1. Field of the Disclosure
The present application is related to determining deformations of tubulars and determining stresses of tubulars in a wellbore.
2. Description of the Related Art
Tubulars are used in many stages of oil exploration and production, such as drilling operations and well completions and wireline logging operations. These tubulars can encounter a large amount of stress, due to compaction, fault movement or subsidence, for example, which can lead to tubular damage or even to well failure. Well failures impact both revenue generation and operation costs for oil and gas production companies. These failures can result in millions of dollars lost in repairing and replacing the wells. Therefore, it is of value to monitor wells to understand the mechanisms of the failures. The present disclosure provides an integrated method for visualizing and interpreting strains on a tubular downhole.
In one aspect, the present disclosure provides a determining an effect of an event on a parameter of a member, the method including: obtaining a plurality of strain measurements at a plurality of times, each strain measurement corresponding to a sensor located at the member; applying a temperature correction to the plurality of strain measurements obtained at each of the plurality of times; obtaining the parameter from the plurality of temperature-corrected strain measurements at each of the plurality of times; and determining the effect of the event on the parameter from the time-correlated parameters.
In another aspect, the present disclosure provides an apparatus for determining an effect of an event on a parameter of a member, the apparatus including a plurality of sensors located at the member; a device configured to obtain a plurality of strain measurements from the plurality of sensors at a plurality of times, wherein each strain measurement corresponding to a sensor from the plurality of sensors; and a processor configured to: apply a temperature correction to the plurality of strain measurements obtained at each of the plurality of times, obtain the parameter from the plurality of temperature-corrected strain measurements at each of the plurality of times, and determine the effect of the event on the parameter from the time-correlated parameters.
In another aspect, the present disclosure provides a computer-readable medium having instructions thereon which when read by a processor enable the processor to perform a method, the method including obtaining a plurality of strain measurements at a plurality of times, each strain measurement corresponding to a sensor located at the member; applying a temperature correction to the plurality of strain measurements obtained at each of the plurality of times; obtaining a parameter from the plurality of temperature-corrected strain measurements at each of the plurality of times; and determining an effect of an event on the parameter from the time-correlated parameters
Examples of certain features of the apparatus and method disclosed herein are summarized rather broadly in order that the detailed description thereof that follows may be better understood. There are, of course, additional features of the apparatus and method disclosed hereinafter that will form the subject of the claims.
For detailed understanding of the present disclosure, references should be made to the following detailed description of the preferred embodiment, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which like elements have been given like numerals and wherein:
Each sensor or FBG 106 is assigned a number (grating number) indicating its position along the optical fiber. An end of the fiber optic cable is coupled to a sensing unit 108 typically at a surface location that in one aspect obtains a measurement from each of the FBGs to determine a wavelength shift or strain at each of the FBGs. In general, the sensing unit 108 reads the plurality of gratings simultaneously using, for example, frequency divisional multiplexing. Sensing unit 108 is coupled to a surface control unit 110 and in one aspect transmits the measured wavelength shifts to the surface control unit. In one aspect, the surface control unit 110 receives and processes the measured wavelength shifts from the sensing unit 108 to obtain a result, such as a three-dimensional image of a tubular deformation, using the methods disclosed herein. A typical surface control unit 110 includes a computer or processor 113 for performing the exemplary methods disclosed herein, at least one memory 115 for storing programs and data, and a recording medium 117 for recording and storing data and results obtained using the exemplary methods disclosed herein. The surface control unit 110 may output the result to various devices, such as display 112 or to the suitable recording medium 117.
A Fiber Bragg Grating such as FBG 106 typically operates by reflecting light of a selected wavelength. A Fiber Bragg Grating is typically a section of an optical fiber in which the refractive index has been altered into a plurality of regions of higher and lower refractive index which alternate periodically. The periodic distance between the regions of higher refractive index is generally on the order of wavelengths of light and is known as the grating period, D. Typically, light enters the FBG from one end of the fiber and a selected wavelength of light is reflected backwards at the FBG at a wavelength that is related to the grating period D by the following:
λB=2nD Eq. (1)
where λB is the wavelength of the reflected light and is known as the Bragg wavelength, n is the refractive index of the optical fiber, and D is the grating period. The FBG is transparent at other wavelengths of light, for all intents and purposes.
