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The present invention relates to a downhole tool for isolating zones in a wellbore. More particularly, the present invention relates to a millable bridge plug system.
A bridge plug is a downhole tool that is lowered into a wellbore. At a particular distance through the wellbore, the bridge plug is activated. The bridge plug opens and locks to seal the bridge plug to the walls of the wellbore. The bridge plug separates the wellbore into two sides. The upper portion can be cemented and tested, separate from the sealed lower portion of the wellbore. Sometimes the bridge plugs are permanent, and they seal an entire portion of the wellbore. Other times, the bridge plugs must be removed, and still other times, the bridge plugs must be removed and retrieved. These removable bridge plugs are millable or drillable, so that a drill string can grind through the bridge plug, making remnants of the destroyed bridge plug to remain at the bottom of a wellbore or to be retrieved to the surface by drilling mud flow.
Bridge plugs generally include a mandrel, a sealing member placed around the mandrel, ring members adjacent the end of the sealing member and around the mandrel, upper and lower slip devices at opposite ends of the mandrel, and respective upper and lower cone assemblies engaged to the upper and lower slip devices.
A problem of the conventional bridge plug is the stabilization of the bridge plug during removal. A removal assembly, such as a drill string or other wireline device, has a drill element to drill through a millable bridge plug, the bridge plug must be able to resist rotation of the drill element itself. Otherwise, a partially milled bridge plug could become lodged on the tip of the drill element of the removal assembly. These remnants of the bridge plug would be rotating along with the drill element of the removal assembly, so that these last remnants could avoid being destroyed and possibly hinder further action of the drill element on bridge plugs further down the wellbore. The structures of the bridge plug are not milled for removal under the same conditions. The upper slip device is milled, then the upper cone assembly, and then the sealing member, etc., as the drill element travels downward through the wellbore. Once the upper slip device is milled, the remaining elements are the remnants holding the bridge plug in place. Once the upper slip device and the upper cone assembly are milled, there are fewer remnants holding the bridge plug in place. As elements are removed, fewer and fewer elements resist the rotation of the drilling element. There is a need to improve the bridge plug to resist the rotation of the drill element, even as the number of remnants decreases.
Conventional materials of the millable bridge plug, like all downhole tools, must withstand the range of wellbore conditions, including high temperatures and/or high pressures. High temperatures are generally defined as downhole temperatures generally in the range of 200-450 degrees F.; and high pressures are generally defined as downhole pressures in the range of 7,500-15,000 psi. Other conditions include pH environments, generally ranging from less than 6.0 or more than 8.0. Conventional sealing elements have evolved to withstand these wellbore conditions so as to maintain effective seals and resist degradation.
Metallic components have the durability to withstand the wellbore conditions, including high temperatures and high pressures. However, these metallic components are difficult to remove. De-activating and retrieving the bridge plug to the surface is costly and complicated. Milling metallic components takes time, and there is a substantial risk of requiring multiple drilling elements due to the metallic components wearing or damaging a drilling element of a removal assembly.
Non-metallic components are substituted for metallic components as often as possible to avoid having so much metal to be milled for removal of the bridge plug. However, these non-metallic components still must effectively seal an annulus at high temperatures and high pressures. Composite materials are known to be used to make non-metallic components of the bridge plug. These composite materials combine constituent materials to form a composite material with physical properties of each composite material. For example, a polymer or epoxy can be reinforced by a continuous fiber such as glass, carbon, or aramid. The polymer is easily millable and withstands the wellbore conditions, while the fibers also withstand the wellbore conditions and resist degradation. Resin-coated glass is another known composite material with downhole tool applications. Composite materials have different constituent materials and different ways of combining constituent materials.
It is an object of the present invention to provide an embodiment of the millable bridge plug system.
It is another object of the present invention to provide an embodiment of the millable bridge plug system with improved slip devices and cap ends.
It is another object of the present invention to provide an embodiment of the millable bridge plug system with improved slip devices to resist rotation of a drilling element of a removal assembly.
It is still another object of the present invention to provide an embodiment of the millable bridge plug system with slip devices having attachments to respective end caps to resist rotation.
It is yet another object of the present invention to provide an embodiment of the millable bridge plug system with slip devices engaged to respective end caps to resist rotation, when the bridge plug system is milled for removal.
These and other objectives and advantages of the present invention will become apparent from a reading of the attached specifications and appended claims.
