Embodiments of the disclosure relate generally to earth-boring tools and methods of forming earth-boring tools. Specifically, embodiments of the disclosure relate to earth-boring tools having only shearing cutting elements attached to at least one blade and only gouging cutting elements attached to at least another blade.
Earth-boring tools for forming wellbores in subterranean earth formations may include a plurality of cutting elements secured to a body. For example, fixed-cutter earth-boring rotary drill bits (also referred to as “drag bits”) include a plurality of cutting elements that are fixedly attached to a bit body of the drill bit, conventionally in pockets formed in blades and other exterior portions of the bit body. Rolling cone earth-boring drill bits include a plurality of cones attached to bearing pins on legs depending from a bit body. The cones may include cutting elements (sometimes called “teeth”) milled or otherwise formed on the cones, which may include hardfacing on the outer surfaces of the cutting elements, or the cones may include cutting elements (sometimes called “inserts”) attached to the cones, conventionally in pockets formed in the cones.
The cutting elements used in such earth-boring tools often include polycrystalline diamond cutters (often referred to as “PDCs”), which are cutting elements that include a polycrystalline diamond (PCD) material. Such polycrystalline diamond cutting elements are formed by sintering and bonding together relatively small diamond grains or crystals under conditions of high temperature and high pressure in the presence of a catalyst (such as, for example, cobalt, iron, nickel, or alloys and mixtures thereof) to form a layer of polycrystalline diamond material on a cutting element substrate. These processes are often referred to as high temperature/high pressure (or “HTHP”) processes. The cutting element substrate may comprise a cermet material (i.e., a ceramic-metal composite material) comprising a plurality of particles of hard material in a metal matrix, such as, for example, cobalt-cemented tungsten carbide. In such instances, catalyst material in the cutting element substrate may be drawn into the diamond grains or crystals during sintering and catalyze formation of a diamond table from the diamond grains or crystals. In other methods, powdered catalyst material may be mixed with the diamond grains or crystals prior to sintering the grains or crystals together in an HTHP process.
The working surface, sometimes called the cutting face, of cutting elements may have various shapes, such as, for example, planar, hemispherical, conic, and chisel-shaped. Conventionally, cutting elements having a planar working surface may remove an underlying earth formation using a shearing cutting mechanism. By contrast, cutting elements having dome-shaped, conic, and chisel-shaped working surfaces conventionally remove an underlying earth formation using a crushing and gouging cutting mechanism. Furthermore, cutting elements having a plow-shaped working surface conventionally remove an underlying earth formation using a plowing cutting mechanism.
Various earth-boring drill bits that employ a combination of shearing, gouging, and/or plowing cutting elements have been proposed. As disclosed in U.S. Application Publication No. 2008/0173482 published Jul. 24, 2008 to Hall et al., now U.S. Pat. No. 7,641,002, issued Jan. 5, 2010, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated herein in its entirety by this reference, a blade on a fixed-cutter drill bit may include both shearing cutting elements located in at least a shoulder region of the drill bit and cutting elements having a pointed geometry located in cone and nose regions of the drill bit. In addition, Hall discloses fixed-cutter drill bits having exclusively cutting elements having a pointed geometry attached to the blades thereof. U.S. application Ser. No. 12/793,396 filed Jun. 3, 2010, now U.S. Pat. No. 8,505,634, issued Aug. 13, 2013, to Lyons et al., the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated herein in its entirety by this reference, discloses that shearing cutting elements and gouging cutting elements may be disposed adjacent one another on a common blade of a fixed-cutter drill bit in various regions (e.g., the cone region, the nose region, and the shoulder region). U.S. application Ser. No. 13/022,288 filed Feb. 7, 2011 to Lyons et al., the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated herein in its entirety by this reference, discloses that gouging cutting elements may be disposed rotationally following shearing cutting elements (known in the art as a backup cutting element configuration) on a common blade of a fixed-cutter drill bit. U.K. Application Publication No. 2,086,451 published May 12, 1982 to Christensen, Inc., the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated herein in its entirety by this reference, discloses a fixed-cutter drill bit having only cutting elements with a planar cutting face on some blades and only cutting elements having a divided cutting face at a mutual angle of less than 180° on other blades. The cutting elements with a divided cutting face engrave furrows (i.e., plow) into the formation being drilled.