As seen with respect to Eq. (1), when D increases, the Bragg wavelength increases. Similarly when D decreases, the Bragg wavelength decreases. Typically, D increases or decrease due to a strain on the FBG. Because of this, an FBG is often attached to an object so that the strains on the object transfer to the FBG to affect the grating period D to thereby produce a wavelength shift that is indicative of the strain. The wavelength shift is then measured.
In various methods employing the measurements from the fiber optic gratings, the strain measurements are used to understand deformations on the tubular. In one exemplary method, known as Real Time Compaction Monitoring (RTCM), these strain measurements are used to obtain deformation modes which can be used to create visual images of the strains on the tubular. In order to accomplish this, various calibrations and corrections are used to obtain a representative strain reading. These can include determining grating positions, wrap angles, tubular diameter corrections, fiber location mapping and temperature corrections.
A tubular undergoing a general deformation experiences one or more deformation modes. Each deformation mode, in turn, has an associated spatial frequency related to the strains obtained at the plurality of FBGs and which can be seen by creating plotting the wavelength shifts Δλ obtained at the plurality of FBGs against the grating numbers of the FBGs to obtain a dataset of the deformation. In an exemplary embodiment, deformation mode of a tubular may be a fundamental deformation mode such as compression/extension, bending, ovalization, triangularization, and rectangularization. The methods disclosed herein are not limited to these particular modes of deformation and can be applied to higher-order modes of deformation.
The compression/extension deformation mode occurs when a tubular experiences a compressive or tensile force applied in the axial direction. Such a force affects both the tubular axis and the circumference of the tubular. For example, as the tubular is shortened along the axial direction under a compressive force, the circumference expands outward to accommodate. As the tubular is lengthened along the axial direction under a tensile force, the circumference constricts inward to accommodate. Since strain is equal along the tubular, the wavelength shift measured at each FBG on the tubular is substantially the same and a substantially horizontal line is shown on corresponding graphs of Δλ vs. grating number.
The bending mode of deformation occurs when an external force is applied perpendicular to the axial direction of a tubular. The tubular is compressed at the side of application of the applied force and is in tension along the side away from the applied force. Therefore, FBGs along the compressed side experience a negative wavelength shift Δλ and FBGs near side in tension experience a positive Δλ. When Δλ is plotted against grating number, the wavelength shift from the bending mode forms a sinusoidal wave having a given (spatial) wavelength that is the length of a wrap of the fiber around the tubular. The spatial frequency of the bending mode is referred to herein as the characteristic frequency of the system.
The other deformation modes (i.e., ovalization, rectangularization and triangularization), often referred to as cross-sectional deformations since they lead to changes in the shape of the cross-section, have spatial frequencies in graphs of Δλ vs. grating number that are related to the characteristic frequency of bending. A typical ovalization deformation mode may occur when two external forces are symmetrically applied perpendicular to the axis of a tubular. In a graph of Δλ vs. grating number, an ovalization mode forms a sinusoidal wave with a frequency that is double the characteristic frequency of the bending deformation. The triangularization deformation mode occurs when three external forces are applied perpendicular to the axis of a tubular along a three-fold symmetry. In a graph of Δλ vs. grating number, the triangularization mode forms a sinusoidal wave with a frequency that is three times the characteristic frequency of the bending deformation. A rectangularization deformation occurs when four external forces are applied perpendicular to the axis of the tubular in a four-fold symmetry. In a graph of Δλ vs. grating number, the rectangularization mode forms a sinusoidal wave with a frequency that is four times the characteristic frequency. Although not discussed herein, higher modes of deformation due to symmetrical applied forces having 5-fold symmetry, 6-fold symmetry and onwards can occur and may be addressed using the methods described herein.
