured to only allow communication from the bore of bypass-conduit 140 to zone 110 and not from zone 110 to bypass-conduit 140. In embodiments using bypass-conduit 140 for fluid communication, a check valve device (not shown) is appropriate. For applications where a logging tool is deployed to zone 110 utilizing bypass-conduit 140, a hydraulic packoff (not shown) is appropriate. Nonetheless, conduit 140 can extend from a surface location, through the bore of tubing 102, through safety valve assembly 100 and communicate with zone 110 (including production zone 112 below) independent of the position (open, closed, or therebetween) of the flapper disc 122.
Referring now to
Operating conduit 220 actuates a flapper valve disc (not shown) or other flow interruption device. Bypass-conduit 222 allows for communication with a zone 224 below safety valve assembly 200 within tubing 202 independent the position (open, closed, or therebetween) of the flow interruption device. As safety valve assembly 200 is lowered to a desired location within tubing string 202, surface reels (not shown) pay out substantially equal lengths of operating conduit and bypass-conduit, 220 and 222 respectively. Injector head 214 and hydraulic packoff 216 thrust and seal around conduits 220 and 222 to prevent escape of pressurized fluids from tubing string 202. When safety valve assembly 200 has reached its target depth within the tubing string 202, a packer element 226 is activated to seal off the portion 224 of tubing 202 below safety valve assembly 200 from the portion above safety valve assembly 200. Packer element 226 can act to anchor safety valve 200 in place and/or to hydraulically isolate the regions above and below safety valve 200. The activation of packer element 226 can be through any means known by one of ordinary skill in the art but may be activated through the pressurization of operating conduit 220. With the safety valve assembly 200 in place and packer element 226 set, operating conduit 220 is capable of opening and closing a flow interruption device (not shown) within valve assembly 200 and furthermore bypass-conduit 222 is capable of communicating with region 224 below safety valve 200 when the flapper disc is closed or open. Operating conduit 220 can be constructed as two strings of hydraulic tubing, whereby one string supplies the energy to open the flow interruption device (not shown) within valve assembly 200 and the second string supplies the energy to close the flow interruption device (not shown) of valve assembly 200. Although the term flapper disc is used for illustrative purposes, the flow interruption device can be other non-disc shapes. The valve is not limited to flapper devices and can contain any flow interruption device know to those in the art. An operating conduit (or one or more strings of hydraulic tubing comprising operating conduit) could also be extended from the surface to safety valve 200 outside the bore of tubing 202. Finally, a string of bypass-conduit 222, operating conduit 220, or tubing 202 can be any combination of concentric or non-concentric configurations.
Furthermore, while the installation of safety valve 200 is shown into a pre-existing string of tubing 202 hung within a well, it should be understood by one of ordinary skill in the art that safety valve 200 can be an integral component of tubing 202 and run simultaneously therewith. Such an operation can include the simultaneous injection of tubing 202, and conduits 220 and 222 into the wellbore, for example through injection assembly 212. Once in location, tubing 202 can be cut and hung from wellhead assembly 202 using methods and apparatus known to those skilled in the art.
Referring now to
Ordinarily, flapper disc 306 (when closed), operating mandrel 308, and any supporting components would consume the entire bore of production tubing 302. However, safety valve assembly 300 also includes a bypass-conduit 322 configured to allow communication from a zone above safety valve assembly 300 to a zone below safety valve assembly 300 regardless of the position of flapper disc 306. Therefore, in safety valve assembly 300 shown in
Referring now to
Furthermore, safety valve assembly 400 includes a bulkhead 420 which can provide a throughway 422 to allow a bypass-conduit 424 which can communicate between a production zone 408 and a surface location independent of the position (open or closed) of flapper disk 406 (shown closed). As above, bypass-conduit 424 can be constructed as any type of hydraulic, pneumatic, electrical, mechanical, or fiber-optic communication mechanism, but is shown here as a hydraulic injection conduit. Bypass-conduit 424 is preferably configured to allow the injection of a chemical substance and/or foam into a production zone to improve the production characteristics thereof. Injection conduit 424 of
Furthermore, safety valve 400 is configured to be capable of being inserted and retrieved from string of tubing 402 after the tubing 402 is deployed to a depth of interest in the cased wellbore 404. Tubing string 402 can include a locking nipple 440 in its inner bore 410 at a location where a safety valve assembly 400 would be desired. The outer profile of main body 442 of safety valve assembly 400 would provide locking dogs 444 configured to be received by and retrieved from corresponding locking nipple 440. The valve can be connected to the tubing using any connective means known in the art. Using the removable configuration, a defective safety valve assembly 400 could be retrieved from the downhole location, repaired (or re-configured), and replaced within a short period of time, making repair operations less costly and more feasible for low production wells.
While the invention has been described with respect to a limited number of embodiments, those skilled in the art will appreciate numerous modifications and variations therefrom. It is intended that the appended claims cover all such modifications and variations as fall within the true spirit and scope of the invention.
This application claims the benefit of provisional application U.S. Ser. No. 60/522,498 filed Oct. 7, 2004.
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