While the specification concludes with claims particularly pointing out and distinctly claiming that which is regarded as the present invention, various features and advantages of embodiments of the disclosure may be more readily ascertained from the following description of embodiments of the disclosure when read in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
The illustrations presented herein are not meant to be actual views of any particular earth-boring tool or cutting element, but are merely idealized representations that are employed to describe the embodiments of the disclosure. Additionally, elements common between figures may retain the same or similar numerical designation.
Embodiments of the disclosure relate to earth-boring tools having only shearing cutting elements attached to at least one blade and only gouging cutting elements attached to at least another blade. In some embodiments, a number of blades to which only shearing cutting elements are attached may be greater than a number of blades to which only gouging cutting elements are attached. In other embodiments, a number of blades to which only gouging cutting elements are attached may be greater than a number of blades to which only shearing cutting elements are attached.
The terms “earth-boring tool” and “earth-boring drill bit,” as used herein, mean and include any type of bit or tool used for drilling during the formation or enlargement of a wellbore in a subterranean formation and include, for example, fixed-cutter bits, fixed-cutter core bits, fixed-cutter eccentric bits, fixed-cutter bicenter bits, hybrid bits, as well as fixed-cutter reamers, mills, and other fixed cutter drilling bits and tools known in the art.
As used herein, the term “polycrystalline material” means and includes any structure comprising a plurality of grains (i.e., crystals) of material (e.g., superabrasive material) that are bonded directly together by inter-granular bonds. The crystal structures of the individual grains of the material may be randomly oriented in space within the polycrystalline material.
As used herein, the terms “inter-granular bond” and “interbonded” mean and include any direct atomic bond (e.g., covalent, metallic, etc.) between atoms in adjacent grains of superabrasive material.
As used herein, the term “superabrasive material” means and includes any material having a Knoop hardness value of about 3,000 Kgf/mm2 (29,420 MPa) or more. Superabrasive materials include, for example, diamond and cubic boron nitride. Superabrasive materials may also be characterized as “superhard” materials.
As used herein, the term “tungsten carbide” means any material composition that contains chemical compounds of tungsten and carbon, such as, for example, WC, W2C, and combinations of WC and W2C. Tungsten carbide includes, for example, cast tungsten carbide, sintered tungsten carbide, and macrocrystalline tungsten carbide.
As used herein, the term “shearing cutting element” means and includes any cutting element having a primary cutting mechanism that involves shearing an underlying earth formation.
As used herein, the “gouging cutting element” means and includes any cutting element having a primary cutting mechanism that involves gouging or crushing an underlying earth formation.
Referring to
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The blades 14 extending from the body 18 of the earth-boring tool 10 may be disposed at angular positions that are spaced at least substantially equally apart. Locating the blades 14 at angular positions that are spaced at least substantially equally apart may aid in balancing the loads placed on the blades 14. For example, where the total number of blades 14 is six, each blade 14 may be about 60° from the blades 14 adjacent to it. Thus, both a rotationally leading and a rotationally following blade 14 may be about 60° from any selected blade 14 where the total number of blades 14 is six. The blades 14 to which only gouging cutting elements 16 are attached may be located at angular positions that are spaced at least substantially equally from one another. Thus, where gouging cutting elements 16 are attached to two blades 14 and the total number of blades 14 is even, the blades 14 to which the gouging cutting elements 16 are attached may be located about 180° apart.
In some embodiments, it may be undesirable to dispose blades 14 at angular positions that are spaced exactly equally apart. For example, it is believed that spacing all the blades 14 of an earth-boring tool 10 exactly equally apart in terms of angular position may cause the resulting earth-boring tool 10 to become unstable. Thus, the blades 14 may be deliberately disposed at angular positions that are not spaced exactly equally apart. For example, each blades 14 may be disposed at an angular position that is ±1°, ±5°, ±10°, ±15°, ±20°, ±30°, or even more or less from a location that would have placed the blades 14 exactly equally apart in some embodiments. Thus, when it is said that the blades 14 may be spaced “at least substantially equally apart” or are located “about” some number of degrees apart, what is meant is that the blades 14 may be deliberately displaced from a location that would have placed the blades 14 exactly equally apart.
