1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates generally to oil production, and more particularly to electric submersible pump (ESP) systems that utilize components which are made with carbon nanotube materials
2. Related Art
Oil is typically extracted from geological formations through the wells that extend far below the earth's surface. Often, the naturally existing pressure in the wells is insufficient to force the oil out of the wells. In this case, artificial lift systems such as ESP's are used to extract the oil from the wells. ESP's are also commonly utilized when operators want to increase the flow rate of the fluid being extracted, such as when the water cut (percentage of water versus oil) increases.
An ESP system includes a pump and a motor that are lowered into a producing region of the well. Typically, the pump is connected to a conduit (e.g., a tubing string) through which oil is pumped to the surface. This conduit is normally used to lower the ESP system into the well, and to retrieve the ESP from the well. A power source at the surface of the well is connected to the ESP motor via a power cable that is connected to the conduit. For example, the power cable may be banded to the exterior of the conduit. The power cable in this type of system normally does not bear any of the weight of the ESP.
Sometimes a well operator wishes to use a cable-deployed ESP system. Conventional power cables, however, typically are not designed to support the weight of an ESP system. In fact, conventional power cables do not normally have the tensile strength to support even their own weight in lengths over about 1000 feet.
Conventional power cables for downhole equipment typically use annealed copper conductors which have excellent electrical conductivity, but very low tensile yield strength. As a result, prior art cables that have been designed for cable-deployed systems have required load-bearing structures within the cables that are separate from the electrical conductors, and that are capable of supporting the immense weight of the cable and ESP system.
This disclosure is directed to ESP systems that solve one or more of the problems discussed above. In one embodiment, an ESP system that is installed in a well includes an electric drive positioned at the surface of a well, an ESP positioned downhole in the well, and a cable coupled to carry power from the drive to the ESP. Various components within the system may be formed using carbon nanotubes in order to provide improved performance over conventional systems. In one embodiment, the ESP motor may use carbon nanotube members in place of conventional copper wires to form the magnetic coils of the stator. In another embodiment, conductors within the motor's rotor, such as conductive rotor bars and end plates, may be formed using carbon nanotubes. The power cable may also use carbon nanotube materials to form the power conductors, tensile strength members or protective armor of the cable. The use of electrically carbon nanotube components in place of conventional copper conductors may provide increased electrical conductivity, increased thermal conductivity and reduced weight, each of which can improve system performance. The carbon nanotube conductors can also provide increased structural strength in comparison to copper conductors. Carbon nanotube materials that are used as strength members can provide increased strength and reduced weight in comparison to conventional materials such as steel.
Numerous alternative embodiments are also possible.
Other objects and advantages of the invention may become apparent upon reading the following detailed description and upon reference to the accompanying drawings.
While the invention is subject to various modifications and alternative forms, specific embodiments thereof are shown by way of example in the drawings and the accompanying detailed description. It should be understood, however, that the drawings and detailed description are not intended to limit the invention to the particular embodiment which is described. This disclosure is instead intended to cover all modifications, equivalents and alternatives falling within the scope of the present invention as described herein. Further, the drawings may not be to scale, and may exaggerate one or more components in order to facilitate an understanding of the various features described herein.
One or more embodiments of the invention are described below. It should be noted that these and any other embodiments described below are exemplary and are intended to be illustrative of the invention rather than limiting.
Generally speaking, the present systems and methods are directed to ESP systems and subsystems in which conventional components are replaced with carbon nanotube components to provide advantages such as increased conductivity and strength, and decreased weight. This new combination of components results in reduced system weight, as well as cables that have sufficient strength to support both their own weight and the weight of the ESP.
Embodiments of the present invention may reduce or eliminate some of the problems of ESP systems as described above by utilizing components that are constructed using carbon nanotube materials. These materials can provide a number of advantages over conventional materials, including increased electrical conductivity, increased strength, increased thermal conductivity, higher power density, decreased weight, decreased size and resistance to corrosion. The carbon nanotube components may include electrically conductive rotor bars, stator windings, power cable conductors, motor leads, connector components and the like. The carbon nanotube components in an ESP system may provide sufficient increases in strength and reductions in weight in comparison to conventional systems to enable the system to be cable-deployed.
