Gas lift is a form of artificial lift for liquid hydrocarbon wells. Gas bubbles are introduced into the vertical production tube that outlets the hydrocarbon resource from the well. The rising bubbles of injected gas reduce the hydrostatic pressure of the fluid column in the production tube as compared with the reservoir below and aerate the fluid to reduce its density. The inherent reservoir pressure below is then able to lift the hydrocarbon fluid out of the wellbore via the production tube.
A gas lift mandrel is a device installed in or on the tubing string of a gas lift well. Each gas lift mandrel is fitted with one or more gas lift valves. In a side-pocket type of gas lift mandrel, the gas lift valve can be installed and removed by wireline while the mandrel is still in the well, eliminating the need to pull the production tubing to repair or replace the gas lift valve.
One or more gas lift valves may reside in each gas lift mandrel to inject pressurized gas from the well casing annulus into the production tubing. Pressures in the production tubing and in the casing annulus cause the gas lift valves to open and close, thus allowing gas to be injected into the fluid in the tubing to cause the fluid to rise to the surface.
A barrier-type mandrel and associated gas lift barrier valves prevent well fluid from flowing backwards from the production tubing into the well casing space when pressurized gas is not being injected, and maintain a barrier during valve replacement operations when one of the gas lift barrier valves is being removed for replacement or repair.
Pressure relief systems for gas lift valves and mandrels are described. In an implementation, a gas lift mandrel includes at least a flow check system and an expansion volume reserved for relieving a pressure of a fluid confined in the gas lift mandrel, beginning at a threshold pressure value. In an implementation, an apparatus includes a gas lift mandrel and at least a flow check system in the gas lift mandrel, and a pressure relief valve within a gas lift valve of the mandrel allowing the pressure of a fluid confined in the mandrel to vent from the gas lift valve. An example method includes constructing a gas lift mandrel with at least a flow check system, and providing a relief for the pressure of a confined fluid in the gas lift mandrel. This summary is not intended to identify key or essential features of the claimed subject matter, nor is it intended to be used as an aid in limiting the scope of the claimed subject matter.
Certain embodiments of the disclosure will hereafter be described with reference to the accompanying drawings, wherein like reference numerals denote like elements. It should be understood, however, that the accompanying figures illustrate the various implementations described herein and are not meant to limit the scope of various technologies described herein.
In the following description, numerous details are set forth to provide an understanding of some embodiments of the present disclosure. However, it will be understood by those of ordinary skill in the art that the system and/or methodology may be practiced without these details and that numerous variations or modifications from the described embodiments may be possible.
This disclosure describes pressure relief systems for gas lift valves and mandrels.
One or more gas lift barrier mandrels (GLBMs) 114 & 114′ may be incorporated in or onto (a side pocket 115 of) the production tube 104 to implement gas lift of the hydrocarbon resource 110. Each gas lift barrier mandrel 114 may include gas lift valves 116 & 118, such as barrier valves, which inject a gas 120 into the production tubing 104 for gas lift of the hydrocarbon resource 110, and regulate the amount of gas 120 injected by opening and closing according to pressure in the production tube 104 versus pressure of the gas 120 between the production tube 104 and the casing 102, being provided from the surface.
Each gas lift barrier mandrel 114 may have a system of gas lift valves 116 that can unintentionally confine or trap fluid between the valves 116 & 118. The confined fluid may be at least partially volatile liquid and/or one or more gases. Under certain conditions, such as normal heating or other rise in temperature, the confined fluid can become destructive to the apparatus, or exceed the operating limits of the valves and/or mandrel. The example mandrels 114 and example gas lift valves 116 & 118 described herein provide implementations of a pressure relief system 122 for this trapped fluid. The pressure relief systems 122 described herein may also be used in other types of valves and mandrels for the hydrocarbon industry in which a fluid becomes confined or trapped, or in situations where a trapped volume of fluid may need to expand.
In a basic wellsite system, such as the example wellbore 100 of
The example gas lift barrier mandrel 114 can be located, for example, in a mandrel side pocket 115 connected with production tubing 104 that is located within a wellbore 100 lined with a casing 102. At least part of the bore or conduit 108 of the production tubing 104 extends through the gas lift barrier mandrel 114. The production tubing bore 108 has a central axis 202, and a first pocket 204 of the gas lift barrier mandrel 114 is located adjacent to the production tubing bore 108. The first pocket 204 also has a respective central axis 206 parallel to the bore 108 of the production tube 104. A second pocket 208 is located in the gas lift barrier mandrel 114 and also has a respective central axis 210 parallel to the aforementioned axes. The pockets 204 & 208 can be cylindrical in shape.
In an implementation, the gas lift barrier mandrel 114 includes two separate, distinctly retrievable flow control check valve devices that work independently to simultaneously meet flow control and pressure barrier system requirements.
