The present disclosure relates generally to equipment and procedures for subterranean wellbore operations. In particular, embodiments of the disclosure relate to a setting tool for securing an expandable liner hanger in a wellbore.
Expandable liner hangers are generally used to secure a liner within a previously set casing or liner string. These types of liner hangers are typically set by expanding the liner hangers radially outward into gripping and sealing contact with the previously set casing or liner string. To expand the liner hangers, hydraulic pressure may be applied to drive a cone or wedge through the liner hanger, but other methods such as mechanical swaging, explosive expansion, swellable material expansion, etc. may be employed). The expansion procedure may be performed using a setting tool to convey the liner hanger into a wellbore and secure the liner therein. The setting tool may be interconnected between a work string (e.g., a tubular string constructed of drill pipe or other tubular elements) and the liner hanger.
If the liner hanger is expanded using hydraulic pressure, then the setting tool is generally used to control the communication of fluid pressure, and flow to and from various portions of the liner hanger expansion mechanism, and between the work string and the liner. Because the pressure required to drive the cone or wedges is high enough to damage the liner below, to prematurely expand the liner, to inadvertently activate completion equipment below the setting tool, and cause a number of other complications, a ball or flapper valve in the setting tool is often used to isolate the expansion pressure from the liner and other equipment below the setting tool. The ball or flapper must seat correctly to generate a sufficient differential pressure to expand the liner hanger. The ball or flapper may fail to seat due to debris in the wellbore, or there may difficulties in getting a ball to seat in a deviated well where gravity may not be relied upon to deliver the ball to a precise seating location. If the ball or flapper fails to seat, the entire string may need to be returned to the surface, or a secondary hanger may need to be deployed above the primary hanger, each of which result in lost time and expense.
The disclosure is described in detail hereinafter, by way of example only, on the basis of examples represented in the accompanying figures, in which:
The present disclosure describes a rotating ball valve employed in a liner hanger setting tool. The rotating ball valve is a reliable and effective alternative or supplement to a flapper member sealing with a valve seat to close a fluid flow path through the liner hanger setting tool. The rotating ball valve may be actuated by selectively applying fluid pressure to the flow path, or by mechanical manipulation. A latch member may be provided to maintain the rotating ball valve in a closed configuration.
In the following description of the representative embodiments of the disclosure, directional terms, such as “above”, “below”, “upper”, “lower”, etc., are used for convenience in referring to the accompanying drawings. In general, “above”, “upper”, “upward” and similar terms refer to an up-hole direction toward the earth's surface along a wellbore, and “below”, “lower”, “downward” and similar terms refer to a downhole direction away from the earth's surface along the wellbore.
As illustrated in
The liner hanger setting system 10 includes an expandable liner hanger 18, which is illustrated as being employed to seal and secure an upper end 12u of the liner 12 near the lower end of the casing string 14. In other embodiments, the liner hanger 18 could be used to seal and secure the liner 12 in other configurations without departing from the scope of the disclosure. For example, the upper end 12u of the liner 12 may be secured above a window (not shown in
A setting tool 20 is connected between the liner hanger 18 and a work string 22 extending to a surface location. The work string 22 is used to convey the setting tool 20, liner hanger 18 and liner 12 into the wellbore 16 and may be employed to conduct fluid pressure and flow, transmit torque, tensile and compressive force, etc. to the setting tool 20. Thus, the setting tool 20 may be employed to facilitate conveyance and installation of the liner 12 and liner hanger 18, in part by using the torque, tensile and compressive forces, fluid pressure and flow, etc. delivered by the work string 22. As described in greater detail below, the setting tool 20 is selectively operable to radially extend external seals 24 provided on the liner hanger 18 to grippingly engage an interior of the casing sting 14 and to seal an annulus 26 defined between the casing string 14 and the work string 22. The setting tool 20 may drive an expansion cone 28 longitudinally in a downward direction through an interior of the liner hanger 18 to outwardly expand or displace the external seals 24. The expansion cone 28 may be driven downward under the influence of a fluid pressure as illustrated in
As illustrated, the example wellbore 16 extends is generally vertically through geologic formation “G.” In other embodiments, a wellbore with any other geometry, e.g., deviated, slanted, curved and/or entirely vertical, may employ the systems and methods described herein without departing from the scope of the disclosure.
