The present invention relates to a coiled tubing unit for use in the servicing of oil and gas wells and more particularly to a unit mounted on a single mobile platform capable of providing both coiled tubing and pressurized fluid injection with non-fired heat recovery.
Well bores require periodic maintenance to remove for example accumulated sediments or for a host of other reasons well known in the industry. When maintenance is required, it is the usual practice to remove existing pumping equipment from the wellhead, and to move in a service rig to maintain control over the well during servicing and to inject and remove the necessary tools and equipment required to complete the maintenance or servicing operations.
For well servicing and workovers, the use of coiled tubing is preferred. Coiled tubing is a single length of continuous unjointed tubing spooled onto a reel for storage in sufficient quantity to exceed the maximum depth of the well being serviced. Coiled tubing is favoured because its injection and withdrawal from the well can be accomplished more rapidly compared to conventional jointed pipe, and it is particularly well suited for use in underbalanced wells. However, as with conventional pipe, service fluids and wire lines for downhole tools and instruments pass through the tubing's interior. The tubing is wound on a reel or spool mounted on a wheeled trailer or the flatbed of a truck for transport. The coiled tubing unit will normally also include an injector for insertion and removal of the tubing from the wellbore and a guidearch which leads the tubing into the injector.
For a typical cleanout, the tubing is injected into the well and a pressurized fluid is pumped through the tubing to circulate the well contents out through the annulus between the tubing and the well bore. The fluid can be a liquid but is often an inert gas such as air, nitrogen or carbon dioxide.
As a cleanout fluid, air has the obvious advantage that it costs nothing and it works reasonably well particularly in shallow wells of less than 1200 meters in depth. In shallow wells, the ratio of oxygen to hydrocarbons is not critical and there is relatively little risk of explosion. In deeper wells however, partial pressures increase, and the concentration of oxygen and its reactiveness increase sharply. This creates a real risk of explosion and the oxygen's reactiveness can cause sever corrosion by the oxidation of metallic surfaces.
Another disadvantage to the use of air is that the equipment needed to compress and pump it adds substantially to the weight of a coiled tubing rig. A major issue with coiled tubing units is the amount of coil they can carry without exceeding load limits on both the trailer and public roadways. So called “bob tailed” coiled tubing units incorporate the air compressor. The compressors typically pump 300 to 650 standard cubic feet per minute (scfm) at a maximum pressure of approximately 2000 psi. This is not sufficient in itself to blow sand from deeper wells. To add more lifting capacity, soap is added to the air stream which produces a foam. The soap is stored in a tank, and the tank and compressor combined weight approximately 7500 lbs. (approximately 3400 kg), which reduces the amount of coil the unit can carry by the same amount. This limits deeper well applications.
These and other factors mitigate against the use of air for deep well applications and favour the use of nitrogen. Nitrogen is inert at all depths and creates a safer working environment around hydrocarbons. Its also non-corrosive. It is pumped at a volume of up to 1500 scfm at pressures up 5000 psi which is sufficient to blow sediments from the wellbore without the need for soap.
To complete a job using nitrogen, both a coiled tubing unit and a nitrogen unit are required on location. The two units are rigged together at the well site and as the coiled tubing is run into the well, the nitrogen is pumped through the tubing to extrude any fluids and/or solids accumulated in the well.
Nitrogen is normally stored and transported to the site as a liquid in a pressurized container forming part of the nitrogen rig, which also includes a tractor for moving the rig from job to job, a pumping unit and a heating unit to vaporize the nitrogen prior to injection through the coiled tubing and into the wellbore. The heater is normally an open flame unit and by regulation it must therefore be kept at a predetermined safe distance from the wellhead.
The above described setup has numerous disadvantages. Most obviously, operating costs for two rigs are high because of the extra personnel, fuel and equipment required. There is the added pollution and cost resulting from the use of two tractor units and an open flame heater. The mandated separation of the nitrogen and coiled tubing units greatly enlarges the footprint at the well site which sometimes necessitates enlarging the site. The high pressure tubing delivering the nitrogen gas to the coiled tubing unit is a hazard and setup and breakdown times before and after the job are increased.
The present invention seeks to overcome the above disadvantages by providing a hybrid coiled tubing/fluid pumping unit. The hybrid unit consists of a coiled tubing reel and injector, together with a nitrogen rig on a single platform. The nitrogen rig must have a non-fired heat recovery system between the pump and the coiled tubing to vaporize the nitrogen prior to injection. The term “single platform” can include both a single supporting surface such as a single trailer or flatbed, or two or more supporting surfaces that when in use can be situated close enough to one another that enlargement of the work site is unnecessary.