As a specific, non-limiting example, blades 14 to which only gouging cutting elements 16 are attached may be located at angular positions that are closer to immediately rotationally leading blades 14 to which only shearing cutting elements 12 are attached than if all the blades 14 were spaced exactly equally apart, as depicted in
Locating the blades 14 to which only gouging cutting elements 16 are attached at angular positions that are spaced at least substantially equally from one another may mean that a maximum possible number of blades 14 to which only shearing cutting elements 12 are attached are interposed between the blades 14 to which only gouging cutting elements 16 are attached. Thus, the number of blades 14 to which only shearing cutting elements 12 are attached on one side of a blade 14 to which only gouging cutting elements 16 are attached may be equal to the number of blades 14 to which only shearing cutting elements 12 are attached on the other side of the blade 14 to which only gouging cutting elements 16 are attached in some embodiments. For example, where the total number of blades 14 is six and the number of blades 14 to which only gouging cutting elements 16 are attached is three, one blade 14 to which only shearing cutting elements 12 are attached may be interposed between each rotationally adjacent pair of blades 14 to which only gouging cutting elements 16 are attached. In such an example, the blades 14 to which only gouging cutting elements 16 are attached may be located about 120° apart.
Referring to
The blades 14 extending from the body 18 of the earth-boring tool 10 may be disposed at angular positions that are spaced at least substantially equally apart. For example, where the total number of blades 14 is six, each blade 14 may be about 60° from the blades 14 adjacent to it. Thus, both a rotationally leading and a rotationally following blade 14 may be about 60° from any selected blade 14 where the total number of blades 14 is six.
Referring to
The blades 14 extending from the body 18 of the earth-boring tool 10 may be disposed at angular positions that are spaced at least substantially equally apart. For example, where the total number of blades 14 is three, each blade 14 may be about 120° from the blades 14 adjacent to it. Thus, both a rotationally leading and a rotationally following blade 14 may be about 120° from any selected blade 14 where the total number of blades 14 is three.
Referring to
The blades 14 extending from the body 18 of the earth-boring tool 10 may be disposed at angular positions that are spaced at least substantially equally apart. For example, where the total number of blades 14 is five, each blade 14 may be about 72° from the blades 14 adjacent to it. Thus, both a rotationally leading and a rotationally following blade 14 may be about 72° from any selected blade 14 where the total number of blades 14 is five. The blades 14 to which only gouging cutting elements 16 are attached may be located at angular positions that are spaced at least substantially equally from one another. Thus, where only gouging cutting elements 16 are attached to two blades 14 and the total number of blades 14 is five, the blades 14 to which only gouging cutting elements 16 are attached may be located about 144° apart in a direction of rotation of the earth-boring tool 10 and may be located about 216° apart in a direction opposing rotation of the earth-boring tool 10.
Locating the blades 14 to which only gouging cutting elements 16 are attached at angular positions that are spaced at least substantially equally from one another may mean that a maximum possible number of blades 14 to which only shearing cutting elements 12 are attached is interposed between the blades 14 to which only gouging cutting elements 16 are attached. Thus, the number of blades 14 to which only shearing cutting elements 12 are attached on one side of a blade 14 to which only gouging cutting elements 16 are attached may not be equal to the number of blades 14 to which only shearing cutting elements 12 are attached on the other side of the blade 14 to which only gouging cutting elements 16 are attached in some embodiments. For example, where the total number of blades 14 is seven and the number of blades 14 to which only gouging cutting elements 16 are attached is two, three blades 14 to which only shearing cutting elements 12 are attached may be interposed between the blades 14 to which only gouging cutting elements 16 are attached on one side and two blades 14 to which only shearing cutting elements 12 are attached may be interposed between the blades 14 to which only gouging cutting elements 16 are attached on the other side. In such an example, the blades 14 to which only gouging cutting elements 16 are attached may be located about 206° apart on the one side and may be located about 154° apart on the other side.
