Field of the Invention
This application relates to drilling and casing of earthen boreholes. Specifically, this application relates to a wear band for a tubular and a method of coupling a wear band to a tubular to be run into an earthen borehole. More specifically, this application relates to a friction-reducing wear band.
Brief Description of the Related Art
Earthen boreholes may be drilled using a tubular string, e.g., a drill string, to rotate a drill bit against the end of a borehole to remove material and extend the borehole. A drill string includes threadably connected segments of drill pipe that are typically rotated and longitudinally advance the drill bit into the earth's crust. Other drill strings may be coupled to a mud motor powered by pressurized fluid to rotate the drill bit as the drill string slides longitudinally along the borehole.
After a targeted depth is achieved, typically the drill string is removed from the borehole and a second type of tubular string called casing is made-up and run into the borehole to a targeted interval where it is cemented in place to stabilize the borehole. After a section of a borehole is cemented with casing, continued drilling through the bore of the cemented casing may further extend the borehole, and subsequent casing strings may be installed through the cemented sections of casing and cemented within the extended portion of the borehole to further stabilize and extend the borehole in a step-wise manner.
In extended reach boreholes and boreholes having horizontal or highly deviated sections, the frictional resistance to both rotational and longitudinal movement of a tubular is substantially greater because the weight of the tubular bears more directly on the floor (e.g., downwardly disposed side) of the borehole. There is a potential for damage or erosion of the outer surface of the tubular where the tubular is moved within the bore of an installed casing string when there is direct metal-to-metal contact.
Advances in drilling technology enable some boreholes to be drilled and cased using a single tubular that serves as both the drill string and the casing string. In this process, known as “casing while drilling,” a tubular may be used to rotate a drill bit to extend the borehole, and the tubular is then cemented into place within the borehole. Casing while drilling eliminates the need to trip drill pipe into and out of the borehole to service the drill bit or to clear the borehole for installation of a casing string. When the borehole is drilled to its targeted subsurface objective, the drill bit at the end of the casing string may either be milled out or collapsed to permit retrieval to the surface through the bore of the casing string. Casing while drilling may provide a significant cost savings from reduced drilling time and by eliminating the need to provide and maintain a drill string on a rig, and it may also reduce the risk of borehole collapse. However, casing is generally larger than drill pipe, thereby resulting in more frictional contact with the borehole, and the need to rotate the casing within the borehole may exacerbate wear.
Wear bands have been proposed to protect tubular strings from excessive wear. One such wear band, disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 7,124,825 to Slack, is installed on a tubular by radial deformation of both a wear band sleeve and the adjacent wall of the tubular to crimp and secure the wear band on the tubular.
Another wear band solution, disclosed by Male et al.'s U.S. Pat. No. 7,412,761, provides a mold coupled to a tubular and filled with a composite material that hardens or cures to form a wear band.
A similar wear pad disclosed in Calderoni et al.'s U.S. Pat. No. 7,195,730 uses plastic compounds injected into molds that, upon curing or hardening, form strips or pads that adhere to the exterior wall of the tubular.
A centralizer disclosed in Clark et al.'s U.S. Publication 20080210419 provides one or more friction-reducing sliders disposed within one or more annular recesses or grooves machined within a bore through the centralizer to reduce rotational torque transmitted between the centralizer and a tubular received through the bore. A shortcoming of Clark et al.'s centralizer is that the body appears to slide along the tubular until it, and not a friction-reducing slider, engages an external feature on the tubular exterior, such as a sleeve-type tubular connection, another centralizer or a stop collar, resulting in unwanted friction between the rotating centralizer and that external feature.
What is needed is a wear band to reduce wear on a tubular that can be installed in the field, for example, at a pipe rack or a pipe yard, in almost any climate and without the need for large machines or skilled operators. What is needed is a wear band that does not require large, expensive sections of tubular to be threadably coupled intermediate adjacent sections of the tubular, and a wear band that can be coupled to a conventional tubular as opposed to being disposed on a special tubular section that must be included within the tubular string. What is needed is a wear band without small rolling elements (e.g., spherical bearings) that are subjected to an extremely large number of cycles or that are incompatible with uneven or rough rolling surfaces. What is needed is a wear band that reduces frictional resistance to both longitudinal and rotational movement of a tubular within a borehole or within the bore of a casing.
Embodiments of the wear band and method of coupling a wear band to a tubular satisfy the above-stated needs. In one embodiment of the wear band, the bore of a rotating element is received onto a tubular having a non-upset end connection over which the wear band may be installed. The wear band comprises a rotating element having a bore and an exterior wear surface comprised of a friction reducing material such as, for example, but not limited to, hardened steel, nylon, plastic, composite or brass, to reduce frictional resistance to longitudinal sliding movement of the tubular through a bore, which may be, for purposes of the claims that follow, an earthen borehole or the bore of an installed section of casing. The bore of the rotating element may receive sleeve bearings radially intermediate the bore of the rotating element and the tubular to reduce frictional resistance to rotation of the rotating element on the tubular and, thus, to reduce the torque demand for rotation of a tubular string that includes the tubular within a borehole or within a bore of a casing.
