In traditional systems for drilling boreholes, rock destruction is carried out via rotary power conveyed by rotating the drill string at the surface using a rotary table or by rotary power derived from mud flow downhole using, for example, a mud motor. Through these modes of power provision, traditional bits such as tri-cone, polycrystalline diamond compact (“PDC”), and diamond bits are operated at speeds and torques supplied at the surface rotary table or by the downhole motor.
In some circumstances and under some drilling conditions when using these traditional techniques, the drilling rate (or rate of penetration, “ROP”) may be compromised. When that occurs, the operator has several options to improve the drilling rate. The operator can trip out the drill string for a new drilling assembly more likely to be successful in drilling under the existing circumstances. Alternatively, if a rotary table on the surface provides the drilling power, the operator can change the rotary speed within a relatively narrow range, such as approximately 60 to 250 revolutions per minute (“RPM”). If the drilling system includes a downhole positive-displacement motor (“PDM”), the operator can change the motor speed over a range, for example, of approximately 150 RPM to approximately 300 RPM (for a medium speed 6¾-inch motor). A change in motor speed, however, can produce proportionate flow rate changes that can have a profound effect on hole cleaning, pressure drop, and other factors. As yet another alternative, the operator can attempt to adjust the weight on bit by adjusting the hook load at surface.
In all of these techniques the operator is remote, both in distance and time, from the changing bottom hole conditions that caused the compromised ROP. As a consequence, it may take some time for the compromised ROP to manifest itself at the surface and for the operator to recognize that the ROP has decreased. In addition, the operator's response actions, such as adjusting the rotary speed, hook load, or flow rate, are equally remote from the bit on bottom. Various load factors such as torque and drag may attenuate the operator's control action and compromise its effectiveness.
Continuous movement, including rotation, of the drill string has important benefits in addition to transferring power to the bit. Torque and drag consumption along the drill string due to frictional losses may reduce the weight and rotary torque available to be transferred to the bit, which may cause the power available at the bit to be variable or unpredictable. This power variability may, in turn, compromise ROP. An important source of frictional loss is static friction, which typically occurs during non-rotary periods, momentary stoppages of the pipe during sliding due to stick/slip, and periodic stoppages during additions of drill pipe. In addition to the static friction, an immobile pipe string is more likely to become differentially stuck due to pressure differential between the hole and the formation. Further, pipe rotation is known to keep the cuttings mobile and off the bottom of the hole, especially in horizontal wells.
A vibration sub 200 may be utilized at various points in the drill string, to ensure that the string is in a dynamic state even when not rotating or progressing down the hole. A typical logging-while-drilling (“LWD”) suite 300 may be utilized for directional and formation sensing. An electric motor sub 400 may be positioned below LWD suite 300 and above a bit 500. Electric motor sub 400 houses an electric motor, not shown in
Although not shown in
In one example drill string 10, a housing 410 for electric motor sub 400 rotates with drill string 10 at, for example, approximately 60 to approximately 250 RPM. Bit 500 rotates relative to housing 410 at a much higher rate, such as approximately 1000 RPM to approximately 2000 RPM. Assuming the same approximate torque is available to bit 500 as would be available with a traditional drilling system (e.g. drilling with just surface-rotation, or with a mud-driven PDM), and the RPM is 10 times higher, the power available to break the rock would be 10 times higher than such a traditional system.
In a conventional drill string, a 6¾-inch mud motor may provide a consistent 100 horsepower (HP) to the bit when drilling an 8½-hole, at 450 gallons per minute (gpm) mud flow rate and 500 psi pressure drop. If an electric motor were substituted for the mud motor to do the same job, this flow rate and pressure drop would correspond to around 74.6 kW of electrical power (not accounting for the efficiency factor of the electric motor, which is generally fairly high). Assuming a full 1 MW of electrical power can be made available to the electrical motor in drill string 10, this increased power represents that full order of magnitude more power than the energy available to a typical mud motor. The operator may prefer, however, to limit the electric power being fed down drill string 10 to electric motor sub 400 to around 250 kW. Even this amount is several times the power available via a typical 6¾-inch mud motor, and the electric power in this case would be available without consuming 500 psi of mud pressure over a mud motor. This pressure is therefore available for other purposes, including increased hole cleaning at bit 500.
