This invention relates generally to a subsea wellhead system for use in the drilling and completion of oil or gas wells at substantial depths beneath the water surface and, more particularly, to a wellhead system with a horizontal spool tree.
Conventional wellhead system includes a wellhead housing mounted on the upper end of a subsurface casing string extending into the well bore. A riser and blowout preventer (BOP) are then installed. During the drilling procedure, the BOP is installed above a wellhead housing (casing head) to provide pressure control as casing is installed, with each casing string having a hanger on its upper end for landing on a shoulder within the wellhead housing. Upon completion of this process, the BOP is replaced by a Christmas tree installed above the wellhead housing, with the tree having a valve to enable the oil or gas to be produced and directed into flow lines for transportation to a desired facility.
In accordance with a relatively recent development in this field, the conventional casing and tubing heads making up the Christmas tree are replaced by a horizontal tree which comprises a spool with a generally horizontal through port mounted above and in axial alignment with a horizontal through port in the wellhead housing. In this application, the hangers for the casing strings are supported one above the other within the bore of the wellhead housing, and the tubing hanger for the production or tubing string is supported in the bore of the spool to suspend the production string within the casing strings.
The vertical bore through the tubing hanger of a horizontal tree may be closed by a wire line tool to direct production fluid through aligned side ports (generally horizontal through ports) in the hanger and spool for recovery and delivery of production fluid to a suitable location. A redundant seal may be provided by a well cap installed in the tree above the tubing hanger, with the vertical bore aligned with that of the tubing hanger closed by a wire line plug to permit vertical access to the production tubing string upon removal of the plug.
The completion of a well with a horizontal tree conventionally includes an isolation/orientation sleeve which is installed within the tree bore in order to isolate and thus allow testing from the exterior of a metal seal between the adjacent ends of the wellhead housing and spool. A portion of the sleeve also carries a guide tube with an upwardly contoured guide surface positioned to cooperate with a lug on the tubing hanger to rotate the tubing hanger into a desired position as it is lowered onto a shoulder in the bore of the spool. This technique automatically aligns the side port in the hanger with the side port in the tree bore.
A BOP stack then is lowered onto the upper end of the spool with a bore in alignment with the spool bore, and a tubing hanger then lowered through the BOP and into the spool bore. A lug on the lower end of the hanger cooperates with the guide surface to orient the hanger into a proper landed position on a seat in the bore of the spool. A tree cap is then lowered into a landed position, following which the BOP may be removed to permit installation of a cover on the top of the tree.
More particularly, the complete drilling and completion operation involves lowering a wellhead housing at the upper end of a production casing string onto an outer housing at the upper end of a conductor casing surrounding the production casing string. The conductor casing and housing at its upper end conventionally have been lowered onto the ocean floor to suspend the production casing string within a well bore by means of a permanent base having guide posts, using cables extending to the surface.
The wellhead housing is lowered with the casing by a running tool on a drill pipe into the upper end of a BOP whose lower end is connected to the wellhead housing by means of a releasable connector, with the bores of the wellhead housing, the BOP and drill pipe in axial alignment. The BOP is normally of the ram type well known in the art and having a stack including at least one pipe ram and at least one blind ram. The upper outer diameter of the wellhead housing may have grooves thereabout to receive teeth of the releasable latch of the connector.
An outer casing hanger on the upper end of the casing may be lowered for landing onto a shoulder in the bore of the wellhead housing to suspend it within the conductor casing. An inner casing hanger in turn may be lowered into a landed position on the outer casing hanger to suspend an inner production casing within the casing. The hangers and the strings on which they are mounted may thus be lowered into the well on running strings through the riser and BOP bore.
A wear bushing may then be lowered through the riser and BOP for landing with its bore aligned with that of the casing hanger and extending upwardly within the bore of the wellhead housing so as to prevent wear on the seal at the upper bore of the wellhead housing during drilling of the production well. The lower portion of this bore is aligned with the bore of the upper casing hanger, while the upper end is enlarged to provide a tapered seat at its lower end. Each of the casing hangers and the wear bushings are releasably locked in place and the outer diameters of the hangers are sealed with respect to the bore of the wellhead housing.
At this stage, the wear bushing may be raised by a suitable running tool, and the BOP and connector at its lower end are released from the upper end of the wellhead housing and raised to the surface to enable the spool of a horizontal tree to be lowered on a running tool releasably connected to its upper end. The tree may then be guidably lowered onto the upper end of the wellhead housing by means of sleeves lowered over the guide posts. The tree may be releasably connected at its lower end to the upper end of the wellhead housing. Thus, the connector has latches on its lower end which move over the upper end of the housing for locking thereto with their bores aligned.