Attaching only shearing cutting elements 12 to a greater number of blades 14 than a number of blades 14 to which only gouging cutting elements 16 are attached on an earth-boring tool 10, such as, for example, any of the earth-boring tools 10 shown in
Referring to
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The blades 14 extending from the body 18 of the earth-boring tool 10′ may be disposed at angular positions that are spaced at least substantially equally apart. Locating the blades 14 at angular positions that are spaced at least substantially equally apart may aid in balancing the loads placed on the blades 14. For example, where the total number of blades 14 is six, each blade 14 may be about 60° from the blades 14 adjacent to it. Thus, both a rotationally leading and a rotationally following blade 14 may be about 60° from any selected blade 14 where the total number of blades 14 is six. The blades 14 to which only shearing cutting elements 12 are attached may be located at angular positions that are spaced at least substantially equally from one another. Thus, where only shearing cutting elements 12 are attached to two blades 14 and the total number of blades 14 is even, the blades 14 to which only shearing cutting elements 12 are attached may be located about 180° apart.
Locating the blades 14 to which only shearing cutting elements 12 are attached at angular positions that are spaced at least substantially equally from one another may mean that a maximum possible number of blades 14 to which only gouging cutting elements 16 are attached are interposed between the blades 14 to which only shearing cutting elements 12 are attached. Thus, the number of blades 14 to which only gouging cutting elements 16 are attached on one side of a blade 14 to which only shearing cutting elements 12 are attached may be equal to the number of blades 14 to which only gouging cutting elements 16 are attached on the other side of the blade 14 to which only shearing cutting elements 12 are attached in some embodiments. For example, where the total number of blades 14 is seven and the number of blades 14 to which only shearing cutting elements 12 are attached is three, one blade 14 to which only gouging cutting elements 16 are attached may be interposed between each rotationally adjacent pair of blades 14 to which only shearing cutting elements 12 are attached. In such an example, the blades 14 to which only shearing cutting elements 12 are attached may be located about 120° apart.
Referring to
The blades 14 extending from the body 18 of the earth-boring tool 10′ may be disposed at angular positions that are spaced at least substantially equally apart. For example, where the total number of blades 14 is six, each blade 14 may be about 60° from the blades 14 adjacent to it. Thus, both a rotationally leading and a rotationally following blade 14 may be about 60° from any selected blade 14 where the total number of blades 14 is six.
In some embodiments, at least one of the blades 14 to which only gouging cutting elements 16 are attached may be canted to extend in a direction that forms an oblique angle θ with a line tangent at a point of intersection 34 of a central axis 36 of the blade 14 with a radially outer surface 32 of the bit body 18 from which the blade 14 protrudes. For example, at least one of the five blades 14 to which only gouging cutting elements 16 are attached may extend in a direction that forms an oblique angle θ with a line tangent to the radially outer surface 32 of the bit body 18. Thus, others of the blades 14 to which only gouging cutting elements 16 are attached may extend in a direction perpendicular to a line tangent to the radially outer surface 32 of the bit body 18. The oblique angle θ at which the blades 14 may be canted may be greater than 45° and less than 90°, for example. As specific, non-limiting examples, the oblique angle θ may be about 60°, about 70°, or about 80°. In some embodiments, the oblique angles θ at which each of the blades 14 to which only gouging cutting elements 16 are attached may be at least substantially equal. In other embodiments, at least one blade 14 may be canted at an oblique angle θ that is different (e.g., greater than or smaller than) the oblique angle θ at which at least another blade 14 is canted. For example, each blade 14 may be canted at a unique oblique angle θ that is different from the oblique angle θ at which each other blade 14 is canted. Canting the blades 14 to which only gouging cutting elements 16 are attached may enable cuttings that have been removed from an underlying earth formation to more effectively be flushed from the gouging cutting elements 16 and the blades 14 to which they are attached. Thus, balling (i.e., sticking) of the cuttings to the gouging cutting elements 16 and the blades 14 to which they are attached may be reduced as compared to embodiments where the blades 14 are not canted.