In drilling some boreholes, sufficient power may be available downhole, but the power is not in useable form. For example, power available downhole may not be available as speed. An electric motor is especially appropriate for circumstances in which the extra bit speed can be used to more effectively break and remove the rock. Existing diamond bit technology is particularly effective at high speeds, and electric motors would be ideal for driving them.
Whether the higher bit rotation speed is accomplished with the same level of power as is currently used, such as around 100 HP, or at the higher power levels that can be produced as a result of increased electrical power provided to the motor, an optional flywheel may be used to provide even further increased power, or torque at that high speed, for a few moments to minutes when needed to break through a hard spot in a formation. We discuss this flywheel in greater detail later in this description.
The operator may steer bit 500 by maintaining electric motor sub housing 410 in a non-rotating mode, while at the same time biasing the bit. This action may be completed by “pointing” bit 500 with a pair of eccentrics (not shown in the figures), as described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,640,909, entitled “Steerable Rotary Drilling Device,” assigned to the assignee of this disclosure. When steering, the operator may then prefer to maintain the motor housing in a sliding mode, with its orientation referenced to the borehole.
In certain circumstances, extreme torque may be desired or required, even just for a moment, to break through a hard region in a formation. To accommodate such an increased torque requirement without excessively winding up drill string 10, a torque reaction sub 600 may be provided to transfer torque into the formation immediately above bit 500 and electric motor sub 400. This transfer would be practical only when the lower portion of the borehole assembly (“BHA”), such as electric motor sub housing 410, is sliding.
In some circumstances, the operator may wish to maintain electric motor sub housing 410 in a sliding mode, when steering or during other operations, such as transferring torque into the formation as referenced above. At the same time, the operator may wish to continue to rotate drill string 10 to remove cuttings and to prevent the drill string from experiencing static drag and sticking in borehole 20. To accommodate both concerns, drill string 10 may optionally include a clutch 700. In particular, drill string 10 may include a dynamic clutch sub, as described in a United States patent application filed on Mar. 4, 2004, entitled “Providing a Local Response to a Local Condition in an Oil Well”, attorney docket number 063718.0523, by the same inventors (referred to hereafter as the “Local Response Patent Application”).
A rotating mandrel 1015 may be made up to the inside of the box connector 1002 and the housing 1003. The rotating mandrel 1015 may have two parts, a friction section 1016 and a pin connector 1017. The friction section 1016 and the pin connector 1017 may be threaded into each other and o-rings 1018 may complete the connection. A friction plate 1019 may have a ring-like structure and may be attached to an upward facing surface of the friction section 1016. A radial bearing 1020 may be positioned between the friction section 1016 and the box connector 1002. A thrust bearing 1022 may be positioned between the bottom end of the friction section 1016 and a housing flange 1021 that extends radially inward from a lower end of the housing 1003. A radial bearing 1023 may be positioned between pin connector 1017 and the housing flange 1021. A thrust bearing 1024 may be positioned between an upward face of the pin connector 1017 and the housing flange 1021.
A bearing chamber 1025 may be defined between the housing 1003, the box connector 1002, and the rotating mandrel 1015. An upper end of the bearing chamber 1025 may be sealed by rotary seals 1026 between the friction section 1016 and the box connector 1002. A lower end of the bearing chamber 1025 may be sealed by rotary seals 1027 between the pin connector 1017 and the housing 1003. The bearing chamber 1025 may be fluidly connected to the balance chamber 1010 via gap 1028. The balance chamber 1010 enables hydraulic fluid to be maintained in and around the bearing regardless of the pressure being generated on the exterior of the sub 1000.
An array of solenoids 1007 may be connected to the bottom of the box connector 1002. A communication/power bus 1008 communicates control signals between PCB 1006 and the array of solenoids 1007, and in one embodiment also communicates rotary electrical interface 1030 between the opposing faces of the box connector 1002 structure and the rotating mandrel 1015. This rotary electrical interface may comprise simply a relative rotation sensor.
In other embodiments, the communication power bus 1008 also extends through this rotary electrical interface 1030 into the rotating mandrel 1015 for connection to a sensor set (not shown) which may preferably sense similar parameters to those named earlier which may be included with printed circuit board 1006, but here such parameters associated with the rotating mandrel. This extension of communication/power bus 1008 may further extend along the mandrel 1015 and connect to other drill string elements connected to the bottom of the sub. In such embodiments the rotary electrical interface 1030 may comprise an inductive type or brush type interface.
