Electric Submersible Pump (ESP) systems provide an efficient and reliable artificial-lift method for pumping a variety of wellbore fluids from wellbores. The ESP system typically comprises a multi-staged centrifugal pump, a motor protector (also referred to as “seal-section”) and a motor in an enclosed unit. A key component of the seal-section is a mechanical shaft seal that relies on sliding surfaces to maintain a seal between the wellbore area and the inside containing a clean dielectric fluid.
When wellbore fluids are drawn into the mechanical shaft seal area from the open pump intake, sand and other solids can accumulate in close proximity to the shaft seal. The high concentration of solid particles in the vicinity of the shaft seal degrades its performance characteristics and compromises the sealing surfaces resulting in failure. The accumulation of solids may also plug the outlet of the check valve that provides a vent for the expanding dielectric fluid into the wellbore. This compromises the pressure compensations mechanism and causes a pressure build up inside seal section that may result in the seal faces separation exacerbating the wear and scoring of the seal faces when solid particles are present. When this occurs, wellbore fluid and solids enter the clean dielectric fluid section of the seal compromising its integrity.
In the following description, numerous details are set forth to provide an understanding of the present invention. However, it will be understood by those of ordinary skill in the art that the present invention may be practiced without these details and that numerous variations or modifications from the described embodiments may be possible.
The present invention generally relates to an apparatus and method for reducing detrimental effects of sand laden wellbore fluid on a motor protector mechanical shaft seal. The system and method are useful with, for example, a variety of downhole production systems, such as electric submersible pumping systems. However, the devices and methods of the present invention are not limited to use in the specific applications that are described herein.
A solids separator taught herein provides a first stage of solids separation that exhausts coarse grained solids out of the solids separator out into the wellbore and a second stage of solids separation that exhausts fine grained solids out of the solids separator out of exhaust ports into the wellbore. Wellbore fluid enters the solids separator near an uphole end of the solids separator, flows downhole within the solids separator to the first stage of solids separation and from there downhole within the solids separator to the second stage of solids separation. At the downhole end of the second stage of solids separation, the coarse and fine solids have been removed from or greatly reduced in the wellbore fluid, and it is this relatively clean wellbore fluid that is circulated to a clean fluid chamber within a downhole end of the solids separator that encloses the motor protector mechanical shaft seal.
The exhaust ports penetrate the housing of the solids separator at an angle, such that the solids carrying fluid exiting the exhaust ports exit at an angle that may generate turbulence in the wellbore fluid surrounding the outside of an electric submersible pump (ESP) assembly comprising an electric motor, a motor protector, the solids separator, and a pump. This turbulence can provide the benefit that a slug of solids does not get ingested into the solids separator and/or into a fluid intake of the pump and cause the solids separator or the pump to clog or to seize up and jam. The risk of ingesting a slug of solids is greatest for an ESP assembly lying on its side in a horizontal portion of a wellbore.
The second stage of solids separation of the solids separator comprises a plurality of conical bladeless impellers that are coupled to a drive shaft of the solids separator. When the drive shaft of the solids separator is turning, the conical bladeless impellers rotate and impart rotating motion to the fluid based on the boundary layer effect associated with fluids in contact with surfaces. The solids entrained in the fluid, because they are denser, tend to migrate to the outside of the rotating conical bladeless impellers and be ejected with some of the fluid out the exhaust ports adjacent to the outside edges of the conical bladeless impellers. The conical bladeless impellers define small apertures proximate the drive shaft that allow fluid to flow between the conical bladeless impellers. Each conical bladeless impeller angles downhole away from the drive shaft. When the solids separator is disposed in an at least partly vertical position, and the solids separator is shutdown (e.g., when electric power to the electric motor is turned off), this downhole slanting of the conical bladeless impellers advantageously promotes settling solids within the second stage of separation to slide outwards, downhole along the upper surface of the conical bladeless impellers, fall to a base of the solids separator, and be caught in a well formed between an outside of the housing or an outside of the base and an upper dam that forms a raised lip proximate the drive shaft, preventing the solids from jamming the solids separator on start-up.
The drive shaft of the solids separator defines an axial bore that promotes circulation of fluid via an inlet transverse bore uphole of the clean fluid chamber and via an outlet transverse bore disposed proximate the middle two conical bladeless impellers. Thus, wellbore fluid flows internally within the solids separator downhole via a flow channel on an outside of a bearing bushing retained within the base (see
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Pumping system 4 is designed for deployment in a wellbore 14 within a geological formation 13 containing desirable production fluids, such as water or crude. A wellbore 14 typically is drilled and lined with a wellbore casing 8. Wellbore casing 8 includes a plurality of openings or perforations 11 through which production fluids flow from formation 13 into wellbore 14. The production fluid may be referred to as wellbore fluid once it has flowed out of the formation 13 into the wellbore 14.