Referring to
The blades 14 extending from the body 18 of the earth-boring tool 10′ may be disposed at angular positions that are spaced at least substantially equally apart. For example, where the total number of blades 14 is three, each blade 14 may be about 120° from the blades 14 adjacent to it. Thus, both a rotationally leading and a rotationally following blade 14 may be about 120° from any selected blade 14 where the total number of blades 14 is three.
Referring to
The blades 14 extending from the body 18 of the earth-boring tool 10′ may be disposed at angular positions that are spaced at least substantially equally apart. For example, where the total number of blades 14 is five, each blade 14 may be about 72° from the blades 14 adjacent to it. Thus, both a rotationally leading and a rotationally following blade 14 may be about 72° from any selected blade 14 where the total number of blades 14 is five. The blades 14 to which only gouging cutting elements 16 are attached may be located at angular positions that are spaced at least substantially equally from one another. Thus, where only gouging cutting elements 16 are attached to two blades 14 and the total number of blades 14 is five, the blades 14 to which only gouging cutting elements 16 are attached may be located about 144° apart in a direction of rotation of the earth-boring tool 10 and may be located about 216° apart in a direction opposing rotation of the earth-boring tool 10.
In some embodiments, at least one of the blades 14 to which only gouging cutting elements 16 are attached may be canted to extend in a direction that forms an oblique angle θ with a line tangent at a point of intersection 34 of a central axis 36 of the blade 14 with a radially outer surface 32 of the bit body 18 from which the blade 14 protrudes. For example, three of the five blades 14 to which only gouging cutting elements 16 are attached may extend in a direction that forms an oblique angle θ with a line tangent to the radially outer surface 32 of the bit body 18. Thus, each of the blades 14 to which only gouging cutting elements 16 are attached may be canted. In other embodiments, at least one blade 14 to which only gouging cutting elements 16 are attached may extend in a direction perpendicular to a line tangent to the radially outer surface 32 of the bit body 18. The oblique angle θ at which the blades 14 may be canted may be greater than 45° and less than 90°, for example. As specific, non-limiting examples, the oblique angle θ may be about 60°, about 70°, or about 80°. In some embodiments, the oblique angles θ at which each of the blades 14 to which only gouging cutting elements 16 are attached may be at least substantially equal. In other embodiments, at least one blade 14 may be canted at an oblique angle θ that is different (e.g., greater than or smaller than) the oblique angle θ at which at least another blade 14 is canted. For example, each blade 14 may be canted at a unique oblique angle θ that is different from the oblique angle θ at which each other blade 14 is canted. Canting the blades 14 to which only gouging cutting elements 16 are attached may enable cuttings that have been removed from an underlying earth formation to more effectively be flushed from the gouging cutting elements 16 and the blades 14 to which they are attached. Thus, balling (i.e., sticking) of the cuttings to the gouging cutting elements 16 and the blades 14 to which they are attached may be reduced as compared to embodiments where the blades 14 are not canted.
Attaching only gouging cutting elements 16 to a greater number of blades 14 than a number of blades 14 to which only shearing cutting elements 16 are attached on an earth-boring tool 10′, such as, for example, any of the earth-boring tools 10′ shown in
Referring to
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The polycrystalline superabrasive material 48 may comprise, for example, synthetic diamond, natural diamond, a combination of synthetic and natural diamond, cubic boron nitride, carbon nitrides, and other polycrystalline superabrasive materials known in the art. In some embodiments, catalyst material used in a process for forming the polycrystalline superabrasive material 48 (conventionally a high temperature/high pressure “HTHP” process) may be disposed in interstitial spaces among the interbonded grains of superabrasive material. In other embodiments, at least some of the catalyst material may be removed (e.g., leached using a leaching agent, such as, for example, aqua regia) from the interstitial spaces among the interbonded grains of superabrasive material of the polycrystalline superabrasive material 48.
One example of an HTHP process for forming the polycrystalline superabrasive material may comprise pressing a plurality of particles (e.g., grains or crystals) of the superabrasive material in a heated press at a pressure of greater than about 5.0 GPa and at temperatures greater than about 1,400° C., although the exact operating parameters of HTHP processes will vary depending on the particular compositions and quantities of the various materials being used. The pressures in the heated press may be greater than about 6.5 GPa (e.g., about 7 GPa), and may even exceed 8.0 GPa in some embodiments. Furthermore, the materials being sintered may be held at such temperatures and pressures for a time period between about 30 seconds and about 20 minutes.
