The field of the invention is completion techniques and more particularly those involving sequential procedures in a zone which need periodic obstruction of the flow bore to conduct the operation and need the flow bore cleared thereafter for production.
Some completion methods require sequential isolation of adjacent zones in an interval to perform treatments such as fracing. Typically the zones are isolated with packers and in between them there are sliding sleeves that can be selectively opened to provide access. Typically, this assembly is run in to position, and then a ball or plug is pumped down to the bottom which closes off the flow path through the bottom end of the liner. Pressure is applied and the packers are set, creating multiple isolated zones. The tubular string is pressurized and the lowermost sliding sleeve is opened. After the lowermost zone is treated a ball is dropped on a lowermost seat to close off the zone just treated and the pressure is built up on this first dropped ball to open the next sliding sleeve up. After that treatment an even bigger ball lands on an even bigger seat to close off the second zone just treated. The process is repeated until all zones are treated using a progression of bigger and bigger seats as the treatment moves toward the surface. At the end, the balls on all the seats are either floated to the surface when the flow commences from the treated formation or the assembly of all the seats and the balls that are respectively on them are milled out so as not to impede subsequent production from the treated zone. This technique is shown in U.S. Pat. No. 6,907,936. The problem with it is that different sized seats are required at specific locations to make the isolation system work and in the end there are some rather small passages through the smallest of the seats even if the balls are floated out that then requires a discrete step of milling out the seat and ball near all but one sliding sleeve.
Techniques have been developed to temporarily block wellbores using dissolving or other wise disappearing plugs. Such devices are illustrated in U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,220,350, 6,712,153 and 6,896,063. Some packers are built to be disposable involving the use of degradable polymers as illustrated in US Publication No. 2005/0205264; 2005/0205265 and 2005/0205266. Some assemblies involve landing collars that can be changed from a go to a no go orientation with a shifting tool that also doubles as a tool to operate sliding sleeves. This is illustrated in US Publication No. 2004/0238173. Yet other designs that create selective access into a formation by using perforating charges that blow out plugs in casing or pressure actuated pistons with internal rupture discs are illustrated in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,660,232 and 5,425,424. U.S. Pat. No. 6,769,491 illustrates a typical anchor assembly for a downhole tool.
The present invention seeks to streamline certain downhole operations by matching profiles on plugs to those on sliding sleeves or nipple profiles. This allows a specific plug to be located at a certain location and bypass other potential landing locations. The flow path can be identical in size for the duration of the zone and yet different portions can be addressed in a particular sequence. Apart from that, the plugs, after having served their purpose, reopen the flow path for further operations. These and other benefits of the present invention will be more readily understood by those skilled in the art from a review of the description of the preferred embodiment that appears below, as well as the drawings and the claims, which define the full scope of the invention.
A system allows for sequential treatment of sections of a zone. Access to each portion can be with a sliding sleeve that has a specific internal profile. Pump down plugs can be used that have a specific profile that will make a plug latch to a specific sleeve. Pressure on the plug when latched allows a sequential opening of sleeves while zones already affected that are below are isolated. The pump down plugs have a passage that is initially obstructed by a material that eventually disappears under anticipated well conditions. As a result, when all portions of a zone are handled a flow path is reestablished through the various latched plugs. The plugs can also be blown clear of a sliding sleeve after operating it and can feature a key that subsequently prevents rotation of the plug on its axis in the event it later needs milling out.
a-c are a section view of an alternative pump down plug design showing the plug landed in the sliding sleeve;
a-c are the view of
a-c are the view of
Those skilled in the art will appreciate that while 2 protrusions 26 and 28 are shown on the plug 10 to match similarly shaped depressions on the sliding sleeve 30 there are many different ways to execute the inventive concept. The concept is to create a unique match between a given plug 10 and a given downhole location which happens to be a sliding sleeve such as 30. For example, when treating a long zone there will be a plurality of sliding sleeves such as 30 that have packers such as 40 and 42 to isolate a surrounding annulus (not shown). The idea is to progressively isolate parts of a zone working uphole so that the next sliding sleeve between a pair of packers can be opened for treating the formation between those two packers while the portions below already treated are isolated.