In one embodiment, a tubular strain map may be obtained by separating the fundamental deformation modes from the original dataset and using the separated deformation modes to create a visual image of the strain on the tubular. Methods for determining these deformation modes, determining an overall strain map of the tubular and created an image of the tubular are summarized below and are also discussed in detail in Attorney Docket No. PRO4-49331-US, Attorney Docket No. PRO4-49330-US, and Attorney Docket No. PRO4-49332-US, the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference in their entirety.
A general deformation of tubular gives rise to a dataset which may displayed as a curve on a graph of wavelength shift against the FBG grating number. An exemplary graph of wavelength shift vs. grating number is shown in
This exemplary curve may be decomposed into a number of curves corresponding to a deformation mode using spectral decomposition for example.
The exemplary methods for obtaining deformation modes discussed above are affected by various conditions that may produce an error in measurements and thus in results. Some of these conditions include temperature, noise, errors in grating location etc. These conditions are addressed using the exemplary methods discussed below.
In one aspect, grating location is determined using calibration methods, typically performed prior to deployment of the tubular downhole. In an exemplary calibration, a location of a selected grating on the tubular may be determined by heating only the selected grating with a heating instrument and observing a corresponding wavelength shift with respect to the selected grating at the sensing unit 108. This heating can be done for any number of gratings to determine location of the grating. Such obtained data provide accurate information on the average number of gratings in each wrap, as well as actual the gratings in each individual wrap. This data can therefore correct for inaccuracies in the tubular diameter and the wrap angle. In addition, this calibration can be used to determine a selected first grating of the tubular. Gratings prior to the selected first grating are typically on a lead portion of the fiber optic cable and provide measurements unrelated to the strain on the tubular. Therefore, determining a selected first grating enables separating the measurements from unrelated gratings from measurements related to the strain on the tubular.
In another embodiment, a bending calibration may be performed. Under an applied bending force, the tubular bends along a known azimuth deformation angle over the entire tubular. Obtaining bending data provides information on average number of gratings in each wrap and identification of the grating in each individual wrap. In addition, one may visually correct data using a calibrated 2D strain map of the bending data, such as shown in
The location of a grating on the tubular is determined by wrap angle, the outer-diameter of the tubular and inter-grating spacing. Systematic errors in any of these are accumulative, such that an error on the location of a particular grating contributes to errors on all subsequent gratings. For an exemplary wrapped fiber having total 400 Bragg gratings and with 40 gratings in each wrap, the error on azimuth angle for the last wrap may be as big as 36°, even if the systematic error is only 1%. To meaningfully determine the azimuth angle, the location of the fiber on the tubular is allocated according to the exemplary methods described herein.
In one embodiment, two steps are used in order to determine a tubular location from the fiber location. In a first step, corrections are made for inaccuracies in tubular diameter or wrap angle using, for instance, the exemplary calibration methods described above. If (x0, x1, . . . , xN) are respectively the measured fiber locations in the sensing fiber, each grating space measured is multiplied by a factor k that is determined either from a heating string correction data or is obtained by taking k as adjustable parameter to align bending correction strain. This therefore maps the fiber location (x0, x1, . . . , xN) to an intermediate calculated location (x′0, x′1, . . . , x′N).
A second step is to map the data to corrected locations onto the tubular surface location as shown in the exemplary insertion method of
In addition to measuring strain, the FBGs are affected by thermal effects and changes in temperature which cause expansion or contraction of the FBG. This expansion or contraction causes the FBG to provide a wavelength shift measurement that is unrelated to the strain of the tubular at that particular FBG. An increase in temperature, as is generally seen downhole, always results in a positive wavelength shift in the data, while a positive axial strain can result in either positive or negative shifts in the data, depending on the wrap angle. Therefore, in one aspect, the present disclosure corrects for the effects of temperature on measurements obtained downhole from the FBGs.
