Many conventional sources of oil and gas production are on the decline. As a result, it has become more difficult and expensive to extract these reserves. To meet expected demand, the industry has increasingly focused on unconventional sources as it has become more technically and economically feasible to do so. According to the International Energy Agency, at least 10% of the remaining recoverable conventional oil and gas reserves lie below the seafloor in deep water. In offshore drilling operations, a drilling rig is typically used to drill a wellbore to recover oil or gas reserves disposed below the seafloor. The offshore facilities may include bottom founded, floating, or mobile drilling rigs and production platforms. In ultra-deepwater operations, drilling and production is conducted in water depths between 5,000 and 10,000 feet or more. Conventionally, offshore operations drill wellbores having a measured depth in excess of 10,000 feet.
The Lower Tertiary is an informal designation for a layer of the Earth's crust deposited during the Paleogene period, between 65 and 23 million years ago. The Gulf of Mexico's Lower Tertiary is considered one of the largest ultra-deepwater oil and gas reserves. According to recent estimates, the Gulf of Mexico's Lower Tertiary is believed to contain between 10 and 40 billion barrels of oil equivalent (“BBOE”). This is significant given that the total estimate of U.S. oil and gas reserves is currently estimated to be approximately 30 BBOE. However, extracting oil and gas from the Lower Tertiary presents a number of technical and economic challenges. To access these reserves, ultra-deepwater drilling operations must deal with water depths up to 10,000 feet or more and drill a further 15,000 to 30,000 feet or more below the seafloor, often under thick sheets of salt, to reach Lower Tertiary reserves. At depth, the downhole temperature may exceed 400° F. and formation pressure may exceed 25,000 pounds per square inch (“PSI”) further complicating production activities, including chemical injection.
According to one aspect of one or more embodiments of the present invention, a chemical injector for injecting chemicals into a Lower Tertiary well includes a housing and a chemical injection port. The housing includes a first threaded opening that extends into a portion of a first cavity, a second threaded opening that extends into a portion of a second cavity, a control port that fluidly connects the first cavity to the second cavity, and a communication port that fluidly connects the second cavity to a chemical outlet port. The chemical injection port includes an inlet end configured to receive fluid flow and an outlet end that directs the fluid flow to the control port. The chemical injection port is inserted into the first threaded opening. A bottom plug is inserted into the second threaded opening. A bellows having a first distal end connected to the bottom plug and a second distal end connected to a dart configured to controllably open and close the communication port. An application of a predetermined amount of fluid pressure to the chemical injection port compresses the bellows and withdraws the dart from the communication port, allowing fluid flow to the chemical outlet port.
According to one aspect of one or more embodiments of the present invention, a chemical injection mandrel for injecting chemicals into a Lower Tertiary well includes a mandrel and a chemical injector disposed on an exterior surface of the mandrel. The mandrel includes a hollow interior passageway and a mandrel injection port. The chemical injector includes a housing. The housing includes a first threaded opening that extends into a portion of a first cavity, a second threaded opening that extends into a portion of a second cavity, a control port that fluidly connects the first cavity to the second cavity, and a communication port that fluidly connects the second cavity to a chemical outlet port. The chemical injector includes a chemical injection port having an inlet end configured to receive fluid flow and an outlet end that directs the fluid flow to the control port. The chemical injection port is inserted into the first threaded opening. The chemical injector includes a bottom plug inserted into the second threaded opening and a bellows having a first distal end connected to the bottom plug and a second distal end connected to a dart configured to controllably open and close the communication port. Application of a predetermined amount of fluid pressure to the chemical injection port compresses the bellows and withdraws the dart from the communication port, allowing fluid flow to the chemical outlet port and into the hollow interior passageway of the mandrel via the mandrel injection port.
According to one aspect of one or more embodiments of the present invention, a subsea system for injecting chemicals into a Lower Tertiary well includes a fluid system disposed on a floating production storage and offloading unit, production tubing disposed in a wellbore, a chemical injection mandrel disposed on a distal or near-distal end of the production tubing, and a chemical injection line disposed in an annulus between the production tubing and the wellbore that fluidly connects the fluid system and a chemical injector of the chemical injection mandrel. The chemical injection mandrel includes a mandrel having a hollow interior passageway and a mandrel injection port. The chemical injector is disposed on an exterior surface of the mandrel. The chemical injector includes a housing. The housing includes a first threaded opening that extends into a portion of a first cavity, a second threaded opening that extends into a portion of a second cavity, a control port that fluidly connects the first cavity to the second cavity, and a communication port that fluidly connects the second cavity to a chemical outlet port. The chemical injector includes a chemical injection port having an inlet end configured to receive fluid flow from the chemical injection line and an outlet end that directs the fluid flow to the control port. The chemical injection port is inserted into the first threaded opening. The chemical injector includes a bottom plug inserted into the second threaded opening, and a bellows having a first distal end connected to the bottom plug and a second distal end connected to a dart configured to controllably open and close the communication port. An application of a predetermined amount of fluid pressure to the chemical injection port compresses the bellows and withdraws the dart from the communication port, allowing fluid flow to the chemical outlet port and into the hollow interior passageway of the mandrel via the mandrel injection port.
