Geologic reservoirs may be used for various purposes such as hydrocarbon production, geothermal production, or carbon dioxide sequestration. These reservoirs are typically accessed by drilling boreholes through the earth to the reservoirs.
A borehole is drilled using a drill bit that is rotated by drill pipes coupled together in series and generally known as a drill string. As the borehole is being drilled, several instruments or tools disposed at the drill string may perform measurements that may be used to monitor drilling operations or characterize the earth formation being drilled. In order to provide these measurements to an operator, processing system or controller disposed at the surface of the earth in real time, these measurements may be transmitted electrically via a transmission line or cable disposed in the drill string. Because drilling fluid is pumped through the interior of the drill string and the drill string is subject to severe vibrations during the drilling process, apparatus and method that protects the transmission line would be well received in the drilling industry.
Disclosed is an apparatus for communicating a signal to or from a downhole tool. The apparatus includes: a drill pipe configured to be rotated to drill a borehole; a tubular under axial tension and secured in the drill pipe; a retention device secured to the tubular and configured to maintain the tubular under the axial tension, the retention device comprising a portion extending from a body of the device in a direction that is non-inward-radial with respect to the drill pipe; and a transmission line disposed in the tubular and in an opening of the retention device and in communication with the downhole tool.
Also disclosed is a method for building an apparatus for communicating a signal to or from a downhole tool. The method includes: receiving a drill pipe; placing a tubular in axial tension; securing the tubular to the drill pipe using a retention device configured to maintain the tubular under the axial tension, the retention device having a portion extending from a body of the device in a direction that is non-inward-radial with respect to the drill pipe; disposing a transmission line into the tubular and an opening of the retention device; wherein the transmission line is configured to communicate the signal.
Further disclosed is a method for communicating a signal to or from a downhole tool. The method includes: disposing a drill pipe in a borehole; and communicating the signal to or from the downhole tool using a transmission line in communication with the downhole tool, the transmission line being disposed in a tubular that is under axial tension and in a retention device that secures the tubular to the drill pipe, the retention device having a portion extending from a body of the device in a direction that is non-inward-radial with respect to the drill pipe.
The following descriptions should not be considered limiting in any way. With reference to the accompanying drawings, like elements are numbered alike:
A detailed description of one or more embodiments of the disclosed apparatus and method presented herein by way of exemplification and not limitation with reference to the figures.
Disclosed are apparatus and method for retaining a tubular disposed in a drill pipe that is part of a drill string. The tubular is configured to enclose or form part of a transmission line in order to retain the transmission line and protect it from vibrations and the environment interior to the drill string. The drill tubular is secured to the drill pipe under tension using a retainer device secured to each end of the drill pipe. The tension provides additional rigidity to the tubular to limit movement preventing interference with tools that may traverse the interior of the drill string.
It can be appreciated that the transmission line 5 may be configured to convey electrical signals, electromagnetic signals or optical signals. To convey electrical signals, the transmission line 5 may include two or more electrical conductors, and the cooperative signal couplers may be induction coils, which can induce a signal from one coil to a cooperative adjacent coil using electromagnetic induction. It can be appreciated that other types of technology may be employed to transmit electrical signals between adjacent drill pipes. The other types of technology may include capacitive (resonant electric) coupling, optical coupling, galvanic coupling (e.g. electrical connection), and a resonant coupling system that may use acoustic resonators for converting the electrical signals to acoustic signals and vice-versa. Non-limiting embodiments of the transmission line 5 for communicating electrical signals include a coaxial cable, a triaxial cable, a twisted pair cable, a ribbon cable, and insulated conductors. To convey electromagnetic signals, the transmission line 5 may be a wave guide and may include the tubular 20 itself and the cooperative signal couplers may be configured to couple wave guides. To convey optical signals, the transmission line 5 may include one or more optical fibers and the cooperative signal couplers may be optical couplers having optical mating surfaces that may be recessed in the drill pipe mating surfaces.
Reference may now be made to
In the embodiment of
In an installed configuration, the tubular 20 is under axial tension (i.e. having at least a vector component of axial tension), which can improve the rigidity and resistance to flexing of the tubular 20. In one or more embodiments, a first retention device 21 may be secured to a first end face of the tubular 20. The tubular 20 is then stretched a selected amount that is within the desired deformation range (which may be elastic) of the tubular 20 and a second retention device 22 may be secured to a second end face of the tubular 20. The term “end face” as used with respect to the tubular 20 refers to where the tubular 20 terminates or ends. The tubular 20 with the second retention device 22 installed is allowed to retract into the drill pipe 8, but still remains under axial tension after retraction. Hence, the tubular 20 remains under axial tension even when the drill pipe 8 is in an unstressed state such as not being under axial tension from a drilling operation. It can be appreciated that the amount of axial tension may be sufficient to keep the tubular under axial tension even when the drill pipe is undergoing compressive loads during drilling operations.