Returning to
In order to compensate for the temperature effect on wavelength shift data, an independent temperature measurement such as distributed temperature sensing (DTS) or a Pressure/Temperature (P/T) gauge may be used. In one aspect, a DTS map of temperature is obtained at multiple locations of a tubular. Although DTS measurement may provide a temperature profile along depth domain, temperature gauges may be used alongside the DTS data to provide a correction to temperature data. When used together, the measurements from the temperature gauges and DTS form a linear relationship that may be applied between the differences in temperature (TDTS−TR) and the a depth (Z) of the sensors:
T
DTS
−T
R
=AZ+B Eq. (2)
where, TDTS and TR are respectively the DTS and reference temperature (obtained from a temperature gauge), A and B are the slope and the intercept.
Reference temperature gauges are usually placed at the locations different from that of any DTS sensor. Before conducting a temperature correction, DTS data are mapped to a location where the reference sensor resides. Alternatively, the reference data may be mapped to a location where the DTS sensor resides. An insertion algorithm may be used to interpolate the DTS data to where the reference is located.
For a temperature profile (TDTS1, TDTS2, TDTS3, . . . TDTSN) and reference temperature profile (TR1, TR2, TR3, . . . TRN) at the depth positions (Z1, Z2, Z3, . . . ZN), a linear regression method may be used to calculate the values of slope A and intercept B:
T
i
DTS
−T
i
R
=AZ
i
+B Eq. (3)
where i=1,2,3, . . . N and N=the number of sensors. Once A and B have been calculated, temperature values at any measurement point j can then be calculated using:
T
j
=T
j
DTS
−AZ
i
+B Eq. (4)
The linear regression may be applied to systems having many reference temperature gauges.
Often, single or dual reference sensors are deployed, leading to separate correction approaches. For a single reference point, A is set to be 0 and B is set to be the difference between DTS data and reference temperature at the same position and the same time. This results in all the DTS temperature curves being shifted by a constant c. If two reference sensors are used, they are typically placed respectively near to the top and bottom of a sensing section. The value of A and B are then calculated using the following formulae:
Once DTS data has been obtained and corrected, they are used to correct deformation modes for the thermal effects of downhole temperatures, as shown in the exemplary flowchart of
The strain of a gridding point can be calculated from the values of the neighboring grating points by using an exemplary linear interpolation method of Eq. (7).
εi,j=└jεi+j,0+(N−j)εi+j−N,0┘/N Eq. (7)
where N is the number of gratings in each wrap. For simplicity, the two nearest grating points in the same column may be used to calculate a strain at a gridding point. Using the example of Eq. (7) to gridding point (3,2) of
Once the deformation modes are separated as described using the exemplary methods described above, they can be separately applied to iterative process that yields in one aspect a geometrical data for the bending mode of the tubular and in another aspect geometrical data for the cross-sectional deformations of the tubular. The obtained geometrical data can be used to obtain a three-dimensional image of the tubular which can be useful in determining a wear or condition of the tubular.
A method of determining geometrical data for the bending deformation is now discussed.
where r and φ are position coordinates of the tubular and φ1 is the bending azimuthal angle. Thus the bending strain such as obtained in
An exemplary numerical process for obtaining geometrical data from the deformation parameters Ra and φ1 is now discussed. In the numerical process, bending strain can be represented by a two-dimensional vector {right arrow over (e)}b lying within a cross-section perpendicular to the axis of the tubular such as the cross-section of
{right arrow over (ε)}b={right arrow over (ε)}bx+{right arrow over (ε)}by Eq. (9)
with
Eqs. (8)-(10) can be combined to obtain the following equations:
Various methods are known for calculating
the first derivative of the bending strain with respect to the azimuthal angle. From Eq. (12), once εb and
are known, the values of the strain components {right arrow over (e)}bx and {right arrow over (ε)}by can then be calculated. The bending parameters Rx and Ry, which are x and y components of Ra, may then be calculated from Eq. (10) and (11). Rx and Ry are related to the axial bending variable by:
where z is the axial coordinate of the tubular. Once Rx and Ry are known, one can numerically solve Eqs. (12) to obtain geometrical data for bending.
