Not Applicable
Not Applicable
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to shaped charge tools for explosively severing tubular goods including, but not limited to, pipe, tubing, production/casing liners and/or casing.
2. Description of Related Art
The capacity to quickly, reliably and cleanly sever a joint of tubing or casing deeply within a wellbore is an essential maintenance and salvage operation in the petroleum drilling and exploration industry. Generally, the industry relies upon mechanical, chemical or pyrotechnic devices for such cutting. Among the available options, shaped charge (SC) explosive cutters are often the simplest, fastest and least expensive tools for cutting pipe in a well. The devices are typically conveyed into a well for detonation on a wireline or length of coiled tubing.
Typical explosive pipe cutting devices comprise a consolidated wheel of explosive material having a V-groove perimeter. The circular side faces of the explosive wheel are intimately formed against circular metallic end plates. The external surface of the circular V-groove is clad with a thin metal liner. An aperture along the wheel axis provides a receptacle path for a detonation booster.
This V-grooved wheel of shaped explosive is aligned coaxially within a housing sub and the sub is disposed internally of the pipe cutting subject. Accordingly, the plane that includes the circular perimeter of the V-groove apex is substantially perpendicular to the pipe axis.
When detonated at the axial center, the explosive shock wave advances radially along the apex plane against the V-groove liner to drive the opposing liner surfaces together at an extremely high velocity of about 30,000 ft/sec. This high velocity collision of the V-groove liner material generates a localized impingement pressure within the material of about 2 to 4×106 psi. Under pressure of this magnitude, the liner material is essentially fluidized.
Due to the V-groove geometry of the liner material, the collision reaction includes a lineal dynamic vector component along the apex plane. Under the propellant influence of the high impingement pressure, the fluidized mass of liner material flows lineally and radially along this apex plane at velocities in the order of 15,000 ft/sec. Resultant impingement pressures against the surrounding pipe wall may be as high as 6 to 7×106 psi thereby locally fluidizing the pipe wall material.
Traditional fabrication procedures for shaped charge pipe cutters have included an independent fabrication of the liner as a truncated cone of metallic foil. The transverse sections of the cone are open. In a forming mold with the liner serving as a bottom wall portion of the mold, the explosive is formed or molded against the concave conical face of the liner. At the open center of the truncated apex of the liner, the explosive is formed against the mold bottom surface and around a cylindrical core.
With the precisely desired explosive material in place, an end plate is aligned over the cylindrical core and pressed against the upper surface of the explosive material at a controlled rate and pressure in the manner of a press platen. When removed from the forming mold, the unified liner-explosive-backing plate comprises half of a shaped charge pipe cutter.
To complete a full cutter unit, two of the shaped charge half sections, separated from the cylindrical core mold, are joined along a common axis at a contiguous juncture plane of exposed explosive at the truncated apex face planes. A detonation booster is inserted along the open axial bore of the unit left by the molding core. This detonation booster traverses the half charge juncture plane to bridge the explosive charges respective to the two half sections between the opposing end plates. The charged cutter is inserted into a cutter housing that is secured to a cutter sub.
Over years of experience, use and experimentation, the explosion dynamics of shaped charge cutters has evolved dramatically. Some prior notions of critical relationships have been revealed as not so critical. Other notions of insignificance have been discovered to be of great importance. The summation of numerous small departures from the prior art traditions has produced significant performance improvements or significant reductions in fabrication expense.
The present invention pipe cutter comprises several design and fabrication advantages that include a half cutter fabrication procedure that compresses the booster explosive material intimately into an axially centered aperture that is bored through the upper charge end plate. In this embodiment of the invention, there is no independently prepared booster that is an article separate from the end plate. The booster initiates the cutter explosive charge at a plane common with inner surface plane of the end plate. Although the initiation point is lateral of the half cutter junction plane, the point of explosive initiation is within a critical initiation distance from the juncture plane and nevertheless produces a symmetric shock wave impact on the opposing liner faces.
Another, similar embodiment of the invention has a tapered wall for the upper backing plate booster aperture. The taper converges from the exterior surface of the upper backing plate toward the cutter explosive at about 5°. The small, terminus end of the aperture coincides with the upper surface plane of the cutter explosive.