An array of pistons 1009 may extend from the array of solenoids 1007 and have clutch plates 1014 attached thereto. The clutch plates 1014 may be positioned opposite the friction plate 1019 so that when the array of solenoids 1007 is engaged, the clutch plates 1014 extend to contact and press against the friction plate 1019. This action restricts relative rotational movement between the rotating mandrel 1015 and the box connector 1002. A return spring 1029 may be positioned between a flange on the housing 1003 and the clutch plates 1014 to release the clutch plates 1014 from the friction plate 1019 when the array of solenoids 1007 is deactivated. The clutch plates 1014 may also engage in a spline 1028 between the clutch plates 1014 and the housing 1003 to prevent rotational movement while allowing axial movement.
The amount of torque translated from one side of the dynamic clutch sub to the other depends on the control signals applied to the array of solenoids 1007. The control signals may be provided by an independent controller on PCB 1006 or may be provided through the PCB 1006 by real-time processor 800, discussed later in this description. A set or series of clutch and friction plates operating together (not shown) may alternatively be employed, to increase the contact area and thereby reduce the contact pressure requirement in achieving the mechanical torque capacity required. In another embodiment (not shown), the return springs 1029 may be positioned so as to create a default contact condition between clutch plates 1014 and friction plates 1019, thus allowing for slippage and relative rotation only when the solenoids are activated.
Returning to
Should bit 500 encounter a particularly hard formation top that requires more torque than drill string 10 can safely accommodate, torque reaction sub 600 can activate rudder wheels 610 to engage the wall of borehole 20 and provide a torque short circuit into formation 30. The BHA can still advance even when rudder wheels 610 engage formation 30. Clutch 700 would disengage fully or maintain a torque transmittal level up drill string 10 that is below the safety threshold of drill string 10 but that still allows the string to be rotated from surface.
A real-time processor 800 may be coupled to drill string 10 and provide real-time control to electric motor sub 400, clutch 700, and torque reaction sub 600. As shown in
Rotor 432 may be fixed to an optional flywheel 900 below or above rotor 432. Flywheel 900 may provide rotor 432 with an inertia that allows the electric-motor-flywheel combination to provide a power output on an impulse or a short-term basis that is greater than the output by electric motor 432 alone. Such increased power may be useful for a number of purposes, including breaking a particularly hard rock section embedded in an otherwise drillable formation. For example, electric motor 420 can drive bit 500 and flywheel 900 at speeds of approximately 1000 RPM to approximately 3000 RPM. The electric motor, bit and flywheel combination can thereby develop much greater power (as calculated by multiplying speed by torque) for breaking and clearing formations than the power generated through traditional rotary- or mud-motor-based drilling.
An example flywheel 900 for use in a 6¾-inch collar might be 5 feet long and have a 4.6-inch outside diameter and 3-inch inside diameter. If, for example, flywheel 900 is made of steel, and spinning at 3000 RPM, it could provide kinetic energy on an “as needed” basis of 10,300 ft-lbs, or 18.7 HP-seconds. As bit 500 engages a hard spot in the formation, and the torque requirement subsequently increases impulsively corresponding to approximately one bit revolution at 3000 RPM (i.e., 0.02 seconds), the energy supplied by flywheel 900 would represent an extra 935 HP for that brief interval.
Various design parameters of flywheel 900 can be adjusted to provide greater stored energy. A 25-foot flywheel may be implemented within a standard length, or 30-foot, collar; if made of steel, such a flywheel would provide 95 HP-seconds of energy. If flywheel 900 is made of a heavier substance such as tungsten, it could provide more than double the energy that a comparably-designed steel flywheel 900 could provide. We have thus far discussed flywheels of relatively small diameters. To drill larger holes, drill string 10 may employ a flywheel 900 with a significantly larger outside diameter. A 9⅝ inch outside diameter sub could be used in drilling 12¼-inch or larger holes and could employ a flywheel with a 7-inch outer diameter and a 5-inch inner diameter. That change would increase the energy capability of flywheel 900 by a factor of four times, other design parameters being equal.
Flywheel 900 could alternatively be clutched in and out of the rotation path.