In one aspect, the axial bending deformation can be calculated by numerically solving the Eqs. (12) using selected boundary conditions for the tubular. The most commonly applied boundary conditions are:
z
x′(z=0)=zy′(z=0)=0
x(z=0)=x(z=1)=0
y(z=0)=y(z=1)=0
where z=0 and z=1 are the z coordinates of the end points of the axis of the tubular. Eqs. (13) holds true if the bending occurs only in the sensing section and the casing is significantly longer than the sensing section. Using the mathematical groundwork of Eqs. (8)-(13), the iterative process for obtaining geometrical data for the bending deformation is discussed below in reference to Eqs. (14)-(18).
Referring to
with
dz=d*sin θ Eq. (15)
wherein d is the spacing between gratings and 8 is the wrapping angle of the fiber optic cable. The position of the i+1th grating is therefore determined by:
x(i+1)=x(i)+x′z(i+1)*dz
y(i+1)=y(i)+y′z(i+1)*dz Eqs. (16)
Thus, in one aspect, the numerical solution begins with a first point such as x(0), y(0), z(0), in which its position and first derivatives are known from the boundary conditions and uses Eqs. (14)-(16) to obtain x(N), y(N), z(N) through N iterations. The coordinates of the Nth grating is compared with the boundary conditions. If the difference between them is greater than a selected criterion, the initial guess on the boundary condition derivatives of the first point is modified using Eqs. (17):
x′
z(0)=x′z(0)+(x(N)−xN)*2/N
y′
z(0)=y′z(0)+(y(N)−yN)*2/N Eqs. (17)
where (xN, yN) is the position of the last point as given by the boundary conditions and (x(N), y(N)) is the position of the Nth grating from the numerical process. The numerical process is then repeated until the difference between the calculated position and the position given in the boundary conditions for the Nth grating is within a preselected criterion, such as the criterion of Eqs. (18):
|x(N)−xN|<σallowed
|y(N)−yN|<σallowed
The geometrical information for the bending deformation is obtained once the criteria of Eqs. (18) are met. An exemplary method for obtaining geometrical information from cross-sectional deformation parameters is now discussed with respect to
where ε(O,T,C) denotes a summation of all the three strain components (ovalization, triangularization, rectangularization), r is the original (undeformed) radius of the tubular and T is the thickness of the wall of the tubular. As long as enough data points are available, one can determine the shape of a closed curve of fixed length that represents the contour of the cross-section from the radius of curvature in two-dimensional space. Typically, polar coordinates are used in this process. In a polar coordinate system, for any curve in 2D space, the radius of the curvature can be calculated as:
where u′θ and u″θθ are respectively the first and second derivative of the logarithm of r over the azimuth angle (u=ln r). Within a limited degree of deformation, u′θ is much less than 1. Therefore, Eq. (20) may be further simplified to:
which can be rewritten in the form of a normal differential equation as:
R
c
u
θθ″+(3/2r−Rc)uθ′+(r−Rc)=0 Eq. (22)
The boundary conditions for Eq. (22) are:
r(θ=0)=r(θ=2π)
r
θ′(θ=0)=rθ′(θ=2π) Eqs. (23)
Using the Eqs. (22) and (23), a contour of a particular cross-section of the tubular can be created. The N gratings may be used to calculate position coordinates along the contour, with index i=1 to N. In one aspect, the position coordinates and derivates of the first grating is obtained. Given the position r(i) and the first derivative r′(i) of a point i in the cross-section, the first derivative r′θ(i+1) of the adjacent point i+1 is calculated using Eq. (24):
The position r(i+1) can then be calculated as
Thus each point is used to calculate values for the next point along the circumference. For a given cross-section, the boundary values for the first point can be taken from the endpoint values obtained from the previously calculated cross-section. An educated estimate can be used as initial boundary values for the first cross-section. The values obtained for the Nth point are checked against a suitable criterion such as the criterion of Eq. (26):
[r(N)previous−r(N)current]2+[r′θ(N)previous−r′θ(N)current]2<σ (26)
where σ is a present tolerance for the combined square error between two iterations. In a typical calculation, σ may be set to 0.0001.
