This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 62719808 filed on Aug. 20, 2018, the entire contents of which is incorporated herein by reference thereto.
The present invention relates to method and apparatus for sealing selected regions in open hole gravel packs in oil and gas wells.
Open hole completions and in particular Open Hole Gravel Packs (OHGP) may provide an effective way of oil or gas production from several different production zones. OHGPs comprise sand-screens within the annulus between the sand-screen and an open hole packed with the proppant/sand which allows flow of the oil or gas both through the annulus and sand-screen. However, over time, the production quality of particular zones diminishes due to a reduction in the percentage of desirable product and may result in overflow of water.
In such cases the remedial action needs to be taken to isolate a particular zone, so the wellbore can produce from the rest of the zones. Currently employed systems for isolation of particular zones utilize Low Melting Temperature (LMT) alloys such as eutectic/bismuth-based alloys mounted on the exterior wall of a tubular and a heat source inserted inside the tubular. Once in desired position in the well a heat source is used to melt the alloy, which flows some distance before it cools and solidifies. However, the melted alloy may flow in the annulus between the tubular and the sand-screen and solidify in “lumps” without penetration and sealing the proppant sand between the sand-screen and open hole. The use of expandable tubular to reduce the clearance between the MLT alloy and the sand-screen may break the MLT alloy which may fall off the tubular in the wellbore before it heated and may not produce an anchoring force for the tubular or a seal. Thus, what is needed and provided by the present disclosure is a reliable system for zonal isolation of selective regions of open hole gravel pack and a simple reliable tool setting system capable of reliably anchoring the isolation patch and focusing flow of LMT alloy through the sand-screen and proppant sand to provide an isolating seal.
The present invention provides a method and apparatus for sealing selective regions in Open Hole Gravel Packs (OHGP) that may be deployable and operational on a wireline. The apparatus comprises a system of a sealing patch, an expansion tool and a heater. The sealing patch comprises tubulars with two anchor/seals, and two low melting temperature alloy elements positioned around outer surface of the tubulars above the anchor/seals. The expansion tool may include two expansion devises and a thruster capable of providing a force necessary for expansion of the anchor/seals in interference contact with the sand-screen. The heater may be a chemical or an electrical source heater provided that it generates temperatures above the melting temperature of the low melting temperature alloy. The low melting temperature (LMT) alloy is defined as having a melting point of 385° C. or below, for example a eutectic/bismuth alloy.
The method for sealing a region of OHGP includes the following steps: a) deploying of the sealing patch comprising tubulars with two anchor/seals and two LMT alloy elements and the expansion tool in the desired location in the well; b) operating the expansion tool to radially expand the anchor/seals in interference contact with the sand-screen; c) heating the LMT elements so that they melt and flow through the sand-screen and proppant sand in radial direction; and allowing LMT alloys to cool and form the seals.
The anchor/seals serve two purposes. First, they provide a hanging capacity to support the tubulars in the well. Second, they provide a “bridge” preventing the molten alloy from freely flowing through the annulus between the tubulars and sand screen which leads to the creation of multiple drips/lumps of alloy on the screen rather than a complete seal. Thus, the anchor/seals by preventing free flow along the screen and focusing the molten alloy at the anchor/seals allow the molten alloy to penetrate through the sand-screen and the surrounding proppant creating a complete seal.
Also, it is appreciated that the use of the tubular patch with two seals provides zonal isolation of an interval of any desirable length which can be matched by the length of the tubular between the seals.
These drawings illustrate certain aspects of some examples of the present disclosure, and should not be used to limit or define the disclosure.
The expansion devises are connected by the shaft 22 and by the shaft 24 to the thruster. Preferably, the swages are positioned such that after expansion of the first anchor/seal 13 by swage 21 the expansion device 23 engages the second anchor/seal 12 and then expands it. This results in sequential expansion of the anchor/seals reducing necessary expansion force and minimizing the length of thruster stroke, which allows setting the patch in one stroke without resetting the thruster. This allows deployment and setting patch in the well-bore using a wireline with a pressure pump (e.g. an electric pump). Tubular 11 is not expanded by the expansion devices 21, 23 above and below the anchor/seals 12, 13.
In operation, the system 20 for sealing a region of OHGP may be deployed in the well-bore comprising the bore-hole formation 41, the sand screen 43 and the proppant/sand 42 between formation 41 and sand-screen 43, see
It will be appreciated that the tubulars 9, 11, may be of any necessary length to suit the spacing of the producing and non-producing zones. It is also envisaged that the sand-screen patch may have one, two or more anchor/seals and LMT alloy components. It is also envisaged that the tubular 11 may be an expandable tubular, being expanded while setting anchor/sealing elements. The term “anchor/seal” as used herein may refer to a sealing device, an anchoring device, or to a combination of a sealing and anchoring device.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20200056444 A1 | Feb 2020 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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62719808 | Aug 2018 | US |