1. Field of the Invention
This invention is for a screen filter which commonly may be used for example, in the production phase of an oil or gas well.
2. Description of Related Art
Known screen filters as exemplified by U.S. Pat. No. 6,415,509 consists of a perforated plate to which is bonded one or more filter screens and/or drainage layers. In constructing the filters, the perforated plate and the wire mesh sheet stack 40a which may include wire mesh layer 48, 50 and 52 are cut to the same dimensions. The wire mesh sheet stack is then bonded to the inner side of the perforated plate. The individual sheets 48, 50 and 52 can be bonded together at the same time or bonded together beforehand. A preferred method of bonding is diffusion bonding.
The assembly is then trimmed to a specific dimension and rolled into a tubular configuration. The abutting edges are joined by a seam weld as shown in 56 in
This type of construction has several major drawbacks. First since the sheets of filter medium are all the same size, by-pass of the liquid to be filtered may occur at the edges of the sheets, which results in the sand particles or other particulate material to be transported to the surface.
Secondly, when the sheets are welded along seam 56, the heat of the welding process can weaken the screens along the edges of the seam weld so as to compromise the bonding of the screens to the perforated plate.
According to the present invention, a screen filter is formed by providing a flat sheet of thin material such as stainless steel having one or more cut out sections or perforations. A first screen of relatively coarse screen size is positioned on top of the flat sheet but does not extend to the periphery of the sheet. This first screen primarily is for forming flow passages. A second screen of relatively fine screen size to form a screening layer is placed on top of the first screen layer and extends beyond the periphery of the first screen layer but stops short of the outer periphery of the flat sheet in a manner disclosed herein. The layers and the flat sheet material are then diffusion bonded together throughout. Finally, the resultant assembly is rolled into the shape of a tubular and the abutting edges are welded together to form the final screen filter. The screen filter may then be placed and secured over a perforated base pipe for use in an oil or gas well, or in any other environment where filtering is desired. As an alternative the first layer may have a relatively small mesh size while the second layer may have a relatively coarse screen size. The screens may be made of woven and non-woven wire cloth, sintered material, fibers or any metallic porous material.
According to another embodiment of the invention, the screen filter may include a frame formed as thin layer of flat sheet material having one or more cut out sections and having a single screen on top that does not extend to the outer edge of the frame.
Furthermore, the frame and screen assembly can have a relatively long dimension with a smaller width so that it may be rolled into a helical configuration thus forming a tubular as explained below.
The above construction eliminates the possibility of fluid by-pass and also reduces the adverse effect on the screen bonds caused by the longitudinal seam weld.
As shown in
One or more cutout sections 17 and 18 are formed in the sheet which creates a center strip 19 which extends between the top and bottom edges 11 and 14 of the sheet. Openings 17 and 18 may have square corners as shown or the corners may be rounded for improved structural integrity.
The thus formed sheet serves as a frame for supporting the woven wire filter screens as discussed below.
As shown in
A second screen 15 having an opening size smaller than that of screen 16 is placed over the first layer and is sized so as to extend beyond the four sides of screen 16 but short of the outer periphery of frame 3.
Thus, first screen 16 is sandwiched between screen 15 and the frame 3. Second screen 15 serves primarily as a filtering layer and may have openings in the range of 2-800 microns. This assembly is then heated to such a temperature and pressure is applied such that all the contracting metal surfaces are diffusion bonded to each other. As is understood in the industry, the assembly is heated to a temperature below the melting point of the metal and pressure is applied so as to form a diffusion bond. A diffusion bond is formed at all points where metal is in contact with metal.
Screens 15 and 16 could be bonded to each other and then bonded to frame 3 or all three components can be simultaneously bonded together.
After the screens 15 and 16 and frame 3 have been diffusion bonded together, the resulting structure can be deformed to a cylindrical structure as shown in
When used in a well environment, the filter as shown in
Although first screen 16 has been illustrated as a single layer of woven or non-woven wire cloth, it may consist of one or more layers of woven or non-woven cloth wire. Such is also the case for the second screen 15.
A still further embodiment of the invention is shown in
First screen 16 is placed on top of perforated sheet 51 such that the edges of the screen extend within solid portions 58, 59, 60 and 61 of sheet 51. Second screen 15 is then positioned over screen 16 and also extends within solid portions 58, 59, 60 and 61 of sheet 51. Second screen 15 also extends beyond the perimeter of screen 16 in the manner shown in
The perforated sheet and screen assembly of
Other embodiments of the invention will be apparent to those with ordinary skill in the art. For example, a third screen similar to screen 16 and a fourth screen similar to screen 15 could be positioned on the bottom side of frame 3 or sheet 51 of the embodiment shown
Furthermore, an additional frame or sheet could be placed on top of screens 16 and 15 of the embodiment of
This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. application Ser. No. 13/708,124 filed on Dec. 7, 2012.
Number | Date | Country | |
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20150076051 A1 | Mar 2015 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 13708124 | Dec 2012 | US |
Child | 14031269 | US |