When rotary tools are used in a wellbore, some such tools may contact the wall of the wellbore. This contact may serve to drill, enlarge, or position the tool in the wellbore, or to act as a contact point for steering a wellbore in a particular direction.
This summary is provided to introduce a selection of concepts that are further elaborated below in the detailed description. This summary is not intended to be used as an aid in limiting the scope of the claimed subject matter.
Embodiments of the present disclosure include a rotary tool in which one or more sensors are located in a cavity which is inwardly from and shielded by an exterior portion on the tool, which portion contacts the wall of a conduit in which the tool is operated. An aspect of the present disclosure provides a rotary tool for operation within an underground conduit, wherein the tool has a body rotatable around an axis of the tool, and at least one exterior portion which is carried by the tool body and which is positioned radially outwardly from the tool body for contact with the wall of the conduit, wherein at least one sensor is located in a cavity between the exterior portion and the tool body.
The exterior portion may be positioned for contact with the wall of a conduit and is optionally attached to the tool body through one or more connecting portions having a total cross-sectional area facing towards the conduit wall that is less than the area of the exterior portion which faces radially outwards towards the wall of the conduit.
The exterior portion may be configured for sliding contact with the conduit wall and may have a smooth outer surface for this reason. However, the exterior portion may possibly include cutters to remove material from the conduit wall, or may have a rough outer surface intended to abrade some material from the conduit wall.
In the same or other embodiments, a connecting portion is more compliant than the exterior portion of a sensor-containing unit so as to show greater distortion than the exterior portion when contact with the conduit wall applies force to the exterior portion. This increased compliance can facilitate observation of force by giving a larger dimensional distortion to observe. A connecting portion may be more compliant than the exterior portion because it differs from the exterior portion in one or more of dimensions, material, heat treatment, or the like. In some constructional forms, the cross-sectional area of a connecting portion, or the combined cross-sectional area of a plurality of connecting portions through which the exterior portion is attached, may be less than the exterior portion's surface area configured to face and contact the conduit wall.
Distortion within a sensor-containing unit caused by force on the exterior portion can also be referred to as strain caused by stress (i.e. generated from a force) on the exterior portion. A sensor-containing unit may be designed and dimensioned with an intention that distortion during use will remain within the elastic limits of constructional materials and so will be no more than reversible, elastic strain. However, a sensor may have ability to observe and be responsive to distortion which exceeds an elastic limit.
An exterior portion positioned for contact with the wall of a conduit may be a part of a sensor-containing unit that is attached to a rotary tool and can include the exterior portion itself, an attachment portion attached to a tool body of the rotary tool, and one or more connecting portions which join the exterior portion to the attachment portion. The cavity which accommodates at least one sensor may be located between the exterior portion and the attachment portion.
Free space around sensors within the cavity may be filled (e.g., with an electrically insulating material) to restrict or prevent drilling fluid or other liquid found in the underground conduit from entering the cavity. Additionally, or alternatively, the cavity may be surrounded by a shield extending over at least part of the distance between the exterior portion and the tool body. Where the exterior portion is part of a unit with an attachment portion, the cavity may be surrounded by a shield extending over at least part of the distance between the exterior portion and the attachment portion.
An exterior portion facing outwardly towards the wall of the conduit is optionally longer (e.g., measured axially) than they are wide (e.g., measured in a circumferential direction). A cavity accommodating at least one sensor may extend radially for a distance less than the length and width of the cavity. The axial length of the cavity may be greater than the circumferential width.
Sensors which may be accommodated within a cavity are of various types, including accelerometers, magnetometers, inclinometers, temperature sensors, and strain gauges. Such sensors may be used to enable or assist navigation of a steerable tool, to monitor the motion and vibration of a tool as it rotates, or to measure forces on the exterior portions as they contact the conduit wall.
In a further aspect this disclosure provides a method of obtaining data by operating a rotary tool as any set forth herein and observing or recording data from the sensor(s) while operating the tool. The method may include operating a rotary drill string within a conduit by incorporating at least one rotary tool as described herein into the drill string and observing or recording data from a sensor or sensors of a tool as stated herein.