Pumping system 4 is deployed in wellbore 14 by a deployment system 2 that may have a variety of forms and configurations. For example, deployment system 2 may comprise tubing, such as coil tubing or production tubing, connected to pump 5 by a connector 3. Electric power is provided to submersible motor 10 via an electric power cable 12. Motor 10, in turn, powers pump 5 which draws wellbore fluid in through a pump intake 6, and pumps the wellbore fluid (which includes production fluid) to the surface via tubing 1.
It should be noted that the illustrated submersible pumping system 4 is merely an example. Other components can be added to this system and other deployment methods may be implemented (i.e. rigless—wireline). Additionally, the wellbore fluids may be pumped to the surface through tubing 1 or through the annulus defined by the region between deployment system 2 and wellbore casing 8. In any of the many potential configurations of submersible pumping system 4, motor protector 7 is used to seal the submersible motor 10 from fluid in wellbore 14 and to generally balance the internal pressure within submersible motor 10 with the external pressure in wellbore 14.
Referring generally to
Labyrinth section 46 comprises a labyrinth 50 tubes that uses the difference in specific gravity of the well fluid and the internal motor oil to maintain separation between the internal motor oil and the well fluid. Each bag section uses an elastomeric bag 52 to physically isolate the internal motor oil from the wellbore fluid. It should be noted that the motor protector sections may comprise a variety of section types. For example, the motor protector may comprise one or more labyrinth sections, one or more elastomeric bag sections, combinations of labyrinth and bag sections as well as other separation systems. A series of fluid ports or channels 54 connect each section with the next sequential section. In the embodiment illustrated, a port 54 is disposed between head section 44 and labyrinth section 46, between labyrinth section 46 and the next sequential bag section 48, between bag sections 48 and between the final bag section 48 and a lower end 56 of motor protector 7.
Motor protector 7 may comprise a variety of additional features. For example, a thrust bearing 58 may be deployed proximate lower end 56 to absorb axial loads applied on shaft 40 by the pumping action of submersible pump 5. The protector also may comprise an outward relief mechanism 60, such as an outward relief valve. The outward relief valve releases excessive internal pressure that may build up during, for example, the heating cycle that occurs with start-up of electric submersible pumping system 10. Motor protector 7 also may comprise an inward relief mechanism 62, such as an inward relief valve. The inward relief valve relieves excessive negative pressure within the motor protector. For example, a variety of situations, such as system cool down, can create substantial internal pressure drops, i.e. negative pressure, within the motor protector. Inward relief mechanism 62 alleviates the excessive negative pressure by, for example, releasing external fluid into the motor protector to reduce or avoid mechanical damage to the system caused by this excessive negative pressure.
Referring to
The fluid with finer solids passes forward along the device through the inlet 113 into the second separation zone 112. The solids in the mixture will be filtered by the action of a series of funnel shaped centrifugal impellers 114. The clean fluid remains near the drive shaft 101 and the finer solid exits the cavity 115 through a second plurality of exit ports 116 in the housing 100. The clean fluid travels axially through ports 119 in the centrifugal impellers 114 and then through an annular gap 124 and flows through bearings 102 and 103 and into clean fluid chamber 117. Additional holes in the housing, not shown, will allow more clean fluid in the clean fluid chamber 117.
The centrifugal impellers 114 are a series of equally spaced similar frustoconical shapes which are each orientated such that the smaller diameter of the frustoconical shape is lower than (e.g., downhole of) the larger diameter of the frustoconical shape (assuming a vertical wellbore), each impeller partially fitting within the neighbouring impellers as shown.
It has been found that the separation in the second separation zone can be improved by orienting the funnels in the opposite direction, such that the smaller diameter of the frustoconical shape 214 is above (e.g., uphole of) the larger diameter of the frustoconical shape when the assembly is disposed in a vertical wellbore, as shown in
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In an embodiment, the solids separator 9 comprises a helical fluid mover 308 disposed downhole of the plurality of conical bladeless impellers 300 (e.g., the fines separator). When the drive shaft 101 of the solids separator 9 turns, the helical fluid mover 308 promotes wellbore fluid flow back uphole within the solids separator 9, which reduces the amount of solids entering the clean fluid chamber 117.
