The field of this invention relates to downhole completion techniques involving insertion of liners or tubulars and tying them to existing tubulars without reduction of internal well dimension, generally using the technique of expansion.
Frequently, during drilling beyond a cased and cemented portion of a wellbore, the fluid losses become unacceptable. This forces the drilling operation to be suspended, as the exposed zone where the fluid loss is happening is isolated. One way to do this is to lower a liner with or without a liner hanger so that there is some overlap with existing casing and expand the liner or hanger into the existing well casing. The downside of this procedure is that the well diameter is now reduced by the wall thickness of the liner, despite the expansion of the liner or its hanger.
Situations requiring liners or the like can also occur when, during drilling, a very unconsolidated formation needs to be traversed to get to the producing zone.
The present invention addresses these and other situations by allowing placement of tubulars in a wellbore to be secured to existing casing or tubulars in the wellbore, without a decrease in the inside diameter in the wellbore due to the newly added tubular. Various versions of a shoe that connects to the casing or tubular in the wellbore, allows the newly inserted tubular to be engaged, generally by expansion, in an area of increased diameter so that when fully supported in the shoe, the wall thickness of the newly added tubular is in a recess and the internal well dimension is not reduced. These and other features of the present invention will be apparent to those skilled in the art from a review of the various embodiments described below in the detailed description and from the claims presented.
A method of attaching a tubular to an existing tubular in a well without reducing the inside diameter of the well is described. A shoe is attached to the lower end of the existing lowermost casing or tubular, generally prior to the casing being cemented or otherwise secured in the wellbore. The shoe has a diameter larger than the inside diameter of the casing or tubular to which it is attached. Subsequently, a liner is run in until its top end is in the enlarged diameter region of the shoe. A hanger can be optionally used. The liner is expanded into the enlarged diameter so that the net result is that the inside diameter in the wellbore is not reduced by the addition of the liner.
a-1c the method with a shoe having an enlarged inside diameter;
a-c illustrate the method with an expandable shoe;
a-3c illustrate the method with a pre-crushed shoe;
a-4b illustrate the method with a special profile shoe;
a-5b illustrate the method with a memory metal shoe;
a-6b illustrate the method with a soft material filled shoe;
a-7b illustrate the method with a covered recess shoe; and
a-8b illustrate the method with a machined shoe.
In this application reference to “casing” is intended to encompass all manner of tubulars found in a wellbore, whether cemented or otherwise secured. In
a-2c show a shoe 19 on casing 10 where the internal diameter 21 of shoe 19 is nearly the same as the diameter 12. A known expansion device 23 can create a diameter 25 larger than diameter 21. Thereafter, the tubular 22 can be expanded or otherwise attached to diameter 25. The tubular 22 can also be delivered prior to expansion of diameter 21 so that the shoe 19 and the tubular 22 are both expanded together in a single step, as opposed to the two steps required in the illustrations of
a-3c illustrate a crushed shoe 28 that has a reduced end diameter to facilitate running in the casing 10. Once the casing 10 is in position, an expansion tool 30 reforms the shoe 28 so that it has the enlarged diameter 18. Thereafter, the tubular 22 can be expanded into recess 24 without intruding into the diameter 12 of the casing 10. Again, seals and/or hangers can be used on tubular 22 and expanded or otherwise set into enlarged diameter 18.
a-4b show a shoe 32 with a series of projections 34 and alternating valleys 35. This can be a thread pattern or some other kind of pattern or a random distribution of peaks and valleys.
a-5b illustrate a shoe 42 made from a well-known memory material. A memory material responds to electrical, acoustical or thermal inputs from a tool 44 to change shape to create the enlarged diameter zone 46. Thereafter, the tubular 22 can be expanded into zone 46 to secure it without reducing the diameter 12 above. As with the other embodiments previously described, seals and/or a hanger can be used in conjunction with an expansion technique with a swage or some other method of mechanical fixation can be used if the end result is that the diameter 12 is at least as large as the internal diameter of the tubular 22 after it becomes supported. The shape change and the fixation of tubular 22 can also occur in a single trip.
a-6b illustrate a shoe 48 with a recess 50 so that it has a larger diameter 52 than diameter 12. The recess 50 is initially filled with a soft material 54 that is compatible with well pressures, temperatures and fluids. It could be aluminum, lead, a composite, foam, plastic or any other material that will be easily displaced during drilling, expansion or fixation of the tubular 22. The material 54 protects the large diameter 52 until the tubular 22 is in position and is expanded, as shown in
a-7b illustrate a shoe 58 with a sleeve 60 in a recess 62. After the shoe 58 is properly positioned downhole the sleeve 60 can be removed by a variety of techniques. It can be physically displaced, chemically dissolved or attacked, thermally attacked or any other technique that will get it out of the way to expose the larger diameter 64 that is defined by recess 62. The tubular 22 can be fixed such as by expansion, in larger diameter 64 with the result as described before that there is little if any reduction in the internal diameter 12 going further downhole. The tubular 22 can remove the sleeve 60 as it is lowered into position.
Finally
Those skilled in the art will appreciate that the various illustrated embodiments of the method of the present invention allow the attachment of a tubular to casing where after the conclusion of the attachment, the diameter of the tubular is close to the internal diameter of the casing above and even greater. Contrasted to prior techniques that overlapped the tubular with the casing and resulted in a decrease in internal diameter in the order of the thickness of the wall of the tubular, the present invention gives a simple way to overcome this problem and allow for minimal or no reduction in internal diameter and even an increase in the internal diameter. Currently the technique in
The foregoing disclosure and description of the invention are illustrative and explanatory thereof, and various changes in the size, shape and materials, as well as in the details of the illustrated construction, may be made without departing from the spirit of the invention.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/384,804 on May 31, 2002.
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Number | Date | Country |
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WO 0104520 | Jan 2001 | WO |
WO 0229199 | Apr 2002 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20030221841 A1 | Dec 2003 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60384804 | May 2002 | US |