Embodiments of the present disclosure relate to providing instrumentation in a rotary tool for operation in an underground conduit. Possible types of conduits include wellbores that extend into geological formations from the Earth's surface (where surface may be ground level at which the ground meets atmosphere or may be the seabed at which ground meets water). When a wellbore is drilled, at least part of the wellbore may be lined with casing or liner and the present disclosure includes rotary tools for operation within cased/lined wellbores as well as within fully or partially openhole wellbores.
Sensors or other instrumentation may observe operation of the tool and/or assist steering of a steerable tool. Examples of sensors for these purposes include accelerometers and magnetometers. Other sensors may observe conditions within the conduit such as temperature. One challenge when designing a rotary tool equipped with sensors is to identify locations where sensors can be accommodated and protected from the environment within the underground conduit.
A rotary tool of the present disclosure may be attached to the downhole end of a drill string and rotated within the conduit by a downhole motor, or in more traditional manner may be driven from the surface along with the rest of the drill string. As mentioned, an example of tool at the downhole end is a drill bit with gauge pads to contact the newly drilled borehole wall, although other rotary tools are also contemplated, as discussed herein.
Drilling a wellbore is illustrated by
The drilling rig 15 is provided with a system 26 for pumping drilling fluid from a supply 28 down the drill string 16 to the underreamer 18 and the drill bit 20. Some of this drilling fluid optionally flows through ports or other passages in the underreamer 18, into the annulus around the drill string 16, and back up the annulus to the surface. Additional quantities of drilling fluid flow through the interior of the reamer and downwardly in the bottomhole assembly (BHA) to the drill bit 20, where the fluid flows out through nozzles or ports, into the annulus around the drill string 16, and back to the surface. The distance between the underreamer 18 and the drill bit 20 at the foot of the bottom hole assembly is fixed so that the pilot hole 22 and the enlarged wellbore 24 are simultaneously extended downwardly.
It will of course be understood that it would be possible to drill without the underreamer 18 present, so that the wellbore is drilled at the diameter of the drill bit 20. It would also be possible to use the same underreamer 18 attached to drill string 16, although without the drill bit 20 and the part of the drill string 16 shown below the underreamer 18 in
Various aspects of the present disclosure may be embodied in a rotary tool attached to the downhole end of a drill string which extends into a wellbore from the surface as illustrated by
The concepts of the present disclosure may also be embodied in a rotary tool incorporated into a drill string or BHA at an intermediate position between, and spaced from, the uphole and downhole ends of the drill string. Tools employed at such intermediate positions include reamers (e.g., underreamers, hole openers, etc.) as shown by
Another possibility is that a tool within the present disclosure is attached to coiled tubing which is inserted into a wellbore from the surface. The tool may be driven by a downhole motor at the downhole end of the coiled tubing, and optionally conveyed by a tractor used to convey the tool into a wellbore.
Embodiments of the present disclosure will first be illustrated by an embodiment which is a drill bit equipped with sensor-containing units which provide one or more gauge pads to contact the wellbore wall.
This drill bit includes blades 6 which are distributed around the bit body 30, and project radially outwardly from the bit body. The blades 6 are separated by so-called junk slots or fluid courses, which are channels allowing for the flow of drilling fluid exiting the drill bit to flow upwardly in the wellbore annulus. Cutters 8 are fitted into cavities (sometimes called pockets) in the blades 6. Example cutters 8 include so-called PDC cutters, which have particles of diamond bonded together to form a cutting face, with that diamond portion bonded to a substrate. The substrate may be formed of tungsten carbide particles which are sintered with a binder. This polycrystalline diamond portion may provide a planar or non-planar cutting face that acts as a hard-cutting surface, and which is exposed at the rotationally leading face of a blade 6. In some embodiments, additional cutters may be placed in back-up or trailing positions along the outer face of a blade, at a position that is offset from the leading face of the blade 6.