In one embodiment of the method of installing a wear band, the wear band may be rotatably secured to a tubular intermediate a first stop collar and a second stop collar that straddle the sleeve bearings and the rotating element to limit or prevent longitudinal movement of the sleeve bearings and the rotating element. In one embodiment, the sleeve bearings may be rotatable within, but longitudinally coupled to, the rotating element to prevent longitudinal movement of the sleeve bearings relative to the rotating element. This embodiment may be used to prevent the rotating element from frictional contact with the tubular and/or the first and second stop collars, e.g., to isolate all sliding contact to the sleeve bearings. In another embodiment, the rotating element may be connected to the sleeve bearings using, for example, a connector, an adhesive or an interference fit.
Another embodiment of the wear band provides a rotating element having a bore comprising a bore first portion and a bore second portion separated one from the other by a shoulder. For example, the bore of the rotating element may comprise a bore first portion and a bore second portion separated one from the other by a radially inwardly protruding barrier, such as a protruding wall, within the bore of the rotating element. In this embodiment, a first sleeve bearing may be disposed radially intermediate the bore first portion and the tubular, and a second sleeve bearing may be disposed radially intermediate the bore second portion and the tubular, to contact the tubular and the rotating element and to together reduce frictional resistance to rotation of the rotating element on the tubular. In one embodiment, this configuration provides a rotating element that is maintained in its longitudinal position by engagement of the shoulder with the first and second sleeve bearings. This configuration prevents frictional engagement between the rotating element and the tubular or stop collars.
In one embodiment, the bore first portion of the rotating element may receive the first sleeve bearing and at least a portion of a sleeve-shaped bearing spacer extending along the tubular from the first stop collar, and the bore second portion of the rotating element may receive the second sleeve bearing and at least a portion of a sleeve-shaped bearing spacer extending from the second stop collar along the tubular. The bearing spacers together straddle the first and second sleeve bearings to limit the range of movement of the rotating element on the tubular. The first and second bearing spacers may, in one embodiment, be of an outer diameter sized to fit within the bore first portion and the bore second portion to generally isolate the bores from exposure to borehole fluids and debris. Structures that may comprise one or more of the friction reducing materials include, but are not limited to, the bore and/or bore portions of the rotating element, the bearings spacers and the sleeve bearings.
In one embodiment, at least one of the sleeve bearings provided to reduce friction to rotation of the rotating element comprises friction reducing material such as, but not limited to, polytetrafluoroethylene (“PTFE”), TetraFluorEthylene-Perfluorpropylene (“FEP”) and PerFluoroAlkoxy (“PFA”). In other embodiments, at least one of the sleeve bearings comprises a friction-reducing material such as, but not limited to, brass or nylon. In another embodiment, at least one of the sleeve bearings comprises a substrate treated, coated, impregnated or encapsulated within a friction reducing material.
In other embodiments, the wear band may be rotatably secured in a position on an exterior of a tubular using a stop collar having a retainer portion received in an interior groove in the bore of a rotating element, a set of slender fingers extending from the retainer portion along the exterior of the tubular, and a sleeve to capture the fingers intermediate the sleeve and the tubular. In one embodiment, the stop collar may further comprise a second set of slender fingers extending from the retainer portion of the stop collar in a direction opposition the direction of extension of the first set of fingers, and a second sleeve to capture the fingers intermediate the sleeve and the tubular. In another embodiment, a second stop collar also having a retainer portion received in either the same or a separate interior groove in the bore of the rotating element, a set of slender fingers extending from the retainer portion and along the exterior of the tubular, in a direction away from the first stop collar, and a second sleeve to capture the fingers intermediate the sleeve and the tubular to further secure the rotating element in the position on the tubular.
In rotatable embodiments of the wear band having a rotating element with an interior groove to receive a retainer portion(s) of a stop collar(s), the rotating element may be rotatably coupled to the stop collar by a variety of methods. For example, in one embodiment, the stop collar comprises a bore with a longitudinal gap, a wall thickness and material that provides sufficient elasticity to allow resilient collapse of the retainer portion for insertion within the bore of the rotating element. The retainer portion of the stop collar is radially aligned with, and allowed to expand into, the interior groove in the bore of the rotating element. The coupled stop collar and rotating element may then be received onto the tubular, moved to the desired installation position and sleeve(s) may be installed on the exposed fingers to secure the wear band on the tubular. Alternately, the rotating element may comprise two or more portions that can be connected to capture the retainer portion of the stop collar within the interior groove of the rotating element. Fasteners, such as screws, bolts and nuts, or pins, adhesives, such as an epoxy, or some interlocking structure, such as a dovetail joint, may be used to connect one portion of the rotating element with the other portion(s) to capture the retainer portion there within. For example, the rotating element may be sectioned into two portions along a plane perpendicular to the axis of the bore of the assembled rotating element, or the rotating element may be sectioned into two portions along a plane that intersects the axis of the bore of the rotating element. Once the rotating element and the stop collar are moved to the desired installation position on the tubular, sleeve(s) may be installed on the exposed fingers to secure the wear band on the tubular.
