The invention relates to a well-logging technique and apparatus for accomplishing such logging without killing the well which has been horizontally drilled using under-balanced drilling techniques; more specifically, a process and apparatus for rigging up and completing wireline logging operations in a horizontal well drilled using an under-balanced drilling technique without killing the well by selectively introducing logging tools into an under-balanced well bore through a dual throated blow out preventer.
When drilling deviated or horizontal wells, conventional overbalanced drilling typically kills the well in older or lower production zones, making conventional logging techniques difficult to accomplish. Different techniques have been developed to circumvent this problem by using underbalanced techniques and sealing around the pipe and wireline cable for example thereby permitting gas insertion into the well bore annulus, logging while drilling (LWD), memory shuttles conveyed by pumping them down inside pipe or using slim tools such as RST conveyed with cable inside drill pipe. So far as known to applicant, the problems with conveying a full suite of open hole logging tools in an under-balanced horizontal well remained unsolved until the filing of applicant's companion application in the European Patent Office under Serial No. EP082901261 on or about 19 Mar. 2008, which application is incorporated herein by reference as if copied herein.
Horizontal wells are a commonly used technique in the industry. Horizontal wells enable a long interval of reservoir to be contacted in a single well thereby improving the productivity and enhancing reservoir recovery economics. Horizontal well logging techniques have also evolved. While drilling measurements allow accurate well placement, in certain types of reservoirs and depending on the evaluation objectives requested by the owner, there still remains a strong need to perform wireline logging operations involving high resolution imaging, magnetic resonance measurements, as well as downhole fluid analysis and sampling services—most of which are currently not available with LWD. For such cases, the industry has developed a method conveniently termed in current literature as “tough logging conditions” (TLC) which enables the tools to be conveyed on drill pipe while also maintaining an electrical connection to the surface unit using a standard wireline cable. The method, in summary, involves conveying tools in the well using drill pipe till just above the last casing shoe. A cable side door entry sub is then inserted in drill string to allow the cable to be rigged up and to enter inside the drill pipe through the side entry sub and further connect to the tools already down hole. The cable is tied up or fixed at the side entry sub and both cable and drill pipe are simultaneously conveyed down to perform logging operations. A standard feature of a TLC system is that a certain length of cable, equal to a minimum of the length of the logging interval, is carried on the drillstring outside the drillpipe located between the rig floor and the point in the drill string where the cable enters the drill pipe, that is, at the side entry sub.
Under-balanced drilling is especially suited for horizontal wells because formation damage in horizontal over-balanced wells can be very significant due to the long contact length and contact time between reservoir rocks and drilling fluids as well as constant scraping of filter cake by the drill pipe lying down on the low side of the horizontal. As a result, significant productivity is lost due to formation damage in horizontal wells. The industry has therefore realized the need to design technologies that are able to perform under-balanced drilling in horizontal wells to lower the formation damage that would otherwise be caused if the well was drilled over-balanced and thereby achieve higher productivity.
The main objective of this invention is therefore to provide an improved apparatus and methods for inserting a wireline through a blow out preventer stack, including either a rotating blow out preventer or snubbing preventer, to perform the equivalent of a TLC logging operation in an under-balanced horizontal well.
A dual throated blow out preventer provides a body having two parallel channels; a sealing element moveable into said body to selectively separate the two channels into a first sealable conduit and a second sealable conduit, whereby the sealing element can be inserted into the body to separate a wireline into the first sealable conduit from a drill string in the second sealable conduit, both of which are disposed in the blow out preventer. The sealing element can be an insert slideably engaging said body and providing an arcuate lower end. Alternatively, the sealing element can be a rotatable slotted liner, which provides a longitudinal slit permitting the movement of a wireline rope into and out of the sleeve; and, means for rotating said sleeve after insertion of a wireline. Both forms of the sealing element can be manipulated to permit the insertion of the wireline and drill string into the blow out preventer, permitting both the wireline and the drillstring to be sealed to well pressures independent of each other.