Thus, calculations described using the Eqs. (8)-(26) yield geometrical information for the bending deformations and for cross-sectional deformations. The obtained geometrical information can then be used to obtain a three-dimensional image of the tubular using exemplary methods discussed below.
In one aspect, the exemplary method of creating a 3D image includes introduces an unstressed tubular having an axis, applying the geometrical information of the bending parameter to the axis to obtain a bent axis, applying the geometrical information of the cross-sectional deformations and adjusting the orientation of the cross-sections to correspond with the orientation bent axis. In one aspect, the three-dimensional image may be sent to a display and a stresses on the tubular shown. The various step of the exemplary method are discussed below in reference to
wherein (x, y, z) and (x′, y′, z′) are respectively the coordinates of a surface point in the cross-section before and after the bending and (Δx, Δy, Δz) is the motion caused by the bending of the cross point between the plane and the axis.
Once the cross-sections are centered on the bent axis, they are reoriented to reflect the bent axis using the exemplary methods discussed below. A tangent line to the bending axis is calculated, which is given in Eq. (28):
{right arrow over (l)}=(xi+1−xi){right arrow over (i)}+(yi+1−yi){right arrow over (j)}+(zi+1−zi){right arrow over (k)} Eq. (28)
wherein (xi+1, yi+1, zi+1) and (xi, yi, zi) are coordinates of two closest neighboring points along the bending axis. In one embodiment, the cross-sections are reoriented using a spherical coordinate system for spatial transformation. Eq. (28) can be rewritten in spherical coordinates as:
{right arrow over (l)}=r cos θ cos φ·{right arrow over (i)}+r cos θ sin φ·{right arrow over (j)}+sin φ·{right arrow over (k)} Eq. (29)
where
r=√{square root over ((xi+1−xi)2+(yi+1−yi)2+(zi+1−zi)2)}{square root over ((xi+1−xi)2+(yi+1−yi)2+(zi+1−zi)2)}{square root over ((xi+1−xi)2+(yi+1−yi)2+(zi+1−zi)2)}
cos θ=(zi+1−zi)/r
sin θ=(xi+1−xi)/r cos Eq. (30)
where θ is an azimuth angle around the y-axis and φ is an elevation angle. In a spherical coordinate system, to reorient the cross-sections, one sets the original point in the cross between the axis and the cross-section, and the directions of the axis to be parallel to the current coordination system. The rotated coordinate system is achieved by rotating each cross-section by an azimuth angle (θ) around the y-axis and an elevation angle (φ), and then rotating an elevation angle (φ) around the z-axis using:
Also shown in
Alongside the wavelength measurements, In Box 1410, distributed temperature sensors (DTS) measurements are obtained at the tubular. In Box 1412, the DTS measurements are filtered to reduce noise on the DTS signal. In Box 1414, the filtered DTS measurements are calibrated with temperatures obtained using independent temperature gauges. In Box 1416, the calibrated DTS data is allocated to deformation modes. These allocated DTS data and the deformation modes are used to determine strain components for each deformation mode in Box 1420.