In the illustrated embodiment, sensor-containing units 40 are attached to the shank 32 of the drill bit. As shown in
The construction of the sensor-containing unit 40 of
The parts 42, 44, 45 and 46 of a sensor-containing unit 40 may be made as a one-piece article by computerized numerical control (CNC) machining from a block of material (e.g., steel, titanium, Inconel, tungsten, etc.). Another possibility is to make the article as one piece by a casting or an additive manufacturing process. An additive manufacturing process may include selectively depositing material in each layer and/or selectively binding material in each layer, in accordance with a design stored in digital form. Such processes are known by various names including rapid prototyping, layered manufacturing, solid free-form fabrication and 3D printing. Example additive processes which may for instance be used include electron beam welding and selective laser sintering of a powder, which may be steel, tungsten carbide, titanium, etc. In those processes, layers of powder may be deposited one on top of another on a vertically movable build platform. After each layer is deposited, the regions to be bound together are sintered by an electron or laser beam.
The steel structure could also be made as two parts, either by machining, casting, additive manufacturing, or other process, and then joined together. Of course, one part could also be made by a different process than one or more other parts. For instance, the exterior portion 42 together with the side wall 45 and end walls 46 could be made as one piece and then joined to the attachment portion 44 by electron beam welding or laser welding.
As shown by
In some embodiments, the sensor-containing units 40 are aligned with the blades 6 and so the channels between the blades 6 can continue as gaps between sensor-containing units 40. The exterior portion 42 of each sensor-containing unit has, in this embodiment, a rounded outer surface (e.g., a part cylindrical outer surface having a radius of curvature about equal to the radius of curvature of the wellbore or the radius which is cut by the outermost cutters 8 on the drill bit body 30). The exterior portions 42 of the sensor-containing unit can, in some embodiments, act as gauge pads which make sliding contact with the wall 36 of the borehole as it is drilled, as seen in
As shown by
The free space within the cavity 52 may remain free; however, in other embodiments the free space is filled with a filler material (e.g., an electrically insulating flexible material such as an organic polymer). An example filler material includes a silicone polymer or a polyurethane polymer which is pumped in as a liquid through a small hole in plate 56 or a small gap between components, and then cures in place. This filler material may be a continuous mass of polymer or other material, may be a closed cell foam, or the like. The filler material may restrict and potentially prevent drilling fluid and cuttings from entering the space which is filled. The walls 45, 46 and plate 56 can further shield the sides of the cavity 52 against abrasion by the flow of drilling fluid and entrained drill cuttings.
Placing the sensors 65-67 and electronics 68 within a cavity 52 which is largely enclosed protects the sensors from the abrasive fluid and rock cuttings outside the drill bit. A cavity which is near to the exterior of the drill bit or, as in this embodiment, is within a unit 40 which is fabricated separately from the drill bit to which it is attached, may facilitate the provision of instrumentation on a drill bit because it enables these sensors to be enclosed without forming a cavity buried deep within the main body or structure of the drill bit and avoiding possible difficulty in inserting and electrically connecting sensors within such a buried interior cavity.
Accelerometers, gyros, and other sensors positioned radially outward from the central axis of a drill bit will make different observations than similar sensors located near the central axis. For instance, temperature sensors in a unit 40 will be able to observe the effect of frictional heating as the exterior portions 42 contact the borehole wall. This is of course especially true of sensor 67 attached to the exterior portion 42.
The electronics package 68 may pass signals from the sensors 65-67 onwards to measuring-while-drilling (MWD) equipment located in the drill string (e.g., close to the drill bit). This MWD equipment may transmit the data, possibly after some data processing, to the surface using known technologies for data transmission in a borehole such as mud pulse telemetry or by using wired drill pipe. It is also possible that the electronics package 68 could itself have the capability of communicating to the surface, and it is possible that the electronics package 68 could have the ability to do some signal or data processing before passing signals onwards to the MWD equipment, or could pass processed or unprocessed data to components other than MWD equipment (e.g., a steering system with some processing and transmission capabilities).
