This invention relates to drill bits, specifically drill bit assemblies for use in oil, gas and geothermal drilling.
Often drill bits are subjected to harsh conditions when drilling below the earth's surface. Replacing damaged drill bits in the field is often costly and time consuming since the entire downhole tool string must typically be removed from the borehole before the drill bit can be reached. Bit whirl in hard formations may result in damage to the drill bit and reduce penetration rates. Further, loading too much weight on the drill bit when drilling through a hard formation may exceed the bit's capabilities and also result in damage. Too often, unexpected, hard formations are encountered suddenly and damage to the drill bit occurs before the weight on the drill bit may be adjusted.
The prior art has addressed bit whirl and weight on bit issues. Such issues have been addressed in the U.S. Pat. No. 6,443,249 to Beuershausen, which is herein incorporated by reference for all that it contains. The '249 patent discloses a PDC-equipped rotary drag bit especially suitable for directional drilling. Cutter chamfer size and back-rake angle, as well as cutter back-rake, may be varied along the bit profile between the center of the bit and the gauge to provide a less aggressive center and more aggressive outer region on the bit face, to enhance stability while maintaining side cutting capability, as well as providing a high rate of penetration under relatively high weight-on-bit.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,298,930 to Sinor, which is herein incorporated by reference for all that it contains, discloses a rotary drag bit including exterior features to control the depth of cut by cutters mounted thereon, so as to control the volume of formation material cut per bit rotation as well as the torque experienced by the bit and an associated bottomhole assembly. The exterior features preferably precede, taken in the direction of bit rotation, cutters with which they are associated, and provide sufficient bearing area so as to support the bit against the bottom of the borehole under weight-on-bit without exceeding the compressive strength of the formation rock.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,363,780 to Rey-Fabret, which is herein incorporated by reference for all that it contains, discloses a system and method for generating an alarm relative to effective longitudinal behavior of a drill bit fastened to the end of a tool string driven in rotation in a well by a driving device situated at the surface, using a physical model of the drilling process based on general mechanics equations. The following steps are carried out: the model is reduced so to retain only pertinent modes, at least two values Rf and Rwob are calculated, Rf being a function of the principal oscillation frequency of weight-on-hook WOH divided by the average instantaneous rotating speed at the surface, Rwob being a function of the standard deviation of the signal of the weight-on-bit WOB estimated by the reduced longitudinal model from measurement of the signal of the weight-on-hook WOH, divided by the average weight-on-bit defined from the weight of the string and the average weight-on-hook. Any danger from the longitudinal behavior of the drill bit is determined from the values of Rf and Rwob.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,806,611 to Van Den Steen, which is herein incorporated by reference for all that it contains, discloses a device for controlling weight-on-bit of a drilling assembly for drilling a borehole in an earth formation. The device includes a fluid passage for the drilling fluid flowing through the drilling assembly, and control means for controlling the flow resistance of drilling fluid in the passage in a manner that the flow resistance increases when the fluid pressure in the passage decreases and that the flow resistance decreases when the fluid pressure in the passage increases.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,864,058 to Chen, which is herein incorporated by reference for all that is contains, discloses a downhole sensor sub in the lower end of a drillstring, such sub having three orthogonally positioned accelerometers for measuring vibration of a drilling component. The lateral acceleration is measured along either the X or Y-axis and then analyzed in the frequency domain as to peak frequency and magnitude at such peak frequency. Backward whirling of the drilling component is indicated when the magnitude at the peak frequency exceeds a predetermined value. A low whirling frequency accompanied by a high acceleration magnitude based on empirically established values is associated with destructive vibration of the drilling component. One or more drilling parameters (weight-on-bit, rotary speed, etc.) is then altered to reduce or eliminate such destructive vibration.
In one aspect of the present invention, a drill bit has an axis of rotation and a working face with a plurality of blades extending outwardly from a bit body. The blades form in part an inverted conical region and a plurality of cutters with a cutting surface is arrayed along the blades. A jack element is coaxial with the axis of rotation and extended within the conical region within a range defined by the cutting surface of at least one cutter.
The cutters and a distal end of the jack element may have hard surfaces, preferably over 63 HRc. Materials suitable for either the cutter or the jack element may be selected from the group consisting of diamond, polycrystalline diamond, natural diamond, synthetic diamond, vapor deposited diamond, silicon bonded diamond, cobalt bonded diamond, thermally stable diamond, polycrystalline diamond with a binder concentration of 1 to 40 weight percent, infiltrated diamond, layered diamond, polished diamond, course diamond, fine diamond cubic boron nitride, chromium, titanium, aluminum, matrix, diamond impregnated matrix, diamond impregnated carbide, a cemented metal carbide, tungsten carbide, niobium, or combinations thereof.
