Roller cone rock drill bits and fixed cutter drill bits are commonly used in the oil and gas industry for drilling wells.
One example of a roller cone-type drill bit is shown in
Significant expense is involved in the design and manufacture of drill bits. Therefore, having accurate models for simulating and analyzing the drilling characteristics of bits can greatly reduce the cost associated with manufacturing drill bits for testing and analysis purposes. For this reason, several models have been developed and employed for the analysis and design of fixed cutter bits. These fixed cutter simulation models have been particularly useful in that they have provided a means for analyzing the forces acting on the individual cutting elements on the bit.
However, roller cone bits are more complex than fixed cutter bits in that each roller cone independently rotates relative to the rotation of the bit body about axes oblique to the axis of the bit body. Additionally, the cutting elements of the roller cone bit deform the earth formation by a combination of compressive fracturing and shearing, whereas fixed cutter bits typically deform the earth formation substantially entirely by shearing. Because each roller cone independently rotates about an axis oblique to the axis of the bit body, a conventional rock bit may experience unbalanced lateral forces (radial forces) that cause the rock bit to gyrate or laterally bounce about the bottom hole and impact the wall of the wellbore during drilling. This type of bit motion is generally referred to as bit gyration or “whirling.” Bit whirling is an undesirable performance characteristic, because it results in inefficient drilling of the bottomhole and can potentially damage the bit prematurely.
Accurate analysis of the drilling performance of roller cone bits requires more complex models than for fixed cutter bits. Until recently, no reliable roller cone bit models had been developed which could take into consideration the location, orientation, size, height, and shape of each cutting element on the roller cone, and the interaction of each individual cutting element on the cones with earth formations during drilling.
In recent years, some researchers have developed a method for modeling roller cone cutter interaction with earth formations. See D. Ma et al, The Computer Simulation of the Interaction Between Roller Bit and Rock, paper no. 29922, Society of Petroleum Engineers, Richardson, Tex. (1995). However, methods have not been specifically developed for optimizing the performance of drill bits, particularly, roller cone bits, in drilling earth formations to analyze bit performance with respect to the lateral (radial) force of the bits. To produce new and improved bits designed to exhibit desirable drilling characteristics, such as minimized bit whirl or a later walk tendency, such methods are desired and may be used. Bit specifically designed to exhibit reduced whirling tendencies may drill more efficiently with increased longevity maximizing the drilling performance of a given bit.
In general, one aspect of the invention relates to a method for designing a drill bit. The method includes defining parameters for a simulation of the drill bit drilling in an earth formation, where the parameters include at least bit design parameters; executing the defined simulation; obtaining radial forces resulting from the executing of the defined simulation; applying a criterion to the obtained radial forces; and adjusting one of the at least bit design parameters in response to the applying of the criterion.
In general, one aspect of the present invention relates to a method for designing a bottomhole assembly. The method includes defining parameters for a simulation of a drilling tool assembly drilling in an earth formation, where the parameters include at least bottomhole assembly design parameters; executing the defined simulation; obtaining radial forces resulting from the executing of the defined simulation; applying a criterion to the obtained radial forces to evaluate the drill tool assembly performance; and adjusting one of the at least bottomhole assembly design parameters in response to the applying of the criterion.
In general, one aspect of the present invention relates to a method for designing a bit. The method includes defining parameters for a simulation of the drill bit drilling in an earth formation, where the parameters include at least bit design parameters; executing the defined simulation; graphically displaying radial forces resulting from the executing of the defined simulation; applying a criterion to the graphically displayed radial forces; and adjusting one of the at least bit design parameters in response to the applying of the criterion.
In general, one aspect of the present invention relates to a method for selecting an optimal bit design. The method includes simulating a first bit design drilling in earth formation; obtaining radial forces resulting from the simulating of the first bit design; applying a criterion to the obtained radial forces of the first bit design; and adjusting one of the at least bit design parameters in response to the applying of the criteria to the first bit design to generate a second a second bit design; simulating the second bit design; obtaining radial forces resulting from the simulating of the second bit design; applying the criterion to the obtained forces of the second bit design; and comparing the first bit design and the second bit design with respect to the criterion; and selecting the optimal bit design of the first bit design and the second bit design.
