Successful drilling, completion and production of an earthen wellbore requires that information be gathered about the downhole formation from which hydrocarbons are produced. Measurement systems are lowered into a drilled wellbore to determine wellbore parameters and operating conditions. A portion of the measurement system includes a sensor package for detecting the wellbore parameters and conditions, such as formation properties, tool and borehole direction, drilling fluid properties, dynamic drilling conditions, and others. The sensor package may be lowered on a tool body after the drill string is tripped out of the borehole, such as with a typical wireline operation. Alternatively, the sensors may be housed in a drill collar and adapted for taking measurements while drilling, as in certain applications known as measurement-while-drilling (MWD) or logging-while-drilling (LWD). In addition to the sensor portion, a sensor tool may also include a processor and associated storage medium for retaining the sensed information. With respect to a MWD/LWD tool, a telemetry system is often used to transmit the sensed information uphole. The telemetry system may include a mud pulser, an acoustic telemetry option, or an electromagnetic transmission system.
The sensors and associated electronic and mechanical components are packaged within the tool body. For example, the sensors and detectors may be hardwired within the tool body and accessible via removable hatches. In another arrangement, the sensors are mounted upon a chassis and retained within an outer housing. However, such sensor packages are restricted by limited accessibility, wherein the sensor package components are accessed by disassembly of tool body parts or additional features such as access ports. They are not easily removed and/or replaced.
Specifically with respect to MWD/LWD tools, there are high capital and operating costs, and the tools must be adaptable to varying drill string sizes. Furthermore, the drilling environment is very dynamic with fluctuating pressures and temperatures, making precision measurements by the sensors difficult. Thus, the sensor package must provide robust isolation from the drilling environment, including a good pressure seal between the sensors and the environment exterior of the drill collar.
Sensors have been placed in insert-type packages wherein a housing receives a sensor case and a cover or sleeve is disposed over the housing to retain the sensor cases. These sensor cases are termed “inserts” because they are internal to the tool (within the cover or sleeve) and, if sealed, are dependent on the cover or sleeve or other external pressure case for sealing from the environment exterior of the tool. An insert is not accessible from an exterior of the tool. Some tools provide a pocket on the outside of the tool body and a sensor case that is placed in the pocket. Such a sensor case is accessible from an exterior of the tool, thus it is termed an “outsert.” The outsert may be sealed by an external pressure case, such as a hatch that fits into the pocket opening and seals the pocket. However, such external pressure cases are unreliable.
The high capital and operating costs of measurement tools, particularly the MWD/LWD type, require that sensor packages provide easy removability and replaceability of the sensors, flexibility to be used in measurement tools of various sizes, and robust sealing from the downhole environment. Despite the aforementioned advances, the current sensor packages are limited in such a way that this combination of parameters cannot be met.
For a detailed description of exemplary embodiments, reference will now be made to the accompanying drawings in which:
In the drawings and description that follow, like parts are typically marked throughout the specification and drawings with the same reference numerals. The drawing figures are not necessarily to scale. Certain features of the disclosure may be shown exaggerated in scale or in somewhat schematic form and some details of conventional elements may not be shown in the interest of clarity and conciseness. The present disclosure is susceptible to embodiments of different forms. Specific embodiments are described in detail and are shown in the drawings, with the understanding that the present disclosure is to be considered an exemplification of the principles of the disclosure, and is not intended to limit the disclosure to that illustrated and described herein. It is to be fully recognized that the different teachings of the embodiments discussed below may be employed separately or in any suitable combination to produce desired results.
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 . . . ”. Unless otherwise specified, any use of any form of the terms “connect”, “engage”, “couple”, “attach”, or any other term describing an interaction between elements is not meant to limit the interaction to direct interaction between the elements and may also include indirect interaction between the elements described. Reference to up or down will be made for purposes of description with “up”, “upper”, “upwardly” or “upstream” meaning toward the surface of the well and with “down”, “lower”, “downwardly” or “downstream” meaning toward the terminal end of the well, regardless of the well bore orientation. In addition, in the discussion and claims that follow, it may be sometimes stated that certain components or elements are in fluid communication. By this it is meant that the components are constructed and interrelated such that a fluid could be communicated between them, as via a passageway, tube, or conduit. Also, the designation “MWD” or “LWD” are used to mean all generic measurement while drilling or logging while drilling apparatus and systems. The various characteristics mentioned above, as well as other features and characteristics described in more detail below, will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art upon reading the following detailed description of the embodiments, and by referring to the accompanying drawings.
