Not Applicable.
Not Applicable.
1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates generally to earth-boring bits used to drill a borehole for the ultimate recovery of oil, gas or minerals. More particularly, the invention relates to rolling cone rock bits and to an improved cutting structure and cutter element for such bits.
2. Background Information
An earth-boring drill bit is typically mounted on the lower end of a drill string and is rotated by revolving the drill string at the surface or by actuation of downhole motors or turbines, or by both methods. With weight applied to the drill string, the rotating drill bit engages the earthen formation and proceeds to form a borehole along a predetermined path toward a target zone. The borehole formed in the drilling process will have a diameter generally equal to the diameter or “gage” of the drill bit.
In oil and gas drilling, the cost of drilling a borehole is proportional to the length of time it takes to drill to the desired depth and location. The time required to drill the well, in turn, is greatly affected by the number of times the drill bit must be changed in order to reach the targeted formation. This is the case because each time the bit is changed, the entire string of drill pipes, which may be miles long, must be retrieved from the borehole, section by section. Once the drill string has been retrieved and the new bit installed, the bit must be lowered to the bottom of the borehole on the drill string, which again must be constructed section by section. As is thus obvious, this process, known as a “trip” of the drill string, requires considerable time, effort and expense. Because drilling costs are typically thousands of dollars per hour, it is thus always desirable to employ drill bits which will drill faster and longer and which are usable over a wider range of formation hardness.
The length of time that a drill bit may be employed before it must be changed depends upon its ability to “hold gage” (meaning its ability to maintain a full gage borehole diameter), its rate of penetration (“ROP”), as well as its durability or ability to maintain an acceptable ROP.
One common earth-boring bit includes one or more rotatable cone cutters that perform their cutting function due to the rolling movement of the cone cutters acting against the formation material. The cone cutters roll and slide upon the bottom of the borehole as the bit is rotated, the cone cutters thereby engaging and disintegrating the formation material in its path. The rotatable cone cutters may be described as generally conical in shape and are therefore sometimes referred to as rolling cones, cone cutters, or the like. The borehole is formed as the gouging and scraping or crushing and chipping action of the rotary cones removes chips of formation material which are carried upward and out of the borehole by drilling fluid which is pumped downwardly through the drill pipe and out of the bit.
The earth disintegrating action of the rolling cone cutters is enhanced by providing the cone cutters with a plurality of cutter elements. Cutter elements are generally of two types: inserts formed of a very hard material, such as tungsten carbide, that are press fit into undersized apertures in the cone surface; or teeth that are milled, cast or otherwise integrally formed from the material of the rolling cone. Bits having tungsten carbide inserts are typically referred to as “TCI” bits or “insert” bits, while those having teeth formed from the cone material are commonly known as “steel tooth bits.” In each instance, the cutter elements on the rotating cone cutters break up the formation to form new boreholes by a combination of gouging and scraping or chipping and crushing. The shape and positioning of the cutter elements (both steel teeth and tungsten carbide inserts) upon the cone cutters greatly impact bit durability and ROP and thus, are important to the success of a particular bit design.
The inserts in TCI bits are typically positioned in circumferential rows on the rolling cone cutters. Most such bits include a row of inserts in the heel surface of the rolling cone cutters. The heel surface is a generally frustoconical surface configured and positioned so as to align generally with and ream the sidewall of the borehole as the bit rotates. Conventional bits typically include a circumferential gage row of cutter elements mounted adjacent to the heel surface but oriented and sized in such a manner so as to cut the corner of the borehole. Conventional bits also include a number of inner rows of cutter elements that are located in circumferential rows disposed radially inward or in board from the gage row. These cutter elements are sized and configured for cutting the bottom of the borehole, and are typically described as inner row cutter elements.
Inserts in TCI bits have been provided with various geometries. One insert typically employed in an inner row may generally be described as a “conical” insert, one having a cutting surface that tapers from a cylindrical base to a generally rounded or spherical apex. Such an insert is shown, for example, in FIGS. 4A-C in U.S. Pat. No. 6,241,034. Conical inserts have particular utility in relatively hard formations as the weight applied to the formation through the insert is concentrated, at least initially, on the relatively small surface area of the apex. However, because of the conical insert's relatively narrow profile, in softer formations, it is not able to remove formation material as quickly as would an insert having a wider cutting profile.