Referring now to
The upper sleeve member 34 is coupled to an upper piston 44 and a retention ring 46 by expendable connectors 48a, 48b. The expendable connectors 48a, 48b may be frangible fasteners, shear screws or similar devices that permit selective separation between the components coupled thereby. A first set of expendable connectors 48a couples the retention ring 46 to the upper piston 44 and a second set of expendable connectors 48b couples the upper piston 44 to the upper sleeve member 34. The retention ring 46 may be fixedly coupled with respect to the outer housing 30 such that the expendable connectors 48a, 48b retain the upper sleeve member 34 in an initial position with respect to the outer housing 30. In the initial position, a lower end 34l of the upper sleeve member 34 engages the rotating ball member 34 such that fluid flow is permitted between the upper sleeve member 34 and the rotating ball member 34. A plurality of radial fluid ports 50 are provided through a sidewall of the upper sleeve member 34 such that a fluid provided through the work string 22 may exit the fluid passageway 32 and apply a fluid pressure, e.g., a sealing fluid pressure, to the upper piston 44 in an up-hole direction. The upper sleeve member 34 is operably coupled to a rotating ball valve 52 including the rotating ball member 36. Specifically, the up-hole movement of the upper sleeve member 34 induces rotational movement of the rotating ball member 36 to seal the fluid passageway 32 as described in greater detail below.
The housing 30 houses a lower piston 54, which is coupled to the housing 30 by a third set of expendable connectors 48c. Fluid exiting the fluid passageway 32 through the radial fluid ports 50 may apply a fluid pressure to the lower piston 54 in a downhole direction to release the lower piston 54 from the housing 30 as described in greater detail below. The lower piston 54 is coupled to the rotating ball member 36 by a pair of pivot pins 58 oriented orthogonally with respect to the longitudinal axis A0. The pivot pins 58 each extend through a longitudinal slot 60 defined in a respective guide plate 62 disposed on lateral sides of the rotating ball member 36. The guide plates 62 are fixedly coupled to the upper sleeve member 34 by screws 64 (see
The lower piston 54 includes one or more equalization ports 66 defined therethrough in fluid communication with radial fluid ports 68 defined through the lower sleeve member 40. Seal members 70 provided on the lower piston 54 ensure that fluid entering the equalization ports 66 exit through vent ports 72, which are defined in the housing 30 when the setting tool 20 is arranged in the initial configuration. One or more channels 73 are defined through outer housing 30 to direct fluid pressure to the expansion cone 28. The channels 73 are circumferentially offset from the vent ports 72 such that there is no interaction between the channels 73 and the vent ports 72. A pressure chamber 75 is defined at an end of the channels 73 radially between the lower end 30l of the outer housing and the cone housing 31. With the rotating ball member 36 in the open configuration, fluid may flow freely through the fluid passageway 32 without an accumulation of fluid pressure in the pressure chamber 75. When the ball member 36 is rotated to close the fluid passageway 32, the channels 73 transmit a fluid pressure from the fluid passageway 32 above the rotating ball member 36, which may be imparted to the expansion cone 28 as described below with reference to
As illustrated in
The up-hole movement of the upper sleeve member 34 separates the upper sleeve member 34 from the rotating ball member 36, and the up-hole movement of the guide plates 62 induce rotational movement of the rotating ball member 36 about the pivot pins 58 as described in greater detail below with reference to
Referring now to
Referring now to
As illustrated in
Referring now to
As illustrated in
In other alternate embodiments (not shown), a rotating ball member may be selectively rotated without the direct application of hydraulic pressure at the surface (such as in the embodiment of
Referring now to
At step 206, the upper sleeve member 34, 102 is shifted to rotate the rotating ball member 36, 112. The upper sleeve member 34 may be shifted by applying a pressure through the work string 22 to drive an upper piston 44 in an up-hole direction, and/or the upper sleeve member 102 may be mechanically shifted by an intervention tool 120. The shifting of the upper sleeve member 34, 102 rotates the rotating ball member 36, 112 by longitudinally shifting a rotating pin that is laterally offset from the pivot pins 58 about which the rotating ball member 36, 112 rotates.
At step 208, any fluid pressure accumulated above and below the rotating ball member 36, 112 may be bled off through the work string 22 and/or vent ports 72. With the pressure above and below the rotating ball member 36, 112 equalized, a working fluid may be pumped through the work string to apply a pressure to the closed rotating ball member 36, 112 to shift a lower sleeve member 40 (step 210). The pressure applied to the closed rotating ball member 36, 112 may be passed through the channels 73 and maintained to drive the expansion cone 28 through the expandable liner hanger 18 to secure the expandable liner hanger 18 within the casing string 14 (step 212).
The aspects of the disclosure described below are provided to describe a selection of concepts in a simplified form that are described in greater detail above. This section is not intended to identify key features or essential features of the claimed subject matter, nor is it intended to be used as an aid in determining the scope of the claimed subject matter.
According one aspect, the present disclosure is directed to a setting tool for a liner hanger. The setting tool includes an outer tubular setting tool housing defining a longitudinal axis and a fluid passageway extending along the longitudinal axis. A valve seat is defined within the housing and a rotating ball member is engaged with the valve seat. The rotating ball member is rotatable between an open configuration in which fluid flow through the fluid passageway is permitted and a closed configuration in which fluid flow through the fluid passageway is obstructed by the rotating ball member. An expansion cone is operably coupled to the ball member to move longitudinally in response to a setting fluid pressure applied to the rotating ball member through the fluid passageway.