Referring initially to
The BHA assembly 18 includes numerous components, such as the drill bit, a directional drilling device, stabilizers, LWD/MWD sensors and drill collars. In
In some embodiments, the sensor packaging embodiments described herein are included in the LWD/MWD portion 24. In some embodiments, the sensor packaging embodiments are located in any section of the BHA 18, including the directional device 21. It should be noted, however, that the drill collar and MWD/LWD assembly is only one conveyance that may be used to lower the sensor package embodiments into the borehole 10, and is used for clarity of description. Alternatively, the sensor package may be coupled to a longitudinal body conveyed downhole using other means. For example, and with reference to
In other embodiments, the conveyance includes wired tubing or pipe. Referring to
It will be appreciated that work string 101 can be other forms of conveyance, such as coiled tubing or wired coiled tubing. The downhole drilling and control operations are interfaced with the rest of the world in the network 100 via a top-hole repeater unit 102, a kelly 104 or top-hole drive (or, a transition sub with two communication elements), a computer 106 in the rig control center, and an uplink 108. The computer 106 can act as a server, controlling access to network 100 transmissions, sending control and command signals downhole, and receiving and processing information sent up-hole. The software running the server can control access to the network 100 and can communicate this information via dedicated land lines, satellite uplink 108), Internet, or other means to a central server accessible from anywhere in the world. The sensor tool 120 is shown linked into the network 100 just above the drill bit 110 for communication along its conductor path and along the wired drill string 101.
Portions of wired drill pipes 103 may be subs or other connections means. In some embodiments, the conductor(s) 150 comprise coaxial cables, copper wires, optical fiber cables, triaxial cables, and twisted pairs of wire. The ends of the wired subs 103 are configured to communicate within a downhole network as described herein. The communication elements 155 may comprise inductive couplers, direct electrical contacts, optical couplers, and combinations thereof. The conductor 150 may be disposed through a hole formed in the walls of the outer tubular members of the pipes 103.
The tool 120 may include a plurality of transducers 115 disposed on the tool 120 to relay downhole information to the operator at surface or to a remote site. The transducers 115 may include any conventional source/sensor (e.g., pressure, temperature, gravity, etc.) to provide the operator with formation and/or borehole parameters, as well as diagnostics or position indication relating to the tool. The telemetry network 100 may combine multiple signal conveyance formats (e.g., mud pulse, fiber-optics, acoustic, EM hops, etc.). It will also be appreciated that software/firmware may be configured into the tool 120 and/or the network 100 (e.g., at surface, downhole, in combination, and/or remotely via wireless links tied to the network).
As previously explained, the sensor sub 24 includes the embodiments of the sensor package now described for ease of description. Referring now to
The pocket 234 includes an inner portion or groove 236 for receiving a sensor outsert assembly 225. The sensor outsert assembly 225 generally includes a sensor outsert 240, a cover 238, and one or more locking bolts 248. The sensor outsert 240 contains the sensors, and is generally an elongated tubular member having electrical connections 244 at its ends. The outsert 40 will be described in more detail with reference to the figures that follow.