The substrate 50 may comprise a hard material suitable for use in earth-boring applications. The hard material may comprise, for example, a ceramic-metal composite material (i.e., a “cermet” material) comprising a plurality of hard ceramic particles dispersed among a metal matrix material. The hard ceramic particles may comprise carbides, nitrides, oxides, and borides (including boron carbide (B4C)). More specifically, the hard ceramic particles may comprise carbides and borides made from elements such as W, Ti, Mo, Nb, V, Hf, Ta, Cr, Zr, Al, and Si. By way of example and not limitation, materials that may be used to form hard ceramic particles include tungsten carbide, titanium carbide (TiC), tantalum carbide (TaC), titanium diboride (TiB2), chromium carbides, titanium nitride (TiN), aluminum oxide (Al2O3), aluminum nitride (AlN), and silicon carbide (SiC). The metal matrix material of the ceramic-metal composite material may include, for example, cobalt-based, iron-based, nickel-based, iron- and nickel-based, cobalt- and nickel-based, and iron- and cobalt-based alloys. The matrix material may also be selected from commercially pure elements, such as, for example, cobalt, iron, and nickel. As a specific, non-limiting example, the hard material may comprise a plurality of tungsten carbide particles in a cobalt matrix, known in the art as cobalt-cemented tungsten carbide.
The bit body 18, including the blades 14 extending from the bit body 18, may comprise a material suitable for use in earth-boring applications. For example, the bit body 18 may comprise any of the hard materials described previously in connection with the substrate 50. Other materials are also contemplated, such as, for example, iron and steel. In some embodiments, particles of superabrasive material may be dispersed among and at least partially embedded within the bit body 18. In some embodiments, hardfacing may be applied to external surfaces of the earth-boring tool 10 or 10′, such as for example, on the blades 14, within junk slots 30, and on the gage region 24.
The bit body 18 may be formed using conventional processes known in the art, such as, for example, machining, casting, and sintering. Likewise, shearing and gouging cutting elements 12 and 16 may be attached to the blades 14 of the earth-boring tool 10 or 10′ by, for example, brazing, mechanical interference, and other attachment means known in the art.
While the present invention has been described herein with respect to certain embodiments, those of ordinary skill in the art will recognize and appreciate that it is not so limited. Rather, many additions, deletions, and modifications to the embodiments described herein may be made without departing from the scope of the invention as hereinafter claimed, including legal equivalents. In addition, features from one embodiment may be combined with features of another embodiment while still being encompassed within the scope of the invention as contemplated by the inventor.
In some embodiments, earth-boring drill bits comprise a bit body having a plurality of radially extending blades and a plurality of cutting elements attached to the plurality of radially extending blades. Only gouging cutting elements are attached to at least one blade of the plurality of radially extending blades. Only shearing cutting elements are attached to at least another blade of the plurality of radially extending blades. Only shearing cutting elements are attached to a number of blades of the plurality of radially extending blades that is different from a number of blades of the plurality of radially extending blades to which only gouging cutting elements are attached.
In additional embodiments, methods of forming an earth-boring drill bit comprise forming a bit body including a plurality of radially extending blades. Only gouging cutting elements are attached to at least one blade of the plurality of radially extending blades. Only shearing cutting elements are attached to at least another blade of the plurality of radially extending blades. Only shearing cutting elements are attached to a number of blades different from a number of blades to which only gouging cutting elements are attached.
This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/101,840, filed May 5, 2011, now U.S. Pat. No. 8,851,207, issued Oct. 7, 2014, which application's subject matter is related to the subject matter of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/793,396, filed Jun. 3, 2010, now U.S. Pat. No. 8,505,634, issued Aug. 13, 2013, to Lyons et al., and U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/022,288, filed Feb. 7, 2011, now U.S. Pat. No. 8,794,356, issued Aug. 5, 2014, to Lyons et al., the disclosure of each of which is incorporated herein in its entirety by this reference.
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Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 13101840 | May 2011 | US |
Child | 14506175 | US |