In one or more embodiments, the setting tool may further include a piston within the fluid passageway, the piston operably coupled to the rotating ball member to move the rotating ball member from the open configuration to the closed configuration in response to a sealing fluid pressure applied to the piston through the fluid passageway. The setting tool may further include a first set of expendable connectors coupled between the piston and the housing to maintain the position of the piston within the housing until the sealing fluid pressure is applied to the piston. The setting tool may further include a second set of expendable connectors coupled between the expansion cone and the housing to maintain the position of the expansion cone within the housing until the setting fluid pressure is applied to the rotating ball member, wherein the setting fluid pressure is greater than the sealing fluid pressure. The setting tool may further include a vent port extending radially through the housing and fluidly coupled to the fluid passageway at a location downhole of the rotating ball member to permit the sealing fluid pressure to be bled when the rotating ball member is in the closed configuration.
In some embodiments, the setting tool further includes a rotation pin coupled between the piston and the rotating ball member, the rotation pin coupled to the piston to move longitudinally along with the piston and coupled to the rotating ball laterally offset from a pivot axis of the rotating ball member. In one or more embodiments, the setting tool further includes a latch member selectively engageable with the rotating ball member to maintain the rotating ball member in the closed configuration.
In one or more embodiments, the setting tool further includes an upper sleeve member engaged with the rotating ball member when the rotating ball member is in the open configuration and separable from the rotating ball member to rotate the rotating ball member to the closed configuration. The upper sleeve member may include an internal shoulder engageable by an intervention tool to separate the upper sleeve member from the rotating ball member. The upper sleeve member may be operably coupled to the rotating ball member such that the separation of the upper sleeve member from the rotating ball member induces rotational motion in the rotating ball member from the open configuration to the closed configuration.
According to another aspect, the disclosure is directed to a liner hanger setting system. The system includes a liner, an expandable liner hanger coupled to an upper end of the liner and a setting tool housing coupled to an upper end of the expandable liner hanger. The housing defines a longitudinal axis and a fluid passageway extending along the longitudinal axis. A valve seat is defined within housing and a rotating ball member is engaged with the valve seat. The rotating ball member is rotatable between an open configuration in which fluid flow through the fluid passageway is permitted and a closed configuration in which fluid flow through the fluid passageway is obstructed by the rotating ball member. An expansion cone is operably coupled to the ball member to move longitudinally through the expandable liner hanger in response to a setting fluid pressure applied to the rotating ball member through the fluid passageway.
In some embodiments, the system further includes an upper sleeve member operably coupled to the rotating ball member such that the separation of the upper sleeve member from the rotating ball member induces rotational motion in the rotating ball member from the open configuration to the closed configuration. In some embodiments, the system may further include a piston coupled to the upper sleeve member, the piston responsive to a sealing fluid pressure applied through the fluid passageway to induce the separation of the sleeve member from the rotating ball member. In some other embodiments, the system may further include an intervention tool engaged with an internal shoulder of the upper sleeve member such that an up-hole force applied to the intervention tool from a surface location is transmitted to the upper sleeve member.
In one or more embodiments, the system further includes a first set of expendable connectors coupled between the upper sleeve member and the housing to releasably maintain the position of the upper sleeve member within the housing. The system may further include a second set of expendable connectors coupled between the expansion cone and the housing to releasably maintain the position of the expansion cone within the housing.
In some embodiments, the system further includes a work string coupled to an upper end of the housing, the housing fluidly coupled to the fluid passageway of the setting tool housing. In one or more embodiments, the expansion cone includes a lower conical surface thereon which engages an interior of the liner hanger to outwardly expand the liner hanger in response to longitudinal movement of the expansion cone through the liner hanger.
According to another aspect, the disclosure is directed to a method for setting a liner hanger in a casing string installed in a subterranean wellbore. The method includes (a) running a work string into the wellbore, the work string including the liner hanger and a setting tool, (b) rotating a ball member within a fluid passageway defined through the setting tool to close the fluid passageway, (c) flowing a working fluid through the work string to apply a setting pressure against the ball member, (d) moving an expansion cone through the liner hanger in response to the pressure applied against the ball member and (e) radially extending the liner hanger into sealing contact with the casing string in response to moving the expansion cone through the liner hanger.
In some embodiments, the method further includes applying a sealing pressure through the fluid passageway to longitudinally displace a piston operably coupled to the ball member to rotate the ball member in response to longitudinal movement of the piston, the sealing pressure less than the setting pressure. The method may further include bleeding the sealing fluid pressure from below the ball member prior to applying the setting pressure against the ball member.
The Abstract of the disclosure is solely for providing the United States Patent and Trademark Office and the public at large with a way by which to determine quickly from a cursory reading the nature and gist of technical disclosure, and it represents solely one or more examples.
While various examples have been illustrated in detail, the disclosure is not limited to the examples shown. Modifications and adaptations of the above examples may occur to those skilled in the art. Such modifications and adaptations are in the scope of the disclosure.