Screens and other filtering assemblies are ubiquitous in the downhole drilling and completions industry. These assemblies are primarily used to filter solids or particulate matter while enabling the production of fluids such as hydrocarbons. Due at least partially to their prevalence in the industry, advances and alternatives in downhole screen assemblies are always well received.
A screen assembly, comprising one or more screen members that correspondingly form one or more flow paths, the one or more flow paths discrete from a tubular with which the one or more screen members are associated, but in fluid communication with an axial passageway of the tubular.
A screen assembly, comprising a plurality of screen members arranged at a same longitudinal position along a tubular, each of the screen members having a discrete closed shape that forms one of a plurality of discrete flow paths corresponding to the plurality of screen members.
A method of using a screen assembly, comprising positioning the screen assembly in a borehole, the screen assembly having one or more screen members discretely arranged with respect to a tubular having an axial passageway, the one or more screen members correspondingly forming one or more flow paths that are discrete from the tubular; and communicating fluid through the one or more screen members to the axial passageway via the one or more flow paths.
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 are presented herein by way of exemplification and not limitation with reference to the Figures.
Referring now to
It is evident to those of ordinary skill in the art from even a cursory review of the drawings that the screen assembly 10 differs from traditional screens, in which a filter is concentrically wrapped at least partially about a base pipe or other tubular to form a radial flow gap bounded between the screen and the tubular about which the screen is wrapped. Instead of this traditional arrangement, the screen members 14 are arranged as discrete members that form discrete flow paths therein. By “discrete” it is meant that the screen members 14 each form a closed shape defining a flow path 18 therein that is separate from the other screen members 14 and from the tubular string 16. It is noted that a pattern formed by all of the screen members 14 may encircle the tubular string 16, but that the tubular string 16 is not enclosed within any individual one of the screen members 14. In this way, the flow paths 18 are discrete from and not defined by the tubular string 16. For example, the screen members 14 in
Additionally, by being discrete members, each of the screen members 14 in the illustrated embodiment, and correspondingly each of the flow paths 18, is offset or nonconcentric with respect to the tubular string 16. It is also noted that despite the screen members 14 and the associated flow paths 18 each being nonconcentric with the tubular string 16, the pattern formed by discretely positioning the screen members 14 about the tubular string 16, may be concentric with respect to the tubular string 16. That is, for example, the pattern 20 in
The screen members 14 are coupled to the tubular string 16 via couplings 26, which have receptacles 28 configured to receive the screen members 14. The screen members 14 are engagable with the receptacles 28 via threads, ratcheting, grooves, force fitting, welds, etc., or in any other suitable manner. In one embodiment, the receptacles 28 are open on both ends for connecting adjacent ones of the screen members 14, while in other embodiments the receptacles 28 are capped off opposite to their securement with the screen members 14. For example, a representative one of the receptacles 28, designated with the numeral 28a, is secured at one end to a first representative one of the screen members 14, designated with the numeral 14a, and at the opposite end to a second representative one of the screen members, designated with the numeral 14b. Another representative one of the receptacles 28, designated with the numeral 28b, has a capped end 30 for sealing off the flow path 18 through the receptacle 28b.
The screen members 14 can be arranged to create a gap 32 between each circumferentially adjacent pair of the screen members 14. In one embodiment, the gaps 32 provide fluid about the screen members 14. Traditional screens are typically spaced some minimum distance from the borehole wall in order to provide sufficient fluid flow into the screen, e.g., during production, and about the screen, e.g., during gravel packing, fracturing, or other borehole treatments or stimulations. Accordingly, in one embodiment, the fluid flow provided by the gaps 32 enables the screen members 14 to be positioned relatively closer to the borehole 12 than a traditional screen could be positioned, thereby enabling the borehole 12 to be more efficiently drilled with a smaller diameter. In another embodiment, the gaps 32 provide for the flow of fluid (e.g., proppant, slurry, injected chemicals, acid, etc.) past, around, or about the screen assembly 10, e.g., for gravel or frac packing, fracturing, or other treatment or stimulation operations.
Additionally, as shown in
It is also to be appreciated that the gaps 32 could be used for holding or providing for a shunt tube or other tool or piece of equipment to be located and/or passed by the screen assembly 10. Furthermore, ones of the screen members 14 could be used as shunt tubes to enable the conveyance of proppant, gravel, or slurry downhole. In one embodiment, one or more of the screen members 14 is replaced by a similarly shaped and sized blank tubular (e.g., not including a filtering material, perforations, or other openings in its circumferential surface) that is receivable in the receptacles 28 of the couplings 26 (the blank tube generally resembling any one of the screen members 14 and thus sufficiently represented in the drawings, although it is understood that the blank tube or shunt tube could take other forms). For example, in one embodiment, the blank tubular is used as a shunt tube to convey slurry or proppant to the borehole 12 or as a protective conduit for housing control lines, sensors, or other equipment. For example, in one embodiment, the screen assembly 10 is modified such that seven of the screen members 14 are included as described above, while an eighth is replaced by a section of blank pipe for protecting control lines, enabling slurry or other media to be conveyed downhole, etc.
The screen members 14 of the embodiment of
As noted above, the screen assembly 36 includes the screen members 14 arranged in an asymmetric pattern about the tubular string 16. By this it is meant that the screen members 14 of the assembly 36 are not evenly spaced and positioned about the tubular string 16, but instead are grouped together at one side of the tubular string 16. A coupling 38 is included for securing the screen members 14 of the assembly 36 to the string 16. The ends of the screen members 14 opposite from the coupling 38 are illustrated as being open, although it is to be appreciated that these ends would be connected into another coupling or screen member, capped off, etc. Additionally, the ends of the screen members 14 are shown tapered or having reduced diameter than the body of the screen members 14, which can assist in securing the screen members 14 in the receptacles of the couplings 26 and/or 38. The tapered ends may be caused by the aforementioned inner tubulars or base pipes of the screen members 14, e.g., a base pipe 40, extending out from a filter portion 42 wrapped thereon. It is to of course be appreciated that the description of the assembly is generally application to those of the assembly 10 and that components and features of the assembly 36 can be used with or for the assembly 10, and vice versa.
As shown in cross-section in
With knowledge that the filterable surface area of a cylindrical screen is measured as pi times diameter times length, the total filterable surface area of the screen members 14 of the assembly 10 can be set to equal or approximate that of a traditional screen of a given length by modifying the number and diameter of the screen members 14. For example, there are eight of the screen members 14 in the illustrated embodiments, thus, by setting the diameter of each of the screen members 14 to be one-eighth that of a traditional screen, the total filterable surface area of the screen assembly 10 would approximate that of the tradition screen, assuming constant length. In this way, for example, eight of the screen members 14, each having a one inch diameter, would approximate the same total filterable surface area as a traditional screen eight inches in diameter having the same length. Of course, any other number of the screen members 14 and/or diameters of the screen members 14 could be utilized and the size of screen members in the same assembly could also vary.
While the invention has been described with reference to an exemplary embodiment or embodiments, it will be understood by those skilled in the art 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 may be made to adapt a particular 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 claims. Also, in the drawings and the description, there have been disclosed exemplary embodiments of the invention and, although specific terms may have been employed, they are unless otherwise stated used in a generic and descriptive sense only and not for purposes of limitation, the scope of the invention therefore not being so limited. Moreover, the use of the terms first, second, etc. do not denote any order or importance, but rather the terms first, second, etc. are used to distinguish one element from another. Furthermore, the use of the terms a, an, etc. do not denote a limitation of quantity, but rather denote the presence of at least one of the referenced item.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20140318811 A1 | Oct 2014 | US |