Another common shape for an insert for use in inner rows is what generally may be described as “chisel” shaped. Rather than having the spherical apex of the conical insert, a chisel insert generally includes two generally flattened sides or flanks that converge and terminate in an elongated crest at the terminal end of the insert. The chisel element may have rather sharp transitions where the flanks intersect the more rounded portions of the cutting surface, as shown, for example, in FIGS. 1-8 in U.S. Pat. No. 5,172,779. In other designs, the surfaces of the chisel insert may be contoured or blended so as to eliminate sharp transitions and to present a more rounded cutting surface, such as shown in FIGS. 3A-D in U.S. Pat. No. 6,241,034 and FIGS. 9-12 in U.S. Pat. No. 5,172,779. In general, it has been understood that, as compared to a conical inset, the chisel-shaped insert provides a more aggressive cutting structure that removes formation material at a faster rate for as long as the cutting structure remains intact. For this reason, in soft formations, chisel-shaped inserts are frequently preferred for bottom hole cutting.
Despite this advantage of chisel-shaped inserts, however, such cutter elements have shortcomings when it comes to drilling in harder formations, where the relatively sharp cutting edges and chisel crest of the chisel insert endure high stresses that may lead to chipping and ultimately breakage of the insert. Likewise, in hard and abrasive formations, the chisel crest may wear dramatically. Both wear and breakage may cause a bit's ROP to drop dramatically, as for example, from 80 feet per hour to less than 10 feet per hour. Once the cutting structure is damaged and the rate of penetration reduced to an unacceptable rate, the drill string must be removed in order to replace the drill bit. As mentioned, this “trip” of the drill string is extremely time consuming and expensive to the driller.
As will be understood then, there remains a need in the art for a cutter element and cutting structure that will provide a high rate of penetration and be durable enough to withstand hard and abrasive formations.
The embodiments described herein include a drill bit and a cutter element for use in a rolling cone drill bit. The cutter element includes a cutting portion having a chisel crest with flanking surfaces tapering toward one another and intersecting in an elongated and peaked ridge, and having a pilot portion intersecting the chisel crest and extending beyond the height of the chisel crest. The pilot portion may include a generally spherical or rounded apex, or may include a second chisel crest. The pilot portion divides the chisel crest into separate crest segments which may have the same or different crest lengths. Likewise, the crest segments may extend to the same or to differing extension heights. Either the pilot portion, the chisel crest, or both portions may be offset from the insert's axis. Likewise, a chisel crest may be sharper at one end than the other end, or may extend further than the other end from the cutter element's base. The pilot portion, with its greater extension height and smaller cross-sectional area, initiates formation fracture, causing cracks to propagate into the uncut formation. The crest segments, at least in certain embodiments, will extend laterally to a greater extent than the pilot portion, and subsequently remove formation that has been pre-fractured by the pilot portion. Further enhancements may be provided by positioning the cutter element in the rolling cone cutter such that the chisel crests are oriented in a particularly desirable way and via material enhancements. By varying the geometry of the pilot portion and chisel crest, their orientation, extension heights, and other characteristics, the cutter elements and drill bit may be better able to resist wear and increase ROP.
Thus, the embodiments described herein comprise a combination of features and characteristics which are directed to overcoming some of the shortcomings of prior bits and cutter element designs. The various characteristics described above, as well as other features, will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art upon reading the following detailed description of the preferred embodiments, and by referring to the accompanying drawings.
For a more detailed description of the preferred embodiment of the present invention, reference will now be made to the accompanying drawings, wherein:
Referring first to
Referring now to both
Referring still to
Extending between heel surface 44 and nose 42 is a generally conical surface 46 adapted for supporting cutter elements that gouge or crush the borehole bottom 7 as the cone cutters rotate about the borehole. Frustoconical heel surface 44 and conical surface 46 converge in a circumferential edge or shoulder 50, best shown in
In the bit shown in
In the embodiment shown, inserts 60, 70, 80-83 each includes a generally cylindrical base portion, a central axis, and a cutting portion that extends from the base portion, and further includes a cutting surface for cutting the formation material. The base portion is secured by interference fit into a mating socket drilled into the surface of the cone cutter.