According to one aspect of one or more embodiments of the present invention, a method of injecting chemicals into a Lower Tertiary well includes connecting a chemical injection line between a fluid system and a chemical injector of a chemical injection mandrel, attaching the chemical injection mandrel to a distal or near-distal end of production tubing, disposing the production tubing into a wellbore, wherein the chemical injection line is disposed in an annulus between the production tubing and the wellbore, and applying fluid pressure in the chemical injection line to enable fluid flow through the chemical injector of the chemical injection mandrel and into a hollow interior passageway of a mandrel of the chemical injection mandrel.
According to one aspect of one or more embodiments of the present invention, a chemical injection mandrel for injecting chemicals through an annularly disposed control line includes a housing attached to production tubing and a chemical injector disposed in the housing. The chemical injector includes a seat, a dart, biasing means, and a porting system. The biasing means biases the dart on seat. The porting system uses hydrostatic pressure in the control line to assist keeping the dart on seat. The porting system directs fluid from the control line to unseat the dart when fluid is to be provided downhole.
Other aspects of the present invention will be apparent from the following description and claims.
One or more embodiments of the present invention are described in detail with reference to the accompanying figures. For consistency, like elements in the various figures are denoted by like reference numerals. In the following detailed description of the present invention, specific details are set forth in order to provide a thorough understanding of the present invention. In other instances, well-known features to one of ordinary skill in the art are not described to avoid obscuring the description of the present invention.
During production operations, chemicals are injected downhole to optimize production flow and minimize the need for expensive interventions. Conventional chemical injection systems are used to inject various chemicals including, for example, corrosion and scale inhibitors, surfactants, asphaltines, hydrates, emulsions, demulsifiers, scavengers, paraffins, weighting agents, and other chemicals. In various operations, expensive chemicals are continuously provided downhole. When the hydrostatic pressure of the wellbore is balanced by the formation pressure, chemicals can be injected at a fairly uniform rate controlled by the chemical injection pump. However, over time, when the formation pressure drops as a result of production, the pressure imbalance causes the formation to syphon chemicals at a substantially higher rate than desired, potentially up to ten times the normal amount, at substantial expense.
In land-based wells, conventional chemical injection systems use a chemical injection pump to inject chemicals downhole via a chemical injection mandrel disposed within the production tubing. Certain conventional chemical injection mandrels reduce chemical flow when the hydrostatic pressure falls to prevent the syphoning of chemicals downhole. These conventional chemical injection mandrels are disposed within the production tubing and at substantially shallower depths. However, they are not suitable for use in ultra-deepwater wells drilled in the Lower Tertiary. Because of the downhole temperature, the downhole pressure, and the hydrostatic head, conventional chemical injection systems are sensitive to production tubing pressure and cannot operate in the harsh conditions where the temperature may exceed 400° F. and pressures may exceed 25,000 PSI. To date, there is no known chemical injection system for effectively injecting chemicals bottomhole in the Lower Tertiary. As such, there is a long felt and unsolved need in the industry for a chemical injection method, apparatus, and system for wells drilled in the Lower Tertiary.
Accordingly, in one or more embodiments of the present invention, a method, apparatus, and system for injecting chemicals into a Lower Tertiary well allows for the efficient and controlled delivery of chemicals downhole in a manner that is production tubing pressure insensitive. A chemical injection mandrel includes a chemical injector disposed on an exterior surface of a mandrel. The chemical injection mandrel connects to the production tubing, such that the chemical injector portion of the chemical injection mandrel is disposed in the annulus between the production tubing and the wellbore. A floating production storage and offloading (“FPSO”) unit on the surface of the water may include a chemical injection pump that injects chemicals downhole via a chemical fluid line that runs in the annulus between the production tubing and the wellbore. The chemical fluid line connects to the chemical injector portion of the chemical injection mandrel and delivers chemicals to the interior passageway of mandrel of the chemical injection mandrel where the chemicals mix with the production flow directed to the surface. Advantageously, the method, apparatus, and system for injecting chemicals into a Lower Tertiary well allow for the efficient and controlled delivery of expensive chemicals downhole in a manner that is pressure insensitive.
