1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to rotary drill bits for use in milling a casing window, and for use in drilling subterranean earthen materials.
2. Description of Related Art
After a wellbore has been drilled into subterranean earthen material, a casing is cemented into place to provide protection against pollution of water aquifers. With the advent of improved directional drilling techniques, existing wellbores are being used as starting points from which new, lateral boreholes are drilled. In order to initiate the drilling of a lateral borehole, an opening or window must be cut or milled into the casing. A curved drilling guide or “whipstock” is set in the casing, and a special milling tool is lowered into the casing. The whipstock directs the milling tool against the casing wall, and the rotation of the milling tools creates the casing window. Once the casing window has been created in harder formations, the milling tool must be removed from the casing and a different drill bit used to drill the lateral borehole in the subterranean earthen material.
The use of a milling tool to create the casing window and the use of a different drill bit to drill the lateral borehole causes significant waste of time waiting for the drill string to be removed and then reentered into the casing. With offshore drilling rig day rates being so expensive, there is strong economic incentive to reduce the number of “trips” into and out of the wellbore. Therefore, there is a need for a drill bit that can be used for both milling of the casing window and for drilling the lateral wellbore, without the need for a drill string trip out of and back into the wellbore.
The present invention has been contemplated to overcome the foregoing deficiencies and meet the above described needs. In particular, the present invention comprises a novel rotary drill bit and its method of use for milling a casing window and for drilling a lateral borehole into subterranean earthen materials. The rotary drill bit has a first set of cutting elements that are specifically adapted for milling casing material, and a separate second set of cutting elements that are specifically adapted for drilling subterranean earthen materials. In use, the rotary drill bit is lowered into a casing set within a borehole; and the drill bit is rotated to engage an inner surface of the casing. The first set of cutting elements on the drill bit remove casing material to mill a casing window. The drill bit is then moved through the casing window so that the second set of cutting elements on the drill bit create a lateral wellbore in subterranean earthen material. The dual use of the rotary drill bit of the present invention eliminates the prior costly need for a drill string trip to change from a milling tool to a separate drill bit.
As briefly described above, the present invention is a rotary drill bit for milling casing material and for drilling subterranean formation material. Generally, the rotary drill bit comprises a bit body having a shank portion for interconnection to a drill string and a plurality of cutting elements extending from the bit body. A first set of the cutting elements are specifically adapted for milling casing material, and a second set of the cutting elements are specifically adapted for drilling subterranean formation material.
As used herein the term “rotary drill bit” means any bit that is rotated to create a borehole in subterranean earthen materials. Examples of such rotary drill bits include rolling cutter rock bits and drag bits, such as core bits, PDC bits, bits having diamond materials impregnated into the body matrix, bits having a lower pilot section and an upper reaming section, bi-centrix bits having sections with differing centers of rotation for drilling boreholes larger than the true diameter of the drill bit, and the like well known to those skilled in the art.
To better understand the novelty of the drill bit of the present invention and the methods of use thereof, reference is hereafter made to the accompanying drawings.
As used herein, the term “face portion” means the lowermost section of the drill bit that has cutting elements to create the borehole. In relation to rolling cutter drill bits, the face portion of each cone or cutter is the area from the apex of the cone to the last row of cutter teeth that create the borehole. The term “gage portion” means the section of the drill bit that may or may not have cutting elements and extends from the face portion upwardly along the sides of the drill bit. In relation to rolling cutter drill bits, the gage portion of each cone or cutter is the area adjacent the face portion and extending from the largest diameter row of teeth, and includes the heel row, as is well known to those skilled in the art.
As shown in
The cutting elements of the second set 24 are sized, arranged and configured for abrading, shearing or crushing subterranean earthen materials, and can be located on the face portion 16, the gage portion 18 or both. The cutting elements of the second set 24 are formed in any desired shape, such as chisel teeth, domed inserts, particles that are impregnated into the bit body, wafers or discs, and the like. Preferably, the cutting elements of the second set 24 are formed from poly crystalline diamond compact (PDC), thermally stable polycrystalline diamond product (TSP), natural diamond, cubic boron nitride, or tungsten carbide.
The cutting elements of the first set 22 and the second set 24 can be attached to the bit body 14 in any known manner, such as a casting, by brazing, welding, soldering, gluing, bolting, and the like.
After the drill bit 10 of the present invention has created the casing window, as will be described more fully below, the same drill bit will be used to create a lateral borehole in subterranean earthen materials. It is intended that all or a substantial portion of the first set 22 of cutting elements be still attached to the drill bit body 14 after creating the casing window, so that these same cutting elements can be used to start the creation of the lateral borehole. However, the first set 22 of cutting elements are formed from a material that is less hard than the second set 24. Therefore, the first set 22 of cutting elements are intended to be quickly removed by or be worn away by rotary drilling of the lateral borehole. The second set 24 of cutting elements can be on the face portion 16, the gage portion 18, or both.
In
An alternate preferred embodiment of the drill bit 10 of the present invention is shown in
As can be understood from the previous discussion, the drill bit of the present invention permits a casing window to be created and a lateral borehole to be drilled, all with the same drill bit. Thereby, the costly prior need for removing the milling tool and rerunning the drill string back into the wellbore to drill the lateral borehole is eliminated.
Whereas the present invention has been described in particular relation to the drawings attached hereto, it should be understood that other and further modifications, apart from those shown or suggested herein, may be made within the scope and spirit of the present invention.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4255165 | Dennis et al. | Mar 1981 | A |
5025874 | Barr et al. | Jun 1991 | A |
5027912 | Juergens | Jul 1991 | A |
5135061 | Newton, Jr. | Aug 1992 | A |
5423387 | Lynde | Jun 1995 | A |
5531281 | Murdock | Jul 1996 | A |
5887655 | Haugen et al. | Mar 1999 | A |
5887668 | Haugen et al. | Mar 1999 | A |
5979571 | Scott et al. | Nov 1999 | A |
6009962 | Beaton | Jan 2000 | A |
6073518 | Chow et al. | Jun 2000 | A |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
2086451 | May 1982 | GB |
9813572 | Apr 1998 | WO |