As drilling mud is recirculated during drilling, debris from earth formations may damage sensitive downhole equipment. Filters used to collect the debris and thereby provide a way of removing the debris are known in the art. Often these filters will attach in single shouldered pipe such as described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,495,073. The '073 patent discloses a mud screen for installation between any two selected ends of interconnected pipes comprising a supporting collar anchored in the selected threaded connection of the drill pipe string and a screen support mounted on such collar and secured thereto by one or more releasing devices. An apertured inverted conical screen is supported by the screen support in transverse relationship to the pipe bore. A bridging element is secured across the screen support and defines a mounting for an upstanding post which functions as a manual handle and also defines a fishing neck at its upper end for downhole retrieval.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,598,685 discloses another system for mounting a filter in a drill string. Disclosed is an apparatus comprising a cylindrical flange member having a first and second passage and a cylindrical sleeve having an internal fishing neck. An attachment pin attaches the flange member to the cylindrical sleeve. The apparatus further comprises a screen member attached to the cylindrical sleeve. In one embodiment, the first and second passages are disposed off-centered so that four bore holes are created. The attachment pin cooperates with a groove formed on the sleeve's outer diameter surface. The apparatus may further include a pulling tool. The pulling tool contains a plurality of dog members disposed about the mandrel, and a spring that urges the dog members into engagement with a protuberance on the mandrel. The apparatus further comprises a shear pin attaching the dog members to the mandrel and wherein the shear pin is disposed within a slot so that the dog members can move axially relative to the mandrel.
Data transmission systems integrated into a drill string may utilize some of the sensitive equipment downhole that may be damaged by the debris. Some of these transmission systems utilize double shoulder pipe which may exclude the references above as being compatible with their systems. Such systems are disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,670,880 to Hall, et al.; 6,641,434 to Boyle, et al.; and 6,688,396 to Floerke, et al. which are all herein incorporated by reference.
A filter for a drill string comprises a perforated receptacle having an open end and a perforated end and first and second mounting surfaces are adjacent the open end. Data transmission elements are disposed within each of the first and second mounting surfaces. The respective transmission elements are in communication with each other and with a transmission network integrated into the drill string.
Also disclosed is a filter for a drill string comprising a perforated, corrosion-resistant receptacle having an open end and a perforated end. First and second mounting surfaces are adjacent the open end and data transmission elements are disposed within a groove in each of the first and second mounting surfaces. The respective transmission elements are in communication with each other via an electrical conductor and with a transmission network integrated into the drill string. The perforated receptacle may comprise a cylindrical shape, a conical shape, a rectangular shape, a spherical shape, or an amorphous shape.
The data transmission elements and the electrical conductor may form an LC circuit with a characteristic impedance. The transmission elements of the filter may transceive data from an integrated network which comprises a characteristic impedance different from the impedance of the filter's LC circuit. Disclosed is a capacitor that may modify the impedance of the LC circuit and reduce electromagnetic reflections that may result from mismatched impedances.
Grooves which house the transmission elements may comprise a biasing element adapted to bias the transmission elements towards adjacent transmission elements; thereby reducing the size of or eliminating gaps between the elements. The adjacent transmission elements may be located in adjacent tools of the drill string. Gaps between the transmission elements may result in an attenuated or weakened signal. The mounting surface may further comprise a passageway intersecting the grooves and in fluid communication with the open end of the filter. This may be advantageous because fluid or lubricants may collect in the grooves while installing the filter into the drill string. A passageway may allow the pressure that the lubricants or fluid may exert on the transmission elements to escape to the open end of the filter and into the central bore of the drill string; thereby, reducing pressure on the transmission elements which may cause the transmission elements to fail.
The transmission elements may be inductive couplers, direct electrical contacts, or optical couplers. In some embodiments of the present invention, the filter comprises electronic components. The electronic components may be selected from the group consisting of sensors, routers, power sources, clock sources, repeaters, and amplifiers. Sensors such as fluid pressure and fluid flow rate may provide valuable information to drilling conditions and also the condition of the filter.
The filter may further comprise a mandrel mounted coaxially within the central bore of the drill pipe and adapted for removing or installing the filter. When a filter is retrieved the perforated receptacle may comprise heavy debris and rig equipment may be required to pull the filter out. The mandrel may comprise a hook to interface with the rig equipment.