In general, one aspect of the invention relates to a system for simulating a drill bit drilling in an earth formation. The system includes means for defining parameters for a simulation of the drill bit drilling in earth formation, wherein the parameters includes at least bit design parameters; means for executing the defined simulation; means for obtaining radial forces resulting from the executing of the defined simulation; means for applying a criterion to the obtained radial forces; and means for adjusting one of the at least bit design parameters in response to the applying of the criterion.
Other aspects and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the following description and the appended claims.
The present invention relates to methods for designing drill bits based on radial forces obtained from a simulation of the drill bit drilling an earth formation.
In one aspect, a method for designing a drill bit includes obtaining radial forces on the drill bit, comparing an aspect of the radial forces to at least one selected criteria, and adjusting a drill bit design based on an evaluation of the radial forces with respect to the selected criteria. In another aspect, the method may be adapted and used for designing a drilling tool assembly that includes a bottomhole assembly, where the design of the bottom hole assembly or just the bit may be adjusted based on the evaluation. In another aspect, the invention relates to drill bits and drilling tool assemblies designed in accordance with methods disclosed.
Radial Forces
As used herein, “radial forces” on the drill bit are the forces (or component of the forces) acting on the bit in a plane perpendicular to the bit axis.
Method of Designing
Obtaining Radial Forces
One embodiment of the present invention is now described with respect to
Initially, magnitudes and directions of resultant radial forces acting on a selected drill bit drilling in earth formation are obtained (Step 400). These resultant radial forces may be obtained in a variety of ways, such as, from a simulation of a drill bit drilling in an earth formation. One example of a simulation method that may be used to determine resultant radial forces acting on a drill bit during drilling is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,516,293, issued on Feb. 4, 2003, entitled, “Method for Simulating Drilling of Roller Cone Bits and its Application to Roller Cone Bit Design and Performance,” assigned to the assignee of the present invention and incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. Other methods are known in the art for simulating the response of a roller cone drill bit and may, alternatively, be used.
The resultant radial forces may be obtained in a lab test simulation involving a drill bit structure drilling an earth formation sample, where the resultant radial forces are measured using sensors coupled to the drill bit or in a surface representative of a borehole wall.
Output of Radial Forces
The radial forces obtained may be represented in a variety of different forms as determined by a bit or system designer. For example, radial forces obtained during a simulation may be summarized in tables, graphs, plots, etc. Examples of tables and graphs include tabular or graphical representations of resultant radial force versus time during drilling. Examples of graphs or plots include a bar chart showing the distribution of resultant force magnitudes during drilling, a box-whisker plot showing the statistical distribution of radial forces, a polar plot showing the distribution of the radial forces about the drill bit or bottomhole, etc. Examples of a bar chart, a polar plot, and a box-whisker plot, are shown in
Applying Criteria
After resultant radial forces are obtained for a given bit design, a criteria is applied to the resultant radial forces (Step 402). The criteria may be any standard by which radial force on a bit can be evaluated. The criteria may be quantitative or qualitative in nature, or a combination thereof.
For example, a criteria may be a ratio of the resultant radial force to the applied weight on bit (WOB). In one example, the criteria is that the ratio is, preferably, no more than about 0.20, i.e., the resultant radial force is less than or equal to twenty percent of the applied weight on bit. In other words, at any given time during drilling the resultant radial force should not exceed 20% of the WOB. One skilled in the art will appreciate that bit performance may be improved as a ratio of the resultant radial force to an applied weight-on-bit is minimized. Thus, in a preferred embodiment of the present invention the resultant radial force is less than or equal to 10% of the WOB, and more preferably, the resultant radial force is less than or equal to 5% of the WOB.