Once the strain components have been determined, they may be used to create an image map of the stain. In Box 1424, a gridded surface of the tubular is created. In Box 1424, the obtained strain data is mapped to the gridded surface. In Box 1226, an interpolation method is applied to the mapped strain data to obtain strains at non-grating locations of the tubular. This surface may be sent to a display as in Box 1434 and as shown in the exemplary
Therefore, in one aspect, the present disclosure provides a determining an effect of an event on a parameter of a member, the method including: obtaining a plurality of strain measurements at a plurality of times, each strain measurement corresponding to a sensor located at the member; applying a temperature correction to the plurality of strain measurements obtained at each of the plurality of times; obtaining the parameter from the plurality of temperature-corrected strain measurements at each of the plurality of times; and determining the effect of the event on the parameter from the time-correlated parameters. The member may be a casing, a sand screen, a subsea riser, an umbilical, a tubing, a pipeline, a cylindrical structure bearing a load, or a cylindrical structure under thermal dynamic changes. The parameter may include temperature, strain, pressure, a structural deformation parameter of the member, or a distributed parameter that can be interpreted from the strain distribution. The system configuration parameter may be at least one of: (1) a spatial location of the member in a wellbore; and (2) a strain sensor location on the member; (3) a spatial distance from a strain sensor to a sensing point of a temperature measurement; (4) the distance from a location of a temperature measurement to a location of a pressure/temperature gauge; (5) a geometry parameter of the member; and (6) a physical property of the member. The geometry parameter of the member may be at least one of: (1) strain string helical wrap angle; (2) tubular radius; (3) tubular wall thickness; (4) fiber capillary diameter; (5) capillary wall thickness; (6) the distance between first strain sensor to the second strain sensor; (7) groove depth; and (8) fiber string attach scheme. The method of claim 4, wherein the physical property of the member may include Poisson's ratio, a temperature strain factor, refractive index strain effect, or bounding coefficient. In one embodiment, obtaining the system configuration parameter further includes obtaining a deflection strain data of a member in a controlled environment and determining the system configuration from the deflection data. A member baseline waveform signature may be constructed from the defection strain data. System configuration parameters may be stored to a data structure. In another aspect, the exemplary method may include obtaining a first dataset of wavelength shift related to a strain at each sensor of a plurality of sensors located on the member; removing noise from the first data set; extracting a second dataset from the first dataset that corresponds to a selected deformation mode; and providing an image of strain on the member for the selected deformation mode using the second dataset. In addition, the temperature correction may be applied by obtaining a distributed temperature measurement at a plurality of positions at the member; removing noise from the distributed temperature measurement; obtaining a pressure/temperature measurement from a gauge located at the member; and applying a correction to the distributed temperature measurements using the obtained pressure/temperature measurement. In another aspect, the method may include creating a grid on the surface of the member; mapping the plurality of strain measurement to the grid; obtaining an interpolated set of strain measurements from the mapped strain measurements; and determining a deformation parameter of the member using the interpolated set of measurements. Determining the deformation parameter of the member may further include obtaining geometrical deformation parameters for an axis of the member using the obtained interpolated set of strain measurements, and obtaining geometrical deformation parameters for a cross section of the member using the interpolated set of strain measurements. In yet another aspect, the method includes obtaining a log track image correlating the parameter with a wellbore structure and the event; determining a work-over pass-through radius for given depth range; and obtaining a time trend diagram correlating the parameter with the event. The log track image may be at least one of: (1) a 2D color map of the parameter; (2) a 3D image of the member with a surface color map of the parameter; (3) a 3D bending axial image; and (4) one or more log charts of the parameter. Determining the work-over pass-through radius may include obtaining multiple cross section contours of the member for a given depth range, and determining the work-over pass-through radius from the multiple cross section contours.