Embodiments of the present invention include a millable bridge plug system with a mandrel, an upper cap end, a sealing means positioned around the mandrel, a plurality of ring members, a plurality of cone assemblies, a plurality of slip devices, and a lower cap end. The elements are mounted on the mandrel. The sealing means has an upper end and a lower end in the middle of the system. A first ring member is placed adjacent the upper end of the sealing means, and a second ring member is adjacent the lower end of the sealing means. A first cone assembly is proximate to the first ring member, and a second cone assembly is proximate to the second ring member. The slip means extend radially outward and engage an inner surface of a surrounding borehole to lock the position of the bridge plug. The upper cap end attaches to the mandrel and the first slip means, and the lower cap end attaches to the mandrel and the second slip means. The cap ends resist rotation of a removal assembly during a milling operation.
Both the upper cap end and the lower cap end connect to the mandrel and respective slip means. The embodiments of the present invention relate to the lower cap end attached to the second slip means because the upper cap end and the first slip means are milled before other parts of the bridge plug system. Thus, these milled structures do not resist rotation of the system, even though they could in the beginning of the milling. As a practical matter, the lower cap end is a focus of the present application.
Embodiments of the attachment of the lower cap end and the second slip means include the lower cap end being comprised of a male connector means, and the second slip means being comprised of a female connector means. The male-female connection is oriented so that the connectors face each other, when assembled. The male-female connection is a removable engagement, such that the lower cap end and the second slip means can be attached and removed, during assembly. The type of removable engagement includes slide-fit engagement, groove-fit engagement, friction-fit engagement, and snap-fit engagement. The male connector means should have a shape complementary to a shape of the female connector means. The male-female connection also includes structures to prevent lateral movement between the lower cap end and the second slip means.
Alternate embodiments include the male connector means as removable from the lower cap end. The protruding male connector can be mounted in the lower cap end as a separate piece or peg. In versions with more than one connector, the connectors are distributed along the perimeters of the lower cap end and the second slip means. These connectors can also be evenly distributed along the perimeter.
The method of milling the bridge plug system, according to embodiments of the present invention, include forming a bridge plug with the lower cap end attached to the mandrel and the second slip device, installing the bridge plug in a wellbore, and drilling with a removal assembly. The removal assembly mills the upper cap end, upper portion of the mandrel, the first slip device, the ring members, the sealing member, and the cone assemblies, while the second slip device, lower cap end, and lower portion of the mandrel hold position. The anchoring of the second slip device before milling stabilizes the system, while the system is being dismantled.
Referring to
The mandrel 112 of the system 100 is a generally tubular member formed of a material to withstand the heat and pressure of the borehole conditions. The mandrel 112 is also millable. The mandrel 112 may have a bridge 134, which seals the zone above the system 100 from the zone below the system 100. The sealing means 114 is positioned around the mandrel 112. The sealing means 114 has an upper end 136 and lower end 138 as shown in
The system 100 also includes the plurality of cone assemblies, 120, 122.
Embodiments of the second slip means 126 and lower cap end 130 are shown in
The male-female connection can be a removable engagement, such that the lower cap end 130 and the second slip means 126 are separable and attachable, during assembly. Embodiments of the present invention include the removable engagement as slide-fit engagement, groove-fit engagement, friction-fit engagement, or snap-fit engagement.
The present invention also includes a male connector means 164 with any shape complementary to a shape of the female connector means 158.
Other embodiments, including the embodiment shown in
One embodiment shown in
An alternate embodiment is a removable male connector means 164. The male connector means 164 can be attached and removed from the contact surface 162 of the lower cap end 130. The protruding male connector means 164 can be a separate piece or peg. In this embodiment, the shape remains complementary to the female connector means 158. A head-post, T-shape, trapezoidal, or locking shoulders are embodiments of the removable male connector means 164. The removable male connector means 164 can be an advantage in assembly of the system 100, while preserving the relative locked rotational and lateral movement. Even as a separate element, the male connector means 164 is made integral with the lower cap end 130 through mechanical engagement, which is removable. The mechanical engagement of the male connector means 164 to lower cap end includes slide-fit engagement, groove-fit engagement, friction-fit engagement, and snap-fit engagement. The male connector means 164 may be fit into the female connector means 158 of the second slip means 126 and a slot or groove or cavity on the lower cap end 130.
In embodiments with more than one connector, the male and female connector means 158, 164 are distributed along the perimeters of the lower cap end 130 and the second slip means 126.
