The present invention relates to fiber splice assemblies, to housings for such assemblies and to methods of splicing using such housings, and to methods of sensing using such assemblies.
There is a requirement in industry for the measurement of conditions such as strain or temperature and other conditions at all points over long distances. Typical uses are for monitoring oil and gas wells, long cables and pipelines. The measurements can be displayed or analysed and used to infer the condition of the structures. Distributed temperature sensors (DTS) often use Raman or Brillouin components of scattered light in optical fibers as the means to determine the temperature. Here, light from an optical source is launched into a fiber and the small amount of light that is scattered back towards the source is analysed. By using pulsed light and measuring the returning signal as a function of time, the backscattered light can be correlated to distance along the fiber. This backscattered light contains a component which is elastically scattered (Rayleigh light) and components that are up- and down-shifted in frequency from the source light (Raman and Brillouin anti-Stokes and Stokes light respectively, also known as inelastic scattered light). The powers of the returning Raman components are temperature dependent and so analysis of these components yields the temperature. The powers and frequency of the returning Brillouin components are strain and temperature dependent and so analysis of both components can yield temperature and strain independently. Such systems have been known for many years. Raman back scattering analysis is discussed, for example, in U.K. Patent Application 2,140,554, published November, 1984, which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
A typical optical fiber is composed of a core within a layer of cladding and thereafter one or more buffer layers. The core provides a pathway for light. The cladding confines light to the core. The buffer layer provides mechanical and environmental protection for both core and cladding. A typical single-mode fiber (SMF) is composed of precision extruded glass having a cladding with a diameter of 125 μm+−2 μm and a core with a diameter of 8 μm+−1 μm at a centre of the cladding. The buffer layer is typically composed of a flexible polymer applied onto the outer surface of a cladding. Most commercial fibers are manufactured with a buffer layer of a polymer coating. With special polymer materials such as polyimide, these types of fiber can offer good performance up to 300° C. in normal atmosphere. It is known that fiber optic cables can deteriorate in harsh environments such as those encountered in down-hole fiber optic sensing applications. As discussed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,404,961, down-hole environmental conditions can include temperatures in excess of 130° C., hydrostatic pressures in excess of 1000 bar, vibration, corrosive chemistry and the presence of high partial pressures of hydrogen. To protect optical fibers from the effects of hydrogen, hermetic coatings and barriers, such as carbon coatings and the like have been used to minimize the effects of hydrogen.
It is known to monitor temperature and pressure using fiber optic Distributed Temperature Sensors (DTS) which have the ability to take measurements every lm with a resolution of less than 1° C. A known method of installation for the fiber optics is to install a ¼″ control line inside the well and to “pump” the fibers into the control lines. It is also known from WO/2003/098176 to provide a downhole sensing system using fiber sensing cable and Raman backscattering analysis, with the cable being attached to a production tube. The cable can be affixed to the production tube by adhesives, by strapping, by wrapping, or by physical integration with the tube. The cable can be installed by clamping the cable to the pipe as it is placed in the well, e. g. using well-known collar protectors used in the oil and gas industry. Calibration sensors may each be installed within splice sleeves. This is accomplished by cutting the cable, fusion splicing optical calibration sensor (e. g., fiber Bragg gratings FBGs) to either end of the calibration fiber protruding from the ends of cut cable using well-known fiber optic cable splicing techniques, splicing any other fibers or wires within the cable, e. g. a sensing fiber, and sealing the splice(s) and sensor within the splice sleeve. The splice sleeve may comprise a ⅜ inch metal tube welded onto a ¼ inch metal sheath of the cable. Where the cable does not have a metal sheath, the sleeve may comprise a snap sleeve or heat shrink sleeve capable of providing a hermetic seal. U.S. Pat. No. 6,435,030, discloses a housing for sensors coupled to the production tube, and which is incorporated by reference in its entirety.
It is an object of the present invention to provide improved apparatus and methods. According the first aspect of the invention there is provided:
A housing for protecting a fiber splice between optical fibers from one or more cables running along tubular infrastructure, the housing comprising at least one port for passing one or more cables carrying the fibers into the housing, and an arrangement for attaching the housing to the infrastructure, the housing having space to contain a fiber splice coupling at least one of the optical fibers from the one or more cables and being suitable to fit within an annular space between substantially cylindrical surfaces of the infrastructure having a separation of less than 0.15 m, the housing being sealable to resist pressures of at least 200 psi, the housing extending further in an annular direction than in a radial direction and enclosing a space suitable to guide an additional length of at least one of the fibers round at least 180 degrees in a substantially annular plane.
