The statements in this section merely provide background information related to the disclosure and may not constitute prior art.
Some embodiments are related to equipment for servicing subterranean wells. Particularly, in some cases, to an apparatus and a method for remotely launching cementing plugs during the primary cementation of a subterranean well.
Most primary cementing treatments involve the use of wiper plugs that travel through the interior of a tubular body (e.g., casing or liner). When launched, the plugs travel from the top of the tubular body to the bottom, where they become seated. The purpose of the plugs is to separate and prevent commingling of different fluids during their journey through the tubular body. In most cases, operators deploy a bottom plug and a top plug.
After the tubular body is installed in the wellbore, the annulus between the tubular body and the wellbore wall (or another tubular body) is usually filled with drilling fluid. When the primary cementing treatment commences, the bottom plug is first launched into the tubular body, followed by the cement slurry. The cement slurry may be preceded by a spacer fluid, a chemical wash or both. The function of the bottom plug is mainly to scrape traces of drilling fluid from the internal surface of the tubular body, and to prevent contact between the drilling fluid and the cement slurry.
The bottom-plug launching and conveyance through the tubular body arises from pressure applied by the cement slurry. When the bottom plug completes its journey through the tubular body, it becomes seated on float equipment installed at the bottom of the tubular body. Continued pumping exerts sufficient pressure to rupture a membrane at the top of the bottom plug, allowing the cement slurry to flow through an interior passage in the bottom plug, and then to exit the bottom of the tubular body and in order to continue into the annulus.
After sufficient cement slurry, to fill the annulus, has been pumped into the tubular body, the top plug is launched into the tubular body, and a displacement fluid is pumped behind the plug. The displacement fluid forces the plug through the tubular body. The function of the top plug is mainly to scrape traces of cement slurry from the internal surface of the tubular body, isolate the cement slurry from the displacement fluid and, upon landing on the bottom plug, seal the interior tubular body from the annulus. Unlike the bottom plug, the top plug has no membrane or interior passage through which fluids may flow.
A thorough description of the primary cementing process and the equipment employed to perform the service may be found in the following references. (1) Piot B. and Cuvillier G.: “Primary Cementing,” in Nelson E. B. and Guillot D. (eds.): Well Cementing-2nd Edition, Houston: Schlumberger (2006): 459-501. (2) Leugemors E., Metson J., Pessin J.-L., Colvard R. L., Krauss C. D. and Plante M.: “Cementing Equipment and Casing Hardware,” in Nelson E. B. and Guillot D. (eds.): Well Cementing-2nd Edition, Houston: Schlumberger (2006): 343-434.
Wiper plugs are usually launched from a cementing head that is attached to the tubular body near the drilling rig. The tubular body rises from the bottom of the openhole to the rig floor. However, for subsea completions, the problem becomes more complicated, and fluid isolation becomes more and more critical as water depth increases. It thus becomes impractical to launch wiper plugs from the surface. Therefore, the cementing head containing the wiper plugs rests on the seafloor, and the top of the tubular body ends at the mudline. Drillpipe connects the top of the tubular body to the rig floor on the surface. During the cementing process, darts are released into the drillpipe on surface, travel through the drillpipe to the seafloor and, upon arrival, trigger the release of the wiper plugs.
After the first dart is launched, cement slurry is pumped behind it. When the first dart lands inside the cementing head, the bottom plug is released. The second dart is launched after sufficient cement slurry has been pumped to fill the annulus. A displacement fluid is pumped behind the second dart. When the second dart arrives, the top plug is released. A brief peak in surface pressure indicates when each wiper plug has been launched. This process is detailed in the following references: (1) Buisine P. and Lavaure G.: “Equipment for Remote Launching of Cementing Plugs into Subsea Drilled Wells,” European Patent Application 0 450 676 A1 (1991); (2) Brandt W. et al.: “Deepening the Search for Offshore Hydrocarbons.” Oilfield Review (Spring 1998) 10, No. 1,2-21.
Those skilled in the art will understand that process fluids may comprise drilling fluids, chemical washes, spacer fluids and completion fluids.