In the alternate embodiment of
Embodiments of the present invention include the method of milling a bridge plug system 100. The bridge plug system is formed by assembling the upper cap end 128 onto the upper portion of the mandrel 112 and inserting the mandrel 112 through the first slip device 124, the first cone assembly 120, the first ring member 116, the seaing member 114, the second ring member 118, the second cone assembly 122, the second slip means 126, and the lower cap end 130. The elements are stacked along the mandrel 112. The lower cap end 130 is attached to both the second slip means 126 and the mandrel 112. The attachment between the lower cap end 130 and the second slip means 126 is more than the stacking arrangement. Then, the bridge plug system 100 is installed by placing the bridge plug system 100 in a wellbore, forming the seal on the wellbore, and locking the system 100 in position within the wellbore.
In some embodiments, the system 100 is lowered into the wellbore having inner walls, such as a casing, using a setting tool on a positioning assembly. The mandrel is held in place as the stack structures 114, 116, 118, 120, 122, 124, and 126 are hammered by a ram portion of the setting tool. Pressure on the bridge plug system 110 forms a seal, when the sealing means 114 is compressed to radially extend outward to seal against the inner walls of the borehole. The ring members 116, 118 push the sealing means 114 to expand, and the cone assemblies 120, 122 push the ring members 116, 118. The cone assemblies 120, 122 also push the slip means 124, 126 to extend radially outward to fixedly engage the inner walls, locking the system 100 in position within the wellbore. At least one slip means 124, 126 is activated, so that stack structures are locked in the sealed position. The exerted pressure through the system 100 is controlled by the first means 140 and second means 142 on the sealing means 114, and sometimes in conjunction with the first ring means 144 and the second ring means 146 on the ring members 116, 118.
The method of milling the bridge plug system further includes drilling with a removal assembly through the bridge plug 100. When the bridge plug 100 has served its purpose and requires removal, a drill on the removal assembly mills through the stacked elements in order from top to bottom, including the upper cap, the upper portion of the mandrel, the sealing member, the ring members, the cone assemblies, and the first slip device. In the present invention, the second slip device, the lower cap end, and the lower portion of the mandrel are held in position without rotation or lateral movement relative to each other. The removal assembly can more easily drill through the remnants of the bridge plug, when the remnants are prevented from rotating by the second slip means 126. The improved milling happens until the second slip means 126 is milled itself.
Embodiments of the method include the step of forming the bridge plug system 100 by attaching the lower cap end 130 to the second slip means 126 with a male-female connection. The lower cap end 130 is comprised of a male connector, and the second slip device 126 is comprised of a female connector. The step of forming is further comprised of attaching the female connector and the male connector in at least one engagement of a group consisting of: slide-fit engagement, groove-fit engagement, friction-fit engagement, and snap-fit engagement. In embodiments of the invention, the shapes of the male and female connectors are complementary, and some embodiments have the male connector as removable from the lower cap end 130. The step of forming may also include forming the male connector on the lower cap end 130 by slide-fit engagement, groove-fit engagement, friction-fit engagement, or snap-fit engagement of the male connector to the lower cap end 130.
The present invention provides an embodiment of a millable bridge plug system. The slip devices and cap ends are innovative with unique attachment elements to provide functionality beyond the prior art. The problem of milling remnants of a bridge plug has not been addressed by prior art systems. The embodiments of the present invention are an inventive solution for stabilizing remnants during this removal of the bridge plug by milling. The slip devices are in an anchored position when installed. The blades have engaged the borehole walls for fixed placement of the bridge plug. The stability of the installation of the bridge plug can be utilized, during milling of the bridge plug, when the structures of the present invention are incorporated into slip devices and cap ends. The resistance to rotational and lateral movement of an installed bridge plug becomes resistance to rotational and lateral movement of a partially destroyed bridge plug, during a milling operation to remove the bridge plug. The structures of the slip devices and cap ends of the present invention enable the resistance of the blades engaged in the borehole wall to be used throughout all of the stacked elements of the bridge plug, even as each element is being milled. The present invention prevents loose remnants from spinning on the drilling element of the removal assembly without being milled. These loose remnants can cause damage and hinder the removal assembly, when milling bridge plugs further down the wellbore. The present invention provides a cleaner and more complete milling operation of installed bridge plugs.
The foregoing disclosure and description of the invention is illustrative and explanatory thereof. Various changes in the details of the illustrated structures, construction and method can be made without departing from the true spirit of the invention.