In another embodiment, a non-rotating wear band with at least one set of fingers extending from the wear band in a first direction is securable in a position on a tubular by receiving a sleeve onto the fingers to capture the fingers intermediate the sleeve and the tubular. In this non-rotating embodiment, the retainer portion of the stop collar is itself the wear member.
The rotating element may comprises an outer coating, shell, pads or other features that may be coupled to an inner body, and the outer coating, shell, pads or other features may be of a hardened or erosion resistant material to impart durability to the wear band.
Embodiments of the wear band may be positioned at uniform intervals along a tubular string, and two or more wear bands may be positioned on a single tubular segment.
The foregoing and other features and aspects of embodiments of the invention will be best understood with reference to the following detailed description of one or more specific embodiments, when read in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, wherein:
The embodiment of the wear band of
The rotating element 12 coupled to the tubular 8 facilitates rotation of the tubular 8 relative to the rotating element 12, but also to substantially reduce friction (e.g., axially and rotationally) between the tubular 8 and the wall of a borehole (e.g., bore of a casing) in which the tubular 8 is run. The rotating element 12 is, as seen in the section view of
Additional friction reduction may be achieved by polishing, treating, lining, coating, lubricating, impregnating or otherwise conditioning contact surfaces such as, for example, at least one of the first and second bore portions 34 and 35, the exterior surface of the tubular 8, and the outer surface of the rotating element. Such surface conditioning may preferably be directed to the rotating element, e.g., to the first and second bore portions 34 and 35.
In the embodiments of the wear band illustrated in
Other embodiments of the wear band may provide similar advantages. For example,
Another embodiment of the wear band illustrated in
“Tubular,” as that term is used herein, refers to drill pipe, casing pipe or any tubular pipe that may be used to form a tubular string that can be run into a borehole. A “stop collar,” as that term is used herein, may comprise any collar, sleeve, upset portion, tubular connection or other feature disposed on a tubular string that may be used, in conjunction with an opposing stop collar, to limit or prevent the longitudinal movement of a sleeve bearing along the tubular. The terms “comprising,” “including,” and “having,” as used in the claims and specification herein, shall be considered as indicating an open group that may include other elements not specified. The terms “a,” “an,” and the singular forms of words shall be taken to include the plural form of the same words, such that the terms mean that one or more of something is provided. The term “one” or “single” may be used to indicate that one and only one of something is intended. Similarly, other specific integer values, such as “two,” may be used when a specific number of things is intended. The terms “preferably,” “preferred,” “prefer,” “optionally,” “may,” and similar terms are used to indicate that an item, condition or step being referred to is an optional (not required) feature of the invention.
The term “stop collar,” as used herein, refers to a collar to limit the range of axial movement of a centralizer movably received on a tubular segment, and that the use of the modifier “stop” within the term “stop collar” should not be considered as limiting the use of the device to secure only stationary or fixed devices. The term “rotatably secured,” as used herein, means axially secured in a manner that permits rotation of one or more components or elements, such as a rotating element, relative to the tubular to which the component or element is secured. The term “rotatably coupled,” as used herein, means axially secured in a manner that permits rotation of one or more components or elements, such as a rotating element, relative to the stop collar to which the component or element is secured.
“Interior,” when used to refer to a bevel, means radially inwardly disposed and “exterior,” when used to refer to a bevel, means radially outwardly disposed.
U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 61/287,665 filed on Dec. 17, 2009, U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/237,202 filed on Aug. 26, 2009, U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/221,716 filed on Jun. 30, 2009, and U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/167,482 filed on Apr. 7, 2009, from which this application depends, are incorporated into this disclosure by reference.
While the invention has been described with respect to a limited number of embodiments, those skilled in the art, having benefit of this disclosure, will appreciate that other embodiments can be devised which do not depart from the scope of the invention as disclosed herein. Accordingly, the scope of the invention should be limited only by the attached claims.
This application is a divisional of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/755,981 filed on Apr. 7, 2010, which depends from and claims priority to U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 61/287,665 filed on Dec. 17, 2009, U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 61/237,202 filed on Aug. 26, 2009, U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 61/221,716 filed on Jun. 30, 2009, and U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 61/167,482 filed on Apr. 7, 2009.
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20150008042 A1 | Jan 2015 | US |
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61287665 | Dec 2009 | US | |
61237202 | Aug 2009 | US | |
61221716 | Jun 2009 | US | |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 12755981 | Apr 2010 | US |
Child | 14481829 | US |