For example, in an implementation, a first gas lift barrier valve 116 can be located in the first pocket 204. The first gas lift barrier valve 116 may be a tubing-to-casing barrier valve (TCBV). The first gas lift barrier valve 116 may prevent communication between the production tubing 104 and the casing 102 (annulus), when a second gas lift valve is removed from the second pocket 208. The first gas lift barrier valve 116 forms a seal 212 with the inside of the pocket 204. A one-way-check-valve 214 in the first gas lift barrier valve 116 allows flow only in one direction. A port 216 connects the outside of the gas lift barrier mandrel 114 to the inside of the first pocket 204 and the inside of the first gas lift barrier valve 116. Gas 120 can pass though the port 216 and through the one-way-check-valve 214 into a port 218.
From the port 218, the gas 120 can pass into the second pocket 208 and into a second (“live”) gas lift barrier valve 118. Thus, the second, live gas lift barrier valve 118 and the first TCBV gas lift barrier valve 116 are in series fluid communication with each other. The live valve 118 may be longer in axial length than the first TCBV gas lift barrier valve 116. In an implementation, the second, live, gas lift barrier valve 118 is the operating valve for gas lift, which injects the gas 120 into the production tubing 104. The live valve 118 can be one of many valve types. For example, a live valve 118 may be a dummy, shear orifice, burst disk, or other valve type that can permanently or temporarily restrict fluid flow.
The gas 120 provided under pressure from the surface, after passing through the first TCBV gas lift barrier valve 116, passes though a one-way-check-valve 220 of the second live gas lift barrier valve 118 and though an opening 222 into the conduit 108 of the production tubing 104. The second gas lift barrier valve 118 has a seal 224 that seals with the inside of the second pocket 208. Due to the seals 212 & 224 of the first gas lift barrier valve 116 and the second gas lift barrier valve 118, gas 120 traveling along the aforementioned path is prevented from passing via openings 226 & 228 of each pocket 204 & 208 into the production conduit 108. The openings 226 & 228 are used to place the gas lift barriers valves 116 & 118 into the pockets 204 & 208, during assembly.
In an implementation, the gas lift barrier mandrel 114 is integrated with the production tubing 104. The outside diameter of the gas lift barrier mandrel portion is generally larger than the outside diameter of the production tubing 104, while the contour of the production conduit or bore 108 remains substantially uninterrupted.
Fluids and gases can become confined in the interstitial space 230 between the first gas lift barrier valve 116 and the second gas lift barrier valve 118. Fluid trapped in the interstitial volume 230 can expand upon heating, causing a rise in the pressure in this region. The example pressure relief system 122 for the confined fluids may be implemented in various ways in the gas lift barrier mandrel 114. These different embodiments are shown in the succeeding Figures.
Barrier-type gas lift mandrels 114 may be distinct from general gas lift mandrels in that the barrier-type may have two or more flow check devices in series as viewed from the perspective of an incoming flow of gas 120. The check system is often accomplished with two or more valves 116 & 118. When one of the valves is a dummy valve, a shear orifice, a burst disk valve, or other flow control device that can temporarily or permanently prevent flow, then there can be a volume of fluid that becomes trapped or backed-up within the mandrel 114. This fluid may acquire increased energy to expand due to increases in temperature, and as such the pressure of the trapped fluid increases because the interstitial volume 230 between the valves 116 & 118 is held constant. The example systems 122 described herein provides means for reducing this pressure to safe levels.
Example Pressure Relief Systems
In the implementation of
There are various alternative implementations of the pressure relief system 122 for gas lift that can be combined in different ways to provide the desired pressure relief.
For example, in an implementation of the example pressure relief system 122 for gas lift valves 116 & 118 and mandrels 114 shown in
Other variations and alternative implementations of the pressure relief system 122 for gas lift can be constructed. For example, the piston 404, spring 502, and bellows 602 embodiments described above in
Likewise, the piston 404 and spring 502 implementations of
Example Methods
At block 902, a gas lift mandrel is constructed with at least a flow check system.
At block 904, an additional volume is provided for fluid trapped in the mandrel to expand into at a given pressure threshold.
At block 1002, a gas lift mandrel is constructed with at least a flow check system.
At block 1004, a pressure relief valve is provided in one of the barrier mandrel valves to vent an interstitial pressure.
Although a few embodiments of the disclosure have been described in detail above, those of ordinary skill in the art will readily appreciate that many modifications are possible without materially departing from the teachings of this disclosure. Accordingly, such modifications are intended to be included within the scope of this disclosure as defined in the claims.
This patent application claims the benefit of priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/879,160 to Kamphaus et al., filed Sep. 18, 2013, and incorporated by reference herein in its entirety, and claims the benefit of priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/900,386 to Kamphaus et al., filed Nov. 5, 2013, and incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US2014/056308 | 9/18/2014 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2015/042265 | 3/26/2015 | WO | A |
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PCT/US2014/056308, International Search Report and Written Opinion, dated Dec. 29, 2014, 14 pgs. |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20160222769 A1 | Aug 2016 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61900386 | Nov 2013 | US | |
61879160 | Sep 2013 | US |