Unlike the known splice protecting sleeves, the provision of space in the housing for at least a bend of fiber can enable the housing to be used for protecting U-bends or to provide some slack fiber within the housing for example. Providing space for slack fiber has a number of advantages such as enabling faster onsite splicing operations as will be explained in more detail below. Faster onsite splicing operations can result in major cost savings. For example where the infrastructure is downhole pipework, and the splicing operation must be carried out on a rig floor during a pause in insertion of the pipework, the cost of such a pause may be measured in tens of thousands of dollars or more per hour.
Another aspect of the invention provides a spliced fiber cable assembly comprising one or more cables carrying optical fibers along a tubular infrastructure, the assembly having such a housing enclosing a fiber splice and a bend of the fiber.
Another aspect provides:
A method of splicing optical fibers from one or more cables running along an infrastructure, the method having the steps of:
passing the one or more cables into a housing, the housing also having space to enclose a fiber splice and and suitable to guide an additional length of at least one of the fibers round at least 180 degrees in a substantially annular plane,
splicing at least one of the optical fibers from the cables,
placing the fiber splice in the housing,
sealing the housing to resist pressures of at least 200 psi, and
attaching the assembly to the infrastructure.
Another aspect provides a corresponding method of sensing using the fiber splice assembly, and involving launching light along the fiber, receiving light from the fiber and deducing conditions along the fiber from the received light.
Any additional features can be added to any of the aspects. Other advantages will be apparent to those skilled in the art, especially in relation to other prior art not known to the inventors. Any of the additional features can be combined together and combined with any of the aspects, as would be apparent to those skilled in the art.
Embodiments of the invention and how to put it into practice are described by way of example with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:—
Definitions:
References to a housing can encompass housings of various sizes or shapes, housings formed of a main body, a lid and a part for attaching, or other parts, or being a one-piece item, with the part for attaching being integral with the main body. The housing can be one-time sealable, or resealable many times. They can be of metal or other materials.
References to an assembly can encompass parts preassembled, or parts assembled on site.
References to an arrangement for attaching the housing can encompass any type of fixing, including straps for strapping, clamps of any sort, clamps for clamping the cable to a pipe using well-known collar protectors, as the pipe is placed in a well. Attaching can be by wrapping, by welding, by adhesives, or by physical integration with the tube, or any other way. If the clamp fits around a tube, then the clamp can be arranged to follow the shape of the tube and the main body part need not do so. If the attaching part is a bolt and a corresponding hole in the main body for example, then the main body part can follow the shape of the tube to make a good fit.
References to ports can encompass sealable holes, resealable holes, holes of any shape, sealable in any way, or recesses in a joint between parts of a housing for example.
References to a substantially annular plane can encompass a plane following a substantially cylindrical surface. This can also encompass a flat plane such as a tangential plane subtending an angle of less then 90° such that the extent of the plane still remains within the annular space between two substantially cylindrical surfaces. References to non corrosive metals can encompass alloys such as Incoloy 825, stainless steels such as SS 316 and others.
Introduction to Embodiments
By way of introduction to the embodiments, some of the problems of protecting fibers such as sensing fibers and fiber splices in harsh environments will be discussed briefly.
The useful life of the fiber in such environments depends on countering three major causes of deterioration: glass oxidation or other glass deterioration at high temperature, hydrogen ingress and physical damage during installation. The protective fibre coating can have a simultaneous effect on some or all of these in that the coating prevents exposure of the surface of the glass of the fiber to oxidation or other deterioration in such high temperatures. Various protective coatings can substantially prevent hydrogen ingress and also protect the glass from physical damage. Increasing the useful life can help reduce costs of replacing fibers in locations such as bore holes. Different protective coatings are used depending on the temperature and environmental conditions of a particular installation.
Cables to protect the sensing fibers can take a number of configurations. For example a fiber or fibers can be surrounded by a metal conduit. This may be a stainless steel strip wrapped around the fiber and welded. Another example is an Al tube, which can provide good hydrogen ingress resistance at high temperatures. It may have insulating and or hydrogen protective coatings on inside and/or outside surfaces of the conduit, and may be filled with a hydrogen scavenging gel. The metal may be surrounded by a second metal conduit, with a filler material in between. This can help avoid transfer of stresses to the fiber which could interfere with measurements. A further outer encapsulation layer of for example HDPE can be provided to give abrasion protection. It is often good practice to install two fibres within a cable for both redundancy, and to enable different calibration techniques. It will often be necessary to connect the two fibres together at the far end of the cable. It is common to do this using a fusion splice. Splices are often regarded as a source of failures.
A high-quality fusion splice is often measured by two parameters:
i. Splice loss and
ii. Tensile strength
For graded-index multimode fibers, the fiber related factors include core diameter mismatch, numerical aperture (NA) mismatch, index profile mismatch, core/cladding concentricity error and cladding diameter mismatch. Splice process-related, factors are those induced by the splicing methods and procedures. Splice process factors include lateral and angular misalignment, contamination and core deformation. Fiber preparation includes fiber stripping, surface cleaning and fiber-end angle.
