2. Background Art
Plunger lift systems are artificial lift systems for oil and gas wells. U.S. Pat. No. 6,200,103 to Bender, incorporated herein by reference, discloses a gas lift plunger having a cylindrical elongated plunger body. The plunger body has a plurality of spaced, shaped circumferential grooves. The grooves are shaped to increase gas turbulence, and thereby improve plunger lift and reduce the flow of liquid around the plunger.
A plunger for an oil or gas well has a cylindrical elongated plunger body with a top portion, an intermediate portion and a lower portion. The intermediate portion includes a plurality of longitudinally spaced, shaped circumferential grooves defined by recessed surfaces interspersed between sections of the peripheral surface of the plunger body. The plunger body has a cylindrical, interior cavity extending upwardly from the bottom with the interior cavity being open at the bottom and closed at the top. Vertically spaced sets of generally radially extending, circumferentially spaced passages extend from the interior cavity to the grooves. A plurality of circumferentially spaced, angled flutes or fins extend outwardly from the lower portion of the plunger body. The depth of the grooves and the size of the passages decreases from the bottom end to the top end of the plunger body.
More specifically, the invention comprises a plunger arrangement for moving up and down in a tubing string in a plunger lift system for an oil and gas well, the plunger having a gas seal arrangement comprising: an elongated plunger body having an upper end and a lower end, the plunger having a longitudinal axis, with a plurality of circumferentially grooves spaced longitudinally apart on an outer surface of the plunger body. A longitudinal bore is arranged within the plunger, extending from an opening in the lower end of the plunger, and an arrangement of fluid side-holes or passageways extend from the bore to the outer surface of the plunger body to permit gas flow therethrough to direct a turbulent flow of fluid about the plunger. In one embodiment, at least one of the passageways extends radially outwardly in the plunger body from said bore. In another preferred embodiment, at least one of the side holes or passageways extends at an acute angle with respect to the longitudinal axis of the plunger body from the bore. In another preferred embodiment, a plurality of fins may be arranged on the lower end of the body of the plunger to effect a rotational motion in the plunger as the plunger travels through the tubing string. The fins may be in a spiral array on the lower end of the plunger. The fins preferably have a tube wall-cleaning sharp edge for cleaning the inside of the tubing string as the plunger travels rotationally therethrough.
The invention also includes a method of controlling fluid flow in a tubing string in a plunger lift system of an oil and gas well wherein an elongated plunger controllably travels vertically therethrough, the method comprising one or more of the following steps: arranging an array of fins on a lower end of the elongated plunger, wherein the fins create turbulence in gas within the tubing string; and rotating the elongated plunger about a longitudinal axis thereof, as the plunger travels through the tubing string in the plunger lift system. The method may include: arranging an elongated bore in the plunger from the lower end thereof; and drilling a plurality of side holes into the bore through the plunger. The side holes in one embodiment may be arranged radially with respect to the longitudinal axis of the bore. The side holes may also be arranged at an acute angle with respect to the longitudinal axis of the bore. The method may also include one or more of the following steps: spinning the plunger about its longitudinal axis so as to generate turbulence in gas surrounding the plunger as the plunger travels through the tubing string in an oil and gas well lift system; ejecting gas through the side holes in the plunger to maximize turbulence of fluid surrounding the plunger as it travels in the tubing string in the oil and gas well lift system.
The invention may also include a method of controlling fluid flow in a tubing string in a plunger lift system of an oil and gas well wherein an elongated plunger controllably travels vertically therethrough, comprising one or more of the steps of: arranging an array of side holes through a side wall of the elongated plunger, wherein the side holes create turbulence in gas within the tubing string; and rotating the elongated plunger about a longitudinal axis thereof, as the plunger travels through the tubing string in the oil and gas well plunger lift system; arranging an elongated bore in said plunger from said lower end thereof; and arranging a plurality of fins on a lower end of the plunger. The fins may be arranged in a spiral with respect to said longitudinal axis of the bore. The method may include the step of spinning the plunger about its longitudinal axis so as to generate turbulence in gas surrounding the plunger as the plunger travels through the tubing string in an oil and gas well lift system.