In an embodiment, the solids separator 9 comprises six conical bladeless impellers 300. In another embodiment, the solids separator 9 comprises four conical bladeless impellers, five conical bladeless impellers, seven conical bladeless impellers, eight conical bladeless impellers, or some other number of conical bladeless impellers. The number of conical bladeless impellers may be selected to provide a preferred pressure differential within the downhole end of the solids separator 9 to promote circulation of wellbore fluid to the clean fluid chamber 117, between the bearing bushing 296 and the bearing sleeve 298, and up the axial bore 121. In an embodiment, the conical bladeless impellers 300 are made of metal, for example low carbon steel or stainless steel. In an embodiment, there is a space of about 2 mm to about 6 mm between each of the conical bladeless impellers 300. The conical bladeless impellers 300 may be manufactured separately and assembled to next concentrically as shown in
The helical fluid mover 308 is coupled to the drive shaft 101 and enclosed by the inner lip of the upper dam 203. As the drive shaft 101 turns, the helical fluid mover 308 turns and resists but does not prevent wellbore fluid flowing downhole inside the solids separator 9 downhole of the conical bladeless impellers 300. This action of the helical fluid mover 308 reduces solids passage downhole through the flow channels 320, 322 and into the clean fluid chamber 117 while still allowing wellbore fluid (clean wellbore fluid) to flow downhole past the helical fluid mover 308. The base 294 retains a radial bearing that stabilizes the drive shaft 101 and comprises a bearing bushing 296 retained by the based 294 and a bearing sleeve 298 coupled to the drive shaft 101 and disposed inside of the bearing bushing 296.
In an embodiment, the drive shaft 101 defines an axial bore 121, a first transverse bore 123 that intersects the axial bore 121 downhole of the bearing bushing 296 and uphole of a throat separating the bearing chamber from the clean fluid chamber 117, and a second transverse bore 122 that intersects the axial bore 121 at a point in the axial bore 121 uphole of the base 294 and proximate the middle conical bladeless impellers 300. Said in other words, the second transverse bore 122 intersects the axial bore 121 between two middle conical bladeless impellers 300 of the plurality of conical bladeless impellers 300. In an embodiment, a plug 202 is threaded into a downhole end of the axial bore 121. The wellbore fluid can circulate downhole via the flow channels 320, 322 defined in the base 294, to the first transverse bore 123, into the first transverse bore 123, uphole inside the axial bore 121, and exit the second transverse bore 122 into a middle portion of the plurality of conical bladeless impellers 300.
A lower dam 201 is provided on the inner surface of the base 294 proximate the opening of the first transverse bore 123. A radiused curve of the lower dam 201 encourages any remaining solid particles to recirculate back up the axial bore 121 to be further processed by the conical bladeless impellers 300 and to be exhausted out the second plurality of exit ports 116. Fluid that is relatively more free of solids can flow downhole into the clean fluid chamber 117. These differences of flow direction for solids particles versus liquid relate to momentum of solid particles versus liquid.
When the pump shuts down and the drive shaft 101 stops rotating, any solids suspended in the fluid in the second separation zone 112 may settle onto the uphole facing surfaces of the conical bladeless impellers 300 to slough off by sliding downhole and away from the drive shaft 101 and fall to the upper dam 203 to be retained outside of the raised lip defined by the upper dam 203.
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At block 404, the method 400 comprises providing electric power to the electric motor of the ESP assembly in the wellbore via an electric cable. At block 406, the method 400 comprises rotating the flow inducer and the plurality of conical bladeless impellers by the third drive shaft.
At block 408, the method 400 comprises exhausting coarse solids out the first plurality of exit ports by the solids separator. At block 410, the method 400 comprises exhausting fine solids out the second plurality of exit ports by the solids separator. At block 412, the method 400 comprises providing clean wellbore fluid by the solids separator to the clean chamber and to the mechanical shaft seal of the motor protector.
In an embodiment, the solids separator of the method 400 comprises a base that is coupled to the housing and enclosing the drive shaft, wherein an uphole end of the base defines an upper dam that defines an inner lip encircling the third drive shaft and that slopes away from the inner lip and wherein a downhole end of the base defines the clean cavity; wherein the base retains a bearing bushing that encloses a bearing sleeve coupled to the third drive shaft, wherein the bearing bushing and bearing sleeve are disposed in a bearing chamber defined by the base that is separated by an interior throat of the base from the clean chamber; and wherein the third drive shaft defines an axial bore, a first transverse bore that intersects the axial bore downhole of the bearing bushing and uphole of the throat separating the bearing chamber from the clean chamber, and a second transverse bore that intersects the axial bore uphole of the base and proximate the conical bladeless impellers; further comprising circulating clean wellbore fluid into the first transverse bore, up the axial bore, out the second transverse bore to pass through some of the conical bladeless impellers. In an embodiment, the method 400 further comprising circulating clean fluid between the bearing bushing and the bearing sleeve and into the first transverse bore based on a pressure differential developed between the second transverse bore and the outside edge of the conical bladeless impellers by the rotating of the conical bladeless impellers by the third drive shaft. In an embodiment, the method 400 further comprises, after running the ESP assembly into the wellbore and after providing electric power to the electric motor of the ESP assembly, removing electric power from the electric motor; stopping rotating the flow inducer and the plurality of conical bladeless impellers by the third drive shaft; sloughing off solids that settle onto the uphole surfaces of the conical bladeless impellers outwards to settle downhole inside the housing of the solids separator; and capturing the solids that settle downhole of the conical bladeless impellers inside the housing of the solids separator by the upper dam.