In operation, the hybrid coil tubing/nitrogen rig is driven to the well site requiring service. The unit has the capability of towing a pup trailer supporting the liquid nitrogen reservoir. Once at the site, the coiled tubing is deployed according to standard procedures known in the art; the tubing is delivered over a guide arch into the injector, and the injector then inserts the tubing into the bore. If the bore is underbalanced, a lubricator can be used in conjunction with the injector.
The outer end of the coiled tubing can be permanently connected to the nitrogen rig, thus eliminating the need to connect tubing which could potentially be a weak spot in a high pressure line. The permanent connection also limits the amount of high pressure tubing exposed at the work site, making for a safer environment. Because the heater used to vaporize the liquid nitrogen is non-fired, it can be deployed on the hybrid unit immediately adjacent the well bore, which greatly reduces the onsite footprint.
According to the present invention then, there is provided apparatus for the servicing of a bore hole in the earth, comprising a first sub-assembly adapted for the insertion and removal of a continuous length of coiled tubing into and from said bore hole; and a second sub-assembly adapted for the vaporization of liquified gas and the pumping of the resulting gas through said coiled tubing into said bore hole; and platform means adapted to support said first and second sub-assemblies thereon.
According to another aspect of the present invention, there is also provided a hybrid coiled tubing and pumping rig for servicing a well comprising a coiled tubing spool; coiled tubing wound about said spool; a coiled tubing injector for injecting said coiled tubing into said well; a guide arch for guiding said coiled tubing into said injector; a flameless heating unit for heating a liquified gas to produce gas; and a first pump for pumping said gas through said coiled tubing into said well wherein said spool, injector, flameless heating unit and first pump are supported on a single platform for transportation and use.
According to yet another aspect of the present invention, there is also provided a method for the servicing of a bore hole in the earth by injecting a pressurized gas thereinto, comprising the steps of supporting a first sub-assembly adapted for the insertion and removal of a continuous length of coiled tubing into and from said bore hole on a platform; and supporting a second sub-assembly adapted for the vaporization of liquified gas and the pumping of the resulting gas through said coiled tubing to said bore on said same platform.
Preferred embodiments of the present invention will now be described in greater detail and will be better understood when read in conjunction with the following drawings, in which:
Reference is now made to the drawings.
Coil tubing unit 10 is situated adjacent to wellhead 5. The rig consists of a mobile tractor/trailer unit 9 fitted with a spool 12 for coiled tubing 14, a boom mounted guide arch 16 and a tubing injector 20 that inserts and removes the coiled tubing from the well bore. As will be appreciated, the tubing unit is shown in its working position. For transport and storage, the boom 18 is used to withdraw the guide arch and injector into a stored position on top of the trailer as best seen in
A conventional stand-alone nitrogen rig 30 includes its own tractor trailer 31 with the trailer supporting a tank 32 for liquid nitrogen, a flame fired heater 36 for vaporizing the nitrogen and a high pressure pump 44 for pumping liquid nitrogen from tank 32 into the heater and then into and through the tubing. The pump will normally use the tractor's motor for power via an intervening hydraulic pump.
As seen in
Reference is now made to
The hybrid unit of the present invention includes all of the components of a conventional coiled tubing unit including spool 12, guide arch 16, injector 20 and boom 18 to deploy the arch and injector from the storage position shown in
The nitrogen is transported to the site as a compressed liquid which must be vaporized prior to injection into the well for clean outs. Assuming that up to 90,000 cubic feet of nitrogen gas will be pumped per hour, approximately 1.7 million British thermal units (btu) of heat per hour will be required to vaporize this amount of nitrogen. Some of this heat can be obtained from the truck's engine up to approximately 250,000 btu's with the bulk of the remaining heat being obtained from water brake 47, with perhaps some additional heat being scavenged from the hydraulic fluid used throughout the unit.
Power for the hybrid rig is taken from the truck's engine. As will be known in the art, the truck's gearbox (not shown) will have at least two auxiliary power take-offs. One is used to drive the coiled tubing hydraulics including the injector and the boom. This is a conventional hookup and therefore will not be described in further detail. The gearbox's other power outlet is used to supply driving force to the nitrogen rig through for example a belt or chain drive 2.
The nitrogen rig includes its own gearbox 4 having two outlets 5 and 6 seen most clearly in
Pump 44 pumps liquid nitrogen from tank 32 through high pressure supply line 45 into heat exchanger 46. A smaller boost pump 43 between tank 32 and pump 44 is actuated as required to ensure a continuous supply of liquid nitrogen at pump 44's intake and to boost pressure at the intake. The liquid nitrogen is vaporized in the heat exchanger and the resulting gas flows through conduit 49 which can be permanently or semi-permanently coupled to the outer end of coiled tubing 14.
