Oil and gas wells commonly bypass significant productive formations that may be uneconomic to complete at the time the wells were drilled. These formations may be relatively thin and low pressure so simply perforating a zone that includes oil does not provide significant new production. Lateral drilling tools have been developed that are capable of drilling formations using rotary mechanical or jetting tools. Lateral drilling into thin, horizontal oil bearing formations can result in substantial new oil production. The lateral well must be drilled at an angle as close as possible to 90 degrees to ensure that the lateral drilling tools stay within the productive zone and can be achieved by feeding a flexible lance though a shoe that curves to form a right angle, directing the lance into the formation. This approach is referred to as zero radius lateral drilling, since the angle is built entirely within the casing as opposed to being formed by drilling a curved hole in the formation.
In the event that the well is cased, lateral drilling requires milling a window in the steel casing before the lateral drilling tool is introduced. Zero radius lateral drilling requires milling a circular or slightly elliptical window in the casing. The milling assembly is preferably directed toward the casing through the same curved shoe that will be used to direct the lateral drilling lance. The shoe incorporates a tight radius curve, providing a near 90 degree turn within the inner diameter (ID) of the casing. The shoe can be set using conventional mechanical or hydraulic packers to ensure that a stable hole location for the jetting assembly is achieved, once the milling is completed.
Milling the steel casing requires substantial torque at relatively low rotary speed. The tool can be rotated by using a rotary table and drillstring, or by using a downhole motor. The thrust, torque, and rotary motion must be transmitted though a flexible assembly that will pass though the shoe. A number of approaches have been developed to achieve this goal; however, all have met with substantial practical difficulties.
It would thus be desirable to provide a method and apparatus for milling such a lateral window in a drill casing that avoids the problems experienced in the earlier attempted approaches.
The concepts disclosed herein achieve a flexible milling assembly that is capable of transmitting sufficient torque and thrust to mill though a steel casing of the type commonly found in oil and gas wells. In this approach, a milling head and flexible shaft comprising a series of yokes joined by universal joint blocks that enable the assembly to flex and rotate, while transmitting substantial thrust and torque to a milling cutter head.
A number of features of this exemplary approach address the challenge of milling casing in a well thousands of feet below the surface.
The milling depth is typically less than one inch, but the milling assembly must be suspended on thousands of feet of steel tubing, which supplies the rotation, thrust and reactive torque. The tubing string stretches under its own weight and expands as it heats so that the location of the milling head relative to the shoe and casing wall is not precisely known. The milling assembly must be lowered into the well at a fast rate but must then come into contact with the casing while moving at a low rate. Accordingly, it is important to provide an apparatus and method for detecting when the milling assembly has entered the curved shoe, so that the operator can slow the feed rate at an appropriate point in the process and initiate milling without damaging the milling cutter head.
The flexible joint assembly must be guided though the shoe with minimal torque, since excessive torque can cause the flexible joint assembly to lock up, stop milling and/or become damaged. In one exemplary embodiment, bearing features on the flexible shaft support the assembly within the shoe passage to maintain alignment of the universal joints, while minimizing friction. The concepts disclosed herein also encompass practical means for assembling the flexible joint assembly so as to provide maximum axial thrust and torsion capacity.
The mill must penetrate a curved surface (i.e., the casing wall) at an angle, and the exemplary embodiment disclosed herein includes a structural arrangement of cutters, and cuttings relief slots that prevent binding while the milling cutter head is initiating the cut and completing the cut. The exemplary embodiments disclosed herein also encompass an arrangement of flexible milling shaft bearings that provide the support needed to initiate and complete the cut, without causing the milling assembly to bind.
The concepts disclosed herein further encompass a method and apparatus for detecting and confirming that the mill has successfully penetrated the casing so that a lateral mill or coring head can be deployed though the casing window.
Another aspect of this of this novel approach is directed to a method for controllably milling an orifice through a well casing in a borehole. The flexible milling assembly is rapidly lowered down the borehole within a guide tube, and the rate of descent of the flexible milling assembly is slowed as it approaches an entry into the curved passage in the shoe. In response to detecting that the flexible milling assembly is advancing into the curved passage, both an increasing rotational drive torque and an increasing thrust is applied to the flexible milling assembly, so that the cutter head on its distal end begins milling the orifice through the well casing.
This Summary has been provided to introduce a few concepts in a simplified form that are further described in detail below in the Description. However, this Summary is not intended to identify key 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.
Various aspects and attendant advantages of one or more exemplary embodiments and modifications thereto will become more readily appreciated as the same becomes better understood by reference to the following detailed description, when taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, wherein:
Exemplary embodiments are illustrated in referenced FIGURES of the drawings. It is intended that the embodiments and FIGURES disclosed herein are to be considered illustrative rather than restrictive. No limitation on the scope of the technology and of the claims that follow is to be imputed to the examples shown in the drawings and discussed herein. Further, it should be understood that any feature of one embodiment disclosed herein can be combined with one or more features of any other embodiment that is disclosed, unless otherwise indicated.
Referring to
Several views of cutter head 4 are shown in
The string of jointed tubing 21 connects to weight bars 22 adjacent to the milling assembly. The weight bars are coupled to drive yoke 1 at the top of flexible milling assembly 23, to apply a rotational torque to the milling assembly that is transmitted through the string of jointed tubing, which thus serves as a drive line. The flexible milling assembly is shown at the completion of milling a window in well casing 29. The entire rotating assembly, including the string of jointed tubing, weight bars, and flexible milling assembly, is deployed into the well casing though a guide tube 26, which is supported on the earth's surface by slips 27 that wedge into a rotary table 28 that is supported by well casing 29. Alternate means of hanging the guide tube are well known in the industry and this example is only illustrative of one exemplary approach. In one exemplary embodiment, production tubing that was removed from the well for the service work is used as a guide tube. The guide tube is connected at its lower end to a packer 25, which is locked into the well casing. In one exemplary embodiment, the packer is a mechanical type that is set by rotating the guide tube and packer and then pulling upwards on the guide tube to set the packer. This type of packer may be released by rotating the assembly in the opposite direction while lowering the guide tube. Alternative packer mechanisms are well known in the industry and could alternatively be used. The packer supports split shoe 24 in which the curved passage diverts the milling assembly to facilitate milling through the well casing.
In one exemplary embodiment, the weight bars are coupled to the flexible milling assembly through a protector assembly, which is illustrated in
Although the concepts disclosed herein have been described in connection with the disclosed form of practicing them in one or more exemplary embodiments and modifications thereto, those of ordinary skill in the art will understand that many other modifications can be made thereto within the scope of the claims that follow. Accordingly, it is not intended that the scope of these concepts in any way be limited by the above description, but instead be determined entirely by reference to the claims that follow.
This application is a continuation of co-pending, commonly owned U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/328,111, filed Dec. 16, 2011, entitled “METHOD AND APPARATUS FOR MILLING A ZERO RADIUS LATERAL WINDOW IN CASING,” which application is based on a prior provisional application, Ser. No. 61/426,345, filed on Dec. 22, 2010, the benefit of the filing date of which is hereby claimed under 35 U.S.C. §119(e), and the entirety of which is herein incorporated by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61426345 | Dec 2010 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 13328111 | Dec 2011 | US |
Child | 14817071 | US |