There are further possibilities for sensors inside a cavity such as the interior cavity 52 of unit 40. If the unit is made of non-magnetic alloys such as Inconel and the drill bit body is also non-magnetic, one or more small magnetometers may be fitted inside the unit 40, as for instance shown in broken lines at 69. Small magnetometers are available as components for electronics industries and one example supplier is NXP Semiconductors in Eindhoven, Netherlands.
The interior cavity 52 of the sensor-containing unit 40 may be at a pressure similar to the external pressure around the drill bit. For instance, if the flexible filler within the unit 40 is compressible by external pressure, the pressure inside the cavity 52 may be about equal to the pressure outside the cavity. If so, a pressure sensor (which could also be represented by unit 69) to measure downhole pressure may be located within the unit 40. One supplier of small piezoresistive pressure sensors is Kulite Semiconductor Products Inc. in New Jersey, USA.
The radial spacing between the attachment portion 44 and the exterior portion 72 provides a cavity in which are located the accelerometers 65, a temperature sensor 66, and an electronics package 68 that processes outputs from the various sensors. These are elements can be coupled to the attachment portion 44 or other portions of the sensor-containing unit 40. The accelerometers 65 are optionally arranged in a suitable manner to measure accelerations along three orthogonal axes. In this embodiment, the connecting portions 76-79 extend through this cavity and electrical strain gauges 81-83 are attached to these connecting portions to observe distortion by stresses on the exterior portion 72, to thereby resolve and measure the forces on the exterior portion 72. The strain gauges 81-83 may take any suitable form, but the interconnections to resolve forces into separate components may be made as discussed herein.
Referring to
With a reduced cross-sectional area, the connecting portions 76-79 can be more compliant than the outer portion 42 and the attachment portion 44. In use, forces acting on exterior portion 72, relative to the main structure of the drill bit, can cause elastic strains (also referred to as distortions) of these connecting portions. The electrical resistance strain gauges 81-83 attached to flat or otherwise shaped faces of the connecting portions 76-79 are used to measure such strains and hence measure the forces causing the strains. As explained in more detail herein, strain gauges 81 can be used to measure radial forces while optionally excluding circumferential and axial forces. The strain gauges 82 are optionally responsive to circumferential forces only (excluding radial and axial forces) and the other strain gauges 83 are optionally responsive to axial forces only (excluding circumferential and radial forces). It should also be appreciated that increased compliance of one or more connecting portions 76-79 can be produced in other ways, besides having reduced cross-sectional areas. For instance, the connecting portions 76-79 may be formed of a different, and more compliant material. For instance, the connecting portions 76-79 may be formed of a steel material that is more flexible than a different steel material (or differently heat treated steel material) used for the outer portion 42 and/or attachment portion 44.
The various gauges used in this example embodiment can each observe strain by means of an electrically conductive but somewhat resistive path deposited on a piece of thin electrically insulating polymer sheet referred to herein as a carrier. The carrier may be adhered to a face of a connecting portion to be observed. If stress causes an area of the connecting portion to which a strain gauge is adhered to stretch slightly, the carrier and the conductive path also lengthen and the resistance of the conductive path increases. Conversely, if the conductive path is shortened, its resistance decreases. Such strain gauges of this type are available from numerous manufacturers and component suppliers including HBM Inc. in Marlborough, Mass., USA, HBM United Kingdom Ltd in Harrow, UK, and National Instruments in Newbury, U K and Austin, Tex., USA. Adhesives for attaching strain gauges to steel are available from manufacturers of strain gauges and may be a two-part epoxy adhesive.
Each of the strain gauges 81-83 can include, in some embodiments, a pair of gauges in proximity to each other on a single carrier. The conductive path of one gauge can run perpendicular to the conductive path of the proximate gauge. Such pairing of gauges can incorporate compensation for temperature variation by orienting the gauges so that only one gauge of the pair is subject to strain to be measured while both of them are exposed to the surrounding temperature.
