This is the first application for this invention.
This invention relates in general to well casing systems and, in particular, to a novel mechanically perforated casing collar for use in well casing systems used to complete hydrocarbon wells.
Well casing systems are well known in the art and are used assemble a “casing string” that is inserted to a hydrocarbon well bore to provide a smooth liner in the well bore. Casing strings are typically assembled using lengths of plain pipe having pin-threaded ends called “casing joints”, which are interconnected using short tubular “casing collars” that have complimentarily box-threaded ends, but the casing joints may have box-threaded ends and the casing collars may have pin-threaded ends. The casing string is generally “cemented in” after it is run into a completed well bore by pumping liquid cement down through and up around the outside of the casing string. The cement sets and inhibits fluid migration within the wellbore behind the casing. As is well understood in the art, once a casing string is cemented in the well bore, it provides a fluid-tight passage from the wellhead to a “toe” or bottom of the well. Consequently, the casing must be perforated within the production zone(s) of the well bore to permit hydrocarbon to flow into the casing string for production to the surface.
Numerous methods of perforating casing in order to complete hydrocarbon wells have been invented. The most widely adopted method currently in use involves the use of perforating “guns”. Perforating guns shoot projectiles through the casing and surrounding cement using explosive charges. While perforating guns are reliable and effective, each set of perforating guns must be run into the well. Consequently, well completion of long lateral well bores requires many sequential trips into and out of the well bore, and hydraulic fracturing equipment sits idle during each trip. To obviate these delays, sliding sleeve casing systems having sliding sleeve valves opened by size-graduated, pumped-down balls were invented so well completion fracturing could progress in a virtually uninterrupted process. A sliding sleeve casing string is assembled and run into an open bore hole and is generally not cemented in place. Rather, packers placed at intervals around the sliding sleeve casing string are used to inhibit fluid migration beyond zones isolated by the respective packers. However, only a predetermined number of sliding sleeve valves may be distributed within the sliding sleeve casing string because of the size graduation limits on the pumped-down balls so the length of a wellbore that can be completed using sliding sleeve valves is limited. Furthermore, sliding sleeve valves are vulnerable to reliability issues.
Consequently, pressure perforated well casing joints and pressure perforated well casing collars were invented for use in shallow wells where wellbore pressures are relatively moderate and consistent. Pressure perforated well casing systems can be used in a lateral well bore of any length and provides much more flexibility in terms of perforation placement than the sliding sleeve casing systems. However, current drilling and well completion equipment and completion techniques permit hydrocarbon wells to be drilled much deeper, where subterranean fluid pressures are significantly higher, and also permit lateral wells to be drilled to lengths of more than 10,000 feet (3000 meters) in the lateral segment. In such long lateral well bores, well bore pressure may be inconsistent and unpredictable and cement infiltration around the casing string may be uneven. High downhole fluid pressures may elevate the fluid pressure required to perforate casing beyond a pressure limit of pumping equipment, and unpredictable fluid pressures and/or uneven cement infiltration around a casing string in the wellbore significantly complicate pressure perforation because perforation pressure cannot be accurately predicted.
A mechanical casing perforator obviates any issues associated with high downhole fluid pressures, unpredictable downhole fluid pressures or uneven cement penetration. Mechanical casing perforators are known, though they have never gained widespread use. Punching through standard casing requires considerable force. Consequently, the known mechanical perforators not only tend to deform the internal diameter of the standard casing, they also have a limited duty cycle.
There therefore exists a need for a mechanically perforated well casing collar that facilitates reliable mechanical casing perforation regardless of well bore length, well bore depth or ambient downhole fluid pressure and facilitates uninterrupted well completion in a lateral wellbore of any length that can be drilled and cased.
It is therefore an object of the invention to provide a mechanically perforated well casing collar that overcomes the shortcomings of the prior art.
The invention therefore provides a mechanically perforated well casing collar comprising a tubular pipe having a sidewall with at least one machined-away area that facilitates mechanical perforation of the sidewall, the sidewall further having an inner surface with a guide and lock structure that guides a mechanical perforator into a position in which at least one perforator blade of the mechanical perforator is aligned with respective ones of the at least one machined-away area and further provides structure to permit the mechanical perforator to lock within the casing collar when the at least one perforator blade in is alignment with the respective ones of the at least one machined-away area of the sidewall.
The invention further provides a mechanically perforated well casing collar comprising a tubular body having a sidewall with at least three spaced-apart machined-away areas that respectively facilitate mechanical perforation of the sidewall, and an inner surface with a guide and lock structure that guides a mechanical perforator having at least three perforator blades into a position in which the at least three perforator blades are in alignment with the respective machined-away areas, and further provides structure to permit the mechanical perforator to be locked in the position in which the respective perforator blades are in alignment with the respective machined-away areas of the sidewall.
The invention yet further provides a mechanically perforated well casing collar comprising a sidewall with an inner surface having a guide structure that guides a mechanical perforator having at least one perforator blade into a position within the well casing collar in which the at least one perforator blade is aligned with a machined-away area on the sidewall that facilitates mechanical perforation of the sidewall by the at least one perforator blade, sidewall material at the at least one machined-away area having a predetermined yield strength.