Referring still to
To lock the covers into position, as shown with respect to the covers 238a and 238b, bolts 248 are placed through bolt holes 246 in the cover 238 and threaded into the threaded bolt holes 254 in the surface 252 of the pocket 234. The bolts 248a are shown locking the cover 238a into position. Additional bolting scheme embodiments include a continuous through hole through the collar from one pocket to the adjacent pocket to receive a continuous securing member. For example, a bolt and a nut can be secured in the through hole. Alternatively, two bolts connected to a threaded sleeve can be positioned in the through hole. Alternatively, two nuts can be connected to a threaded rod positioned in the through hole. See
Referring now to
Referring now to
The housing 241 is shown as a cylindrical tubular member with concentric outer and inner diameters. However, the housing 241 may be any shape necessary to accommodate the internal components and operating conditions of the drill collar assembly 24. The housing 241 is preferably a pressure housing and the seals 247 and 253 are pressure seals such that the sensor outsert 240 is a sealed pressure vessel. Preferably, the seals 247 and 253 hermetically seal the ends 249, 251 of the pressure housing 241 such that sensor outsert 240 is a hermetically sealed pressure vessel. For example, the connector 245 includes a piston-type O-ring seal 253 that hermetically seals the interior of pressure housing 241 from its exterior, and also seals around the electrical connections 244 that extend from within the pressure housing 41 to beyond the seal 253. The seal 247 may include a hermetic piston-type O-ring seal or a hermetic connector as just described. The connector 245 transmits power and/or data via electrical connections 244. The connections 244 may also include other connections, such as a conduit for a fluid. In various embodiments, the seals 247, 253 include an O-ring elastomer, an O-ring metal, a metal to metal seal, a glass to metal seal, a molded dielectric material to metal seal, or any combination thereof.
In other embodiments of the drill collar assembly 24, the position of the connector 245 is slightly adjusted. In addition to the hermetic connector 245 being located at the end or ends of the sensor outsert 240, other embodiments include a connector located in a portion of the drill collar adjacent the interface between the supporting drill collar and the sensor outsert 240. In yet another embodiment, a hermetic connector 245 is located at an end of the sensor outsert 240 and also in the drill collar at the drill collar interface. In these embodiments, the connection between the hermetically sealed sensor outsert 240 and the drill collar 230 (or other supporting body) at the drill collar interface, regardless of where the connector 45 is located, maintains the hermetic seal of the sensor outsert relative to the exterior of the sensor outsert and exterior of the drill collar.
In at least one embodiment, the interface between the sensor outsert and the collar or other containment body is shown as connection 300 in
In at least one embodiment, the interface between the sensor outsert and the collar or other containment body is shown as connection 400 in
The connections 300, 400 are releasable, allowing the sensor outserts to be connected and disconnected as desired. In other embodiments, the connections include a “hard wire” or “hard connect” between the outsert and the collar assembly, wherein additional features add to the securement and retention of the connections while maintaining the removability and changeability of the outsert. Certain retention mechanisms are described more fully below. The connections 300, 400 transmit power and data via electrical signals over electrical connections. Alternatively, the connection interfaces between the outsert and collar assemblies described herein include power and/or data transmission using electromagnetic waves, hydraulic flow, pressure signals, acoustic waves, fiber optic signals, and other means.
The sensor 242 is any type suitable for downhole use, such as those for detecting formation properties, mud properties, direction of a tool in the borehole, direction of the borehole itself, pressure, temperature, dynamic drilling conditions, and other properties and conditions. Any type of electrical component or package which is suitable for downhole use may be housed in the sensor outsert 240.
Referring next to
Referring to the outsert assembly 225, the bolts 248 lock the cover 238 over the outsert 240. Although the cover 238 is not necessary for outsert 240 retention, as other outsert retention features are disclosed herein, the cover 238 may be used to provide protection for the outsert 240 from wear and impact loads. The cover 238 generally does not provide sealing, and does not require hermetic sealing at least because the sensor outsert 240 is a sealed pressure vessel with a hermetic connector as previously described.
In some embodiments of the outsert assembly 225, the cover 238 functions to secure the outsert in the position shown in
In some embodiments wherein the cover 238 is the primary outsert 240 retention feature, the grooves 264 are added to the cover mounting surface 252 adjacent the bolt holes 254, as shown in
Alternative embodiments of the tab and groove combination also allow the cover 238 to lock to the collar 230 and function as a load bearing structural member of the collar. Such alternative embodiments include precision dowel pins with mating holes, removable keys in mating grooves, notched surfaces on the collar and the cover, and specifically defined surface finishes for the mating surfaces of the cover and the collar to provide a friction lock with a preloaded cover. The present disclosure also contemplates other means for adding torsional and bending stiffness to the collar 230 via the cover 238.