At least some of the embodiments of the invention as described below show a housing for a spliced fiber cable assembly of cables carrying optical fibers along an infrastructure, the assembly being fixable to the infrastructure and the housing comprising at least one port for passing into the housing one or more cables carrying the fibers. The housing has space for protecting a fiber splice coupling at least one of the optical fibers from the cables and space for protecting an additional length extending around a bend of at least 180 degrees, of at least one of the fibers, the housing being sealable to resist pressures of at least 200 psi.
Additional Features:
Embodiments of the invention can have any features added to those mentioned above. Some notable additional features will be described and some are the subject of dependent claims. Many others can be envisaged. The housing can have a curved outside face to fit against the outside of tubing, or the inside of casing for use down boreholes or in undersea structures or other harsh environments. The housing can have overall dimensions suitable to fit within an annular space between cylindrical surfaces. One example is the movable tubing and fixed or movable casing in a borehole, other examples can be envisaged such as above ground structures or tubes or pipework. The housing can have internal islands surrounded by channels for spooling slack fiber around the islands. The islands can provide support for a lid to cover the channels. The housing can be manufactured from different materials to provide protection against corrosion, such as SS 316 and Incoloy 825, or others. The housing can be formed to withstand pressures of up to 5000 psi, or 10,000 psi, or 15,000 psi for example, to suit different environments. In one example the housing can provide enough space to coil at least 0.3 m of fibre. This can be enough to enable the fibre ends to reach the splicer from the housing, or to be reworked after an unsatisifactory splice. The housing can provide enough space to allow many turns or coils of fiber to be housed within This means they can be used to protect a coil of reference fiber, which may be spliced into the cable at a known position corresponding to a known depth of borehole for example. This is useful for deep wells, to improve collected data.
The ports provided to allow the cables to enter the internal space, and allowing pressure sealing to be achieved to the cables, can be arranged to be resealable. There can be ports arranged at both ends of the housing to enable the cable to extend beyond the housing, or there can be a port or ports at only one end of the housing where it is for the end of a cable. In some examples, four cables can be jointed in the housing.
A pressure test port can be provided to allow pressure testing of a port before assembly, and also after assembly, to confirm pressure resistance of the housing and the cables, to reduce a number of failures.
The housing can have a lid and gasket allowing it to be pressure sealed. A test arrangement can be provided to test the lid seal.
The housing can extend in an annular shape to fit around part or all of the circumference of a pipe. It may extend around an angle of anything up to 360°.
The housing can be used at the end of a cable(s) or in-line at a mid-point (above a packer etc), and may be inserted in any point of a previously installed cable for the purpose of inserting instrumentation or repairing a damaged cable if required.
A splicing rig may be provided to hold the housing in place close to splicing tools, during splicing at the infrastructure location. Such specialised arrangement of tools can minimize time and improve quality of the splices in difficult locations such as a rig floor. The ports may be used to clamp the cables during splicing. Cable ends can be stripped to bare sufficient fiber to enable the ends of the fibers to be moved to a splicer without unclamping the cables. After splicing, the slack fiber can be coiled in the housing.
A main body of the housing can be secured to the tubing using bands or clamps, of conventional design or clamps adapted specially for the housing. The body and any clamps or straps of the housing can be sufficiently low in profile to fit in the annular space between the production tubing and the casing. The housing can be filled with hydrogen scavenging gels if required. The housing can be arranged to work with cables having other components such as electrical supply lines (FOC+EL), and the housing can be used additionally for protecting electrical equipment or sensors.
The fiber splicing equipment can be used for example to couple a new section of cable, or to insert sensors or anything else into the optical path in mid cable, or to terminate the cable. A U-bend may be inserted at the lower end of the cable for example.
An arrangement for attaching is shown in the form of a clamp 150, shown fitting over the main body of the housing to attach the main body to the tubing 30. This can involve any type of attachment including bands, bolts, adhesives, mechanisms to couple to joints in the production tubing and so on. Many configurations are possible. The clamp may be integrated with the housing, or be a separate item.
Although the ports are shown at the ends and off centre, they could be at other locations, or there could be just one port. Having the ports off centre provides a straighter path for the fiber to join the perimeter of the coiling space.
A passage 840 can be provided for testing the seal. This passage can extend into both gaps above the tapered part as shown. Testing the seals can involve injecting fluid into this passage and inspecting for leakage at the exterior of the main body of the housing at rings 830 and 810, and optionally checking for leakage into the housing past the tapered part. In some cases, the sensing will be affected by leakage and so can be used to detect failed seals, either during testing or later in operation.