A method of inserting a wireline into a dual channel blow out preventer can be described in the following steps: closing a pressure isolation valve in a well bore; rigging up wireline tools on a rotary floor; reeving a wireline through a wireline packoff assembly and a cable entry sub, building a rope socket and making up a pump down wet connector; connecting a downhole wet connector head to tools and making up a drill pipe; running the assembly containing the wireline tools into to a position above the pressure isolation valve; moving the pump down wet connector head into the drill pipe and making up the cable side entry sub to the drill string; pumping the pump down wet connector head into the well bore and latching to the downhole wet connector head; slacking off the wireline and tying the wireline to the cable side entry sub; moving the drillstring to a position that the cable side entry sub is below the blow out preventer; moving the cable into a wireline channel fabricated in the blow out preventer; manipulating a sealing element in the rotating blow out preventer to separate the wireline channel from the drill string channel closing the seals on the wireline packoff and the blow out preventer; and, equalizing the pressure in the drill string with the pressure at the pressure isolation valve (PIV). This method thereby permits the logging of a horizontal well in an underbalanced state with current logging technology, which has heretofore been difficult to achieve.
The logging of deviated or horizontal wells using a drillstring to set the logging tool string in place has been more fully described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,871,052, the contents of which are fully incorporated herein by reference as if copied herein verbatim. In the present inventive method, the logging tool string must be rigged up and lowered into the well bore while maintaining the underbalanced well bore at its underbalanced pressure but without killing the well by pumping in a mud column to contain the downhole pressure. The present invention relates to an improved method of stringing the wireline through the pressure control devices at the rig floor to make this technique easier and faster to accomplish.
As can be readily seen in
The rigging up of the electrical wireline through a lubricator system for this improved method and apparatus is made on the rig floor above the rotary blow out preventer 10. As shown in
Lubricator 14 can provide a wireline packoff and wireline blow out preventer to seal against pressure and pressure surges experienced by the well while logging takes place. The entry point for the wireline cable is a channel fabricated into a rotary blow out preventer body and providing means for connection of the lubricator and the packoff above the rotary floor. Once the float valve is attached to the top of the cable side entry sub, additional drill pipe can be connected into the drillstring assembly, the pipe rams can be opened and the float valve/cable side entry sub moved below the rotary blow out preventer. Pressure control is thus maintained over the drillstring through the mud line and the casing string below and over wireline through the lubricator 14. The pump down wireline connect head is sent down either by gravity or slight pump pressure to mate with the downhole wet connect head attached to the logging string.
Once the connection between the PWCH and the DWCH is made and tested, the electrical wireline cable is slacked off sufficiently into the drillstring to prevent premature connector separation. The operator would then pull the drillstring up to the rig floor and the cable would be affixed by banding or other means well known to those in this art to the cable side entry sub.
Then, as shown in
It is generally expected that the distance from the downhole wet connector head to the side entry sub will be long enough to protect the wireline cable which is run inside the drillstring from the side entry sub to the wet connect to completely log the open hole portion 91 of the well bore, all as more fully shown in
As may be readily appreciated in
To accomplish the foregoing invention, the wireline 13 must be readily inserted below the rotating blow out preventer 10 rams to be connected to the logging string on the drill pipe.
After each of these assemblies is complete and the dual throat of this embodiment is closed to separate the wireline from the drillstring path of the RBOP, the pressure can be increased from the surface to match the conditions experienced at the PIV 90 of
Numerous embodiments and alternatives thereof have been disclosed. While the above disclosure includes the best mode belief in carrying out the invention as contemplated by the named inventors, not all possible alternatives have been disclosed. For that reason, the scope and limitation of the present invention is not to be restricted to the above disclosure, but is instead to be defined and construed by the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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08290743 | Jul 2008 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2009/005564 | 7/20/2009 | WO | 00 | 4/7/2011 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2010/012487 | 2/4/2010 | WO | A |
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