In another aspect, the present disclosure provides an apparatus for determining an effect of an event on a parameter of a member, the apparatus including a plurality of sensors located at the member; a device configured to obtain a plurality of strain measurements from the plurality of sensors at a plurality of times, wherein each strain measurement corresponding to a sensor from the plurality of sensors; and a processor configured to: apply a temperature correction to the plurality of strain measurements obtained at each of the plurality of times, obtain the parameter from the plurality of temperature-corrected strain measurements at each of the plurality of times, and determine the effect of the event on the parameter from the time-correlated parameters. The member may be a casing, a sand screen, a subsea riser, an umbilical, a tubing, a pipeline, a cylindrical structure bearing a load, or a cylindrical structure under thermal dynamic changes. The parameter may include temperature, strain, pressure, a structural deformation parameter of the member, or a distributed parameter that can be interpreted from the strain distribution. The system configuration parameter may be at least one of: (1) a spatial location of the member in a wellbore; and (2) a strain sensor location on the member; (3) a spatial distance from a strain sensor to a sensing point of a temperature measurement; (4) the distance from a location of a temperature measurement to a location of a pressure/temperature gauge; (5) a geometry parameter of the member; and (6) a physical property of the member. The geometry parameter of the member may be at least one of: (1) strain string helical wrap angle; (2) tubular radius; (3) tubular wall thickness; (4) fiber capillary diameter; (5) capillary wall thickness; (6) the distance between first strain sensor to the second strain sensor; (7) groove depth; and (8) fiber string attach scheme. The method of claim 4, wherein the physical property of the member may include Poisson's ratio, a temperature strain factor, refractive index strain effect, or bounding coefficient. The processor may be configured to obtain a deflection strain data of a member in a controlled environment and determine the system configuration from the deflection data as well as to construct a member baseline waveform signature from the defection strain data. A database may be used to store the system configuration parameters. In one aspect, the processor is configured to obtain a first dataset of wavelength shift related to a strain at each sensor of a plurality of sensors located on the member; remove noise from the first data set; extract a second dataset from the first dataset that corresponds to a selected deformation mode; and provide an image of strain on the member for the selected deformation mode using the second dataset. In another aspect, the processor is further configured to: obtain a distributed temperature measurement at a plurality of positions at the member; remove noise from the distributed temperature measurement; obtain a pressure/temperature measurement from a gauge located at the member; and apply a correction to the distributed temperature measurements using the obtained pressure/temperature measurement. The processor may also be configured to: create a grid on the surface of the member; map the plurality of strain measurement to the grid; obtain an interpolated set of strain measurements from the mapped strain measurements; and determine a deformation parameter of the member using the interpolated set of measurements. In another aspect, the processor is configured to: obtain geometrical deformation parameters for an axis of the member using the obtained interpolated set of strain measurements; and obtain geometrical deformation parameters for a cross section of the member using the interpolated set of strain measurements. The processor may be further configured to: obtain a log track image correlating the parameter with a wellbore structure and the event; determine a work-over pass-through radius for given depth range; and obtain a time trend diagram correlating the parameter with the event. The log track image may include at least one of: (1) a 2D color map of the parameter; (2) a 3D image of the member with a surface color map of the parameter; (3) a 3D bending axial image; and (4) one or more log charts of the parameter. The processor may also be configured to obtain multiple cross section contours of the member for a given depth range, and determine the work-over pass-through radius from the multiple cross section contours.
In another aspect, the present disclosure provides a computer-readable medium having instructions thereon which when read by a processor enable the processor to perform a method, the method including obtaining a plurality of strain measurements at a plurality of times, each strain measurement corresponding to a sensor located at the member; applying a temperature correction to the plurality of strain measurements obtained at each of the plurality of times; obtaining a parameter from the plurality of temperature-corrected strain measurements at each of the plurality of times; and determining an effect of an event on the parameter from the time-correlated parameters.
While the foregoing disclosure is directed to the preferred embodiments of the disclosure, various modifications will be apparent to those skilled in the art. It is intended that all variations within the scope and spirit of the appended claims be embraced by the foregoing disclosure.
The present application is related to Attorney Docket No. PRO4-49331-US, filed Dec. 3, 2010, Attorney Docket No. PRO4-49330-US, filed Dec. 3, 2010, Attorney Docket No. PRO4-49332-US, filed Dec. 3, 2010, Attorney Docket No. PRO4-50985-US, filed Dec. 3, 2010, and Attorney Docket No. PRO4-51016-US, filed Dec. 3, 2010, the contents of which are hereby incorporated herein by reference in their entirety.