Liner top packers and liner hangers are commonly used together to seal a liner to a downhole tubular such as a casing or another liner. The liner hanger acts as an anchor during the process of setting the liner top packer seals. The liner hanger supports the liner top packer keeping the liner top packer stationary relative to the casing in which it is sealing as a force required to set the liner top packer is applied. Seal integrity and durability are desirable characteristics for such seals, as once set, liner top packer seals are often kept in place for long periods of time, often multiple years.
Typical liner top packer seals incorporate elastomers at the seal interface. Caustic fluids, high temperatures and high pressures encountered downhole often precipitate degradation of elastomeric seals. Degraded seals can develop leaks that can be costly to an operation whether left in place or replaced. When left in place, the quality of a production stream can suffer. When replaced, the cost of equipment and labor as well as costs of lost production, during replacement down-time, will accumulate. Accordingly, there is a need in the art for highly durable liner top packer seals.
Disclosed herein is a liner top packer seal system. The seal system includes, a body, a sleeve in radial alignment with the body and a first deformable metal member in operable communication with the sleeve. The operable communication is such that movement of the sleeve in a first direction causes deformation of the first deformable metal member and the first deformable metal member is sealably engagable with a tubular in response to being in a deformed position. The seal system further includes a second deformable metal member in operable communication with the sleeve such that movement of the sleeve in the first direction causes deformation of the second deformable metal member. The second deformable metal member is sealably engagable with both the body and the first deformable metal member in response to being in a deformed position.
Further disclosed herein is a liner top packer seal system. The seal system includes, a body, a sleeve in radial alignment with the body and a first deformable metal member in operable communication with the sleeve such that movement of the sleeve in a first direction causes deformation of the first deformable metal member. The first deformable metal member is sealably engagable with a tubular in response to being in a deformed position. The seal system further includes a second metal member sealably engaged with the body and the first deformable metal member.
Further disclosed herein is a method of sealing a liner top packer to a tubular. The method includes, positioning the liner top packer within a tubular and moving a sleeve of the liner top packer in a first axial direction thereby radially deforming a first deformable metal member and a second deformable metal member. The method further includes sealably engaging the radially deformed first deformable metal member with a tubular and sealably engaging the radially deformed second deformable metal member with the first deformable metal member and a body of the liner top packer.
The following descriptions should not be considered limiting in any way. With reference to the accompanying drawings, like elements are numbered alike:
A detailed description of an embodiment of the disclosed apparatus and method are presented herein by way of exemplification and not limitation with reference to the Figures.
Referring to
The ratcheting member 26 has a movable portion 46, attached to the sleeve 22, and a stationary portion 50, attached to the body 14. The movable portion 46 moves with the sleeve 22 in a downhole direction in this embodiment (although other embodiments could have the sleeve 22 move in an uphole direction) as the sleeve 22 causes the first deformable member 18 to deform as will be shown in detail with reference to
Referring to
Referring to
Referring to
Reconfigurability of the second deformable member 118 between the undeformed configuration and the deformed configuration is effected by and is enabled by the construction thereof. The second deformable member 118 is formed from a tubular member 162 that has four lines of weakness, specifically located both axially of the tubular member 162 and with respect to an inside surface 166 and an outside surface 172 of the tubular member 162. In one embodiment, a first line of weakness 176 and a second line of weakness 180 are defined in this embodiment by diametrical grooves formed in the outside surface 172 of the tubular member 162. A third line of weakness 184 and a fourth line of weakness 188 is defined in this embodiment by a diametrical groove formed in the inside surface 166 of the tubular member 162. The four lines of weakness 176, 180, 184 and 188 each encourage local deformation of the tubular member 162 in a radial direction that tends to cause the groove to close. It will be appreciated that in embodiments where the line of weakness is defined by other than a groove, the radial direction of movement will be the same but since there is no groove, there is no “close of the groove”. Rather, in such an embodiment, the material that defines a line of weakness will flow or otherwise allow radial movement in the direction indicated. The four lines of weakness 176, 180, 184 and 188 together encourage deformation of the tubular member 162 in a manner that creates a feature such as the deformed configuration. The feature is created, then, upon the application of an axially directed mechanical compression of the tubular member 162 such that the deformed configuration is formed as the tubular member 162 is compressed to a shorter overall length.
Referring again to
In an alternate embodiment the second deformable member 118 could be deformed during the assembly of the tool 10 prior to running the tool 10 downhole. In this embodiment the second shear screw 192 positionally locks the sleeve 22 to the first deformable member 18 thereby maintaining the second deformable member 118 in the deformed position. Optionally the sleeve 22 could be threadable engaged with the first deformable member 118 to allow rotation therebetween to control axial compression of the second deformable member 118. Once the axial compression of the second deformable member 118 is at the desired level a set screw could be used (for example at the location where the second shear screw 192 is shown) to prevent undesired motion of the threadable engagement. As such, the second deformable member 118 is maintained deformed such that it is sealably and slidably engaged between the body 14 and the first deformable member 18 to allow sealed axial motion therebetween. In this embodiment the third shear screw 194 is not required since the shearing of the first shear screw 190 controls the loading of the first deformable member 18.
While the invention has been described with reference to an exemplary embodiment or embodiments, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes may be made and equivalents may be substituted for elements thereof without departing from the scope of the invention. In addition, many modifications may be made to adapt a particular situation or material to the teachings of the invention without departing from the essential scope thereof. Therefore, it is intended that the invention not be limited to the particular embodiment disclosed as the best mode contemplated for carrying out this invention, but that the invention will include all embodiments falling within the scope of the claims.
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Entry |
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APEX TM Big Bore Completion Solutions, [online]; [retrieved on Nov. 3, 2006]; retrieved from the Internet http://www.bakerhughesdirect.com/cgi-bin/bot/resources/ExternalFileHandler.jsp?BV—SessionID=@@@@0932326691.11625. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20080251261 A1 | Oct 2008 | US |