Not Applicable.
Not Applicable
Not Applicable.
This disclosure relates to the field of well logging instruments. More specifically, the disclosure relates to well logging instruments having sensors disposed in a pad or arm extending laterally from the instrument housing to make contact with the wall of a wellbore or the interior of a pipe, casing or tubing.
Oil and gas exploration and production uses certain types of instruments or tools lowered into wells drilled through subsurface formations. Such instruments may be lowered into and withdrawn from a well through a conduit such as drill pipe, tubing and casing.
Among these tools, certain types of such well logging tools require having sensors applied against the borehole wall (or the inner wall of, e.g., a casing) to obtain good quality measurements. Such sensors may be referred to as “wall contact” sensors.
Wall contact sensors, for example and without limitation, micro-resistivity, dielectric, ultrasonic, wheel and nuclear sensor are often fragile and it is important to protect the sensors during conveyance through a wellbore, in particular one of the above mentioned types of pipe, to avoid their destruction or their unnecessary wear.
Wall contact sensors are typically spring loaded and have an active (power operated) retraction system. The retraction system may comprise hydraulic pumps and motors, or electric motors, making them complex assemblies.
It is within the scope of this disclosure that any known wall contact well logging sensor or instrument that can be moved through the inside of a tube or conduit may be used with a deployment device according to the present disclosure. Such sensors and/or instruments include, without limitation, acoustic sensors, electromagnetic resistivity sensors, galvanic resistivity sensors, seismic sensors, Compton-scatter gamma-gamma density sensors, neutron capture cross section sensors, neuron slowing down length sensors, calipers, gravity sensors and the like.
The fluid pressure pulse device 418 has a variable flow restriction (not show) which is controlled by electric signals transmitted by the imaging tool 414 to the pressure pulse device 418, which signals represent part of the data produced by the first well logging instrument 412 during the making of measurements of the underground formation 2. The upper end of the deployment device may be provided with a latch 420 for latching of an armored electrical cable (not shown) to the device for retrieval of the first well logging instrument 412 from the bottom of the drill pipe 409.
A wellhead 422 may be connected to the upper end of the casing 404 and may be provided with an outlet conduit 424 terminating in a drilling fluid reservoir 426 provided with a suitable sieve means (not shown) for removing drill cuttings from the drilling fluid. A pump 428 having an inlet 430 and an outlet 432 is arranged to pump drilling fluid from the fluid reservoir 426 into the upper end of the drill pipe 409.
A control system 434 located at the Earth's surface is connected to the drill pipe 409 for sending or receiving fluid pressure pulses in the body of drilling fluid 410 to or from the fluid pressure pulse device 418.
A second wall contact well logging instrument 100 with a self retracting sensor arm 110 and a sensing element 112 disposed at the end of the self retracting sensor arm 110 may disposed in and extend from a housing 100 coupled within or at an end of a set of well logging instruments. This instrument 100 will be identified as the “self retracting wall contact instrument.”
The embodiment of the set of devices shown in
In the description that follows with reference to
The housing 102 may comprise open compartments 103, 103A, respectively for receiving a first passive biasing device 104 such as an arched spring and for receiving a sensor arm 110. The arched spring 104 and the sensor arm 110 may extend laterally outward from the housing 102 in opposed directions. In the present context, “passive” means, with reference to a biasing device, that no power operated elements are used to operate the passive biasing device. In the case of an arched spring as the first passive biasing device 104, one end of the arched spring may be attached to the housing 102, in some embodiments in a longitudinally fixed position, by a pivot pin 107. The other end of the ached spring 104 may be attached to a coupling 106 that slidably engages an extension 110A of the sensor arm 110.
The sensor arm 110 may be pivotably coupled to the housing 102 by a pivot rod 108. A second passive biasing device 109 such as a torsion spring may be fitted over one or both longitudinal ends of the pivot rod 108 (that extend outwardly from the sensor arm 110) to apply a torque to the sensor arm 110 such that the sensor arm 110 is urged laterally outward from the compartment 103A in the housing 102. A wall contact sensor 112 may be affixed to the end of the sensor arm 110 opposed to the extension 110A. In the present example embodiment, the wall contact sensor 112 may be a wheel used to make measurement corresponding to amount of motion of the well logging instruments (
In
Although only a few examples have been described in detail above, those skilled in the art will readily appreciate that many modifications are possible in the examples. Accordingly, all such modifications are intended to be included within the scope of this disclosure as defined in the following claims.
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