Upon landing of the horizontal tree on the wellhead housing, a lower end of an orientation sleeve in the tree moves into the upper enlarged end of the casing hanger to form a continuation of the bore therethrough. This lower end of the orientation sleeve carries a seal assembly for sealing between it and the upper enlarged bore of the casing hanger. A seal which was lowered with the upper casing hanger seals off the annulus between the casing hanger and well bore housing. A metal seal ring is carried by the tree to land upon and form a seal with a tapered seat on the inner diameter of the upper end of the bore of the housing so as to be energized as the tree is connected to the housing by a connector.
The upper portion of the bore through the horizontal tree may be enlarged to receive an elongated wear bushing which is lowered with the tree to land on an intermediate shoulder in the upper enlarged bore of the tree. The wear bushing has an inner diameter somewhat less than that of the bore of the tree so as to prevent wear on the seal surfaces of the tree bore as tools are lowered into and raised from the well bore during drilling of the hole to receive the tubing.
In accordance with one of its functions, the sleeve isolates the metal seal ring to permit the ring to be tested from the outside of the tree. In addition, the sleeve has an upwardly extending guide surface which cooperates with a lower guide surface on a tubing hanger to orient the tubing hanger into a desired rotational position as it is lowered into the tree bore. Thus, for horizontal trees of this type, a side port in the tubing hanger is aligned with side port in the tree to direct production fluid to a flow line.
In accordance with horizontal tree practices, a first plug is lowered on a wire line and locked within the upper end of the hanger bore above its side port, and a tree cap that may contain another wire line plug is lowered into and locked within the bore of the tree. The BOP is then removed and replaced by a protective cover which is axially aligned and rotationally oriented into a position over the upper end of the tree.
The conventional procedure for installing a horizontal tree on a subsea wellhead involves the installation and the removal, and the subsequent reinstallation, of the BOP stack. U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,465,794; 5,544,707; 5,555,935; 6,062,314 and 6,039,119 disclose different equipment for horizontal tree applications. Each such installation is time consuming and expensive.
The present invention provides an improved horizontal spool tree wellhead system and method in which only one installation of the BOP stack is required. The disadvantages of the prior art are overcome by the present invention, and improved horizontal spool tree wellhead system and method are hereinafter disclosed which does not require repeated installation and removal of the BOP stack.
According to the method of invention, a subsea well is drilled and completed with a casing installed in the well bore and a wellhead housing having a wellhead housing bore installed on the upper end of the casing. The method includes lowering a spool of a horizontal tree for connection with an upper end of the wellhead housing, with the spool having a spool bore and at least one spool side port extending radially from the spool bore. A BOP may then be installed on the upper end of the tree, with the BOP having a BOP bore aligned with a spool bore and the wellhead housing bore. After a large diameter hole has been drilled with the tree and BOP in place, a casing string carrying a casing hanger may be lowered through the bores of the BOP, the spool tree and the wellhead housing and into the large diameter hole. At least one production hole with a smaller diameter may then be drilled with the drill string extending through the tree and the BOP on the wellhead. An orientation/isolation sleeve may then be installed in the tree spool, with the sleeve having a predetermined rotational orientation with the spool tree. Thereafter, a tubing hanger having a side port extending radially from the tubing hanger central bore may be lowered for landing on the orientation sleeve and rotationally oriented by the sleeve to align the tubing hanger side port with the spool side port.
According to the system of the present invention for drilling and completing a subsea well, a horizontal spool tree includes a spool bore and at least one side port extending radially from the spool bore. A BOP bore is aligned with the spool bore and the wellhead housing bore, and a casing string is supported on a casing hanger from the bore within the wellhead housing. An orientation sleeve may then be installed with a predetermined rotational orientation with respect to the spool tree, with the orientation sleeve having an internal diameter less than the cutting diameter of the drill bit used to drill the production hole. A tubing hanger is then landed on the orientation sleeve, as discussed above, so that its side port is oriented properly with respect to the spool side port.
The significant feature of the invention is that the size of the drill bit for drilling the large diameter hole is not restricted by the tree bore, which may be the full bore of the wellhead. A drill bit at the end of a drill string passes through the BOP through the tree and wellhead housing, and into the formation to drill the casing hole. Also, the size of the bit used to drill the production hole need not be restricted by the orientation sleeve. The orientation sleeve may have an internal diameter substantially less than the cutting diameter of the drill bit used to drill the production hole, since the orientation sleeve is installed after drilling the production well. A sleeve-shaped subsea tree bore protector may be provided within the bore of the tree while drilling the well, and may be removed prior to installing the orientation/isolation sleeve.
A further feature of the invention is that the orientation/isolation sleeve seals at its lower end to a casing hanger and its upper end to the tree. This sleeve preferably includes an upper guide surface for engagement with the tubing hanger to orient the tubing hanger with respect to the tree. The orientation sleeve also is preferably fixed to the tree to resist vertical and rotational forces applied to the orientation/isolation sleeve.
