The present invention relates to the field of directional drilling, and in particular to a reamer suitable for use in downhole drilling operations.
Directional drilling involves controlling the direction of a wellbore as it is being drilled. It is often necessary to adjust the direction of the wellbore frequently while directional drilling, either to accommodate a planned change in direction or to compensate for unintended and unwanted deflection of the wellbore.
In the drill string, the bottom-hole assembly is the lower portion of the drill string consisting of the bit, the bit sub, a drilling motor, drill collars, directional drilling equipment, and various measurement sensors. Typically, drilling stabilizers are incorporated in the drill string in directional drilling. The primary purpose of using stabilizers in the bottom-hole assembly is to stabilize the bottom-hole assembly and the drilling bit that is attached to the distal end of the bottom-hole assembly, so that it rotates properly on its axis. When a bottom-hole assembly is properly stabilized, the weight applied to the drilling bit can be optimized.
A secondary purpose of using stabilizers in the bottom-hole assembly is to assist in steering the drill string so that the direction of the wellbore can be controlled. For example, properly positioned stabilizers can assist in increasing or decreasing the deflection angle of the wellbore by supporting the drill string near the drilling bit or by not supporting the drill string near the drilling bit.
Drilling operators frequently have a need to open up tight restrictions in a borehole prior to running casing, liners, and packers in the hole. In addition, reamers may be used to remove ledges in the borehole profile. Reaming a borehole reduces the frequency of stuck pipe, helps in running wireline tools that may get stuck on ledges, and reduces the frequency of stick slip, which reduces the amount of vibration and the damage to the bottom hole assembly and the drilling bit.
In addition, reaming or opening a borehole reduces the annular fluid velocities to manage the equivalent circulating density (ECD) more effectively, an important factor in the drilling of a well.
A downhole apparatus for reaming a borehole incorporates two sets of cutting structures into two integral blade stabilizers, one oriented downhole and the other oriented uphole. The cutting structures comprise polycrystalline diamond cutters that are brazed into a wedge of steel that is inserted into the body of the reamers in an axial direction and retained by a stop block and retention cover that is bolted into the reamer. The two integral blade stabilizers have a combination left hand/right hand blade wrapping to provide 360° support around the circumference of the reamer. Between the two stabilizers, an impeller and a flow accelerator agitate cuttings on the low side of the borehole to mix the cuttings in with the drilling mud.
A method of enlarging a borehole uses a reamer such as is described above, stabilizing the reamer in the borehole and enlarging the borehole with the cutting sections. In one embodiment, the reamer can enlarge the borehole when moving both downhole and uphole.
The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated in and constitute a part of this specification, illustrate an implementation of apparatus and methods consistent with the present invention and, together with the detailed description, serve to explain advantages and principles consistent with the invention. In the drawings,
In the following description, for purposes of explanation, numerous specific details are set forth in order to provide a thorough understanding of the invention. It will be apparent, however, to one skilled in the art that the invention may be practiced without these specific details. In other instances, structure and devices are shown in block diagram form in order to avoid obscuring the invention. References to numbers without subscripts or suffixes are understood to reference all instance of subscripts and suffixes corresponding to the referenced number. Moreover, the language used in this disclosure has been principally selected for readability and instructional purposes, and may not have been selected to delineate or circumscribe the inventive subject matter, resort to the claims being necessary to determine such inventive subject matter. Reference in the specification to “one embodiment” or to “an embodiment” means that a particular feature, structure, or characteristic described in connection with the embodiments is included in at least one embodiment of the invention, and multiple references to “one embodiment” or “an embodiment” should not be understood as necessarily all referring to the same embodiment.
In describing various locations in the following description, the term “downhole” refers to the direction along the longitudinal axis of the wellbore that looks toward the furthest extent of the wellbore. Downhole is also the direction toward the location of the drill bit and other elements of the bottom-hole assembly. Similarly, the term “uphole” refers to the direction along the longitudinal axis of the wellbore that leads back to the surface, or away from the drill bit. In a situation where the drilling is more or less along a vertical path, downhole is truly in the down direction and uphole is truly in the up direction, but in horizontal drilling, the terms up and down are ambiguous, so the terms downhole and uphole are used to designate relative positions along the drill string. Similarly, in a wellbore approximating a horizontal direction, there is a “high” side of the wellbore and a “low” side of the wellbore, which refer to those points on the circumference of the wellbore that are closest and farthest, respectively, from the surface of the land or water.
In between the stabilizers 130 and 140 are a helical feature 150 that acts as an impeller and a flow accelerator 160. The impeller 150 and flow accelerator 160 are used to agitate the cuttings that are lying on the low side of the borehole in a horizontally drilled borehole as is described in more detail below.
Couplings 170 and 180 on each end of the reamer 100 allow coupling of the reamer 100 into a drill string.
The IB stabilizers 130 and 140 are rotating block stabilizers that are incorporated into the reamer 100 and rotate with the reamer 100 as the drill string rotates. Although illustrated in
As illustrated in
Although an IB stabilizer having straight blades is suitable for slide drilling, straight blades tend to cause shock and vibration in the bottom-hole assembly when rotary drilling. Wrapped blades such as illustrated in
The IB stabilizers 130 and 140 are symmetrically spaced around the impeller 150, to minimize shock and vibration on the bottom-hole assembly and other drill string components. Because both stabilizer 130 and stabilizer 140 use a right-hand left-hand combination wrap, the stabilizers 130 and 140 provide 360° support for the stabilizer blades and aid in the reduction of shock and vibration. The IB stabilizers 130 and 140 allow the reamer 100 to maintain a directional path of the wellbore while the reamer 100 enlarges the borehole. The reamer 100 exhibits neutral directional behavior because of the symmetrical placement and combined left-hand/right-hand symmetry of the IB stabilizers 130 and 140.