Referring to
A cable-deployed ESP 120 is positioned in the wellbore. The ESP is connected to the lower end of a power cable 110 by a lower coupling 121. Power cable 110 couples the ESP to a drive system 112. The drive system receives power from a source such as an external electrical power grid and converts the power to a form that is suitable to drive the ESP. Typically, the drive system is a variable speed drive that provides three-phase power at a variable voltage, and is thereby used to control the speed of the ESP's motor.
Power cable 110 is also configured to suspend the ESP as it is installed into the well or retrieved from the well. A pothead or other type of coupling device (121) provides a means to both electrically couple the leads of the ESP motor to the electrical conductors of the cable and physically secure the ESP to these same conductors. In one embodiment, the conductors of the cable actually support the weight of the ESP when it is suspended in the well. In this case, the upper end of the power cable will have an upper coupling that is secured to a cable hanger 111. Cable hanger 111 supports the weight of the suspended cable and ESP.
When the ESP is installed in the well, the ESP (suspended by the power cable) is lowered into the well. When the ESP reaches landing nipple 132, a stinger 122 on the bottom of the ESP stabs into landing nipple 132, sealing the producing zone below the landing nipple from the upper portion of the well. The drive system can then provide power to the ESP via the cable to drive the ESP's motor. The motor drives the pump, which draws fluid from producing zone 140, through the pump and into the annulus 141 between the ESP/cable and the casing.
As noted above, various components of the ESP system may utilize parts made from carbon nanotube materials to reduce the weight of the system, while increasing their performance with respect to the strength, conductivity and other characteristics. In one embodiment, the ESP system may utilize carbon nanotube components in the rotor and stator of the ESP motor, as well as in the power cable, motor leads, connectors, and other electrical components that couple the drive at the surface of the well to the ESP that is downhole in the well.
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In this embodiment, the rotor bars are manufactured using a carbon nanotube material. The end plates may also be made from the carbon nanotube material. The carbon nanotube material has a higher electrical conductivity than the annealed copper that is commonly used to form the rotor bars, so the rotor will have lower resistive losses than conventional rotors. This will result in higher power density and higher operating speed than conventional rotors. The increased conductivity and corresponding decreased resistive losses in the carbon nanotube material result in lower heat generation. The carbon nanotube material also provides better heat dissipation than copper. These heat generation and dissipation characteristics allow the motor to operate at cooler temperatures for a given load, which in turn results in a longer operational life for the motor. In addition to the improved electrical and heat characteristics provided by the carbon nanotube material, this material has greater strength than copper. Since the rotor bars are strength members that undergo stresses from manufacturing processes and operation of the motor, the increased strength of the carbon nanotube rotor bars can provide improved performance due in the motor.
In the assembled motor, the rotor is positioned so that it can rotate within the central bore of the stator. Referring to
The stator core has a central bore (403) within which the rotor is positioned. The stator core also has a plurality of slots (e.g., 404) that accommodate the windings of the stator. In the exemplary structure of
As an alternative to using carbon nanotube magnet wires that are comparably sized with conventional copper wires, the stator can use smaller carbon nanotube wires that carry a comparable amount of current. The stator could therefore provide the same amount of horsepower in a smaller size (e.g., smaller outer diameter). It should be noted that the size of the magnet wire in the stator is one of the factors that has the most impact on the size and weight of the motor. Since the motor is typically the component of an ESP system that has the largest outer diameter, reducing the outer diameter of the motor through the use of carbon nanotube magnet wires may allow the ESP system to be installed in deviated wells and smaller-diameter casings.
The use of carbon nanotube magnet wires may provide other benefits In addition to increasing the conductivity of the windings. As noted above, carbon nanotube material has greater thermal conductivity than copper, so the carbon nanotube windings of the stator will dissipate heat more efficiently than conventional copper windings. Because heat from the stator windings is more rapidly dissipated, the ESP motor will run cooler than a conventional motor at the same load, which will result in a longer run life for the motor. Carbon nanotube wires are also stronger than copper wires and are less likely to be damaged during installation in the stator.
ESP motors that have rotors and stators with carbon nanotube components materials may therefore be more efficient (electrically and thermally), smaller, lighter and more powerful than conventional motors that use copper conductors. The cables that carry power from drives at the surface of wells to these motors can also benefit from the use of carbon nanotube materials. The power cables can utilize carbon nanotube conductors that can increase the efficiency and reduce the weight of the cables, as well as carbon nanotube strength members that can enable the cables to support the weight of the system and allow cable-deployment of the system.