In an embodiment of method 400, the first plurality of exit ports and the second plurality of exit ports pass through the housing at an angle between 25 degrees and 55 degrees versus an outward directed radius from a centerline of the housing, and the method 400 further comprises producing turbulence in the wellbore fluid in an annulus between an outside of the ESP assembly and an inside of the wellbore by the solids separator exhausting wellbore fluid out the first plurality of exit ports and the second plurality of exit ports. In an embodiment, the method 400 further comprises preventing ingesting a slug of solids into the plurality of inlet ports in the solids separator and into the pump intake by the producing turbulence in the wellbore fluid in the annulus.
Turning now to
At block 458, the method 450 comprises coupling a solids separator to an uphole end of the motor protector and coupling a third drive shaft of the solids separator to the second drive shaft, wherein the solids separator defines a clean cavity at a downhole end that encloses the mechanical shaft seal of the motor protector and comprises a housing interiorly defining a separation cavity in a middle of the housing, defining a plurality of inlet ports at an uphole end of the housing, defining a first plurality of exit ports located downhole of the inlet ports and contiguous with the separation cavity, and defining a second plurality of exit ports uphole of the clean cavity and downhole of the separation cavity, flow inducer coupled to the third drive shaft and located uphole of the separation cavity and downhole of the inlet ports, a fine solids separator coupled to the third drive shaft and located uphole of the clean cavity, downhole of the separation cavity and adjacent to the second plurality of exit ports, wherein the fine solids separator comprises a plurality of conical bladeless impellers coupled to the third drive shaft and sloping downhole away from the third drive shaft, wherein each conical bladeless impeller defines at least one aperture between a central opening of the bladeless impeller that receives the third drive shaft and a point midway outwards from the central opening.
At block 460, the method 450 comprises hanging the electric motor, the motor protector, and a downhole portion of the solids separator in the wellbore. At block 462, the method 450 comprises coupling a pump intake to an uphole end of the solids separator. At block 464, the method 450 comprises coupling a pump to an uphole end of the pump intake and coupling a fourth drive shaft of the pump to the third drive shaft.
At block 466, the method 450 comprises hanging the electric motor, the motor protector, the solids separator, the fluid intake, and a downhole portion of the pump in the wellbore. At block 468, the method 450 comprises coupling a production tubing to an uphole end of the pump. At block 470, the method 450 comprises running the electric motor, the motor protector, the solids separator, the fluid intake, and the pump into the wellbore. In an embodiment, the method 450 further comprises providing electric power to the electric motor; lifting wellbore fluid up the production tubing by the pump; and capturing the wellbore fluid at a surface at the well site.
In an embodiment, the solids separator of the method 450 comprises a base that is coupled to the housing and enclosing the drive shaft, wherein an uphole end of the base defines an upper dam that defines an inner lip encircling the third drive shaft and that slopes away from the inner lip and wherein a downhole end of the base defines the clean cavity. In an embodiment, the solids separator of the method 450 comprises a helical fluid mover disposed downhole of the fine solids separator that is coupled to the third drive shaft and enclosed by the inner lip of the upper dam. In an embodiment of the method 450, the base retains a bearing bushing that encloses a bearing sleeve coupled to the third drive shaft, wherein the bearing bushing and bearing sleeve are disposed in a bearing chamber defined by the base that is separated by an interior throat of the base from the clean chamber. In an embodiment, of the method 450, the third drive shaft defines an axial bore, a first transverse bore that intersects the axial bore downhole of the bearing bushing and uphole of the throat separating the bearing chamber from the clean chamber, and a second transverse bore that intersects the axial bore uphole of the base and proximate the conical bladeless impellers.
In an embodiment of the method 450, the first plurality of exit ports and the second plurality of exit ports pass through the housing at an angle between 25 degrees and 55 degrees versus an outward directed radius from a centerline of the housing.
This application is a continuation of and claims priority to PCT/US2022/046946 filed Oct. 18, 2022 and entitled, “Enhanced Mechanical Shaft Seal Protector for Electrical Submersible Pumps,” which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/US2022/046946 | Oct 2022 | US |
Child | 18371104 | US |