A bi-axial liner embodiment of the invention configures the liner of a half charge as a pair of coaxial cone frustums of different conical angles. The base edge of the inner cone is joined to the apex edge of the outer cone. The inner cone frustum that diverges from the half charge juncture plane is formed to a greater conical angle than the outer cone frustum.
Another embodiment of the invention is a charge liner having a tapered thickness. The liner thickness increases from the half charge juncture plane out to charge perimeter by a surface angle divergence of about 0.50° to about 1.50°.
A further embodiment of the invention comprises a thin wall tube for the booster explosive that is inserted into an axial aperture in the upper backing plate. The length of the booster tube is terminated at or above the half charge juncture plane. The inside face of the upper backing plate is configured to provide a boss extension around the booster aperture.
The invention is hereafter described in detail and with reference to the drawings wherein like reference characters designate like or similar elements throughout the several figures and views that collectively comprise the drawings. Respective to each drawing figure:
As used herein, the terms “up” and “down”, “upper” and “lower”, “upwardly” and downwardly”, “upstream” and “downstream”; “above” and “below”; and other like terms indicating relative positions above or below a given point or element are used in this description to more clearly describe some embodiments of the invention. However, when applied to equipment and methods for use in wells that are deviated or horizontal, such terms may refer to a left to right, right to left, or other relationship as appropriate. Moreover, in the specification and appended claims, the terms “pipe”, “tube”, “tubular”, “casing”, “liner” and/or “other tubular goods” are to be interpreted and defined generically to mean any and all of such elements without limitation of industry usage.
Referring initially to the invention embodiment of
The cutter housing 20 is secured to the top sub 12 by an internally threaded sleeve 22. The O-ring 18 seals the interface from fluid invasion of the interior housing volume. A jet window section 24 of the housing interior may be axially delineated above and below by exterior “break-up grooves” 26 and 28. The break-up grooves are lines of weakness in the housing 20 cross-section and may be formed within the housing interior as well as exterior as illustrated. The jet window 24 is that inside wall portion of the housing 20 that bounds the jet cavity 25 around the shaped charge between the outer or base perimeters 52 and 54 of the liners 50. Preferably, the upper and lower limits of the jet window 25 are coordinated with the shaped charge dimensions to place the window “sills” at the approximate mid-line between the inner and outer surfaces of the liner 50.
Below the lower break-up groove 28, the cutter housing cavity is internally terminated by an integral end wall 32 having a substantially flat internal end-face 33. The external end-face 34 of the end wall may be frusto-conical about a central end boss 36. A hardened steel centralizer 38 is secured to the end boss by an assembly bolt 39. A spacer 37 may be placed between the centralizer and the face of the end boss 36 as required by the specific task. Preferably, the shaped charge housing 20 is a frangible steel material of approximately 55-60 Rockwell “C” hardness.
The shaped charge assembly 40 is preferably spaced between the top sub end face 15 and the internal end-face 33 of the end wall 32 by a resilient, electrically non-conductive, ring spacer 56. An air space of at least 0.100″ between the top sub end face 15 and the adjacent face of the cutter assembly thrust disc 44 is preferred. Similarly, a resilient, non-conductive lower ring spacer 56 provides an air space of at least 0.100″ between the internal end-face 33 and the adjacent cutter assembly lower end plate 48.
Loose explosive particles can be ignited by impact or friction in handling, bumping or dropping the assembly. Ignition that is capable of propagating a premature explosion may occur at contact points between a steel, shaped charge end plate 46 or 48 and a steel housing 20. To minimize such ignition opportunities, the thrust disc 44 and upper end plate 46, for the present invention, are preferably fabricated of non-sparking brass.
The explosive material 60 traditionally used in the composition of shaped charge tubing cutters comprises a precisely measured quantity of powdered explosive material such as RDX or HMX. The
This frusto-conical liner 50 is placed in a press mold fixture with a portion of the fixture wall bridging the liner apex opening 62. A precisely measured quantity of powdered explosive material such as RDX or HMX is distributed within the internal cavity of the mold intimately against the interior liner surface and the fixture wall bridging the apex opening 62. The lower end plate 48 is placed over the explosive powder and the assembly subjected to a specified compression pressure. This pressed lamination comprises a half section of the cutter assembly 40. The upper half section is identically formed except for the booster aperture 70 along the central axis 13 of the upper end plate 46. A complete cutter assembly comprises a contiguous union of the apex zones 62 respective to the lower and upper half sections along the juncture plane 72.