In
The criteria (500) applied to the radial forces obtained for a drill bit is illustrated on the chart plot as an upper limit ratio of 0.200 (indicated by the dotted line). In this example, the criteria applied to the chart plot of resultant radial force, preferably, requires that a ratio of resultant radial force to the applied weight-on-bit is less than 0.200 during the time spent drilling. An additional criteria may be applied that the frequency of the smaller ratios (ratios below a selected value) be maximized with respect to the total distribution. This additional criteria may be used to evaluate the extent to which the larger radial forces are minimized if the first criteria is not met.
Another example of a criteria is that a magnitude of a resultant radial force is less than a predetermined value. In other words, at any given time during drilling the resultant radial force should not exceed a predetermined value. In another example, the criteria may be that a magnitude of the resultant force is less than a predetermined value for a selected percentage of the time spent drilling. For example, in one embodiment, the magnitude of the lateral forces is less than a predetermined value for 70% of the time of simulated drilling. One skilled in the art will appreciate that the predetermined value may depend on the WOB, type of formation, drill bit design (i.e., orientation of the cutting elements), or the geometry of the cutting element, etc. Again, the criteria may be numerically applied to radial force values output from a simulation or applied to graphical representation of resultant radial forces, such as, graphs and/or plots. In a polar plot of resultant radial force, as shown in
Alternatively, a criteria may be applied qualitatively to the resultant radial forces obtained during the simulation method. For example, a criteria may be a predetermined radial force pattern desired for a polar plot, such as the one shown in
The manner in which the cutting structure and bit body interacts with the earth formations during a given instant in drilling produces the instantaneous resultant radial force (the emboldened arrow). The resultant radial forces determined at previous increments of drilling are shown as “foot prints” on the plot as smaller vectors. The polar plot may be compared against a predetermined desired radial force pattern, such as, an even distribution of radial forces of relatively small magnitudes about the origin of the polar plot.
Adjusting Design
Referring back to
The adjustment of various drill bit design parameters is largely based on the designer's discretion and/or experience. Preferably, modifications in the design are rendered to improve the performance with respect to a radial force imbalance. However, in other embodiments, a drill bit may be purposefully designed to produce a radially imbalanced, such as in a particular direction, for example, to obtain a design for a bit having a particular “walking” tendency. Examples of bit design parameters that may be adjusted include, but are not limited to, an arrangement of cutting element on a drill bit (which may be within a row or between rows), a number of cutting elements on a drill bit, a geometry of cutting elements on a drill bit, or orientation of cutting elements. For a given roller cone on a bit, bit design parameters additionally include a journal angle, cone profile, number of cutting elements on a row, a location of a row, and an arrangement of cutting elements on a cone, etc. Those skilled in the art will appreciate that numerous other design parameters of a bit may be adjusted in accordance with methods described herein.
After an adjustment is made to the drill bit design (Step 404), the new (or adjusted) bit design is simulated, and the resultant radial forces are obtained for the new bit design (Step 400). The new design is then evaluated based on the selected criteria. The design method may be repeated until a bit design satisfying a criteria is obtained or until the design method is terminated by the designer.
Selecting Design
A method in accordance with one embodiment shown in
For example, referring to
As previously discussed,
Computer System for Designing
In one or more embodiments, the present invention may be implemented on virtually any type computer system regardless of the platform being used. For example, as shown in
In one or more embodiments, using the keyboard 808 and/or mouse 810, a user may input initial or modified set an of parameters known as simulation input 814. The initial or modified parameters are input to the system and used by the processor 802 (or simulator) to execute a simulation. The results of the simulation (or simulation output 816) in the form of graphics (computer-generated graphics of a bit, bottom hole profile, etc.), graphs (polar plots, box-whisker plots, chart plots, etc.), tables, etc. may be output from the computer system 800 and displayed on a monitor 812, for example. After reviewing the simulation on the monitor 812, a user may change a bit parameter using the mouse 810 and reinitiate a simulation of the design on the computer system 800.
Further, in one or more embodiments, the computer system 800 may include a software component, which provides Boolean (true or false) values for satisfying (or not) different quantitative radial force criterion. For example, after specifying the criteria and running the simulation to obtain radial force output, the software component may output a statement to the user, “No, this design does not meet the established criteria,” and may provide values that indicate to the extent to which the selected criteria has not been satisfied. The system may be further configured to prompt the designer to change the criteria, modify the design, or terminate the design process.