In one embodiment, the stabilizer blades are spaced apart around the circumference of the IB stabilizers 130 and 140 with a large spacing to reduce the chance of cuttings accumulating between the blades and packing off that particular portion of the IB stabilizer 130 or 140.
The outer diameter of the IB stabilizers 130 and 140 are typically very near that of the drill bit diameter, thus the stabilizers contact will nearly contact the wall of the wellbore at all times. The stabilizers 130 and 140 keep the advancement of the drill bit proceeding in a straight line, preventing any further curvature of the wellbore trajectory until the drill string is reconfigured. The stabilizers must therefore be of a highly robust design and construction to withstand the extremely high loads that are imported to the stabilizers when they experience contact with the wall of the wellbore. In addition, the action of the cutting structures 110 and 120 adds stress on the blades of the stabilizers 130 and 140.
As illustrated in
In one embodiment, each blade member 210 comprises a substantially straight portion 212 located at the downhole end of the blade member 210, and an angular profile 214 located at the uphole end portion of the blade member 210. The angular profile 214 in one embodiment comprises a chevron or V-shaped portion having an apex in a counterclockwise direction relative to a downhole direction along the central axis. In one embodiment, the apexes of the angular portion 214 of each blade member 210 are in circumferential alignment.
The numbers and configurations of the IB stabilizers 130 and 140 are illustrative and by way of example only, and other numbers and configurations can be used, including straight (non-wrapped) IB stabilizers.
The stabilizer 130 is essentially identical to the stabilizer 140, but oriented in the opposite direction. The cutting structures 110 and 120 are positioned distal to the impeller 150 and flow accelerator 160 in both stabilizers 130 and 140. The cutting structures 110 and 120 are disposed in the straight portions 212 of each stabilizer blade 210.
Turning now to
The wedge 510 is further retained by a stop block 550 that is disposed under one end of a retention cover 540. A stop block 550 may be pinned into the blade 210. The retention cover 540 covers the stop block 550 and may be bolted using bolts 542 or otherwise removably affixed to the blade 210.
As illustrated in
As illustrated in
In one embodiment, the retention section 320, comprising the stop block 550 and retention cover 540, is designed to retain the wedge section 310, comprising the wedge 510 and PDCs 520, such that in use all of the loading on the PDCs 520 is transmitted through the wedge 510 into the body of the reamer 100. In such an embodiment, no loads are placed on the bolts 542 that attach the retention cover 540 to the reamer 100. The embodiment illustrated in
By using two cutting structures 110 and 120, one facing uphole and one facing downhole, the reamer 100 can act in either an uphole or a downhole direction.
In horizontal drilling, the drill bit is frequently directed at an angle at or near horizontal, and may continue in that trajectory for great distances. The flow of the drilling mud inside the wellbore is parallel with the axis of the wellbore, thus is at or near horizontal, so the cuttings are not only carried horizontally by the viscous force of the mud, but are also acted upon vertically downward by the public gravity. The viscous forces imparted by the mud when traveling horizontally often cannot overcome the gravity forces, thereby allowing the cuttings to congregate in higher densities along the low side of the horizontal wellbore.
This accumulation of cuttings poses various problems with drilling process. The higher density of cuttings on the low side of the wellbore increases drag on the drill string by causing contact and interference with the rotational as well as translational movement of the drill string pipe and other drill string components. The higher density of cuttings also increases the wear and tear on the drill string, as well as increases the likelihood of downhole problems such as stuck pipe.
In
Because the IB stabilizers 130 and 140 are capable of withstanding the relatively high impact loads that result from contact with the wellbore wall, they are able to keep the impeller 150, which has a smaller outer diameter than that of the maximum diameter of the stabilizers 130 and 140, from having any contact with the wall of the wellbore. Therefore, the impeller 150 does not need to have the same strength and durability as the IB stabilizers 130 and 140.
In one embodiment, the pitch of the helical curves of the blades 610 is essentially the ratio of the circumferential displacement of the blade 610 relative to the axial displacement of the blades 610 across a given axial length of the impeller 150, just as pitches defined for any conventional screw.
The profile of the blades 610 of the impeller 150 is consistent throughout the length of the agitator. Likewise, the profile of the grooves 620 between the blades 610 of the impeller 150 is also consistent throughout the length of the impeller 150. The shape of the impeller blades 610 features a forward bias, such that the leading face of the blade 610 that first contacts the drilling fluid while the drill string is rotating is undercut relative to an imaginary line drawn radially from the axis 650 of the reamer 100. Thus, the agitator blades face “leans” into the fluid. This forward bias, along with the sharper pitch of the helical curve of the blades 610, produces a greater augering effect upon the drilling fluid and the entrained cuttings. Thus the blades 610 of the impeller 150 are not just stirring the cuttings within the flow stream of the mud, but are actually moving the cuttings from the low side of the wellbore where the density is at a maximum, and redistributing them to areas in the wellbore where the density of cuttings is lower.
The flow accelerator 160 is disposed between the impeller 150 and the downhole IB stabilizer 140. As best illustrated in
It is to be understood that the above description is intended to be illustrative, and not restrictive. For example, the above-described embodiments may be used in combination with each other. Many other embodiments will be apparent to those of skill in the art upon reviewing the above description. The scope of the invention therefore should be determined with reference to the appended claims, along with the full scope of equivalents to which such claims are entitled. In the appended claims, the terms “including” and “in which” are used as the plain-English equivalents of the respective terms “comprising” and “wherein.”
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