The invention also includes a method of cleaning interior walls of a tubing string in a plunger lift system of an oil and gas well wherein an elongated plunger controllably travels vertically therethrough, comprising one or more of the steps of: arranging an array of fins on a lower end of the elongated plunger, wherein the fins have a sharp edge in close proximity to the walls of the tubing string; rotating the elongated plunger about a longitudinal axis thereof, as the plunger travels through the tubing string in the plunger lift system; and cleaning the walls of the tubing string by scraping of the sharp cleaning edges of the fins, as the rotating plunger travels vertically therethrough; and ejecting gas through an angled arrangement of side holes, either forward in one embodiment, rearward in another embodiment, or tangentially from the bore to the grooves in yet a further embodiment, in the plunger to maximize turbulence of fluid surrounding the plunger as it travels in the tubing string in the oil and gas well lift system.
Details of this invention are described in connection with the accompanying drawings that bear similar reference numerals in which:
Referring now to the drawings in detail, and particularly to
Describing the specific embodiments herein chosen for illustrating the invention, certain terminology is used which will be recognized as being employed for convenience and having no limiting significance. For example, the terms “up”, “down”, “top”, and “bottom: refer to the illustrated embodiment in its normal position of use. The terms “outward” and “inward” will refer to radial directions with reference to the central axis of the device. Further, all of the terminology above-defined includes derivatives of the word specifically mentioned and words of similar import.
The fishing neck portion 11 has an exterior size and shape corresponding to a conventional oil and gas well plunger fishing neck. The intermediate portion 14 includes a plurality of longitudinally spaced, circumferential grooves 15 that divide the peripheral surface of the intermediate portion 14 into a plurality of outer surface sections 16. Preferably the grooves 15 are sized, shaped and spaced as set forth in U.S. Pat. No. 6,200,103 and as shown in
As shown in
The lower portion 12 includes a plurality of circumferentially spaced, radially extending, angled fins or flutes 25 separated by channels 26. The flutes 25 each have an outer surface 27 bounded laterally by sharp corners 28. The diameter of the lower portion 12, as measured at the outer surfaces 27 is preferably the same as the diameter of the outer surface sections 16 of the intermediate portion 14. Preferably the flutes 25 are angled at about 30 degrees.
The shape of the grooves 15 creates a turbulent flow region that inhibits liquid flow downward into the groove 15 and inhibits gas flow upward out of the groove 15. The interior cavity 20 reduces the weight of the plunger 9. Gas flow up through the interior cavity 20 and out through the passages 22 increases the turbulence in the grooves 15, increasing the turbulent gas to liquid sealing effect of the groove 15 design. Gas flow up through the channels 26 causes the plunger 9 to spin. As the plunger 9 spins, the corners 28 of the fins 25 clean the inside walls of the tubing string to minimize build-up of paraffin and scale therein. Spinning the plunger 9 also increases the turbulence in the grooves, increasing the turbulent gas to liquid sealing effect of the groove 15 design.
Some wells produce frac or formation sand fines which can pack in around a plunger 9 when it is in the lubricator during the after-flow cycle causing the plunger 9 to become stuck. Gas escaping through the passages 22 while the plunger 9 spins in the lubricator at the surface during the after-flow cycle of the plunger 9 precludes the plunger 9 from becoming sanded off. The action of the spinning plunger 9 and the jet effect of the interior cavity 20 and passages 22 also mitigate against the plunger 9 becoming stuck in the lubricator.
By way of example, and not as a limitation, for a 2 inch tubing string, the plunger 9 would be 15 inches long and the outer diameter of the plunger 9 would be about 1.875 inches to about 1.890 inches. There are sixteen grooves 15 and the diameter at the grooves 15 would increase from 1.385 inches for the lowest groove 15 to 1.571 inches for highest groove 15. The vertical length of the flutes 25 would be about 2 inches and the diameter at the inside of the channels 26 would be 1.375 inches. The diameter of the passages 22 would be 0.125 inches for the lowest set 21, 0.094 inches for the middle set 21 and 0.043 inches for the highest set 21.
Although the present invention has been described with a certain degree of particularity, it is understood that the present disclosure has been made by way of example and that changes in details of structure may be made without departing from the spirit thereof.
1. Field of the Invention This present invention relates to plunger lift systems for oil and gas wells, and more particularly to a gas lift plunger with an improved gas seal, and is based upon Provisional patent application Ser. No. 60/593,914, filed 24 Feb. 2005, and is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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4410300 | Yerian | Oct 1983 | A |
6725916 | Gray et al. | Apr 2004 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20060185853 A1 | Aug 2006 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60593914 | Feb 2005 | US |