A preferred system for transmitting data through a drill string 20 is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,670,880 to Hall et al. A swivel assembly 26 may be located at the top of the drill string 20 which may act as a physical interface to the derrick 21 and may provide a means 28 for transmitting data to and from surface equipment 27, such as a computer. One embodiment of a downhole network consistent with the present invention is disclosed in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/710,790 entitled “Distributed Downhole Network,” and filed on Aug. 3, 2004 in the name of Hall, et al.
The second conductor 50 is part of the transmission network 59. A preferred transmission network is disclosed in U.S. application Ser. No. 10/710,790, filed on Aug. 3, 2004; which is herein incorporated by reference.
Preferably, the perforated receptacle 33 is corrosion resistant. An electrically insulating polymer may coat the outer surface of the receptacle 33 to protect it from corrosive material that may be circulating through the drill string 20. Further, an electrically insulating polymer, such as polyurethane or Teflon® may help prevent against galvanic corrosion. In other embodiments fiberglass or metal alloys, such as chromium steel, may be used to prevent against corrosion.
More than one filter 44 may be mounted in the drill string 20. Multiple filters 44 may prove to be advantageous by filtering more debris from the circulating mud. The top-most filter 44 may filter most of the debris, while the downhole filters 44 may function as backup filters 44 and catch significantly less debris. However, the downhole filters may require retrieval for empting the filters 44 less frequently. A downhole filter 44 may be placed immediately above the sensitive equipment 25 and therefore increase the protection to that equipment 25. An advantage to mounting the filter 44 immediately below the swivel assembly 26 is that of easy removal. A typical segment of drill pipe added to a drill string 20 during tripping may have a length of ninety feet. After the drill string 20 advances into the earth ninety feet, the filter 44 may be full. The filter 44 may be retrieved and replaced or cleaned before more drill pipe 29 is added to the drill string 20.
A third conductor 49 connects the first and second transmission elements 37, 38. The third conductor 49 may be a coaxial cable, a triaxial cable, a twin axial cable, a shielded twin axial cable, a pair of twisted wires, a shielded pair of twisted wires, or an optical cable. Preferably the impedance of the first and second conductors 31, 50 match the impedance of the third conductor 49 located in the flange 32 of the filter 44. A coaxial cable's capacitance is dependant upon its length and will therefore affect its impendence. The length of the third conductor 49 in the flange 32 may be a different length than the other conductors 31, 50 resulting in mismatched impedance. A capacitor 52 may alter the capacitance of the third conductor 49. The capacitor 52 may be configured as shown in
Still referring to
In some drill pipe secondary shoulders do not create a mechanical seal; in such cases the filter 44 may be inserted into the drill pipe without modifying a swivel or other downhole component. Since downhole components not designed to form a mechanical seal between the secondary shoulders of the pipes have a tolerances that may range several inches, a spring adapted to bias the transmission elements 37, 38 in the mounting surfaces 40, 41 to the transmission elements 36, 39 in the adjacent pipes is disclosed. Further biasing elements may include a gas compressed chamber, or elastic material. The filter 44 of the present invention may be adapted to an insert such as described in U.S. application Ser. No. 10/710,639 filed on Jul. 27, 2004; which is herein incorporated by reference; by mechanically attaching the perforated receptacle 33 to the insert.
Sensors 57 that measure fluid pressure and fluid flow rate may provide valuable information about drilling conditions and also the condition of the filter 44. As the filter 44 collects debris, the debris may block the perforations 48 in the receptacle 33 resulting in fluid traveling through the other perforations 48 of the receptacle 33 with a higher pressure. Sensing this pressure may indicate when the filter 44 has collected enough debris that the flow of fluid through the drill string 20 is impaired so the filter 44 may be replaced. Pressure measured in the central bore 45 of the drill string 20 may be compared with pressure outside of the drill string 20 to indicate if drilling mud is being lost into a formation in the earth. Other types of electronic components 56 may aid in the transmission of a data signal; such component 56 may be selected from the group consisting of signal filtering circuitry, signal error checking circuitry, device control circuitry, modems, digital processors, optical regenerators, optical transmitters, optical receivers, repeater circuits, sensors, routers, switches, memory, amplifiers, data compression circuitry, data rate adjustment circuitry, wireless transceivers, digital/optical converters, analogue/optical converters, and microcontrollers.
Also shown in
Whereas the present invention has been described in particular relation to the drawings attached hereto, it should be understood that other and further modifications apart from those shown or suggested herein, may be made within the scope and spirit of the present invention.
This invention was made with government support under Contract No. DE-FC26-01NT41229 awarded by the U.S. Department of Energy. The government has certain rights in the invention.
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