In the region T, a second gauge is provided by a conductive path running to and fro transverse/perpendicular to the arrow 91. The resistance of the conductive path in this region T is not affected by strain parallel to the arrow 91. The conductive paths in regions C and T are connected to each other and to a solder tab 94 on the supporting carrier 90. The other ends of these two conductive paths are connected to separate solder tabs 95. A strain gauge 81 of the kind shown in
On each connecting portion 76-79, the Poisson gauge 81 provides a gauge as indicated at C of
The circuit diagram of
When radial force on the exterior portion 72 of the sensor-containing unit 70 compresses the four connecting portions 76-79 and the carrier 90 of the Poisson gauge 81 on each connecting portion, this shortens the conductive paths of gauges 76C-79C and reduces their resistance. The gauges 76T-79T may not be affected due to their different orientation/arrangement. Consequently, the potential of output 96 from the Wheatstone bridge increases and the potential of 97 decreases. The resulting change in potential difference between 96 and 97 is amplified by the differential amplifier 100 and is a measurement of radial compressive strain and hence of radial force. Further, any change in the temperature of the gauges can affect their resistance, but so long as this affects all the individual gauges 76C-79C and 76T-79T equally, changes in temperature will not cause any change in the voltage difference between 96 and 97 and in the output from the amplifier 100. Output from the differential amplifier 100 may be converted to digital form by an analog to digital converter 102 within the electronics package 68.
The chevron gauges 82 on the connecting portions 77 and 79 may be oriented so that circumferential force on the exterior portion 72 of the sensor-containing unit 70 (i.e., force acting in a circumferential direction relative to the tool axis and therefore tangential to the direction of rotation) will act in the direction of the arrow 108 or the opposite arrow 109 shown in
Gauges 82 may be positioned to respond to circumferential forces which cause shear strain, and not to respond to axial forces on the exterior portion 72. In some embodiments, radial force transmitted to a gauge 82 or a change in temperature will not produce a response because it will affect the conductive paths 104 of that gauge 82 equally and the voltage difference between 113 and 114 will stay substantially unchanged.
The gauges 83 on the connecting portions 76 and 78 can also be chevron gauges of the type shown by
Overall, the described configuration of Poisson gauges 81 and chevron gauges 82, 83 on connecting portions 76-79 which extend axially and circumferentially is able to separate components of force acting radially, circumferentially, and axially on the exterior portion 72 of the sensor-containing unit 70. A further possibility in some embodiments is that an accelerometer attached to the underside of the exterior portion 72 will be able to detect resonant frequencies of the exterior portion 72. Monitoring such resonant frequencies over time may provide an indication of the extent to which the exterior portion 72 has been worn away by the frictional contact with the borehole wall.
Each carrier 120 may be wrapped or folded around one of the connecting portions 76-79 as shown in
As shown by
In the following description of circuitry, the gauge C on portion 120a of the carrier attached to connecting portion 76 is designated as gauge Ca76. Corresponding designations are used for the other individual gauges. The individual C and T gauges which form Poisson gauges are each connected in a Wheatstone bridge circuit as shown by
Although this embodiment has more individual gauges than some of the embodiments shown in
The provision of four identical individual gauges C, T, Q, and R on both faces of each connecting portion 76-79 serves to exclude effects arising from bending strain of the connecting portions. For instance, circumferential force acting in the direction of arrow 126 (observed by shear strain of connecting portions 77 and 79) will cause bending of the two connecting portions 76 and 78, leading to stretching of Q, R, and T gauges on one face of each of these two connecting portions and compression of the Q, R and T gauges on the opposite face. However, it can be seen from
Bending of one or more connecting portions may result from axial or circumferential shear forces or from radial force which is not central on the outer portion 72 of a sensor-containing unit. Regardless of cause, when there is bending strain of any connecting portion, the resulting stretching of any gauge on one face of that connecting portion is compensated by compression of the corresponding gauge on the opposite face of the same connecting portion so that the total resistance of the two gauges which are connected in series remains the same, and bending strain of connecting portions is eliminated from the measured data.