The jack element may have a distal end with a blunt geometry with a generally hemi-spherical shape, a generally flat shape, a generally conical shape, a generally round shape, a generally asymmetric shape, or combinations thereof. The blunt geometry may have a surface area greater than the surface area of the cutting surface. In some embodiments, the blunt geometry's surface is twice as great as the cutting surface.
Depending on the intended application of the bit, various embodiments of the bit may out perform in certain situations. The bit may comprise three to seven blades. Cutters attached to the blades may be disposed at a negative back-rake angle of 1 to 40 degrees. Some of the cutters may be positioned at different angles. For example, the cutters closer to the jack element may comprises a greater back-rake, or vice-versa. The diameter of the cutters may range for 5 millimeters to 50 millimeters. Cutters in the conical region may have larger diameters than the cutters attached to the gauge of the bit, or vice-versa. Cutting surfaces may comprise a generally flat shape, a generally beveled shape, a generally rounded shape, a generally scooped shape, a generally chisel shape, or combinations thereof. Depending on the abrasiveness of the formation back-up cutters may also be desired. The bit may comprise various cone and flange angles as well. Cone angles may range from 25 to 155 degrees and flank angles may range from 5 to 85 degrees. The gauge of the bit may be 0.25 to 15 inches. The gauge may also accommodate 3 to 21 cutters.
The jack element may extend to anywhere within the conical region, although preferably 0.100 to 3 inches. The jack element may be attached within a pocket formed in the working face of the bit. It may be attached to the bit with a braze, a compression fit, a threadform, a bond, a weld, or a combination thereof. In some embodiments, the jack element is formed in the working face. In other embodiments, the jack element may be tapered. In other embodiments, a channel may connect the pocket to a bore of the drill bit. Such a channel may allow air to enter or to exit the pocket when the jack element is inserted or removed and to prevent a suction effect. A portion of the working face may extend adjacent the jack element in such a manner as to support the jack element against radial loads. In some embodiments, the working face has a cross-sectional thickness of 4 to 12 times the cross-sectional thickness of the jack element. The working face may also have 4 to 12 times the cross-sectional area as the jack element.
The drill bit 100a includes a bit body 201a attached to the shank 200a and comprises an end which forms a working face 202a. Several blades 101a-101e extend outwardly from the bit body 201a, each of which comprise a plurality of shear cutters 102a. The drill bit 100a may have at least three blades and, preferably, the drill bit 100a will have between three and seven blades. The blades 101a-101e collectively form an inverted conical region 103a. Each blade 101a-101e may have a cone portion 253a, a nose 204a, a flank portion 205a, and a gauge portion 207a. Shear cutters 102a may be arrayed along any portion of the blades 101a-101e, including the cone portion 253a, the nose 204a, the flank portion 205a, and the gauge portion 207a.
A jack element 104a having a distal end 206a is substantially coaxial with an axis 105a of rotation of the drill bit 101a and extends to a distance 318 from the working face 202a to its distal end 206a within the inverted conical region 103a. The distance 218 that the jack element 104a extends falls within a range defined by a diameter 211a of a cutting surface 210a of at least one of the cutters 102a. The cutter 102 may be attached to the cone portion 253 and/or the nose 204 of one of the blades 101.
A plurality of nozzles 106a are fitted into recesses 107a formed in the working face 202a. Each nozzle 106a may be oriented such that a jet of drilling mud ejected from the nozzle 106a engages a formation before or after the cutters 102a. The jets of drilling mud may also be used to clean cuttings away from drill bit 100a. In some embodiments, the jets of drilling mud may be used to create a sucking effect to remove drill bit cuttings adjacent the cutters 102a and/or the jack element 104a by creating a low pressure region within their vicinities.
