Conventionally when a wellbore is created, a number of casings are installed in the borehole to prevent collapse of the borehole wall and to prevent undesired outflow of drilling fluid into the formation or inflow of fluid from the formation into the borehole. The borehole is drilled in intervals whereby a casing which is to be installed in a lower borehole interval is lowered through a previously installed casing of an upper borehole interval. As a consequence of this procedure the casing of the lower interval is of smaller diameter than the casing of the upper interval. Thus, the casings are in a nested arrangement with casing diameters decreasing in downward direction. Cement annuli are provided between the outer surfaces of the casings and the borehole wall to seal the casings with the borehole wall. As a consequence of this nested arrangement a relatively large borehole diameter is required at the upper part of the wellbore to achieve the desired flowbore diameter extending down through the well. Such a large borehole diameter involves increased costs due to heavy casing handling equipment, large drill bits, and increased volumes of drilling fluid and drill cuttings. Moreover, increased drilling rig time is involved due to required cement pumping, cement hardening, required equipment changes due to large variations in hole diameters drilled in the course of the well, and the large volume of cuttings drilled and removed.
Expandable tubulars may also be used to repair, seal, or remediate perforated existing casing that has been parted, corroded, or otherwise damaged since installation. Whether used as a liner or to initially line a wellbore, sealing between overlapping portions of the tubulars is important to prevent fluids contained in the wellbore from leaking into the surrounding formation, or vice versa.
In one aspect, the present disclosure relates to an expandable tubular. The expandable tubular includes a tubular body and a sealing arrangement disposed on an external surface of the tubular body. The sealing arrangement includes a plurality of seals having a corrugation.
In another aspect, the present disclosure relates to a method of manufacturing a sealing arrangement for an expandable tubular. The method includes arranging a plurality of seals about the circumference of an expandable tubular and forming corrugations in the plurality of seals such that the effective length of the plurality of seals is at least 5 percent greater than the circumference of the expandable tubular.
In another aspect, the present disclosure relates to a sealing assembly for an expandable tubular. The sealing assembly includes a tubular body having an outer circumference and a seal disposed on the outer circumference and having a contracted state wherein a centerline of the seal is greater in length than the outer circumference of the tubular body.
Other aspects and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the following description and the appended claims.
The present disclosure relates to apparatus and methods for sealing the outside of an expanded tubular in a wellbore.
Separate seals are typically provided on the outer circumference of an expandable tubular in order to seal against a cased or open hole wellbore in which it is expanded. As the tubular is expanded, the seals stretch with the outer circumference of the expandable tubular and are pressed against the inside of the wellbore, which may be the formation itself or the inside of a previously installed tubular. The expansion ratio of an expandable tubular may be, for example, 10 percent to 20 percent, or more. Before expansion, the seals are in close contact with the outside of the expandable tubular to protect the seals from damage during the deployment of the expandable tubular into the wellbore. During expansion, the seals surrounding the expandable tubular will stretch to an increased diameter, which may be in addition to the stretching of the seals during installation prior to expansion. Many seal materials can handle such stretching and provide reliable seals, but seal materials intended for high pressure and/or high temperature applications are usually less ductile, making the seals more susceptible to rupturing or tearing during the expansion process. Examples of high temperature sealing materials include asbestos wrapped with metal, Viton® (DuPont Performance Elastomers, Wilmington, Del.), and Kalrez® (DuPont Performance Elastomers, Wilmington, Del.).
In
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To reduce or eliminate the risk of a leak path, the locations of the opposing ends of each seat 201a-d about the circumference of the tubular 101 may be staggered, as shown in
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In operation, the seals 120a-d are disposed on the expandable tubular 101. The seals are in their contracted state with their centerline 118 having a length greater than the circumference of the outer surface of the expandable tubular 101 on which the seals are disposed. The expandable tubular 101 is then expanded. As the tubular 101 is expanded, the corrugations straighten out around the tubular 101, passing through a transition state, to the expanded state where the centerline 118 of the seals 120a-d forms a circle. The seals 120a-d are then further expanded in their expanded state to increase the length of the centerline 118 and their outer circumference. The seals 120a-d are then compressed between the expandable tubular 101 and the wellbore to their final expansion state to establish a seal between the expandable tubular 101 and the wellbore.
Embodiments disclosed herein may be particularly suitable for high temperature (e.g., greater than 300° F.) installations of expandable tubulars. In general, sealing materials suitable for high temperature applications are less ductile than other sealing materials. To reduce the stretching of the less ductile sealing materials, one or more corrugations may be formed in at least one seal on the expandable tubular in accordance with one or more embodiments. One such high temperature application is in repairing steam injection wells in steam-assisted gravity drainage (SAGD) and cyclic steam stimulation (CSS) projects. The SAGD process is a form of enhanced oil recovery that involves injecting steam into an oil bearing formation in order to lower the viscosity of the oil so that it drains into a producing well. The SAGD process involves a pattern of wells that are injecting steam or producing the oil. If a well is damaged such that it leaks, it is taken out of production to avoid ecological damage, which reduces the production of the pattern of wells. CSS, also known as “huff and puff,” involves repeating intervals of steam injection, soaking of the formation with the steam, then production of hydrocarbons from the same well.
Expandable tubulars can be used to repair such wells by expanding a tubular member across and sealing above and below the damaged portion of the casing in the well. Because of the steam injection, the seals on the expandable tubular are subjected to periods of intense heat that can degrade the seals. One solution that has been considered is a metal-to-metal seal directly between outer surface of the expanded tubular and the inside of the previously installed casing. However, metal-to-metal seals are unreliable because of eccentricity of the casing already in the well, either from the original manufacture of the casing or from the damage that led to the need for repair. The expanded tubular is formed into a nearly perfect circle during expansion, but the eccentricity of the casing can result in a gap between the outside of the expanded tubular and the inside of the casing. Corrugating a seal made with sealing material that can withstand higher temperatures may provide the sealing performance necessary to repair and seal SAGD wells and other high temperature wells. The corrugations reduce the stretching imposed on the seals during the expansion process, thereby allowing for the use of less ductile seals on the expandable tubular.
Although this detailed description has shown and described illustrative embodiments of the invention, this description contemplates a wide range of modifications, changes, and substitutions. In some instances, one may employ some features of the present invention without a corresponding use of the other features. Accordingly, it is appropriate that readers should construe the appended claims broadly, and in a manner consistent with the scope of the invention.