Referring to
Sensor-containing units disclosed herein are generally provided with protective skirts and filling but, to assist explanation of the component parts and sensors within the cavity, the enclosing skirts and filling are omitted from many of the drawings.
Other types of sensors could be used on connecting portions 76-79 in place of the electrical strain gauges described herein. One possibility illustrated by
Patent literature on the creation of Bragg gratings by means of ultraviolet light to irradiate a photosensitive optical fiber includes U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,956,442 and 5,309,260 along with documents referred to therein, each of which are incorporated herein by this reference. Strain sensors based on Bragg grating in optical fiber are available from a number of suppliers including HBM and National Instruments.
In use, the optical fiber 150 is optionally coupled to an interrogating device indicated schematically at 158, which directs light of varying wavelengths along the fiber 150, receives the reflection, and determines the wavelength at which reflectance is greatest. Observed changes in this wavelength are proportional to the strain and in turn proportional to the force causing strain of the connecting portion. The gratings 151 and 152 are made with different spacings so that they reflect different wavelengths. Consequently, both can be interrogated by the same device 158 transmitting and receiving light along the common optical fiber.
The output from the interrogating device 158 may be in digital form and may be processed by computer/processor to give measurements of strain and hence of force on the exterior portion 72. The Bragg gratings are sensitive to temperature as well as strain. Measurements of temperature by the sensor 66 enables correction for the effects of temperature variation.
Fiber Bragg sensors may be provided on both of the connecting portions 76, 78 to measure axial and radial forces on exterior portion 72. Fiber Bragg sensors may also be provided on both the connecting portions 77 and 79 to measure strain of these connecting portions by circumferential and radial forces.
Another technology which may possibly be used for strain sensors on the connecting portions 76-79 is piezoresistive sensors, which are also known as “semiconductor strain gauges”. Such sensors have an electrically conductive path which includes a semiconducting material. The electrical resistance of this material is affected by strain of the material causing a change of interatomic-spacing within the semiconductor. The change in resistance in response to strain is greater than with electrical resistance sensors. Suppliers of such gauges include Micron Instruments in Simi Valley, Calif., USA and Kulite Semiconductor Products Inc. in New Jersey, USA.
In the embodiment shown by
Just as with the unit 70 shown in
Structure as shown in
A further possibility is to use the structure of
Cutter blocks having inner parts 220 and splines 14 as shown in
The first cutter section 228 can be made of any suitable material (including steel or matrix material). As shown in
The radially outer extremity of cutter 233 is at a distance from the tool axis which is slightly greater than the original inner radius of the tubing 235. As the tool rotates and advances axially, the cutter 233 removes corrosion 238 from the tubing interior and also removes a small thickness from the interior wall of the tubing. This creates a new and clean interior surface on which the exterior portion 72 of the sensor containing unit 230 slides as a gauge pad, thus positioning the tool on the axis of the tubing.
Projections inwardly into the tubing interior, as for instance seen at 239, may occur at couplings between lengths of tubing. When an inward projection 239 is encountered, some of the projection is removed by the cutter 234 and the remainder is removed by the following cutter 233. Overall, therefore, the tool is a rotary mill which functions to mill away any inward projections and interior corrosion from the internal surface of tubing and thereby create a uniform internal diameter within the tubing.
As with the unit 40 shown in
The rotary steerable tool has a part 270 which is attached to the drill collar 264 and is continued by a part 272 of smaller diameter. A part 274 attached to the drill bit 268 is connected to the part 272 at a universal joint. A pivot of the universal joint is indicated schematically at 280. The part 274 includes a hollow section 278 which extends around the part 272. Actuators 281 can operate to incline the hollow section 278 together with the rest of part 274 and the drill bit 268 at an angle to the part 272, thus creating a bend in the bottom hole assembly, as shown. When it is required to change the direction of the wellbore being drilled, the actuators 281 are operated to keep the part 278 inclined towards the desired drilling direction as the drill string is rotated, thus steering the drill bit.