One of ordinary skill in the art can appreciate that the computer system may be implemented in a variety of ways having a variety of software components for executing the design method of the present invention.
Another example of a method of designing a bit in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention will now be described with respect to
Initially, parameters for the simulation are selected (Step 1200), which define the initial bit design, and the simulation begins by rotating the defined bit (Step 1202) to determine a new location of the cutting elements located on the bit (Step 1204). Interferences between the cutting elements and the earth formation are determined (Step 1206) and the vertical and/or radial forces are calculated (Step 1208). Based on the previous calculations, the appropriate parameters, such as the bottomhole geometry, etc. are updated (Step 1210) and the simulation continues in view of the removed earth formation, until a terminating condition is reached (Step 1212).
The calculated radial forces are obtained in a variety of forms.
The chart plot in
A quantitative radial force criteria is applied. For example, the criteria being that a resultant radial force is less than 20% of the WOB at any time during drilling. As seen in
Then, a simulation is obtained for the second bit design and the resultant radial forces are obtained as plots from the simulation.
With respect to the box-whisker plot,
The chart plot in
After reviewing the plots, the designer finds that the quantitative radial force criteria has been satisfied. However, with respect to a “qualitative” radial force criteria that is applied by the designer through a visual analysis of the polar plot distribution of radial forces, the designer determines that the design may be improved further. Accordingly, the designer may further modify the bit design by changing one or more drill bit design parameters, and thereby, generating a third bit design. An adjustment is made, and the third design is simulated, and the lateral forces are obtained from the simulation in the form of a radial plot, a box-whisker plot, and a chart plot. In
As for
The chart plot in
In the above example, the radial force plots show substantially even distribution of resultant radial forces. However,
Designing Bottomhole Assembly
In view of the description above, one of ordinary skill in the art will appreciate that a method for simulating an entire drilling tool assembly may also be used to obtain the resultant radial forces for a drill bit during drilling. Similarly, the above design method may also be used to design a drilling tool assembly. The drilling tool assembly may further include the entire bottomhole assembly (BHA), which may include a drill bit, or an entire drill string, including a string of drill pipe, a BHA and a drill bit. As shown in
Alternatively, or in addition to modifying drill bit design parameters, drilling tool assembly design parameters may be modified in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention. The drilling tool assembly design parameters modified may be, for example, BHA design parameters. Such methods may be extremely useful in the design of drilling tool assemblies for selected bits and formations. While the magnitude of the resultant forces will tend to be larger than those obtained by simulations of only the drill bit, the general designs method described above is applicable.
One embodiment of the present invention will now be described with respect to
The method further includes comparing resultant radial force in view of a selected criteria (Step 1602). Examples of comparing a resultant radial force to a selected criteria have been previously described above with respect to method shown in
Designing Fixed Cutter Drill Bits
Additionally, one of ordinary skill in the art will appreciate that design methods in accordance with the present invention may also be used to design or selected fixed cutter drill bits (including, PDC drill bits, diamond impregnated bits, and bi-centered bits, and other eccentric bits). For example, referring to
Advantages of embodiments of the present invention may include one or more of the following. In one or more embodiments, the present invention may be used to minimize radial force imbalance that may result in a whirl effect and reduces cutting efficiency of a drill bit. Embodiments of the present invention can potentially increase the life of the bit by preventing damage due to repetitive impact of the cutting structure against the walls of the wellbore during drilling. Further, embodiments of the present invention may be adapted or use with any simulation method that can be adapted to output radial force data determined during a simulation.
Specific embodiments of the invention have been described in detail with reference to the accompanying figures. Numerous specific details have been set forth in order to provide a more thorough understanding of the invention. However, it will be apparent to one of ordinary skill in the art that the invention may be practiced without these specific details. In other instances, well known features, or features disclosed in detail documents referenced and incorporated herein by reference have not been described in detail to avoid obscuring the invention.
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.
This is an utility application, which claims priority to U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/458,075, filed on Mar. 26, 2003.
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