In other embodiments of the outsert assembly 225 and the drill collar 230, the cover 238 secures and retains an intermediate retention mechanism which then secures the outsert 240. Machining components such as the sensor outsert 240 and the outsert groove 236 on the drill collar 230 to a precise fit can be costly. Thus, to accommodate for any space between the outsert 240 and the groove 236 that may allow movement of the outsert 240 when installed, an intermediate retention mechanism may be used.
Referring back to
In still other embodiments of the outsert assembly 225 and the drill collar 230, the cover 238 does not secure the outsert 240 and functions as a protective cover only. In these embodiments, a primary retention mechanism is used to secure the outsert directly to the collar 230, and the cover 238 is installed and secured directly to the collar 230. Examples of a primary retention mechanism are shown in
Referring to
Referring now to
Referring now to
Referring now to
Referring to
Referring to
Still referring to
Some embodiments include a bolted retention member or spacer block 770 as shown in
In some embodiments, the sensor outsert is designed to be expandable and have connections on each end. Referring to
The outsert assembly 940 may be extended to an expanded position. Referring to
To install the outsert assembly 940, the outsert is contracted or closed as shown in
The embodiments described herein provide for a downhole sensor or detector to be packaged in a sealed housing. The sealed housing, or outsert, is connectable with a tool body interface. The connection at the tool body interface is also sealable, such that the sealed environment of the pressure housing having the sensor is maintained after the outsert is stabbed into the tool body. The seals, at the ends of the pressure housing and at the outsert/tool body connections, may be hermetic seals. A separate cover may be used to protect and/or retain the outsert in the pocket of the tool body, but the cover need not provide a seal as the outsert is already sealed. The sensor package is therefore not dependent on a cover seal. The removability and sealed nature of the sensor outsert allow the outsert to be a standard component used across a plurality of tool sizes. For example, the same gamma detector outsert may used in a number of different tools of varying sizes. Further, the outsert hardware can be standardized for use with multiple measurements. For example, the detectors and electronics are unique between a gamma outsert and a Drilling Dynamics Sensor (DDS); however, the pressure housing, seals, connectors, connection interface, collar locking mechanism and other hardware may be the same for each type of measurement. Also, the length of the outserts can be easily varied. Thus, the sensor outserts disclosed herein are pressure capsules of a standardized size that mount in a cavity or pocket on the external surface of a downhole collar. The outsert may house the electronics and detectors for an LWD tool such as a neutron logging tool and a density logging tool. Other logging tools may be implemented in outsert form.
As used at times herein, “outsert” may refer to a pressure housing, sonde, or other containment vehicle provided in an outer pocket of the drill collar or tool body. Such a pressure housing is accessible from an exterior of the tool, and places the radially outermost dimension of the pressure housing while in the pocket coincident with or substantially adjacent the outer diameter of the drill collar. In certain embodiments as described herein, the outsert is not internal to the tool and includes pressure sealing independent of a cover, sleeve, or other external pressure case for sealing from the environment exterior of the tool.
The above discussion is meant to be illustrative of the principles and various embodiments of the disclosure. Numerous variations and modifications will become apparent to those skilled in the art once the above disclosure is fully appreciated. It is intended that the following claims be interpreted to embrace all such variations and modifications.
This application is the U.S. National Stage Under 35 U.S.C. §371 of International Patent Application No. PCT/US2010/035663 filed May 20, 2010, entitled “Downhole Sensor Tool With A Sealed Sensor Outsert”, which claims priority to U.S. provisional application Ser. No. 61/180,071 filed May 20, 2009, entitled “Downhole Sensor Tool With A Sealed Outsert”.
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PCT/US2010/035663 | 5/20/2010 | WO | 00 | 11/19/2011 |
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WO2010/135584 | 11/25/2010 | WO | A |
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