Cable
The cable is intended to protect the optical fiber or fibers, and enable a good seal with the housing. An example is a multi-layer cable, to provide the protection required for downhole installations in oil wells. Other examples can be envisaged. A basic cable might have a single stainless steel tube surrounding carbon polyimide coated fibers in a hydrogen scavenging gel. For more protection a double wall or tube in tube type can be used. An example specified for operation within the −40° C. to 150° C. temperature range, will be described in more detail. Two fibres are included in the cable allowing for double ended measurements. An inner tube of 304 SS or other metal, has a diameter of approximately 3.2 mm, and wall thickness of 0.2 mm. This can be filled with a hydrogen scavenging gel for example. This is surrounded by a belting of polypropylene of thickness 0.2 mm to provide separation from an outer tube of 316 SS or other metal. This outer tube has a diameter of 6.3 mm and wall thickness of 0.7 mm approx. An outer encapsulation can be of Santoprene or other materials such as HDPE of outer diameter 11 mm and thickness of 3.9 mm approx.
To create a good seal the outer encapsulation can be stripped back to enable a metal on metal compression seal for example.
As a preliminary to the splicing, the operator places a splice protector tube over one of the ends to be spliced at step 290. The operator then uses the fiber stripper to strip the fiber coating at step 300. The fiber ends are then moved to the cleaver to cleave the ends at step 310. Then the cleaved ends are moved to the splicer to splice and the splice is then covered with the protective tube at step 320.
The step of stripping the fiber can involve removing any outer protective coatings to leave the cladding exposed at the ends to be joined. This can be done by chemical, thermal or mechanical treatment for example. The next steps can involve the ends being cleaved, aligned and fused. Conventional fusion equipment can be used. The uncoated gap of approximately 30 mm length is now covered by the protective tube. The protective tube might be a polymer based splint that is heat shrunk around the uncoated fusion splice. Alternatively, for higher temperatures, protective sleeves of other materials such as high temperature polymers or ceramics can be used. Epoxy or ceramic paste might be used to seal the protective tube in place over the fibre fusion splice region. The end splice protector has a length of up to approximately 40 mm. After coiling the spare fiber and the protected splice in the space in the body of the housing at step 330, the housing can be sealed and tested at step 340. If the test fails, the housing can be opened up again and resealed. The splice may also be tested and if necessary can be remade. The housing can then be clamped to the production tube and the operator can continue installing the production tube into bore with the cable and housing attached, at step 350. Once installed, sensing can start by launching light into fiber, receiving light from fiber and deducing conditions from received light at step 355.
For the case that the housing is as shown in
Various ways of clamping such a housing to the production tubing or other cylindrical parts can be envisaged. Some embodiments can be arranged for clamping to an inside surface of a tube rather than the outside. The slack fiber can be bent or coiled in the circumferential space inside the housing.
In other embodiments, the housing can be rectangular, and attached by a standard clamp used at the joints in the production tubing, to protect the cable over the joint where there are variations in diameter.
These figures show cross sectional views of different arrangements of islands and ports. In
Advantages of Housings Having Space for Fiber Bend
A number of advantages can arise, such as for example:
a) The space in the housing for at least a bend can enable some slack in the fibers after splicing, which can be bent, or in some cases coiled, in the housing. This can in some cases enable multiple attempts at a splice without having to restrip the cable. Or it can enable larger tolerances in the location of the stripping and cutting of the fiber ends for splicing. At least in the case that any of these advantages enables a splicing operation at the location of the infrastructure to be made easier, more reliable or quicker, this can result in major cost savings. For example where the infrastructure is downhole pipework, and the splicing operation must be carried out on a rig floor during a pause in insertion of the pipework, the cost of such a pause may be measured in tens of thousands of dollars or more per hour.
The additional length of slack fibre can make it easier to allow more space for work between splicer and cassette. The spare fiber means that the cables can be sealed to the assembly providing strain relief during the splicing operation.
b) The space for a bend can enable the housing to be used to protect a U-bend of fiber to enable a return path of fiber to enable bidirectional launch of light for sensing, or other uses.
c) In some cases where there is space in the housing for coils of longer lengths of fibre, then the housing can be used to contain a length of reference fiber which will be at similar temperature, to act as a reference section in subsequent measurements.
d) The housing could be used for additional sensors or electrical equipment. These can be located in the islands for example. Electrical equipment can be powered by an electrical supply line running alongside the fibers in the cable.
Concluding Remarks
Some or all of the measures or features described can be combined to enable robust sensing installations, including the protection of splices in the sensing cable. Other variations within the claims can be conceived.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/GB2008/050675 | 8/7/2008 | WO | 00 | 2/2/2011 |