When oil is discovered it is not uncommon for more than one reservoir to be discovered, with one below the other. This may have been because they were formed at different times in history or because at some time oil was able to move up through a permeable layer which later moved and stopped the flow.
To reduce the costs of recovering oil from each reservoir, a single oil well may be created that passes through each reservoir so that oil can be recovered from each simultaneously. This method of creating two or more producing wells from a single casing is called a dual- or multi-completion well. A diagram of such a well is shown in
As the two reservoirs have developed in different environments and at different times, it is likely that they will have different characteristic pressures and temperatures which can compromise the extraction process. This can be exacerbated over time as the volume of oil remaining in one of the wells may reduce much quicker, and therefore the pressure will drop quicker leading to a lower rate of oil production.
Engineers have developed several tools to overcome this and one approach is called “stimulation”, where the reservoir pressure is increased by some means, one of which is water injection. This method involves injection of water directly into a particular reservoir to replace the lost oil and thus increase the reservoir pressure. As water is heavier than oil it does not easily mix with the oil and therefore sinks to the bottom of the reservoir (see water layer W in
Currently water injection wells are either specially drilled and created for this specific purpose or use a converted oil well. A schematic of such a well can be seen in
The present invention provides a fluid injection control device for deployment in a well-bore to control injection of fluid into an oil reservoir, wherein the well-bore has an outer pipe and an inner tube which extends within the outer pipe and is connected at one end to a pressurized fluid supply above the ground, and the device includes a control valve arrangement comprising:
The invention further provides a method of controlling injection of fluid into an oil reservoir from a well-bore, wherein the well-bore has an outer pipe and an inner tube which extends within the outer pipe and is connected at one end to a pressurized fluid supply above the ground, the method comprising the steps of:
Known techniques and embodiments of the invention will now be described by way of example and with reference to the accompanying schematic drawings, wherein:
Embodiments of the present invention facilitate the implementation of multi-zonal injection from a single production tubing string. Moreover they may allow the rate of injection into each zone to be controlled independently of the pressure of the injected water. A schematic diagram of such a implementation is shown in
A device embodying the invention incorporates an electrically actuatable valve (or valves) into the tubing string and allows water to pass from the inner, centre tube (working pipe) into the outer pipe. Two such devices 10 and 12 are deployed in tubing string 14 in the example of
Two injection zones 22 and 24 are defined in the annular region by packers 26 and 28. The packers prevent fluid flow between the zones. An injection device 10, 12 is located in a respective zone 22, 24. The perforations associated with zone 22 permit fluid flow into a first oil reservoir R1, and similarly the perforations associated with zone 24 permit fluid flow into a second oil reservoir R2. Oil is extracted from the reservoirs R1 and R2 via a separate well 30.
In operation of the arrangement shown in
A diagram of a fluid injection device 38 embodying the invention is shown in
Water under pressure is supplied to the centre pipe 40 and it flows into the small inlet hole 42 and passes to the valve 44. The water also enters the small inlet hole 46 so that equal pressure is present at both the valve and the rear bellows 48 of the actuator 50. The pressure is therefore balanced across the actuator.
When the unit is actuated, the actuator impeller 52 pushes pin 54 which in turn opens valve 44. This allows fluid to pass through the valve and travel from point A to point B in the outlet 56 via a fluid conduit in the device (not shown). As the fluid passing through the valve is equal in pressure to that in the tubing and it presses on the front bellows of the actuator, the system remains in balance. The fluid travelling through the outlet then passes into the outer pipe via injection orifice 58. The outer pipe is perforated by perforations 20 and therefore allows the fluid to enter the reservoir 60. The fluid flow can be stopped by actuating the valve 44 in the opposite direction by sending an appropriate control signal to the actuator 50.
The device may include externally removable injection orifices 58 so that flow rates can be readily selected according to particular field conditions by choosing appropriate orifice sizes for insertion in the device.
For the purposes of illustration, the valve 44 and outlet 56 are shown on opposite sides of the device in
The device may also incorporate a pressure sensor for monitoring the pressure in the annular region adjacent to the injection device. This parameter can be used to influence the fluid flow rate to the or each reservoir.
The provision of more than one such valve in an injection control device allows the operator to have a finer control on the flow rate of the fluid. This concept is not limited to injection of water and could be used in the injection of gases as well.
Advantages of this arrangement include:
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1017699.8 | Oct 2010 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/GB2011/052024 | 10/19/2011 | WO | 00 | 4/17/2013 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2012/052760 | 4/26/2012 | WO | A |
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Entry |
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United Kingdom Intellectual Property Office, Patents Act 1977: Search Report under Section 17, Application No. GB1017699.8, dated Apr. 18, 2011 (2 pages). |
European Patent Office, International Search Report and Written Opinion of the International Searching Authority, International Application No. PCT/GB2011/052024, dated Feb. 15, 2013 (12 pages). |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20130199797 A1 | Aug 2013 | US |