Having thus generally described the nature of the invention, reference will now be made to the accompanying drawings, in which:
The invention provides a mechanically perforated well casing collar used to interconnect “plain casing joints” to assemble a casing string to case a drilled well bore. Plain casing joints are any commercially available casing joint having an unperforated sidewall, of any desired weight and any desired length. Plain casing collars may also be used in conjunction with the mechanically perforated casing collars in accordance with the invention to assemble the casing string. Casing string configuration is a matter of design choice understood by those skilled in the art and dependent, at least in part, on formation characteristics. The mechanically perforated casing collar is a tubular pipe having at least one machined-away area(s) of the casing collar sidewall to facilitate mechanical perforation, and an internal guide and lock structure on an inner surface of the sidewall to guide a mechanical perforator blade(s) into alignment with the machined-away area(s) and lock the mechanical perforator in the location for perforating the casing collar at the machined-away area(s). The machined-away area(s) weakens the sidewall to an extent adequate to facilitate and control mechanical perforation, while leaving enough sidewall material to ensure that the casing collar cannot be pressure perforated by cementing or fracturing operations required to complete the well. This permits fracturing fluid to be pumped down an annulus of the cased well during well completion, which significantly improves well fracturing efficiency and reduces overall well completion time. The machined-away area(s) also ensures that the casing collar is reliably perforated with minimal distortion of the casing collar sidewall, and that the perforation(s) have a consistent initial size and shape so fracturing fluid evenly distributes among the respective perforation(s) in the casing collar.
As used in this application mechanical perforator “blade” means any instrument that can be pushed against a weakened area of the sidewall of the casing collar to effect perforation without undue distortion of the sidewall of the casing collar. The blade need not have a sharp edge, and the edge may include wear resistant buttons of diamond or carbide to control blade wear.
The casing collar 10a further includes an inner surface 20, which is provided with a guide and lock structure 22 to guide perforating blade(s) of a mechanical perforator 100 (see
The embodiments of the casing collars 10a, 10b, 10c, 10d and 40 described above may be gas nitrided or salt bath nitrided to inhibit corrosion. Prior to nitriding, the threaded ends 34, 34d, 64 may be masked to prevent over-hardening of the threads. Alternatively, the entire outer surfaces 13 shown in
In this exemplary embodiment, the mechanical perforator 100 has 4 perforator blades (only two, 102a and 102c can be seen in cross-section) and four guide skates (only two, 104a and 104c can be seen in cross-section). A linear force generator 106 generates mechanical force to operate the respective perforator blades. The linear force generator 106 may be, for example, one of the force multipliers described in Applicant's two patent applications, the specifications of which are respectively incorporated herein by reference, namely: U.S. patent application Ser. No. 16/004,771 filed May 11, 2018 entitled “Modular Force Multiplier For Downhole Tools”; and U.S. patent application Ser. No. 15/980,992 filed May 16, 2018 and also entitled “Modular Force Multiplier For Downhole Tools”. Downhole tool termination components 108 serve pumped fluid control functions described in Applicant's above-referenced co-pending patent application entitled “Mechanical Perforator with Guide Skates”.
Fluid pumped into a central passage 110 of the mechanical perforator 100 controls a disposition of the guide skates 104a and 104c, which are normally urged to a retracted position by coil springs (not shown), In an exemplary use of the mechanical perforator 100, it is connected to a coil tubing or jointed tubing work string (not shown) and run to a bottom of a cased well bore using the work string without fluid pressure in the central passage 110, so the guide skates 104a, 104c are in the retracted position and the mechanical perforator 100 can be pushed down the cased well bore without resistance. When the bottom of the cased well bore is reached, fluid is pumped through the work string and into the central passage 110. Initially, the fluid pressure in the central passage is raised to about 200-300 psi, and the work string is pulled up from the bottom of the cased well bore until a weight indicator connected to the work string indicates positive spikes as the guide skates 104a, 104c “skip” through a guide and lock structure of a casing collar 40 nearest the bottom of the cased well bore. When the casing collar 40 is thus detected, the fluid pressure in the central passage is increased to about 2,000 psi, for example, and the work string is slowly pushed back down the well bore. The weight indicator will register a pronounced negative spike as the guide skates are urged out of the respective guide funnels 58a-58d (see
The embodiments of the casing collars 10a, 10b, 10c, 10d and 40 described above have been shown and described having a guide and lock structure, 22, 52 with a guide point, a guide funnel and a skate lock recess for each machined-away area of the casing collar. As will be understood by those skilled in the art, this is a matter of design choice. The mechanical perforator 100 may be designed to use a guide and lock structure having a different number of guide skates than the number of perforator blades, as will be readily understood by those of ordinary skill in the art.
The explicit embodiments of the invention described above have been presented by way of describing casing collars only. It should be understood that the invention may also be practiced using heavy-weight casing joints that are combined with plain casing joints and plain casing collars to assemble a well casing string, in a manner that will be readily understood by persons of ordinary skill in the art. The scope of the invention is therefore not limited solely to casing collars, per se, and the term “casing collar” as used in above and in the append claims is intended to mean any pipe used in a casing string to case a well bore.
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