Heat exchanger 46 includes an inlet 52 for hot fluid, which can be water but more typically will be glycol or a water/glycol mixture, and an outlet 53 for cold fluid. To heat the glycol, heat is derived from two principal sources, the truck's cooling system and water brake 47.
To maximize the production of heat from the truck engine's cooling system, it's preferred that the engine be fully loaded. Some of this load will come from the engine's peripherals such as the alternator, water pump and so forth, and some from the power required for the coiled tubing's hydraulics. These loads are not sufficient by themselves however to cause the engine to produce its maximum horsepower and heat output. The engine is therefore mechanically coupled to water brake 47 as described above to produce the required added load and to generate heat of its own.
Water brakes are well known in the art and therefore will not be described in great detail. Generally however they comprise a sealed chamber that is normally kept full of fluid. A plurality of radially extending, shaft mounted blades or rotor/stators are disposed to rotate within the chamber against the resistance of the fluid. The shaft is rotated by the motor being loaded. The mechanical energy from the spinning rotors is converted to heat energy in the fluid which is continuously circulated through the chamber to cool the water brake and its bearings and seals and to produce hot glycol for circulation through heat exchanger 46.
The present system incorporates a pump such as centrifugal pump 60 which circulates the glycol throughout the system. The pump is connected at its intake end to two sources of hot glycol. The first is supply line 56 which delivers heat extracted from hot engine coolant circulated through hoses 57 into an engine coolant heat exchanger 58. The second source is supply line 64 that delivers hot glycol from glycol tank 65.
Pump 60 forces the hot glycol through a filter 66 following which the flow is split up to three different ways. Part of the glycol is deviated into inlet 52 of heat exchanger 46. Another part is divided into feed line 69 that flows into water brake 47. Feed line 69 is typically an inch in diameter but this can vary. A smaller portion is diverted into ¼ inch lines 71 and 72 that connect with secondary inlets such as ⅛ inch orifices into the water brake that divert glycol against the water brake's seals and bearings when the water brake runs empty as will be described below in greater detail. Glycol entering the water brake through lines 69 and 71 and 72 drains through line 75 which flows the hot fluid back into glycol tank 65.
The cold fluid leaving heat exchanger 46 is circulated through line 77 in which it can be delivered directly to engine heat exchanger 58 for recovery of waste engine heat prior to circulation back into pump 60. Or, if valve 80 is closed, the fluid can be diverted through hydraulic heat exchanger 84. This exchanger can be used to scavenge heat from hot hydraulic fluid from the skid's hydraulic pumps and motors circulated through the exchanger via inlet 85 and outlet 86.
The flow rate through heat exchanger 46 is approximately 295 gallons of glycol per minute.
There are times when its unnecessary to operate the water brake. In conventional systems, this requires that the gearbox be adapted to disengage the brake from the truck's engine. These gearboxes however are heavy and expensive. To avoid this, the present water brake in a preferred embodiment of the present invention has been adapted to run empty which otherwise would normally cause the brake and its seals to burn out.
In the present system, the brake's aluminum housing is hardened to 85 Rockwell, and supply lines 71 and 72 continuously deliver a small amount of glycol to ⅛ inch orifices which internally direct the glycol against the seals and/or bearings. When valve 90 is closed to stop the delivery of glycol to the water brake, pressurized air (7 to 10 psi) from an expansion tank 94, arranged above and in fluid communication with glycol tank 65 through a 2 inch connecting line 97, flows through oneway check valve 98 and through air hose 96 into line 69 to purge the fluid from the brake. Check valve 98 prevents any reverse flow of glycol into the expansion tank when valve 90 is open during normal operation. Without fluid, the water brake simply spins without loading the truck's engine. The additional hardening of the water brake's housing and the continuous flow of glycol against the seals and bearings prevents burnout.
In operation, hybrid unit 50 can tow its own trailer supporting a liquid nitrogen tank 32. At the well site, the trailer is disconnected from the unit and conveniently located for connection to pump 44 and to boost pump 47 if one is needed.
It is contemplated that the present rig can additionally incorporate an exhaust gas heat exchanger to recover even more engine waste heat for vaporizing the nitrogen.
As will be appreciated from the foregoing, the hybrid unit is largely self-contained, quickly set up and broken down, occupies a small footprint, requires only one crew, one motor and enhances on-site safety.
The above-described embodiments of the present invention are meant to be illustrative of preferred embodiments of the present invention and are not intended to limit the scope of the present invention. Various modifications, which would be readily apparent to one skilled in the art, are intended to be within the scope of the present invention. The only limitations to the scope of the present invention are set out in the following claims.
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2421376 | Mar 2003 | CA | national |
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2339685 | Jun 2001 | CA |
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20050082064 A1 | Apr 2005 | US |