A cutter element 100 is shown in
Referring now to
In the embodiment shown, cutting portion 102 generally includes a chisel crest 115 and a pilot portion 130 intersecting chisel crest 115 and protruding beyond the height of crest 115 to extension height 110. Crest 115 includes a pair of flanking surfaces 123 that taper or incline towards one another and intersect in a peaked ridge 124, best shown in
Referring still to
In this embodiment, pilot portion 130 comprises generally rounded apex 132 supported by a pair of buttress portions 134. Apex 132 is a partial sphere defined by a spherical radius. In this embodiment, the radius of apex 132 is larger than the spherical radius defining crest ends 122, and is preferably at least 20% greater than the spherical radius of ends 122. Likewise, in this embodiment, the radius of apex 132 is larger than the radius of curvature of the cross-section of chisel crest 115 taken perpendicular to crest 115 proximal crest ends 122. However, the size of apex 132 will vary depending upon numerous factors, including formation characteristics such as hardness, intended weight-on-bit, and other features associated with the particular bit and cutting structure design. Buttress portions 134 help to support rounded apex 132 and include buttress surfaces 135 that emerge from and extend laterally beyond the portion of crest end profile 126 that are formed by crest flanks 123. Buttress surfaces 135 thus represent and define a pilot end profile of pilot portion 130. In this embodiment, buttress portions 134 are generally bisected by a reference plane 140 (
As mentioned above, cutting surface 103 is preferably a continuously contoured surface. As used herein, the term “continuously contoured” means and relates to surfaces that can be described as having continuously curved surfaces that are free of relatively small radii (0.040 in or smaller) as have conventionally been used to break sharp edges or round off transitions between adjacent distinct surfaces. Although certain reference or contour lines are shown in
Cutting surface 103 includes transition surfaces between crest 115 and pilot portion 130 to reduce detrimental stresses. More particularly, cutting surface 103 includes a crest-to-apex transition surface 136 to blend the cutting surface between crest segments 120 and apex 132. Further, cutting surface 103 includes transition surfaces 138 generally transitioning between flanks 123 and outer surface 135 of buttress portions 134. Buttress surfaces 135 are generally frustoconical in the region extending between transition surfaces 138.
Referring now to
As understood by those in the art, the phenomenon by which formation material is removed by the impacts of cutter elements is extremely complex. The geometry and orientation of the cutter elements, the design of the rolling cone cutters, the type of formation being drilled, as well as other factors, all play a role in how the formation material is removed and the rate that the material is removed (i.e., ROP).
Depending upon their location in the rolling cone cutter, cutter elements have different cutting trajectories as the cone rotates in the borehole. Cutter elements in certain locations of the cone cutter have more than one cutting mode. In addition to a scraping or gouging motion, some cutter elements include a twisting motion as they enter into and then separate from the formation. As such, the cutter elements 100 may be oriented to optimize cutting that takes place as the cutter element both scrapes and twists against the formation. Furthermore, as mentioned above, the type of formation material dramatically impacts a given bit's ROP. In relatively brittle formations, a given impact by a particular cutter element may remove more rock material than it would in a less brittle or a plastic formation.
The impact of a cutter element with the borehole bottom will typically remove a first volume of formation material and, in addition, will tend to cause cracks to form in the formation immediately below the material that has been removed. These cracks, in turn, allow for the easier removal of the now-fractured material by the impact from other cutter elements on the bit that subsequently impact the formation. Without being held to this or any other particular theory, it is believed that an insert such as insert 100 having a pilot portion 130 extending above the crest 115, as described above, will enhance formation removal by propagating cracks further into the uncut formation than would be the case for a crested insert of similar design and size lacking the pilot portion 130. Further, providing an insert with crest segments 120 extending or radiating from pilot portion 130 also enhances formation removal by providing a substantial total crest length. In particular, it is anticipated that providing the pilot portion 130 with its relatively small cross-sectional area (from the top of crest 115 to its apex 132) will provide the cutter element with the ability to penetrate deeply without the requirement of adding substantial additional weight-on-bit to achieve that penetration. Pilot portion 130 leads the cutter element into the formation and initiates the insert's penetration. Once the pilot section 130 has penetrated the rock to the step height 113 of the insert, it is anticipated that substantial cracking of the formation will have occurred, allowing the crest segments 120 to gouge and scrape away a substantial volume of formation material as crest 115 sweeps across (and in some cone positions, twists through) the formation material. Further, by the pilot portion 130 extending deeper into the formation than would be the case with a similarly-sized chisel insert, but one without the pilot portion 130, it is believed that the insert 100 will create deeper cracks into a localized area, allowing the remainder of the cutter insert (e.g., crest segments 120) and the cutter elements that follow thereafter to remove formation material at a faster rate.
