The field of this invention is tubular patches applied by expansion and more particularly those that result in a flush mounting of the patch so that the internal diameter of the well is not reduced from patching.
Downhole well tubulars sometimes develop leaks and need to be repaired. On technique to make such a repair is called cement squeezing. In this technique, cement is pumped into an isolated zone and hopefully into the damaged portions and the cement is allowed to set up. After setup the excess cement is drilled out of the wellbore and the repair is pressure tested to see if it has been successful. If it still fails to hold pressure the process can be repeated as many times as necessary until pressure integrity is regained. This process can work but it is extremely time consuming and could get very expensive if ultimately it doesn't work in a particular application. The cement is brittle and can break over time. These types of patches are difficult to make in a short interval and progressively get more problematic with a longer interval.
Another technique is to place a patch in the area of the damaged tubular and expand the patch into a sealing relationship. This technique is well known and it will also reduce the inside diameter of the wellbore.
What is needed and provided by the present invention is a technique for patching a tubular downhole without reducing the inside resulting diameter and without aggravating the existing failure in the tubular that has brought the need to apply a patch. The details of the method will be more readily understood by those skilled in the art from a review of the description of the preferred embodiment and the claims that appear below.
Casing or other well tubulars that have failed are repaired in a manner that doesn't reduce the final inside diameter and doesn't further propagate the failure. The tubular needing repair is first expanded on at least one zone above and below the damaged area. This expansion in an undamaged area arrests failure propagation when the damaged area is then expanded. After the damaged area is expanded, the patch coupled preferably with exterior seals is positioned in the expanded zone of the damaged tubular and expanded. The procedure can also be accomplished in a single trip into the well.
The reason an undamaged zone on either or both sides of a damaged zone is expanded first is that a failure or crack that defines the damaged zone will want to propagate if the damaged portion itself is initially expanded. Using the initial expansion in the undamaged zone acts as a stop to crack propagation. This step is illustrated in
The illustrated method can also be accomplished in a single trip using a single or multiple swage devices. The patch is simply run in and temporarily supported from the run in string. An adjustable swage and related anchor and stroker are suspended below on the running string. The initial expansion of zones 18 and 20, as described above, are accomplished. The swage is then repositioned adjacent the joined expansion zones that are shown in
The above description is illustrative of the preferred embodiment and many modifications may be made by those skilled in the art without departing from the invention whose scope is to be determined from the literal and equivalent scope of the claims below.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20070107898 A1 | May 2007 | US |