1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates generally to the field of oilfield isolation elements. Specifically, the invention relates to degradable isolation elements.
2. Background Art
It is common to use isolation elements, such as plugs or darts, to temporarily block fluid flow in tubular equipment. The tubular equipment may include oilfield tubular equipment, and tubular equipment used in geothermal wells, injection wells, and carbon dioxide sequestration wells. Isolation elements are used so that fluid pressure and flow may be applied to a specific portion of a well, without damaging or effecting downstream equipment.
In one example, it may be desirable to perform an operation on the upper zone 11, such as a gravel pack or a hydraulic fracture, without effecting the lower zone 12. The zones 11, 12 are isolated by the packers 6, 8, 10, which prevent fluid communication in the annulus outside the tubular string 2. Before the operation may begin, however, fluid communication between the two zones 11, 12 within the tubular string 2 must be prevented.
To accomplish this, a dart or plug, known in the art, may be dropped, lowered on a tool, or otherwise released into the tubular string 2 so that is seats in the seat 15. Once the dart is seated in the seat 15, fluid flow and pressure may be applied above the seat 15, and the dart will prevent fluid communication below the seat 15. A fracture or gravel pack operation may be performed on the upper zone 11, without effecting the lower zone 12 or the equipment below the seat 15.
Once the operation is performed, the dart (not shown) must be removed so that fluid communication within the tubular string 2 is reestablished.
In one aspect, the invention relates to an isolation element that includes a body having at least one sealing surface, an internal cavity within the body, and a chemical agent disposed within the internal cavity. The chemical agent may be configured to substantially increase a rate of degradation of the body.
In another aspect, the invention relates to a method of actuating a downhole tool in a well that includes positioning a tool in a wellbore using a tubing string, introducing a isolation element into the tubing string, as the isolation element descends in the tubing string, rupturing a bladder within the isolation element using hydrostatic pressure present in the tubing string, wherein the rupturing releases a material for substantially increasing a rate of degradation of a body of the isolation valve, and after the isolation lands in a flow restriction orifice, actuating the downhole tool by increasing fluid pressure within the tubing string.
In another aspect, the invention relates to a method of actuating a downhole tool in a well that includes positioning a tool in a wellbore using a tubing string, introducing an isolation element into the tubing string, degrading a plug in the isolation element, exposing a chemical agent for substantially increasing a rate of degradation of a body of the isolation element, and after the isolation is positioned in a flow restriction orifice, actuating the downhole tool by increasing fluid pressure within the tubing string.
In another aspect, the invention relates to an isolation element that includes a body having at least one sealing surface, the body comprising at least two sections, at least one internal cavity within one of the sections of the body, a chemical agent disposed within the internal cavity, and a connector disposed within the body, holding the at least two of the sections together. The chemical agent may be configured to substantially increase a rate of degradation of the body.
Other aspects and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the following description and the appended claims.
In order to block fluid communication in a wellbore, it is known in the art to use an isolation member, such as a dart, plug, or ball. Once the operation requiring the isolation is over, the isolation member is typically removed, so that flow may be reestablished though the orifice where the isolation member was seated.
It is also known in the art to use an isolation member that is made from a degradable material, so that is may degrade, for example by dissolving or disintegration, to the point where is can no longer provide isolation. U.S. Patent Application Publication 2007/0181224, assigned to the assignee of the present invention, discloses degradable compositions that may be used for temporary plugs (see, e.g., paragraph 43). U.S. Patent Application Publication 2008/0149345, assigned to the assignee of the present invention, discloses downhole devices that include degradable materials. U.S. Patent Application Publication 2008/0105438, assigned to the assignee of the present invention, discloses using degradable materials to form a whipstock, for the purpose of drilling a lateral well. The whipstock may degrade following the lateral drilling operation, thereby avoiding the need to remove it. Each of these publications is incorporated by reference in its entirety.
In the above-mentioned applications, the device constructed from a degradable material is degraded or consumed from the outside. That is, the degradation begins on the external surface of the device, and it continues at a rate determined by the materials, well fluids, temperature, and pressure until the device is fully degraded. In the examples described below, a device constructed of a degradable material may be degraded from within. The degradation from within may be in addition to or in lieu of external degradation.
The dart 20 includes a head section 22 and a tail section 23. The head section 22 is, in general, the lower end of the dart 22, and it includes a sealing surface 24 that may seat in an orifice, such as an orifice specifically designed to seat a dart, such as seat 15 in
The example dart shown in
In yet another example, the chemical agent itself may not cause degradation, but it may change the environment around the dart such that, in combination with other elements in the wellbore, the rate of degradation is substantially increased. For example, the chemical agent may form part of an exothermic reaction, and the heat given off by the reaction may speed an ongoing external degradation. In another example, the chemical agent may be released to mix or react with wellbore fluids to create a chemical or compound that degrades the dart. Examples of chemical agents and their operation are provided below.