Referring now to
In still more detail, cutting portion 202 includes an elongate crest 215 that extends along crest median line 221 and terminates at crest ends 222. Crest ends 222 include end surfaces 225 which are generally frustoconical and extend from base 201 to crest end 222. Crest 215 includes a pair of flanking surfaces 223 which taper toward one another and intersect in peaked ridge 224, ridge 224 extending along crest median line 221. Flanking surfaces 223, along with peaked ridge 224, define a crest end profile 226 as best shown in
Pilot portion 230 extends above crest 215 and includes a pilot crest 232 that is supported by buttress portions 234. In this embodiment, crest 232 extends in a direction generally perpendicular to crest median line 221, and is slightly convex, crest 232 being highest at the point that it intersects insert axis 208 in this embodiment. Pilot crest 232 and the side surfaces 235 of buttress portions 234 define a pilot portion end profile 231.
The pilot end profile 231 extends above crest end profile 226 and also extends laterally beyond crest end profile 226. As shown in
Referring to
Cutting surface 203 of insert 200 includes transition surfaces between crest 215 and pilot portion 230 so as to reduce detrimental stresses. Accordingly, cutting surface 203 includes a crest-to-crest transition surface 236 to blend the cutting surfaces between crest segments 220 and the pilot portion crest 232. Further, cutting surface 203 includes transition surfaces 238 that generally transition between the flanking surfaces 223 of crest 215 and the outer surface 235 of buttress portions 234.
As best shown in the profile view of
The materials used in forming the various portions of cutter elements 100, 200 may be particularly tailored to best perform and best withstand the type of cutting duty experienced by that portion of the cutter element. For example, it is known that as a rolling cone cutter rotates within the borehole, different portions of a given insert will lead as the insert engages the formation and thereby be subjected to greater impact loading than a lagging or following portion of the same insert. With many conventional inserts, the entire cutter element was made of a single material, a material that of necessity was chosen as a compromise between the desired wear resistance or hardness and the necessary toughness. Likewise, certain conventional gage cutter elements include a portion that performs mainly side wall cutting, where a hard, wear resistant material is desirable, and another portion that performs more bottom hole cutting, where the requirement for toughness predominates over wear resistance. With the inserts 100, 200 described herein, the materials used in the different regions of the cutting portion can be varied and optimized to best meet the cutting demands of that particular portion.
More particularly, because the pilot portions 130, 230 of inserts 100, 200 are intended to experience more force per unit area upon the insert's initial contact with the formation, and to penetrate deeper than chisel crests 115, 215 it is desirable, in certain applications, to form different portions of the inserts' cutting portion of materials having differing characteristics. In particular, in at least one embodiment, pilot portion 130 of insert 100 is made from a tougher, more facture-resistant material than is crest 115. In another embodiment, pilot crest 230 is made of a tougher, more fracture-resistant material than crest 215. In each of these examples, chisel crests 115, 215 are made of a harder, more wear-resistant material than pilot portion 130, 230, respectively.
Cemented tungsten carbide is a material formed of particular formulations of tungsten carbide and a cobalt binder (WC—Co) and has long been used as cutter elements due to the material's toughness and high wear resistance. Wear resistance can be determined by several ASTM standard test methods. It has been found that the ASTM B611 test correlates well with field performance in terms of relative insert wear life. It has further been found that the ASTM B771 test, which measures the fracture toughness (K1c) of cemented tungsten carbide material, correlates well with the insert breakage resistance in the field.
It is commonly known that the precise WC—Co composition can be varied to achieve a desired hardness and toughness. Usually, a carbide material with higher hardness indicates higher resistance to wear and also lower toughness or lower resistance to fracture. A carbide with higher fracture toughness normally has lower relative hardness and therefore lower resistance to wear. Therefore there is a trade-off in the material properties and grade selection.
