Rotary steerable drilling tools are commonly utilized in downhole drilling operations. The use of such drilling tools tends to confer several advantages, for example, including improved well placement with reduced wellbore tortuosity and a smoother, less aggressive borehole wall. Moreover, rotary steerable tools tend to provide better weight transfer to the bit and improved wellbore cleaning, which in turn tends to increase the rate of penetration of drilling.
The use of drilling automation with rotary steerable drilling tools is also becoming increasingly common in drilling subterranean wellbores. Such methods may be employed, for example, to control the direction of drilling based on various downhole feedback measurements or to control various aspects of tool functionality.
A rotary controlled system includes first and second alternators electrically connected to one another via a DC voltage bus. The alternators may optionally be further mechanically connected to one another via corresponding rotationally coupled components (such as rotationally coupled stators). A first field oriented controller is electrically connected with the first alternator and configured to cause the first alternator to provide a constant DC voltage to the voltage bus. A second field oriented controller is electrically connected with the second alternator and configured to receive electrical power from the voltage bus and cause the second alternator to provide servo angular position control of the rotationally coupled components.
In one example embodiment, a downhole tool includes a downhole tool collar configured for coupling with a drill string such that the tool collar rotates with the drill string. A roll stabilized housing is deployed in and rotationally decoupled from the tool collar. An electronic controller deployed in the roll stabilized housing includes first and second field oriented controllers, the first field oriented controller configured to provide a constant DC voltage to a voltage bus and the second field oriented controller configured to receive power from the voltage bus and provide servo angular position control for the roll stabilized housing.
In another example embodiment, a method for controlling a downhole tool includes (i) pumping drilling fluid through the downhole tool while rotating the tool in a subterranean wellbore, the tool including first and second turbine alternators electrically connected to one another via a voltage bus and mechanically connected to one another via rotationally coupled component; (ii) causing a first field oriented controller to regulate power output from the first turbine alternator to provide a constant DC voltage at the voltage bus; and (iii) causing a second field oriented controller to receive electrical power from the voltage bus and to regulate the second turbine alternator to provide servo angular position control of the rotationally coupled components.
The disclosed embodiments may provide various technical advantages. For example, certain of the disclosed embodiments may provide for fast and efficient servo and motor control. Moreover, the disclosed embodiments tend to be robust and allow for thorough validation and verification testing. In rotary steerable embodiments, the disclosed embodiments may provide for improved angular position control of a roll stabilized housing which may in turn improve tool performance metrics such as steerability and rate of penetration of drilling. The disclosed embodiments may further provide for improved position control at higher drilling speeds and tend to reduce electric power conversion within the tool.
This summary is provided to introduce a selection of concepts that are further described below in the detailed description. This summary is not intended to identify key or essential features of the claimed subject matter, nor is it intended to be used as an aid in limiting the scope of the claimed subject matter.
For a more complete understanding of the disclosed subject matter, and advantages thereof, reference is now made to the following descriptions taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
At least some disclosed embodiments relate generally to angular position control in rotary systems and more particularly to a rotary steerable system employing field oriented control applied to cascaded voltage regulation and servo angular position control using an open loop plant model of a roll-stabilized housing.
The rotary steerable tool may include substantially any suitable steering tool including a roll stabilized controller (or control unit) deployed in a roll stabilized housing or an otherwise substantially non-rotating housing. For example, various PowerDrive (trademark of Schlumberger) rotary steerable systems include a drill collar that is intended to fully rotate with the drill string and an internal roll-stabilized control unit intended to remain substantially rotationally geostationary (i.e., rotationally stable with respect to the tool axis, the tool axis attitude being defined with respect to the wellbore reference frame). Other rotary steerable systems, e.g., including the PathMaker rotary steerable system (a trademark of Schlumberger), the AutoTrak® rotary steerable system (available from Baker Hughes), and the GeoPilot rotary steerable system (a trademark of Halliburton) include a substantially non-rotating outer housing employing blades that engage the borehole wall.
While various embodiments are described herein with respect to rotary steerable drilling tools, it will be understood that the disclosed embodiments are not so limited. Rather, disclosed control system embodiments may be suitably employed to provide rotational control for substantially any suitable downhole tools in which one portion of the tool rotates relative to another (e.g., including a geo-stationary sensor housing that is free to rotate with respect to the drill string). Moreover, the disclosed embodiments are not even limited to downhole tools. The disclosed embodiments include a rotary control system including first and second alternators electrically coupled to one another via a common DC voltage bus. The alternators may optionally be further mechanically/rotationally coupled to one another, for example, via mechanically/rotationally coupled rotor or stator components.
In the embodiment depicted on
While not depicted on
It will be understood that the phrase “common stator” is meant to disclose that the stator windings 81, 86 are rotationally coupled to one another such that they rotate together about the tool axis. Stated another way the stator windings 81, 86 share a common rotation, for example, via the roll stabilized housing 70 in
With continued reference to
A servo regulation block (or angular position regulation block) 136 receives a demand angular position (e.g., toolface) θtfr and a measured angular position feedback θtfy from the common stator 106 (e.g., from accelerometers and/or magnetometers deployed in the roll stabilized housing 70) and outputs direct and quadrature demand currents Id2r and Iq2r to FOC controller 120. A Clarke-Park transform routine is used to process a relative toolface rotational position (θΔ2=θr2−θs2) between the rotor and stator in the second torquer to transform the direct and quadrature demand currents to direct and quadrature voltages Vd2 and Vq2 at 122. These voltages are then further transformed to three-phase sinusoidal currents ia2, ib2, and ic2 at 124 via an SVM inverter. The three-phase sinusoidal currents may then applied to the second torquer 104 as depicted in order to provide servo angular position control of the stator 106 (i.e., to maintain the stator at a constant toolface angle).