Preferably, the shear cutters 102a also comprise a hard surface made of polycrystalline diamond. In some embodiments, the cutters 102a and/or distal end 206a of the jack element 104a comprise a diamond or cubic boron nitride surface. The diamond may be selected from group consisting of polycrystalline diamond, natural diamond, synthetic diamond, vapor deposited diamond, silicon bonded diamond, cobalt bonded diamond, thermally stable diamond, polycrystalline diamond with a cobalt concentration of 1 to 40 weight percent, infiltrated diamond, layered diamond, polished diamond, course diamond, fine diamond or combinations thereof. In some embodiments, the jack element 104 is made primarily from a cemented carbide with a binder concentration of 1 to 40 weight percent, preferably of cobalt.
The working face 202a of the drill bit 100a may be made of a steel, a matrix, or a carbide as well.
The cutters 102a or the distal end 206a of the jack element 104a may also be made out of hardened steel or may comprise a coating of chromium, titanium, aluminum or combinations thereof.
The jack element 104a may be disposed within a pocket 301a formed in the bit body 201a. The jack element 104a is brazed, press fit, welded, threaded, nailed, or otherwise fastened within the pocket 301a. In some embodiments, the tolerances are tight enough that a channel 302a connected to a bore 330 of the drill bit 100a is desirable to allow air to escape upon insertion of the jack element 104a into the pocket 301a and to allow air to fill in the pocket 301a upon removal of the jack element 104a. A plug 303 may be used to isolate the internal pressure of the drill bit 100a from the pocket 301a. In some embodiments, there is no pocket 301a and the jack element 104a is attached to a flat portion of the working face 202a.
The drill bit 100a may be made in two portions. The first portion 305a may comprise at least the shank 200a and a part of the bit body 201a. The second portion 310a may comprise the working face 202a and at least another part of the bit body 201a. The two portions 305a, 310a may be welded together or otherwise joined together at a joint 315a.
A diameter 320a of the jack element 104a may affect its ability to lift the drill bit 100a in hard formations. Preferably, the working face 202a comprises a cross-sectional thickness, or diameter, 325a of 4 to 12 times a cross-sectional thickness, or diameter, 320a of the jack element 104a. Preferably, the working face 202a comprises a cross-sectional area of 4 to 12 times a cross-sectional area of the jack element 104a.
One long standing problem in the industry is that cutters, such as diamond cutters, chip or wear in hard formations when a drill bit is used too aggressively. To minimize cutter damage, a driller will reduce the rotational speed of the bit, but all too often a hard formation is encountered before it is detected and before the driller has time to react.
With the present invention, the jack element 104a may limit the depth of cut that the drill bit 100a may achieve per rotation in hard formations because the jack element 104a actually jacks the drill bit 100a thereby slowing its penetration in the unforeseen hard formations. If the formation is soft, the formation may not be able to resist the WOB loaded to the jack element 104a and a minimal amount of jacking may take place. But in hard formations, the formation may be able to resist the jack element 104a, thereby lifting the drill bit 100a as the cutters 102a remove a volume of the formation during each rotation. As the drill bit 100a rotates and more volume is removed by the cutters 102a and drilling mud, less WOB will be loaded to the cutters 102a and more WOB will be loaded to the jack element 104a. Depending on the hardness of the formation 400, enough WOB will be focused immediately in front of the jack element 104a such that the hard formation will compressively fail, weakening the hardness of the formation and allowing the cutters 102a to remove an increased volume with a minimal amount of damage.
Typically, WOB is precisely controlled at the surface of the well bore to prevent over loading the drill bit. In experimental testing at the D.J. Basin in Colorado, crews have added about 5,000 more pounds of WOB to embodiments of the drill bit disclosed herein than typically applied to other drill bits. The crews use a downhole mud motor in addition to a top-hole motor to turn the drill string.
Since more WOB increases the depth-of-cut of the cutters on a drill bit, the WOB added will also increase the traction at the drill bit, which will increase the torque required to turn the drill bit. Too much torque can be harmful to the motors rotating the drill string. Surprisingly, the crews in Colorado discovered that the additional 5,000 pounds of WOB did not significantly add much torque to their motors.
This finding from the DJ Basin is consistent with the findings of a test conducted at the Catoosa Test Facility in Rogers County, Okla., where the addition of 10,000 to 15,000 pounds of WOB did not add the expected torque to their motors either.
The minimal increase of torque on the motors is believed to be effected by the jack element 104a. It is believed that as the WOB increases the jack element 104a jacks the drill bit 100a and then compressively fails the formation 400 in front of the drill bit 100a by focusing the WOB to the small region in front of the jack element 104a, thereby weakening the rest of the formation 400 in the proximity of the working face 202a. By jacking the drill bit 100a, the depth of cut of the cutters 102a is limited until the compressive failure of the formation 400 takes place, leaving the formation 400 relatively weaker or softer. This, in turn, causes less torque to be required to drill. It is believed that the shearing failure and the compressive failure of the formation 400 happen simultaneously.