A disadvantage of the subsea plug launching mechanism currently used in the art is that each dart is identical; therefore, after launching, the plug-release process is passive. The plug-releasing mechanism is the same for both the bottom and top plugs. If for any reason the bottom dart does not stop traveling downward after the bottom plug is launched, the potential exists for the top plug to be launched prematurely. Such an occurrence could result in cement slurry being left inside the tubular body—a condition known as “cement left in pipe” or CLIP.
Therefore, it remains desirable to provide an improved apparatus and methods that would prevent premature release of the top plug resulting from improper function of the bottom dart.
Some embodiments serve to address the problems mentioned herein.
The first aspect is an apparatus by which the bottom and top cementing plugs are released by different mechanisms. First, the bottom-dart of the invention 11 (
The inventive design as described herein allows the release of the top plug only when a specific chain of events occurs. In fact, the top dart 9 needs to land on the bottom dart 11, in order to force the internal movable rod 12 downward so that it extends out of the posterior of the bottom dart (
The second aspect is a method for launching cementing plugs during a primary cementing operation. The method is shown in
The apparatus described in the first aspect (except bottom dart 11 and top dart 9) is installed inside a casing string 20. A first process fluid is pumped from the surface through tubular body 19. The bottom dart 11 is launched into the process-fluid stream in the tubular body 19. A desired volume of a second process fluid is pumped behind the bottom dart 11. After a desired volume of the second process fluid has been pumped into the well, the top dart 9 is launched into the process fluid stream in the tubular body 19, followed by a third process fluid. Bottom dart 11 lands on movable sleeve 14, which is connected to the main rod 5 (
The third aspect is a method for cementing a subterranean well.
The apparatus described by the first aspect (except bottom dart 11) is installed inside a casing string 20. A drilling fluid is pumped from the surface through tubular body 19. A bottom dart 11 is launched into the process fluid stream in the tubular body 19. A desired volume of a cement slurry is pumped behind the bottom dart 11. The cement slurry may preceded by a spacer fluid, a chemical wash or both. After a desired volume of cement slurry has been pumped into the well, a top dart 9 is launched into the process fluid stream in the tubular body 19, followed by a displacement fluid Bottom dart 11 lands on movable sleeve 14, which is connected to the main rod 5. Continued process-fluid pumping forces movable sleeve 14, main rod 5 and the piston 4 downward, resulting in the ejection of the bottom plug 1 from the plug basket. The movable sleeve 14 now rests on movable sleeve 17. The bottom plug 1 acts as a barrier between the drilling fluid and the cement slurry, preventing their commingling while traveling through the interior of the casing 20. When top dart 9 lands on bottom dart 11, the chain of events described earlier takes place, resulting in the ejection of the top plug 2 from the plug basket 3. The top plug 2 acts as a barrier between the cement slurry and the displacement fluid, preventing their commingling while traveling through the interior of the casing 20. When the top plug 2 lands on the bottom plug 1, the region in the wellbore surrounding the casing 20 is filled with cement slurry, and the interior of the casing is filled with displacement fluid.
All aspects may be applied in oil and gas wells, geothermal wells, water wells, and wells for chemical waste disposal, enhanced recovery of hydrocarbons and carbon sequestration.
When cementing the annular space between tubulars and the walls of a subterranean wellbore, it is usually necessary to minimize or prevent the commingling of the drilling fluid, spacer fluid and cement slurry. Commingling may result, for example, in adverse rheological effects, dilution of the cement slurry and compromised zonal isolation. One way to minimize commingling involves using wiper plugs to separate fluids as they travel down the tubulars. Wiper plugs also clean the inner surface of the tubulars. Most cementing operations involve two wiper plugs: a bottom plug that separates cement slurry from drilling fluid, and a bottom plug that separates cement slurry from displacement fluid. The bottom plug travels through the tubular body (e.g., casing) and lands on float equipment at the bottom end. Continued pumping breaks a membrane in the bottom plug, allowing cement slurry to pass through the plug and enter the annular region around the tubular body. The top plug lands on top of the bottom plug, forcing the cement slurry out of the tubular-body interior, and leaving the tubular-body interior full of displacement fluid. Premature release of the top plug can result in the failure to pump all of the cement slurry out of the tubular body, and incomplete filling of the annular region around the outside of the tubular body. The present invention provides means and methods by which premature release of the top plug may be prevented.