It is understood that the wear resistance of a particular cemented tungsten carbide cobalt binder formulation is dependent upon the grain size of the tungsten carbide, as well as the percent, by weight, of cobalt that is mixed with the tungsten carbide. Although cobalt is the preferred binder metal, other binder metals, such as nickel and iron can be used advantageously. In general, for a particular weight percent of cobalt, the smaller the grain size of the tungsten carbide, the more wear resistant the material will be. Likewise, for a given grain size, the lower the weight percent of cobalt, the more wear resistant the material will be. However, another trait critical to the usefulness of a cutter element is its fracture toughness, or ability to withstand impact loading. In contrast to wear resistance, the fracture toughness of the material is increased with larger grain size tungsten carbide and greater percent weight of cobalt. Thus, fracture toughness and wear resistance tend to be inversely related. Grain size changes that increase the wear resistance of a given sample will decrease its fracture toughness, and vice versa.
As used herein to compare or claim physical characteristics (such as wear resistance, hardness or fracture-resistance) of different cutter element materials, the term “differs” or “different” means that the value or magnitude of the characteristic being compared varies by an amount that is greater than that resulting from accepted variances or tolerances normally associated with the manufacturing processes that are used to formulate the raw materials and to process and form those materials into a cutter element. Thus, materials selected so as to have the same nominal hardness or the same nominal wear resistance will not “differ,” as that term has thus been defined, even though various samples of the material, if measured, would vary about the nominal value by a small amount.
There are today a number of commercially available cemented tungsten carbide grades that have differing, but in some cases overlapping, degrees of hardness, wear resistance, compressive strength and fracture toughness. Some of such grades are identified in U.S. Pat. No. 5,967,245, the entire disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference.
Inserts 100, 200 may be made in any conventional manner such as the process generally known as hot isostatic pressing (HIP). HIP techniques are well known manufacturing methods that employ high pressure and high temperature to consolidate metal, ceramic, or composite powder to fabricate components in desired shapes. Information regarding HIP techniques useful in forming inserts described herein may be found in the book Hot Isostatic Processing by H. V. Atkinson and B. A. Rickinson, published by IOP Publishing Ptd., ©1991 (ISBN 0-7503-0073-6), the entire disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by this reference. In addition to HIP processes, the inserts and clusters described herein can be made using other conventional manufacturing processes, such as hot pressing, rapid omnidirectional compaction, vacuum sintering, or sinter-HIP.
Inserts 100, 200 may also include coatings comprising differing grades of super abrasives. Super abrasives are significantly harder than cemented tungsten carbide. As used herein, the term “super abrasive” means a material having a hardness of at least 2,700 Knoop (kg/mm2). PCD grades have a hardness range of about 5,000-8,000 Knoop (kg/mm2) while PCBN grades have hardnesses which fall within the range of about 2,700-3,500 Knoop (kg/mm2). By way of comparison, conventional cemented tungsten carbide grades typically have a hardness of less than 1,500 Knoop (kg/mm2). Such super abrasives may be applied to the cutting surfaces of all or some portions of the inserts. In many instances, improvements in wear resistance, bit life and durability may be achieved where only certain cutting portions of inserts 100, 200 include the super abrasive coating.
Certain methods of manufacturing cutter elements with PDC or PCBN coatings are well known. Examples of these methods are described, for example, in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,766,394, 4,604,106, 4,629,373, 4,694,918 and 4,811,801, the disclosures of which are all incorporated herein by this reference.
As one specific example of employing superabrasives to inserts 100, 200, reference is again made to
As another example, and referring to
Thus, according to these examples, employing multiple materials and/or selective use of superabrasives, the bit designer, and ultimately the driller, is provided with the opportunity to increase ROP, and bit durability.
Disclosed in
Also shown in
Referring now to
In
Referring now to
Insert 900 is shown in
While preferred embodiments have been shown and described, modifications thereof can be made by one skilled in the art without departing from the spirit or teaching herein. The embodiments described herein are exemplary only and are not limiting. Many variations and modifications of the system and apparatus are possible and are within the scope of the invention. Accordingly, the scope of protection is not limited to the embodiments described herein, but is only limited by the claims which follow, the scope of which shall include all equivalents of the subject matter of the claims.