As the cutters 102a along the inverted conical region 103a of the drill bit 100a remove portions of the formation 400, a conical profile 401 in the formation 400 may be formed. As the jack element 104a compressively fails the conical profile 401, the formation 400 may be pushed towards the cutters 102a of the inverted conical region 103a of the blades 101a-101e. Since cutting at the axis of rotation 105a is typically the least effective (where the rotational velocity of the cutter 102a is lowest), the present invention provides an effective structure and method for increasing the rate of penetration (ROP).
It is believed that it is easier to compressively fail and displace the conical profile 401 closer to its tip 401′ than at its base 401″, since there is a smaller cross-sectional area. If the jack element 104a extends too far into the conical profile 401, the cross-sectional area of the conical profile 401 becomes larger, which may cause it to become too hard to effectively compressively fail and/or displace it. If the jack element 104a extends beyond a first distance 410 from the working face 202a to the leading most, or most distant first point 416 of the leading most cutter 402, i.e., the cutter 402 furthest from the working face 202a, the cross-sectional area of the conical profile 401 may become indefinitely large and extremely hard to displace. In some embodiments, the jack element 104a extends within a range of 0.100 to 3 inches from the working face 202a. In some embodiments, the jack element 104a extends a distance 414 from the working face 202a that falls within a diameter 411 extending from a point 415 proximate to the working face 202a of a cutting surface 413 of a cutter 403 proximate the axis 105a of rotation to another point 415′.
As drilling advances, the jack element 104a is believed to stabilize the drill bit 100a as well. A long standing problem in the art is bit whirl, which is solved by the jack element 104a provided that the jack element 104a extends beyond the diameter 211a of the cutting surface 210a of at least one of the cutters 102a within the inverted conical region 103a, as illustrated in
Referring back to
Surprisingly, if the jack element 104a does not extend beyond the distance 412, it was found that the drill bit 100a was only as stable as the typical commercially available shear bits. During testing it was found in some situations that if the jack element 104a extended too far, it would be too weak to withstand radial forces produced from drilling or the jack element 104a would reduce the depth-of-cut per rotation greater than desired.
Referring to
Referring back to
Referring to
In such embodiments of drill bit 100d, the jack element 104d may be inserted from either the working face 202d or the bore 600 of the drill bit 100d. In either situation, a pocket 301d is formed in a bit body 201d and the tapered jack element 104d is inserted. Additional material is then added into the exposed portion of the pocket 301d after the tapered jack element 104d is added. The additional material may comprise the geometry of the exposed portion of the pocket 301d, such as a cylinder, a ring, or a tapered ring. In the embodiment of
Since the inner cutters 1400b are now subjected to a more aggressive environment, the cutters 1400b may be reduced in size to make the cutters 1400b less aggressive. The inner cutters 1400b may also be chamfered around their edges to make them less aggressive.
The cutters may have a diameter of 5 millimeters to 50 millimeters. Cutters having a diameter of 13 millimeters to 19 millimeters are more common in the deep oil and gas drilling.
In other embodiments, such as the embodiment of a drill bit 100f illustrated in
Whereas the present invention has been described in particular relation to the drawings attached hereto, it should be understood that other and further modifications apart from those shown or suggested herein, may be made within the scope and spirit of the present invention.
This patent application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/535,036 filed Sep. 25, 2006 and that issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,571,780 on Aug. 11, 2009, which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/278,935 filed Apr. 6, 2006 and that issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,426,968 on Sep. 23, 2008, which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/277,394 filed Mar. 24, 2006 and that issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,398,837 on Jul. 15, 2008, which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/277,380 filed Mar. 24, 2006 and that issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,337,858 on Mar. 4, 2008, which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/306,976 filed Jan. 18, 2006 and that issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,360,610 on Apr. 22, 2008, which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/306,307 filed Dec. 22, 2005 and that issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,225,886 on Jun. 5, 2007, which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/306,022 filed Dec. 14, 2005 and that issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,198,119 on Apr. 3, 2007, which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/164,391 filed Nov. 21, 2005 and that issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,270,196 on Sep. 18, 2007. All of these applications are herein incorporated by reference in their entirety.
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