It can be appreciated that increasing the amount of stretching may increase the amount of rigidity and resistance to flexing and, thus, prevent cracks or damage from occurring in the tubular 20. In addition, by resisting flexing the tubular 20 may be held firmly in place so as not to interfere with tools that may be conveyed through the interior or the drill string 9. It can be appreciated that increasing the amount of stretching, but still being within the elastic deformation range, may increase the natural resonant frequency of the tubular 20 such that the resonant frequency has sufficient distanced to a drill string's vibrational frequency under all environmental conditions (e.g., temperature ranges, pressure ranges, mud properties) to which the drill string will be exposed. In one or more embodiments, the tubular 20 is made from a high strength metal alloy such as a high strength stainless steel alloy. Similarly, in one or more embodiments, the retention devices 21 and 22 are made from a high strength metal alloy such as a high strength stainless steel alloy. Materials selected for the tubular 20 and the retention devices 21 and 22 are in general suitable to be welded or attached to each other. The term “high strength” relates to the metal alloy having a high enough strength to be resistant to damage during normal use. The pre-tension of the tubular is selected such that the tubular 20 is usually tensioned during drill pipe use such as when the drill pipe is in a curved borehole or undergoing compression. It can be appreciated that high strength composite materials may also be used to build the tubular 20 and the retention devices 21 and 22.
Referring to
While the tubular 20 is illustrated as being straight from the box end 23 to the pin end 24 of the drill pipe 8 in
In support of the teachings herein, various analysis components may be used, including a digital and/or an analog system. For example, the downhole tools 10, the downhole electronics 11, or the computer processing system 12 may include digital and/or analog systems. The system may have components such as a processor, storage media, memory, input, output, communications link (wired or optical or other), user interfaces, software programs, signal processors (digital or analog) and other such components (such as resistors, capacitors, inductors and others) to provide for operation and analyses of the apparatus and methods disclosed herein in any of several manners well-appreciated in the art. It is considered that these teachings may be, but need not be, implemented in conjunction with a set of computer executable instructions stored on a non-transitory computer readable medium, including memory (ROMs, RAMs), optical (CD-ROMs), or magnetic (disks, hard drives), or any other type that when executed causes a computer to implement the method of the present invention. These instructions may provide for equipment operation, control, data collection and analysis and other functions deemed relevant by a system designer, owner, user or other such personnel, in addition to the functions described in this disclosure.
Further, various other components may be included and called upon for providing for aspects of the teachings herein. For example, a power supply (e.g., at least one of a generator, a remote supply and a battery), magnet, electromagnet, sensor, electrode, transmitter, receiver, transceiver, antenna, controller, optical unit, signal repeater, amplifier, connector, splice, electrical unit or electromechanical unit may be included in support of the various aspects discussed herein or in support of other functions beyond this disclosure.
Elements of the embodiments have been introduced with either the articles “a” or “an.” The articles are intended to mean that there are one or more of the elements. The terms “including” and “having” and the like are intended to be inclusive such that there may be additional elements other than the elements listed. The conjunction “or” when used with a list of at least two terms is intended to mean any term or combination of terms. The terms “first,” “second” and the like do not denote a particular order, but are used to distinguish different elements.
The flow diagrams depicted herein are just examples. There may be many variations to these diagrams or the steps (or operations) described therein without departing from the spirit of the invention. For instance, the steps may be performed in a differing order, or steps may be added, deleted or modified. All of these variations are considered a part of the claimed invention.
While one or more embodiments have been shown and described, modifications and substitutions may be made thereto without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. Accordingly, it is to be understood that the present invention has been described by way of illustrations and not limitation.
It will be recognized that the various components or technologies may provide certain necessary or beneficial functionality or features. Accordingly, these functions and features as may be needed in support of the appended claims and variations thereof, are recognized as being inherently included as a part of the teachings herein and a part of the invention disclosed.
While the invention has been described with reference to exemplary embodiments, it will be understood that various changes may be made and equivalents may be substituted for elements thereof without departing from the scope of the invention. In addition, many modifications will be appreciated to adapt a particular instrument, situation or material to the teachings of the invention without departing from the essential scope thereof. Therefore, it is intended that the invention not be limited to the particular embodiment disclosed as the best mode contemplated for carrying out this invention, but that the invention will include all embodiments falling within the scope of the appended claims.
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