The present invention relates generally to removing fluids from wells and, more particularly, to the use of a hydraulically driven down-hole jet pumping apparatus for remove fluids from a well bore.
Often fluids need to be removed from wells, either to recover a useful fluid such as oil or water or to remove an unwanted fluid such as water in a gas well. Of particular difficulty is the removal of produced water from a gas well when the formation pressure begins to decrease and the well begins to produce increasing quantities of water. At some point a water column will form in the well and block the flow of gas. The water must then be removed to restore gas flow. Foaming agents may be injected into the well to reduce the water density and assist the gas flow in carrying the foam, and hence the water, out of the well. However, if the gas flow has ceased, the water must be removed to restart the gas flow.
Gas wells are typically deep wells, in the range of 8,000 feet to 20,000 feet deep, and often have small diameters, of the order of four-inch casings having inside diameters of about three inches. These characteristics make it difficult to remove water using conventional pumping systems. Water is commonly lifted from such wells using large volumes of nitrogen gas to carry water droplets out of the well, and preventative measures, such as foaming agent injection, are used to retard shutoff of the gas flow by the water. However, production time is lost whenever a nitrogen lift procedure is done, since the well must be flared for a period of time to reduce the nitrogen concentrations to insignificant levels. Typical costs for a nitrogen lift operation are approximately $20,000 for a single nitrogen lift operation, $20 per day for injection of a foaming agent, and $7,000 for lost production for a 350 mcf per day well. Further, a nitrogen lift might be required every 1 to 2 months for a well that is producing 20 to 40 gallons of water per day. Total costs for maintaining gas well production may exceed $150,000 annually. As stated, small well bores make the use of conventional plunger pumps and electric motor driven pumps to remove the water difficult, if not impossible. Jet pumps can be and are being used, but these pumps require dual, concentric tubing systems. Dual, concentric tubing is considerably more expensive than single tubing. It has a larger diameter, which restricts the well bore, as well as requiring more complex and expensive equipment for installation and operation than would be required for use of a single tube.
Accordingly, it is an object of embodiments of the present invention to provide an apparatus and method for removing fluids from well bores.
Additional objects, advantages and novel features of the invention will be set forth in part in the description which follows, and in part will become apparent to those skilled in the art upon examination of the following or may be learned by practice of the invention. The objects and advantages of the invention may be realized and attained by means of the instrumentalities and combinations particularly pointed out in the appended claims.
To achieve the foregoing and other objects, and in accordance with the purposes of the present invention, as embodied and broadly described herein, the hydraulically driven jet pumping system for removing fluids from a well bore, hereof, includes: a surface pump for pumping a chosen fluid; a tube disposed in the well bore; a jet-pumping apparatus disposed in the well bore below perforations therein which permit fluid flow between a surrounding formation and the well bore, including: an eductor in fluid communication with the tube and with the fluid flow from the perforations in the well bore; an inlet check valve for permitting fluid in the well bore to flow into the eductor; and an accumulator comprising a pressure vessel and a gas-charged metal bellows disposed therein, the accumulator being in fluid communication with the eductor; and a 3-way valve in fluid communication with the surface pump and the tube, for exhausting fluids exiting the tube, and for providing fluid communication between the surface pump and tube.
In another aspect of the invention, and in accordance with its objects and purposes, the method for removing fluids from a well bore, hereof, includes: pumping a chosen fluid from the surface through a tube in the well bore through an eductor disposed in the well bore below the perforations in the well bore and in communication with fluids in the well bore to be removed, and into an accumulator disposed in the well bore until a first selected pressure is obtained; compressing a gas-charged metal bellows in the accumulator; and releasing the pressure on the tube at the surface such that the chosen fluid is forced through the eductor and through the tube to the surface, whereby fluids in the well bore to be removed are drawn into the eductor and flow into the tube to the surface.
Benefits and advantages of the present invention include, but are not limited to, providing an apparatus and method for removing fluids from a well bore through a single tube using a compact and efficient metal bellows driven eductor.
The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated in and form a part of the specification, illustrate embodiments of the present invention and, together with the description, serve to explain the principles of the invention. In the drawings:
Briefly, the present invention includes a down-hole jet pumping apparatus suitable for use in a deep, small diameter well bore to remove accumulated water. Similar technology may be adapted to pump oil from oil wells or water from water wells and may be used on larger diameter wells.