The first aspect is an apparatus by which the bottom and top cementing plugs are released by different mechanisms. The apparatus is shown in
A second aspect is a method for launching cementing plugs during a primary cementing operation. The method is particularly shown in
The first portion of the apparatus described in the first aspect is installed inside a casing string 20. A first process fluid is pumped from the surface through tubular body 19. A bottom dart 11 is launched into the process fluid stream in the tubular body 19. A second process fluid is pumped behind the bottom dart 11. After a desired volume of second process fluid has been pumped into the well, a top dart 9 is launched into the process fluid stream in the tubular body 19, followed by a third process fluid. Step A depicts the moment during which the bottom dart 11 lands on main rod 5. The sleeve 14 prevents movement of the internal rod 13 inside the main rod 5. Fluid flow through ports 6 and 7 is blocked by the bottom dart 11, and the internal movable rod 12 remains in its initial position. As shown in Step B, further fluid pumping forces the bottom dart 11 and main rod 5 downward until the piston 4 has reached a mechanical stop 10, fluid flow through ports 6 and 7 in the tubular body 19 is unobstructed, and movable sleeve 14 has landed on movable sleeve 17, held in place by shear pin 18. As a result, the bottom plug 1 is released from the plug basket 3 and into the casing 20, whereupon it travels through the casing 20 and lands on float equipment at the bottom of the casing string. The bottom plug 1 acts as a barrier between the first and second process fluids, preventing their commingling while traveling through the interior of the casing 20. In Step C, a top dart 9 has landed on the bottom dart 11, obstructing fluid flow through ports 6 and 7. Further pumping causes the top dart 9 to force the internal rod 12 to move and protrude from the posterior of bottom dart 11 and into the sleeve 14 attached to the top of the main rod 5. In Step D, the movement of the internal rod 12 results in two events. First, downward force upon movable sleeve 17 causes the shear pin 18 to break, thereafter allowing movable sleeve 17 to travel downward (
It will be understood by those skilled the art that the internal volume of the casing 20 may be less than the amount of second process fluid necessary to fill the annular region surrounding the casing 20. In such cases, the second portion of the first aspect of the invention, the bottom dart 11 with movable rod 12, will reach the first portion of the first aspect of the invention before the desired quantity of process fluid has been pumped into the tubular body 19. Thus, the bottom plug 1 may be launched before the top dart 9 is launched.
A third aspect is a method for cementing a subterranean well.
The first portion of the apparatus described by the first aspect is installed inside a casing string 20. Drilling fluid is pumped from the surface through a tubular body 19. A bottom dart 11 is launched into the drilling-fluid stream in the tubular body 19. A cement slurry is pumped behind the bottom dart 11. The cement slurry may be preceded by a spacer fluid, a chemical wash, or both. After a desired volume of cement slurry has been pumped into the well, a top dart 9 is launched into the cement-slurry stream in the tubular body 19, followed by a displacement fluid which may include (but not be limited to) drilling fluid and a completion fluid.
It will be understood by those skilled the art that the internal volume of the casing 20 may be less than the amount of cement slurry necessary to fill the annular region surrounding the casing 20. In such cases, the second portion of the first aspect of the invention, the bottom dart 11 with movable rod 12, will reach the first portion of the first aspect of the invention before the desired quantity of process fluid has been pumped into the tubular body 19. Thus, the bottom plug 1 may be launched before the top dart 9 is launched.
All aspects may be applied in oil and gas wells, geothermal wells, water wells, and wells for chemical waste disposal, enhanced recovery of hydrocarbons and carbon sequestration.
The preceding description has been presented with reference to some embodiments of the broader invention. Persons skilled in the art and technology to which this invention pertains will appreciate that alterations and changes in the described structures and methods of operation can be practiced without meaningfully departing from the principle, and scope of this invention. Accordingly, the foregoing description should not be read as pertaining only to the precise structures described and shown in the accompanying drawings, but rather should be read as consistent with and as support for the following claims, which are to have their fullest and fairest scope.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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09290672.6 | Sep 2009 | EP | regional |