The bottom hole assembly (BHA) shown in
The outer surfaces of the exterior portions of these sensor-containing units 282, 284, 286 are at the radius drilled by the bit 268 can therefore act as gauge or stabilizing pads in contact with the wall of the drilled wellbore. They can each measure accelerations in three orthogonal axes, and forces radially, axially, and circumferentially.
While the BHA of
The rotary steerable tool has a main body 300 with a connector 302 at its uphole end for attaching to a drill string and a connector 303 at its downhole end to which a drill bit 304 is attached. Near its downhole end, the steerable tool has pads which can be extended by hydraulic pressure. For purpose of explanation, two diametrically opposite pads 306, 308 are shown, but three or even four pads distributed around the tool axis may be used. Fluid to extend the pads is supplied along hydraulic lines 310 from a valve 312 which allows the pads to be extended individually. It can be seen in
Rotary steerable systems which function by selectively extending pads to push against one side of the wellbore wall as the steerable tool and attached drill bit rotate described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,502,255, 5,706,905, 5,971,085, 6,089,332, and 8,672,056, which are each incorporated herein by this reference. In the tool shown here, the valve is operated by a unit 314 powered by turbine 316 in the path of the drilling fluid pumped to the drill bit. Details of a rotary valve 312 and operating arrangements for it are given in U.S. Pat. No. 8,672,056.
The steering pads of this embodiment are provided as sensor-containing units with construction resembling the elements 70 shown in
Sensors are accommodated in the cavity 325 between the piston 324 and the exterior portion 72. These sensors can include accelerometers 65, a temperature sensor 66, an inclinometer 339, and strain gauges 81-83 whose positioning and function can be similar to that described with reference to
As previously described with reference to
When a sensor-containing unit is extended by hydraulic pressure so that its exterior portion 72 acts as a steering pad pressing on the borehole wall, its accelerometers 65 provide measurements of acceleration on up to three axes, and its strain gauges 81-83 provide measurements of axial, circumferential, and radial forces in the same manner as described with reference to
It will be appreciated that radial force on the exterior portion 72 will be transmitted through the connecting portions 76-79 and the piston 324 to the hydraulic fluid behind the piston 324. This hydraulic fluid will have some compliance and consequently will also undergo compressive strain. However, force is transmitted through the exterior portion 72, the connecting portions, the piston 324 and the hydraulic fluid in series. Consequently, they are all exposed to the force and so the connecting portions will undergo compressive strain which can be measured by the strain gauges 81-83 even though the force is transmitted onwards to the hydraulic fluid.
Concepts disclosed herein are not limited to any specific category of rotary tool and have been exemplified for a variety of rotary tools intended for operating within a conduit which may be a borehole or may be tubing within the borehole. Data measured by sensors may be transmitted to the surface using known technologies for transmission of data from a bottom hole assembly to the surface, may be recorded downhole for later analysis, or may be processed by downhole electronics, and an alarm communication sent the surface if forces exceed expected magnitudes.
The example embodiments described in detail above can be modified and varied within the scope of the concepts which they exemplify. Features referred to above or shown in individual embodiments above may be used separately or together in any combination so far as this is possible. More specifically, sensor-containing units 40 shown in
This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 16/833,719, filed Mar. 30, 2020, which claims the benefit of, and priority to, U.S. Patent Application No. 62/827,373, filed Apr. 1, 2019. This application is also related to U.S. patent application Ser. No. 16/833,758 filed Mar. 30, 2020 which claims the benefit of, and priority to U.S. Patent Application No. 62/827,516 filed Apr. 1, 2019 and to U.S. patent application Ser. No. 17/598,334, filed Aug. 27, 2021, which is a national stage application of International Patent Application No. PCT/US2020/025105, filed Mar. 27, 2020, which claims the benefit of, and priority to, U.S. Patent Application No. 62/827,549, filed Apr. 1, 2019. Each of the foregoing is expressly incorporated herein by this reference in its entirety.
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Entry |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20220372864 A1 | Nov 2022 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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62827373 | Apr 2019 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 16833719 | Mar 2020 | US |
Child | 17815795 | US |