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Just as carbon nanotube materials may be used to form the conductors of the power cables, they may be used to form other components that are used to transfer power to downhole ESP equipment, such as motor lead cables, connectors, penetrators, etc. When used in place of conventional copper conductors, carbon nanotube conductors provide improved conductivity, reduced weight, improved corrosion resistance and increased strength, as compared to the conventional conductors.
Carbon nanotube conductors weigh approximately one-sixth as much as copper conductors of the same size. As a result of using carbon nanotube conductors in the rotor, stator, power cable, motor leads, connectors, etc., the weight of the ESP system can be substantially reduced. Improved conductivity also provides a reduced voltage drop and allows for smaller conductors to be used to achieve a given electrical rating and to meet motor voltage requirements. This would in turn reduce the overall size of the power cable. The reduced weight of the carbon nanotube materials may allow cable-deployed ESP systems to be used in longer/deeper applications. The reduced weight of the system also improves the manufacturability and facilitates the installation of the system. Reducing the size of the power cable also reduces the risk of damage during installation of the system.
The improved conductivity and lower resistance of carbon nanotube conductors, as compared to conventional copper conductors, also results in less heat generation in the cable and motor. Because carbon nanotube materials have better thermal conductivity than copper, the heat that is generated in the system is more rapidly dissipated than in systems that use conventional copper conductors. The improved thermal efficiency of carbon nanotube conductors increases the current rating of the cable and improves the reliability and run life of the cable and motor.
Another benefit of using carbon nanotube conductors in power cables and motor leads is improved corrosion resistance, particularly to H2S. Conventional power cables often have a lead jacket that protects the copper conductors in the cables from the H2S that is present in sour wells. When carbon nanotube conductors are used in place of copper conductors, this lead jacket is no longer necessary. The elimination of the lead jacket substantially reduces the weight of the cables, which makes it easier to install the cables, and allows cable deployment in deeper wells. The elimination of the lead jacket also improves the manufacturability of the cables, as the cost of material and complexity of the manufacturing process are reduced. Elimination of the lead jacket also eliminates health, safety and environmental issues related to handling lead in the manufacturing, installation and disposal of the final product.
Yet another advantage of using carbon nanotube conductors is their increased strength in comparison to copper conductors. Manufacturing processes typically must be controlled to prevent drawdown of the copper size, which results in scrap. Carbon nanotube conductors do not pose this problem. In regard to installation, the breaking strength of the cable is primarily tied to the strength of the conductor so, by increasing the strength of the conductors, the cable is able to carry a much greater load without damage. This improves the overall performance and reliability of the cable.
The components described above can be combined to provide the advantages of carbon nanotube materials in a cable-deployed ESP system. The use of carbon nanotube conductors in the form of rotor bars, stator windings, power cable conductors, motor lead extension conductors and the like provide significant weight and performance advantages over ESP systems that use conventional construction. This new combination of components enables the construction of cables that have sufficient strength to support both their own weight and the weight of the ESP, and thereby enables cable deployment of these systems to depths that were not previously possible, while also providing improved performance in comparison to conventional systems.
The benefits and advantages which may be provided by the present invention have been described above with regard to specific embodiments. These benefits and advantages, and any elements or limitations that may cause them to occur or to become more pronounced are not to be construed as critical, required, or essential features of any or all of the embodiments. As used herein, the terms “comprises,” “comprising,” or any other variations thereof, are intended to be interpreted as non-exclusively including the elements or limitations which follow those terms. Accordingly, a system, method, or other embodiment that comprises a set of elements is not limited to only those elements, and may include other elements not expressly listed or inherent to the described embodiment.
While the present invention has been described with reference to particular embodiments, it should be understood that the embodiments are illustrative and that the scope of the invention is not limited to these embodiments. Many variations, modifications, additions and improvements to the embodiments described above are possible. It is contemplated that these variations, modifications, additions and improvements fall within the scope of the invention as detailed within the descriptions herein.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application 62/020,926, filed Jul. 3, 2014, which is incorporated by reference as if set forth herein in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62020926 | Jul 2014 | US |