To better understand how this happens reference is again made to
One aspect of the invention is that a given plug has a profile on the fingers 24 that registers with a specific sliding sleeve profile in the embodiment of
If fracing is to be done for example, using sliding sleeves A, B and C where A is furthest from the surface, the procedure would be to run the assembly into position and set packers between A, B and C and another above C. All sleeves would be run in closed. To frac the zone adjacent sliding sleeve A the string is simply pressurized to open sleeve A to treat the furthest zone from the surface. Sleeve A can be a pressure to open design. When that zone is done a plug is pumped down into sleeve B and that effectively isolates the zone just treated through sliding sleeve A. This plug has a pattern on its fingers to register only with sleeve B. Pressure is built up again and sleeve B opens and treatment of the zone through open sleeve B takes place. When that treatment is done, another plug specially configured to register only with sleeve C is pumped down. Pressure is again built up and the zone is treated through open sliding sleeve C. While that is going on the plug in sleeve B is isolated by virtue of the plug above it and it starts to warm to well temperature and the material 44 in that plug disappears. When pumping is stopped against the plug in sliding sleeve C, it too warms up and the material 44 in it disappears. What are then left are the open passages in the two plugs 18 with all sleeves open and the need to go in and drill out is not there. The treated formation can simply be produced. Should it be desired, the plugs could be fished out using necks 20.
While a procedure with 3 sleeves A, B and C has been described those skilled in the art will understand any number of sleeves that have external isolation devices can be used. The only difference among the sleeves is the profile on them is unique to each and the plugs pumped down have matching profiles to properly land in the sleeves in the desired sequence. In the preferred bottom up sequence each successive plug isolates an already treated zone while the material 44 in that now isolated plug just disappears. What's left is a fully treated interval and a fully open passage to the entire treated interval with no need to drill or mill ball seats as in the past. In the preferred embodiment the sleeves that span the zone can all have similar internal diameters and the unique patterns that register between a plug and a sleeve will ensure that similarly dimensioned plugs wind up at the right sleeve. After it is all done each plug now with its material 44 disappeared presents a consistent flow path 18 to the entire treated interval.
In an optional variation, instead of using the material 44 an easily milled disc can be provided. While this way will require subsequent intervention after all the plugs are in place, the milling should go quickly if only the discs themselves are milled out and not the plugs that retain them. Thereafter, with the passage in each plug open, production can flow through them all. Any remnants from milling can be brought to the surface with this production.
While the embodiment in
In this embodiment a given plug has a unique profile or pattern than is matched in the housing adjacent to a sleeve as opposed to literally on the sleeve in the case of
While two specific embodiments have been described as a unique way to block a passage in a plug that disappears, those skilled in the art will appreciate that independent of the specific execution of the disappearing member the invention encompasses the use of other assemblies that disappear by a variety of mechanisms apart from dissolving when used in the contexts that here described in the application and covered in the claims.
Referring now to
It is worthy of mention again that all types of ways to obtain a unique registering location between a given plug and a given sleeve or a given downhole location are part of the invention. While projections and depressions have been used as an example with either member capable of having one or the other, other combinations that result in registrations of selected pump down plugs at different locations are within the scope of the invention. The sleeves or landing locations can be all the same diameter but what makes them unique is the ability to register with a specific plug that has a profile that registers with it.
Yet another aspect of the present invention is to use progressively larger seats as described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,907,936 except to make the obstructing members of a disappearing material so that when all zones are treated, all the seats are reopened. While this embodiment has the disadvantage that without milling there are well obstructions that vary in size, it does retain an advantage over the method in the aforementioned patent in that production can begin without milling out balls on seats.
In another technique, a plurality of nipple profiles that are unique can be placed in a casing string. A pump down plug that supports a perforating gun can be delivered to register with a particular nipple profile whereupon registering at the proper location pressure above the now supported plug can fire the gun. In that manner an interval can be perforated in a specific order and intervals already perforated can be isolated as other portions of the interval are perforated.
In another embodiment the sliding sleeves that have explosive charges to open access to the formation as described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,660,232 can be selectively operated with the pump down plugs described above that register with a discrete sleeve to open access to the formation in a desired order. The technique can also be grafted to the sliding sleeves used in combination with telescoping pistons as described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,425,424 to selectively shift them in a desired order using the techniques described above.
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.
This application is a continuation application claiming priority from U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/388,847, filed on Mar. 24, 2006.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11388847 | Mar 2006 | US |
Child | 11829238 | Jul 2007 | US |