Reference will now be made in detail to the present embodiments of the invention, examples of which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings. In the FIGURES, similar or identical structure will be identified using the same reference characters. Turning first to
The fluid stored in down-hole pressure vessel 32 under pressure from surface pump 14 may be released to surface reservoir or holding tank 16 by 3-way control valve 18 at the surface through single tube 24 along with the additional fluid that is drawn into eductor 34. The combined fluids are discharged into surface holding tank 16 which is also the source of fluid for high-pressure surface pump 14. When the down-hole accumulator is exhausted, and flow ceases at the surface, 3-way control valve 18 again directs high pressure fluid from surface pump 14 to down-hole pressure vessel 32 until a chosen jet pump pressure is achieved in the down-hole accumulator. Surface accumulator, 44, (
Screen and filter system, 46, installed on the suction side of eductor 34 prevents debris and grit from the formation from entering the jet pumping apparatus with attendant wear and damage to the pump. Such screen and filter system may be disposed above jet pumping apparatus 28 and concentric with tube 24. Gas-charged, sealed metal bellows, 48, stores the pumping energy in down-hole pressure vessel 32, which, together with pressure vessel 32, comprise accumulator 33. The pre-charge gas pressure of metal bellows 48 may be adjusted prior to down-hole installation to optimize the jet pump operation for particular well depth and formation pressure conditions according to well-known jet pump performance calculations (See, e.g., Igor J. Karassik et al., Pump Handbook, Fourth Edition; McGraw-Hill; New York; 2008, pages 7.9 through 7.15).
The metal bellows is pre-charged with nitrogen or another gas. When fluid enters pressure vessel 32 in which the pre-charged metal bellows is situated, the bellows is compressed by the essentially incompressible liquid. As the pre-charge bellows compresses the internal volume decreases and the nitrogen gas pressure increases. The limit to this process is when the metal bellows “stack” becomes effectively a solid. When the charging pressure is reduced by releasing fluid in tube 24 through 3-way valve 18, the liquid in the pressure vessel exits the pressure vessel, and the metal bellows expands.
When a pumping cycle begins with stored energy being released from accumulator 33 of jet pump 28, initially a portion of the energy is expended in accelerating the water column in tube 24, and does not contribute to pumping effort. As the momentum of the water column is established, pumping action builds and continues after steady-state is achieved until accumulator 33 is exhausted. The energy expended in accelerating the water column can be at least partially recovered when the accumulator is exhausted with bellows 48 having expanded, if accumulator 33 has a shut off valve that actuates when the accumulator is empty or near empty. This type of valve currently exists in some accumulators and is often implemented by having the flexible member of the accumulator cover the outlet port. The result of the sudden stoppage of the motive fluid in the jet pump is that the momentum of the water column is dissipated not only through frictional losses but also by “pumping” more fluid against the pressure head for a short time. That is, there is a short surge in the pumped fluid entering the jet pump inlet since the discharge fluid is instantaneously moving at or close to the same velocity as prior to the exhaustion of the accumulator, whereas the motive fluid flow has dropped to zero. The quantity of fluid entering the pump inlet compensates for the lack of the motive fluid flow, and the surge then decays away as the momentum of the water column dissipates.
A second benefit of using an accumulator shut-off valve derives from the ability to shut off the accumulator with a residual pressure therein chosen to be higher than the pressure of the system outside the accumulator and close to the pre-charge pressure of the bellows. Such retention of pressure lowers the stresses on the flexible metal bellows of the accumulator with the result that the fatigue life and reliability of the flexible member is enhanced.
An implementation of the accumulator shutoff valve is illustrated in
A schematic representation of a cross section of the screen and filter system illustrated in FIG, 1B is shown in
Pressure relief valve, 60, is disposed in parallel fluid communication with inlet check valve 36, such that pressure relief valve 60 may discharge fluid from eductor 34 into screen and filter system 46, by elevating the tubing line pressure above the pressure relief valve setting, thereby permitting back flushing of the screen and filter system 46.
Since embodiments of the present invention are hydraulically driven, down-hole jet pumping systems are applicable to wells having small-diameter well bores. By combining jet pump nozzle 38 with quick fluid recharge bypass check valve 40 by embedding jet nozzle 38 in the movable closure element of check valve 40, provides a still more compact design. Turning now to
When the charging pressure is removed, accumulator fluid pressure, 74, and the force of return spring, 76, move closure element 64 to the closed position shown in
A schematic representation of a projection view of recharge check valve guide 68, is illustrated in
In wells deeper than about 8,000 feet deep, a single-stage jet-pumping apparatus may not be effective for pumping fluids to the surface. In such cases, one or more hydraulically driven jet-pump pressure boosters may be employed to provide additional fluid lift. The accumulator of the jet-pump pressure booster may be a relatively long, small diameter, concentric tubular design to permit the jet-pump apparatus dewatering tubing to pass through the booster, thereby minimizing blockage of the production tubing in the well.
The foregoing description of the invention has been presented for purposes of illustration and description and is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise form disclosed, and obviously many modifications and variations are possible in light of the above teaching. The embodiments were chosen and described in order to best explain the principles of the invention and its practical application to thereby enable others skilled in the art to best utilize the invention in various embodiments and with various modifications as are suited to the particular use contemplated. It is intended that the scope of the invention be defined by the claims appended hereto.