With continued reference to
where Id and Iq represent direct and quadrature current components, Rs represents a stator winding resistance, ωr and ωs represent rotational speeds of the rotor and stator such that ωr−ωs represents the rotation speed of the dq reference frame, φd and φq represent direct and quadrature axis flux linkage components such that φd=LdId+φm and φq=LqIq. The parameters Ld and Lq represents the inductances of the direct and quadrature axes of the state are and φm represents a constant magnetic flux produced by the permanent magnets 82, 87.
The electromagnetic torque Te may be expressed mathematically, for example, as follows:
where P represents the number of pole pairs. A mechanical governing equation may be expressed mathematically, for example, as follows:
where J represents an inertia, b represents a fraction coefficients, and Tm represents a load torque. Based on the foregoing, a mathematical model for the roll stabilized housing 70 may be expressed, for example, as follows:
Where the subscripts (1 and 2) refer to the first and second torquers, the subscripts (r and s) refer to rotor (outer) and stator (inner) parts of the torquers, and the dot accent on the left-hand side of each equation denotes the first derivative of the corresponding quantity with respect to time (e.g., such that id1=dId1/dt, iq1=dIq1/dt, and so on).
The applied voltage regulation scheme makes use of feedback linearization to provide a wider operating envelope than would otherwise be possible with a small perturbation-based linearization control scheme. As used herein the term feedback linearization refers to a technique in which an inner loop linearizes the input-state relationship and an outer loop stabilizes the closed-loop dynamics. In this scheme the first torquer 102 is understood to be rectifying the power taken from the drilling fluid as if it were a three-phase supply as shown on
{dot over (x)}=f(x)+gu
y=h(x) (5)
where {dot over (x)}=[İd, İq, {dot over (V)}DC]T, y=[Id, VDC]T, u=[ud−0, uq−Eq]T, and:
where L=Ld=Lq, dω/dt=0, and Eq represents the q-phase voltage source. The control objectives are to regulate Id to zero and VDC to the required voltage DC-bus value using the FOC SVM voltage control inputs ud and uq. Differentiating the controlled outputs y1=Id and y2=VDC until the inputs appear and rearranging gives:
Therefore the control gains u1 and u2 can be evaluated, for example, as follows:
assuming the following error dynamics:
ë1+k11ė1+k22e1=0+k21ë2+k22ė2+k23e2=0
A demand angular position θr and an absolute angular position θ are summed in outer loop 202 at 212. The plant for the outer position loop 202 may be taken as a pure integrator (as indicated at 224) given the assumption that the velocity loop is sufficiently fast. Therefore a nested PI-SISO architecture may be used for the position loop with pole placement gains given by ωn2 and 2δωn for the forward path integral and the feedback path proportional gains respectively.
The position error from 212 is received at 214 and processed to obtain a position control output (e.g., a velocity demand). The position control output is combined at 216 with a measured rotation rate of the tool collar obtained at 208 and a relative demand velocity {dot over (θ)} of the common stator (e.g., the control housing) with respect to the tool collar obtained in middle loop 204 to compute a velocity error. The velocity error is received at 218 and processed to compute a demand torque which is processed in inner loop 206 as described below.
The middle velocity loop 204 may be proportional only and may be configured using pole placement assuming a first order lag open loop plant. This first order lag assumption tends to be reasonable given that the dominant dynamics are inertia and a friction dominated second order transfer function, the derivative of which is a first order lag. Thus, the pole placement proportional gain may be given by
where τ1 represents the control specification for the velocity response time constant.
It will be understood that the inner current control loop 206 is not fully depicted, but rather its location in the control architecture 200 is indicated by 206. A demand torque is received from 218 and divided by a motor constant to obtain the demand quadrature current Iq2r which is turn processed to obtain the three phase sinusoidal currents as described above with respect to
Thus, a nested PI-SISO architecture is used with pole placement gains given by Lωn2 and 2Lδωn−R for the forward path integral in the feedback Path proportional gains, respectively. The closed loop control specifications are the natural frequency ωn and the damping ratio δ.
In the disclosed embodiments element 220 may include the SVM inverter 124 depicted on
Simulation Results
A transient simulation of the above described control system was created in Matlab/Simulink using the parameter values listed below in Table 1. The simulation included the non-linear open loop plant (described above with respect to Equations 1-4) and the voltage regulating and servo FOC controllers 110 and 120 described above with respect to
The control specifications for the voltage regulating and servo control loops are shown in Table 2.
The methods described herein may be configured for downhole implementation via various hardware controllers (e.g., deployed in the roll stabilized housing 70 depicted on
Although a system and method for providing roll stabilized control in a rotary steerable tool has been described in detail, it should be understood that various changes, substitutions and alternations can be made herein without departing from the spirit and scope of the disclosure as defined by the appended claims.
This application claims the benefit of: U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 62/213,725 filed Sep. 3, 2015 and entitled Rotary Steerable Roll Stabilized Control System.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20170067332 A1 | Mar 2017 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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62213725 | Sep 2015 | US |