The tubing hanger preferably includes a fluid production port which extends laterally from the central tubing hanger bore for producing fluids from production tubing extending from the tubing hanger into the production well. During completion, an internal tree cap may be positioned above the production tubing hanger and secured to the tree. One plug may be positioned within a central bore of the tubing hanger, and another plug positioned within a central bore of the tree cap.
The casing hanger is preferably landed on a shoulder within the wellhead housing. The orientation sleeve preferably extends from within the wellhead housing into the spool bore of the horizontal tree, while the tubing hanger is positioned within the spool bore of the tree and is supported on the orientation sleeve. A conventional BOP stack may thus be used above the tree.
These and further objects, features, and advantages of the present invention will become apparent from the following detailed description, wherein reference is made to the figures in the accompanying drawings.
Referring still to
After drilling of the large diameter hole, a casing hanger 38, as shown in
Following drilling of another hole to receive a production tubing string, the wear bushing and the protector sleeve 40 are removed, as shown in
The upper end 64 of the orientation sleeve 60 does not block access to the side ports 52, 54 in the tree bore, so that a production tubing hanger 70, as shown in
A production tubing will thus be suspended from the tubing hanger 70 and passed through the orientation/isolation sleeve 60 and into the production well bore. More particularly, the drilling and completion system has reached the same stage as discussed above in connection with the prior art without having to remove the BOP and drilling riser.
The well may thus be completed in essentially the same way as described above. A tree cap 74, as shown in
The tree 22 and spool 23 may include one or more side ports leading to various conduits and controlled by valves to permit various workover tests and other functions to be performed, as shown and described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,544,707. Alternatively, the tree may be constructed in accordance with one or more of those shown and described in provisional application Ser. No. 60/295,857, entitled “HORIZONTAL TREE,” filed May 25, 2001, and in utility application Ser. No. 10/155,482 filed May 24, 2002, entitled “HORIZONTAL SPOOL TREE ASSEMBLY.” Thus, the tree 22 may have different conduit connections with its side port or ports. From the descriptions of the present invention as discussed above, its advantages are attained regardless of the type of horizontal tree.
A significant advantage of this invention is that the bore through the horizontal spool of the tree may be at least as large as the most restrictive diameter of the bore through the wellhead. Accordingly, the size of the large diameter well is only restricted by the bore size of the wellhead, even though the tree is already in place on the wellhead when drilling this large diameter well. The maximum bore of the tree is thus significantly greater than the bore through the one or more casing hangers, which is unlike the prior art operation wherein the BOP was removed and the tree first installed after the casing hangers were hung in the well.
Another significant advantage of the present invention is that the orientation/isolation sleeve need not be installed until just prior to running the tubing string in the well, and after drilling the portion of the hole intended to receive this tubing string. Accordingly, the bore through the tree is not restricted by an orientation/isolation sleeve while the production tubing well is being drilled. By running the sleeve in after the drilling operation is complete, a highly reliable orientation/isolation sleeve may be used. The present invention thus makes possible the drilling of a production well for receiving the production tubing string wherein the bit diameter used to drill the production hole is not restricted, and may be only slightly less than the diameter of the casing hanger, and only slightly less than the diameter of a protector sleeve provided within the spool 23. Referring to
The orientation/isolation sleeve as disclosed herein may be a single sleeve that achieves three purposes: (1) sealing between the casing hanger (or the wellhead) and the tree, (2) providing orientation for the tubing hanger so that the side port of the tubing hanger is properly oriented with respect to the side port in the spool, and (3) securing the orientation sleeve to the tree to resist vertical forces, either upward or downward, that may be imparted to the orientation sleeve. If desired, separate components could be used to perform each of these functions. Orientation of the tubing hanger could be achieved with a device separate from the function of sealing between the casing hanger and the tree. In many applications, it will be desirable to lock the sleeve to the tree, although in other applications the sleeve could be locked to the wellhead housing, or could be axially fixed between the casing hanger locked to the wellhead housing and the tubing hanger locked to the tree. In most applications, other functions of the orientation/isolation sleeve are to support the weight of the tubing hanger and thus the tubing string, and to safely withstand the fluid pressure levels in the tree.
While preferred embodiments of the present invention have been illustrated in detail, it is apparent that modifications and adaptations of the preferred embodiments will occur to those skilled in the art. However, it is to be expressly understood that such modifications and adaptations are within the spirit and scope of the present invention as set forth in the following claims.
This application is a divisional of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/222,259 filed Aug. 16, 2002, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,805,200, which claims the benefit of the provisional application U.S. patent application Ser. No. 60/313,612 filed Aug. 20, 2001.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20040262009 A1 | Dec 2004 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60313612 | Aug 2001 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10222259 | Aug 2002 | US |
Child | 10872673 | US |