Distinctively, the end plates 46 and 48 of the
Loading the booster charge 78 directly into the end plates 46 and 48 provides certain manufacturing and field assembly advantages. The field assembly steps of inserting a booster cartridge after placing the shaped charge assembly 40 in the housing are eliminated. The material logistics of separately packaged booster cartridges is also eliminated. However, to assure a symmetric application of explosive forces on the opposing faces of the V-grooved liner, the cutting charge initiation point 66 should be within a critical initiation distance of about 0.050″ to about 0.100″ from the juncture plane 72 for a 2.50″ cutter. The critical initiation distance may be increased or decreased proportionally for other sizes. The velocity or intensity of the booster explosion as influenced by the charge properties or the shape of the booster vent 82 as explained relative to
A modification of the
The tapered booster vent is intimately charged with booster explosive. Original initiation of the tapered booster charge occurs at the plane of the outer orifice 84 having initiation proximity with a detonator 31. The initiation shock wave propagates inwardly toward the inner orifice plane 86. As the shock wave progresses along the tapered booster vents 82, the concentration of shock wave energy intensifies due to the progressive increase in confinement of the explosive energy. Consequently, the tapered booster charge shock wave strikes the cutter charge 60 at the inner orifice plane 86 with an amplified impact.
The
The
Distinctively, the upper end plate 110 is axially bored for an aperture 120 of about 0.080″ to about 0.125″ diameter. The aperture 120 receives a booster cartridge 122 having a brass tube wall, for example, wall of about 0.010″ to about 0.030″. The booster cartridge 122 projects from the inner end of the aperture 120 to the juncture plane 72 of the cutter explosive 60.
Although several preferred embodiments of the invention have been illustrated in the accompanying drawings and describe in the foregoing specification, it will be understood by those of skill in the art that additional embodiments, modifications and alterations may be constructed from the invention principles disclosed herein. These various embodiments have been described herein with respect to cutting a “pipe.” Clearly, other embodiments of the cutter of the present invention may be employed for cutting any tubular good including, but not limited to, pipe, tubing, production/casing liner and/or casing. Accordingly, use of the term “tubular” in the following claims is defined to include and encompass all forms of pipe, tube, tubing, casing, liner, and similar mechanical elements.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2684030 | Muskat et. al. | Jul 1954 | A |
2839997 | Church et. al. | Jun 1958 | A |
3013491 | Poulter | Dec 1961 | A |
3053182 | Christopher | Sep 1962 | A |
3057295 | Christopher | Oct 1962 | A |
3108540 | Fletcher | Oct 1963 | A |
3233688 | Bell | Feb 1966 | A |
3245485 | Bell | Apr 1966 | A |
3599567 | Graham et al. | Aug 1971 | A |
3626850 | Davis | Dec 1971 | A |
3799055 | Irish et al. | Mar 1974 | A |
3893395 | Kilmer | Jul 1975 | A |
3938440 | Dooley et al. | Feb 1976 | A |
4354433 | Owen | Oct 1982 | A |
4425850 | Grossler | Jan 1984 | A |
4724105 | Owen | Feb 1988 | A |
4753170 | Regalbuto et al. | Jun 1988 | A |
4932239 | Regalbuto | Jun 1990 | A |
4961381 | McLaughlin | Oct 1990 | A |
5046563 | Engel et al. | Sep 1991 | A |
5129322 | Christopher et al. | Jul 1992 | A |
5377594 | Alford | Jan 1995 | A |
5385098 | Lindqvist et al. | Jan 1995 | A |
5698814 | Parsons et al. | Dec 1997 | A |
5714712 | Ewick et al. | Feb 1998 | A |
5859383 | Davison et al. | Jan 1999 | A |
6016753 | Glenn et al. | Jan 2000 | A |
6298913 | Box | Oct 2001 | B1 |
6408759 | Ewick et al. | Jun 2002 | B1 |
6505559 | Joslin et al. | Jan 2003 | B1 |
6644099 | Bell | Nov 2003 | B2 |
6792866 | Grattan | Sep 2004 | B2 |
7073448 | Bell | Jul 2006 | B2 |
7104326 | Grattan et al. | Sep 2006 | B2 |
20020083860 | Shim | Jul 2002 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20060075888 A1 | Apr 2006 | US |