This application is a U.S. National Phase Application under 35 U.S.C. § 371 and claims the benefit of priority to International Application Serial No. PCT/US2014/014659, filed on Feb. 4, 2014, the contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference.
The present disclosure relates to acoustic telemetry systems for communications in subterranean well systems.
Downhole acoustic telemetry systems have difficulty decoding acoustic communication signals when there is a high ambient noise level. There is a need to cancel out noise to improve the signal to noise ratio, so that the communication signals can be decoded. The well tool lengths are small compared to the wavelength of the acoustic communication signal, making spatial noise cancellation impractical. Electronic filtering is standard practice, but high noise swamps electronics.
Like reference symbols in the various drawings indicate like elements.
Each of the downhole telemetry elements 24 includes a controller 100 for encoding/decoding communications for transmission as acoustic vibrations and a transducer 102.
Referring to
Referring to
In some implementations, the damper 104, 108 is one or more layers of material, such as a silicone, epoxy, elastomer, polytetrafloroethylene (PTFE), hydrogenated nitrile butadine rubber (HNBR), composite such as glass, arimid or carbon (including composite with uniaxial fibers), foam (including open cell foam), cross-linked gel, low stiffness metal, aerogel, and/or other material. Each layer can be a single material or a combination of materials, and different layers can have a different composition. In certain instances, the damper 104, 108 can be made up of multiple layers of hard and soft elements that can produce an impedance mismatch, tuned by the layers to produce a modal filter. In one example, the layers can include layers of metal bonded together with layers of epoxy. Additionally, or alternatively, the damper 104, 108 is a mechanical component, such as an O-ring, mechanical spring, shock, and/or other damping element. In certain instances, the damper 104 is a shear stiffening material that becomes stiff at certain shear rates, i.e., in response to certain frequencies. An example shear stiffening material is silica nanoparticles in polyethylene glycol, dilatant materials and rheopectic materials, such as 3179 dilatant compound (a product of Dow Corning Corporation), gypsum paste, and carbon black suspensions. In some instance, rubber becomes stiffer at higher shear rates. Other examples exist and are within the concepts herein.
In some instances, the damper 104, 108 is continuous, covering all the space between the transducer and the well string. In other instances, the damper is non-continuous, with gaps between the transducer and the well string. In other instances, the damper is non-continuous, with non-damping material between the transducer and the well string. The shape of the damper 104, 108 and any gaps can be used to tune the directionality of the damper to be more transmissive of acoustic signals in one direction than another. Referring to
In certain instances, the length and shape of the second transducer 106 is the same as that of the transducer 102. In other instances, they can be different lengths and/or shapes. In some instances, one or both of the transducers 102, 106 is shaped and sized based on the specified frequency range of the communication signal. For example, referring to
In certain instances, the transducer with the damper is used in transmitting an acoustics communication signal. Using the damped transducer allows for less sophisticated transmitter electronics. For example, the transmitter electronics can be a bang-bang type transmitter that generates broadband, impulsive signals and the damper can damp the output from the transducer to contain or limit the frequency range of the transmission. Containing the frequency band of the transmission can reduce echoes.
In view of the above, certain aspects encompass an acoustic well telemetry system. The system includes an acoustic telemetry transducer affixed to an in-well type component, and a damper between the transducer and the in-well type component. The damper damps transmission from the in-well type component to the transducer of a specified frequency range or vibrational mode.
Certain aspects encompass a method where a specified frequency range or vibrational mode of transmission from an in-well type component to an acoustic telemetry transducer in a well is damped. Another frequency range or vibrational mode outside of the specified frequency range is received with the transducer.
Certain aspects encompass, an acoustic well telemetry system that includes an acoustic telemetry transducer affixed to an in-well type component, a damper between the transducer and the in-well type component, and a receiving station communicably coupled to the transducer to receive signal from the transducer. The damper damps transmission from the in-well type component to the transducer of a specified frequency range or vibrational mode.
Implementations can include some, none, or all of the following features. The specified frequency range of the damper is noise to communications of the telemetry system. The damper includes a shear stiffening material. The damper includes a material that damps frequencies in the specified range. The damper is directionally preferential to damp transmission of acoustic energy greater in a first direction than a second, different direction. The damper includes a damper material affixed to the transducer in parallel lines. The acoustic telemetry system includes a second acoustic telemetry transducer more rigidly affixed to the in-well type component than the first mentioned transducer. The acoustic telemetry system includes a receiving station communicably coupled to the first mentioned transducer and the second transducer that distinguishes communication from noise based on a signal received from the first mentioned transducer and a signal received from the second transducer. The specified acoustic mode of the damper is the communication acoustic mode of the telemetry system. The receiving station distinguishes communication from noise by subtracting the signal received from the first mentioned transducer from the signal received from the second transducer. The acoustic telemetry system includes a second damper between the second transducer and the in-well component to damp transmission from the in-well type component to the second transducer in a second specified frequency that is different than the first mentioned acoustic mode. The transducer is shaped to respond more efficiently to frequencies outside of the specified frequency range. The transducer is wider in a middle portion than an end portion. The receiving station identifies signal from the transducer as noise to communications of the telemetry system. The other acoustic mode includes a communication, and damping a specified acoustic mode includes damping noise to the communication. Damping a specified acoustic mode and receiving another acoustic mode includes receiving the specified acoustic mode and the other acoustic mode with a second acoustic telemetry transducer in the well and distinguishing noise from communication based on a signal of the first mentioned transducer and a signal of the second transducer. The specified acoustic mode is a communication acoustic mode of the telemetry system. Distinguishing noise from communication includes subtracting a signal of the first mentioned transducer from a signal of the second transducer. Damping a specified acoustic mode and receiving another acoustic mode includes using a bang-bang controller that minimizes the frequency band of a transmission to minimize echoes in the filtered acoustic signal.
A number of embodiments have been described. Nevertheless, it will be understood that various modifications may be. Accordingly, other embodiments are within the scope of the following claims.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US2014/014659 | 2/4/2014 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2015/119595 | 8/13/2015 | WO | A |
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