A chemical injection mandrel 200 may be disposed on a distal or near-distal end of production tubing 126 downhole. The chemical injection line 112 may fluidly connect a fluid system (not shown) disposed on the FPSO 102 on the surface of the water 104 to the chemical injection mandrel 200, the connection being made in the annulus 130 (see, for example,
In one or more embodiments of the present invention, the chemical injection mandrel 200 allows for the efficient and controlled delivery of chemicals 154 downhole in a manner that is pressure insensitive. In certain embodiments, the hydrostatic head 142 acts through a porting system comprised of one or more control ports (408 of
Continuing,
Continuing,
In one or more embodiments of the present invention, a method of injecting chemicals into a Lower Tertiary well may include connecting a chemical injection line between a fluid system and a chemical injector of a chemical injection mandrel. The chemical injection mandrel may be attached to a distal end of production tubing. The production tubing may be disposed in a wellbore. The chemical injection line may be disposed in the annulus between the production tubing and the wellbore. Fluid pressure may be applied to the chemical injection line to enable chemical fluid flow through the chemical injector of the chemical injection mandrel and into a hollow interior passageway of a mandrel of the chemical injection mandrel. Specifically, the application of fluid pressure in the chemical injection line may direct chemical fluid flow into an inlet end of a chemical injection port of the chemical injector of the chemical injection mandrel. Chemical fluid flow into the inlet end of the chemical injection port may direct chemical fluid flow from a first cavity of the chemical injector into a second cavity of the chemical injector by way of one or more control ports that fluidly connect the first cavity to the second cavity. Upon application of a predetermined amount of fluid pressure, fluid flow into the second cavity may cause a bellows of the chemical injector to compress and withdraws a dart from a communication port of the chemical injector, allowing chemical fluid flow from the second cavity into the communication port. Chemical fluid flow from the communication port may be directed to a chemical outlet port of the chemical injector and into a hollow interior passageway of the mandrel via a mandrel injection port. The chemical fluid flow into the mandrel injection port of the mandrel allows for chemical fluid flow to be mixed with production flow provided by formation fluids in the hollow interior passageway of the mandrel. The mixture of production flow and chemical fluid flow are directed up the production tubing towards the surface via a production flow line that returns fluids to the FPSO on the surface of the water.
Advantages of one or more embodiments of the present invention may include one or more of the following:
In one or more embodiments of the present invention, a method, apparatus, and system for injecting chemicals into a Lower Tertiary well allows for the efficient and controlled injection of chemicals into Lower Tertiary wells in a manner that is tubing pressure insensitive.
In one or more embodiments of the present invention, a method, apparatus, and system for injecting chemicals into a Lower Tertiary well allows the fluid flow rate of chemical injection to be controlled from the surface in a manner that is production tubing pressure insensitive. If the formation pressure falls and the formation syphons fluids, the fluid flow rate through the chemical injector is substantially unchanged. Advantageously, this prevents the formation from drinking large amounts of expensive chemicals and saves the attendant expense.
In one or more embodiments of the present invention, a method, apparatus, and system for injecting chemicals into a Lower Tertiary well uses a chemical injector disposed in the annulus between the production tubing and the wellbore. The chemical injection line that connects the fluids system disposed on the FPSO to the chemical injector disposed downhole is also disposed in the annulus. As such, the fluids system disposed on the surface may control the rate of chemical fluid flow by application of fluid pressure within the chemical injection line in a manner that is tubing pressure insensitive.
In one or more embodiments of the present invention, a method, apparatus, and system for injecting chemicals into a Lower Tertiary well uses a chemical injector that is normally closed and only opens when a predetermined amount of fluid pressure is provided from the surface. As such, the effect of downhole pressure is substantially reduced or eliminated, thereby preventing chemicals from inadvertently flowing into the formation when downhole pressures suddenly decrease. Advantageously, the fluid flow rate of chemicals can be controlled from the surface by application of fluid pressure.
In one or more embodiments of the present invention, a method, apparatus, and system for injecting chemicals into a Lower Tertiary well uses a chemical injector having a hemispherical interface between the communication port and the chemical outlet port.
In one or more embodiments of the present invention, a method, apparatus, and system for injecting chemicals into a Lower Tertiary well uses a chemical injector having a bellows that functions at extremely high temperatures and pressures.
While the present invention has been described with respect to the above-noted embodiments, those skilled in the art, having the benefit of this disclosure, will recognize that other embodiments may be devised that are within the scope of the invention as disclosed herein. Accordingly, the scope of the invention should be limited only by the appended claims.
This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 15/815,873, filed on Nov. 17, 2017, which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 15815873 | Nov 2017 | US |
Child | 16155559 | US |