Returning to
A plug may be held in place by a retaining ring. For example, the upper plug 33 is shown in
A cavity within a dart or other isolation element may include a chemical agent to substantially increase a degradation rate of the dart. Activation of the chemical agent may occur in one of many ways. In one example, a chemical agent may need no activation. It may be present within a dart or isolation element, and it may degrade the device from within. In such an example, the device may be implemented and used before the chemical agent is able to degrade the device beyond a useful limit.
In another example, a chemical agent may be disposed within a soluble bladder within a cavity. A plug, separating the cavity from the outside of the isolation element, may allow well fluids to enter the cavity to dissolve the bladder, thereby releasing the chemical agent. A plug may allow well fluids to enter the cavity by several means. In one example, a plug may dissolve or otherwise degrade in the well fluids over time. Once the degradation proceeds far enough, well fluids may penetrate into the cavity. In such an example, the plug may be configured to move within the cavity to balance the external hydrostatic pressure. In another example, a plug may include a rupture disc or other device that may respond to the external hydrostatic pressure. Upon rupturing, the well fluids may enter the cavity. In another example, a plug may be configured to move within the cavity in response to external pressure, and it may include a structure that will puncture a bladder within the cavity once the external hydrostatic pressure exceeds a selected value.
In the particular example shown in
Likewise, the example dart 20 shown in
A person having skill in the art may envision alternate examples. An isolation element may include only one cavity, or it may include three or more. The two cavities 26, 27 shown in
Those having skill in the art may devise many types of degradation enhancement features. Such features may include drilled holed, grooves, scratches, etching or scoring, cracks, and other features that may enhance degradation caused by a chemical agent.
As shown in
In examples where an isolation element includes a chemical agent, the chemical agent may be an agent that when released, will substantially increase the rate of degradation of the device. For example a chemical agent may be an acid that when released, will speed the degradation of the device. Such acids include hydrochloric acids, fluoric acids, and nitric acids. In another example, a chemical agent may be a chemical or compound that will react with well fluids or water to release heat. Such exothermic reactions may substantially increase the rate of degradation of the device from the well fluids by adding heat. Such exothermic compounds include both bases and acids. For example, exothermic bases may include metal hydroxides—such as sodium hydroxide, potassium hydroxide, lithium hydroxide, and cesium hydroxide—as well as any hydration chemicals (e.g. salts) leading to substantial exothermicity (e.g., metallic nitrates like calcium, magnesium, aluminum, or zinc nitrates, sulfates incorporating similar metals like magnesium sulfates, etc). Acids that may react exothermically with well fluids include hydrogen bromide, hydrogen chloride, hydrogen iodide, aluminum chloride, sulfuric acids, and percholoric acids. It is noted that some acids may serve both as a consuming agent and an exothermic reactant.
Table 3 shows hoe temperature and acids may be used in combination to substantially increase a degradation rate.
As shown in Table 3, the degradation rate as a pH of 6 increases from 0.5 mm/hr at a temperature of 25° C. to a rate of 4.0 mm/hr at 70° C. Thus, a chemical or compound that reacts exothermically with well fluids, such as water, can substantially increase the degradation rate through the addition of heat to the already present degradation of the isolation element. Table 3 further shows that at a constant temperature of 70° C., the degradation rate will increase from 4.0 mm/hr to 12.0 mm/hr when the concentration of hydrochloric acid is increased from 1% to 10%, in water. Thus, the release of acid as a chemical agent in a isolation element
In practice and shown in
Next, a well procedure or evolution may be performed, at 103. Such procedures are well known in the art, and they may include a fracturing operation, gravel packing, or using pressure to set a tool such as a packer. Such procedures and evolutions require fluid pressure in excess of the hydrostatic or pumping pressure that is typically present. The isolation element may be used to prevent the excessive pressure from being communicated below the seat where the device is seated, thereby protecting lower formations and well equipment from the pressure.
Next, the method may include allowing the degradable device to degrade, at 104. If the useful life of the degradable device is not longer than the evolution to be performed, it may be required to deploy a second degradable device, as shown in 101. If the useful life of the degradable device is longer than the evolution to be performed, it may be necessary to wait for some period time for the degradable device to degrade so that it is not longer blocking flow and pressure. Once the time has elapsed, the method may include verifying that flow has been restored, at 105, for example, by pumping fluid and verifying that there is fluid flow or pressure changes below the position of the degradable element.
While the invention has been described with respect to a limited number of embodiments, those skilled in the art, having benefit of this disclosure, will appreciate that other embodiments can be devised which do not depart from the scope of the invention as disclosed herein. Accordingly, the scope of the invention should be limited only by the attached claims.
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