The invention provides a method for extracting salt from pre-existing, mature brine well caverns which have been deemed unsuitable for further solution mining due to depth and width limitations.
A salt dome is a mass of salt that has intruded upwards into overlying sediments. Where conditions allow, salt domes can rise thousands of feet above the layer of salt from which they began growing, ascending from. depths of between 5 and 6 miles (or more) below the ground surface. In the United States, salt domes are found primarily in the Gulf Coast Embayment. For many years, brine mining, or solution mining, was normally limited to about 6000 feet below ground level because of the abundance of shallow accessible dome salt and hydraulic limitations. Moreover, as the salt is removed during brine mining or solution mining operations, a deposit of insoluble materials and loose sand (“insoluble deposit”) is deposited on the bottom of the cavern floor where salt has been removed.
In one embodiment, the invention provides a method for expanding an existing brine well cavern in a salt dome wherein the brine well is comprised of existing cemented casings into the cavern, a cavern, cavern roof, and an insoluble deposit filling the bottom portion of the salt cavern. The method for expansion is comprised of a drilling operation incorporating the steps of (1) removing existing seal fluids followed by removing existing hanging strings from the mature brine well, (2) determining from past and present sonars the top of, depth of, and volume of the insoluble deposit as it relates to the original total depth of the mature brine well cavern (3) drilling casing continuously through the insoluble deposit into a portion of the salt dome which underlies the mature brine well; (4) providing a rotating drill casing with a drillable drill bit and sufficient length to penetrate the insoluble deposit and penetrate into the salt under the mature brine well cavern; (5) providing the rotating drill casing string with seal packer(s) to be placed in the newly drilled salt; (6) replenishing seal fluid in the mature brine well cavern through drill casing and then setting the packers; (7) passing a standard drill bit on a second drill string through the drill casing to the bottom end of the drill casing; (8) drilling through the drillable drill bit into the lower salt formation; (9) drilling into the salt formation to a pre-determined total depth (“TD”); and (10) mining the salt at the TD to form a lower salt cavern. Additional embodiments are described herein.
For the purpose of illustrating the invention, there is shown in the drawings a form that is presently preferred; it being understood, however, that this invention is not limited to the precise arrangements and instrumentalities shown.
The inventive method has the ability to expand a mature brine well without changing the existing cavern width or spacing between existing caverns. The inventive method assumes that the cavern is hydraulically sound, and that a salt formation below an insoluble deposit in the mature brine well is available for mining.
Determination of the suitability of an existing brine well for the inventive method may be made by any procedure, suitable for determining the relevant factors. Such procedure may be, for example, early sonar examinations of the well. Preferably, the procedure will provide, at a minimum, the depth of and thickness of and volume of the insoluble deposit and the existence of and shape of the early mined salt formation containing the insoluble deposit. Based on such data, the length of drill casing needed to penetrate and completely pass through the insoluble deposit and into the salt formation may be determined. In some embodiments, the drill casing with in line seal packers is completely constructed on the surface prior to drilling.
Without limiting the application of the inventive method, a typical mature brine well cavern suitable for use with the inventive method may have a standard teardrop type shape, a cavern of about 300 feet in diameter with a diesel roof pad. A typical well may have a 30 inch diameter into the surface casing with a 20 inch diameter interior casing cemented within the surface casing to about 3000 feet surface/salt depth depending on the dome and 16 inch borehole drilled to a salt/surface depth of about 6000 feet original TD. Solution mining of such a mature brine well may further result in about 600 feet or more of insoluble deposit, which resides in the bottom of the cavern
Referring to
Referring to
In the inventive method, the outer drill string casing 12, either re-used or new outer drill casing, terminates with a drillable drill bit. 13. Such drillable drill bits 13, also referred to as drilling with casing systems, are known and disclosed, for example, in U.S. Pat. Nos. 7,096,982 and 7,083,005, the disclosures of which are incorporated herein by reference. Any such casing drillable drill bits 13, which may be drilled through using standard drill bits 14, may be used in the inventive method.
In a particular embodiment of the inventive method, the casing 12 with the drillable drill bit 13 attached thereto is used to drill, without interruption, through the insoluble deposit 4 (and insoluble filled sump 6, if present) and into the salt formation 9 underlying the mature brine well 1. In a preferred embodiment, the casing 12 with drillable drill bit 13 drills into at least about 150 feet of the salt formation 9. This operation is referred to as an initial drilling operation.
In some embodiments of the inventive method, the drill string casing 12 is connected to the salt formation 9 using multiple resettable packers 16 mounted in the casing above the drillable drill bit 13. Particularly preferred packers are inflatable packers. The initial drilling operation is finished when the packers 16 are set at which time, the casing is semi-permanent. In some embodiments, diesel seal fluid is injected into the hole prior to placement of the packers.
After setting drill string packers 16, sealing the casing to the salt formation 9, a standard drill string 14, which comprises a standard drill string 14A and a standard drill bit 14B, is assembled and lowered through the drill string casing 12 to be used in a second drilling operation. See
In a specific embodiment, the inventive method produces a new brine well 17 having a bottom maximum diameter of about 300 feet wide (similar to the cavern 2) and a height of about 1500 feet. Such exemplary dimensions would provide sufficient volume from new salt removal to allow displacement of the insoluble deposit from the existing brine well as well as insoluble materials formed during the mining of the new lower salt cavern. The total depth of the new lower salt cavern may range, in some embodiments, from 6000 to 8350 feet. All values and subranges from 6000 to 8350 feet are included and disclosed herein.
Referring to