Flywheel 900 also can be used for other purposes. During connections, such as when operators add new drill pipe at the surface, the electrical power supplied through wired drill pipe 100 may be disconnected. By using flywheel 900 to drive an alternator (not shown in
For example, flywheel 900 could directly engage a mechanical vibration sub 200 through clutch 750, as shown in
As discussed earlier in this description, flywheel 900 can be used to generate electricity. The electric power can be used to drive vibration sub 200. An example of an electrically powered vibration sub 200 might be a piezo-vibration sub, as described below.
A mandrel 1114 may be made up within a lower housing 1105. The upper portion of the mandrel 1114 is inserted between lower housing 1105 and electronics insert 1107, wherein o-ring seals 1115 seal the connection between the mandrel 1114 and the electronics insert 1107. A stack chamber 1116 may be defined between the lower housing 1105 and the mandrel 1114. The stack chamber 1116 may be in fluid communication with the balance chamber 1110 via a gap 1117 between the mandrel 1114 and the lower housing 1105. The two chambers may be in further fluid communication to the balance chamber 1110 (oil side) through port 1118 in an upper portion of the lower housing 1105.
Within the stack chamber 1116, an annular stack of piezo electric crystals 1119 may be secured to the mandrel 1114. An annular tail mass 1120 may be positioned immediately on top of the piezo electric crystals 1119. Tension bolts 1121 may extend through the tail mass 1120 and the piezo electric crystals 1119 and thread directly into the bottom of the stack chamber 1116 defined by the mandrel 1114. The tension bolts 1121 keep the piezo electric crystals 1119 and tail mass 1120 in compression. An electrical communication/power bus 1122 extends from the electronics insert 1107 to the piezo electric crystals 1119. As before, the characteristics of the dynamic vibration sub may be controlled via the circuit board 1108 by surface real-time processor 800.
A spring chamber 1123 may also defined between the lower housing 1105 and the mandrel 1114. A spring 1124 may be positioned within the spring chamber 1123 to engage the mandrel 1114 at the bottom and the lower housing 1105 at the top. The spring chamber 1123 may be sealed by o-ring seals 1125 at the bottom. The spring chamber 1123 may be in fluid communication with the stack chamber 1116 through a gap 1126 between the mandrel 1114 and the lower housing 1105. A spline 1127 may be configured in the gap 1126 to prevent relative rotational movement between the mandrel 1114 and the lower housing 1105 while allowing relative movement in the axial direction.
An upper portion of the mandrel 1114 may have a notch 1128 for receiving multiple keys 1129 which extend from the lower housing 1105. The keys may be secured in the lower housing 1105 by sealed plugs 1130. The keys 1129 prevent rotation and retain the mandrel 1114 within the housing 1103 when the vibration sub 1100 is in tension. The vibration sub 1110 is placed in tension, for example, when pipe string is made up to the pin connector 1131 and suspended below the vibration sub 1100 and especially when the pipe string is being tripped in or out of the borehole.
The vibration sub 1100 may also include a mini-sensor set 1132. The sensors of the sensor set 1132 are positioned in the exterior of the mandrel 1114 where the mandrel extends below the housing 1103. The sensor set 1132 may be electrically connected to the communication/power bus 1122 by copper with a seal plug, and preferably includes the sensors as noted above that might be useful in monitoring and/or controlling the vibration sub.
In certain implementations of the drilling apparatus, a fluid-driven motor may be substituted for the electric motor sub 400. A fluid-driven motor may be of a positive displacement type or may be a drill string turbine.
The term “couple” or “couples” used herein is intended to mean either an indirect or direct connection. Thus, if a first device couples to a second device, that connection may be through a direct connection, or through an indirect electrical connection via other devices and connections.
The present invention is therefore well-adapted to carry out the objects and attain the ends mentioned, as well as those that are inherent therein. While the invention has been depicted, described and is defined by references to examples of the invention, such a reference does not imply a limitation on the invention, and no such limitation is to be inferred. The invention is capable of considerable modification, alteration and equivalents in form and function, as will occur to those ordinarily skilled in the art having the benefit of this disclosure. The depicted and described examples are not exhaustive of the invention. Consequently, the invention is intended to be limited only by the spirit and scope of the appended claims, giving full cognizance to equivalents in all respects.
This application claims priority to commonly owned U.S. provisional patent application Ser. No. 60/549,852, filed Mar. 3, 2004, entitled “Rotating Systems Associated with Drill Pipe,” by Daniel D. Gleitman, Paul F. Rodney, and James H. Dudley.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60549852 | Mar 2004 | US |