The present disclosure relates to setting tools that can be used in an oil or gas well to secure a zone isolation device in the wellbore.
Setting tools for setting a zone isolation plug or packer within a borehole typically have a design limiting the types of securing mechanisms that may be employed to secure or retain the setting tool in a compact or unstroked configuration within which the setting tool is run into the borehole, before activation. In particular, setting tool designs generally are not suited for use with one-time or disposable securing mechanisms.
In addition, the design of commercially available setting tools frequently limits the materials suitable for components, such that readily available items such as borehole tubing cannot be employed as part of the setting tool due to design and/or geometry. Instead, specially machined components are required, increasing the cost and production time in general and, in particular, increasing the cost beyond a level practical for a disposable setting tool.
Still further, use of a shear screw to retain the setting tool in the unstroked configuration during hook-up and run-in requires that rotational forces during those processes be sufficiently small to avoid inadvertent shearing of the shear screw.
A gas operated setting tool in accordance with an embodiment comprises a cylinder, made from tubing, a bottom connector, a piston rod, and a top cap.
One exemplary embodiment includes a gas operated setting tool having a mandrel and an outer tool assembly. The outer tool assembly has a hollow interior and the mandrel is disposed within the hollow interior of the outer tool assembly. The outer tool assembly includes a top cap having an interior surface, a cylinder having an upper end, a lower end, and an interior surface, and a bottom connecter having an upper surface and an interior surface. The top cap connects to the upper end of the cylinder and the bottom connector connects to the lower end of the cylinder. The mandrel includes an upper section having an exterior surface, a piston section having an exterior surface, and a lower section having an exterior surface. The upper section of the mandrel includes a firing head attachment and the lower section of the mandrel is configured to connect to a setting adapter. The exterior surface of the piston section fits within and is sealed against said the interior surface of the cylinder. The upper section of the mandrel has a hollow power charge chamber configured to receive a power charge and the piston section has gas ports that extend from a bottom of the power charge chamber directly onto the bottom connector. In some implementations, a shear ring between the exterior surface of the mandrel and the interior surface of the top cap prevents axial movement of the outer tool assembly relative to the piston rod until the power charge has fired and sheared the shear ring to stroke the setting tool.
Another exemplary embodiment includes a gas operated setting tool having a piston rod and an outer tool assembly. The outer tool assembly has a hollow interior and the piston rod is disposed coaxially within the outer tool assembly's hollow interior. The outer tool assembly includes a top cap having an interior surface, a cylinder having an upper end, a lower end, and an interior surface, and a bottom connecter having an upper surface and an interior surface. The top cap connects to the cylinder's upper end and the bottom connector connects to the cylinder's lower end. The piston rod comprises an upper section having an exterior surface, a piston section having an exterior surface, and a lower section having an exterior surface. The piston rod's upper section comprises a firing head attachment and the piston rod's lower section is configured to connect to a setting adapter. The piston section's exterior surface fits within and is sealed against the cylinder's interior surface. The piston rod's upper section has a hollow power charge chamber configured to receive a power charge and the piston section has port holes that open into the power charge chamber at one end and that open directly onto the bottom connector's upper surface at the other end. The top cap's interior surface engages the piston rod's exterior surface to prevent axial movement of the outer tool assembly relative to the piston rod until the power charge is fired to stroke the gas operated setting tool. In some implementations, the top cap's interior surface comprises a shear ring that engages a surface feature on the piston rod's exterior surface to prevent the axial movement of the outer tool assembly relative to the piston rod until the power charge is fired. In some implementations, the piston rod's exterior surface comprises a shear ring that engages a surface feature on the top cap's interior surface to prevent the axial movement of the outer tool assembly relative to the piston rod until the power charge is fired. In some implementations, a center portion of an end of the power charge chamber between the ports holes extends into the power charge chamber to cause pressurized gasses in the power charge chamber to more efficiently flow to the port holes.
A gas operated setting tool in accordance with an embodiment comprises a cylinder 10, a bottom connector 20, a piston rod 40, and a top cap 30. The cylinder 10 is sometimes called a barrel or barrel piston, and the piston rod 40 is sometimes called a mandrel.
In the various embodiments depicted in
In the embodiment(s) of
A firing head (not shown) can be attached to the piston rod's upper end. A setting adapter (also not shown) can be attached to the piston rod's lower end. The structure, attachment, and use of both the firing head and the setting adapter (which are commercially available) is understood by those in the art and, for clarity and conciseness, will not be described in detail in this disclosure. Even if a setting tool designed as depicted in
Within the piston rod 40 of all of the exemplary embodiments, a hollow interior space called the power charge chamber 45 that receives and houses the power charge which, when fired, generates gas pressure needed to stroke the setting tool. The design and manufacture of suitable power charges (which are commercially available) and their operation within setting tools of the type described herein is understood by those in the art and, for clarity and conciseness, will not be described further.
As shown in the drawings, the annular top cap 30 preferably has an interior surface that engages the exterior surface of the upper end of the piston rod 40. As shown in the detail of
Before the power charge within the setting tool is fired, a lower shoulder 47 around the piston rod 40 (or the bottom of the piston rod's piston section 42 for the embodiment of
When the power charge fires, gas flows from the power charge chamber 45 through the flow path(s) in the piston rod connected to the port holes. The gas pushes directly against an end surface of the bottom connector 20 that abuts the port holes (the end surface 21 of the bottom connector 20 that is adjacent to the port holes 44 in the embodiment of
The bottom connector 20 has a top end that is connected to the cylinder 10. The bottom connector 20 has an inner surface that is sealed around the piston rod 40. O-rings within O-ring slots, for example, can help form the seal 62 between the inner surface of the bottom connector 20 and the outer surface of the piston rod 40. The bottom connector's seal 62 around the piston rod 40 allows the bottom connector 20 to move relative to the piston rod 40 by sliding. The bottom connector 20 has a bottom end configured to connect a setting sleeve to the setting tool, where the setting sleeve is coupled to a plug, a packer, or the like.
A setting tool in accordance with an embodiment is intended to be used with electric wireline service.
A prior art setting tool cannot be attached using a shear ring. Because shear ring attachment causes a setting tool to be disposable and reuse is not typically possible, using a shear ring is not feasible for most prior art setting tools. Moreover, for some setting tools, geometry prohibits shear ring accommodation because they are not designed to allow shear ring placement.
For some embodiments, the cylinder 10 can be made from tubing. This feature is unique because design constraints and geometry make the use of tubing impossible for prior art setting tools, for which neither the tubing itself nor its connections will satisfy design requirements and safety factors.
For some embodiments, the piston rod 40 is machined from a single piece of bar stock as shown in
The outer tool assembly (OTA) comprises the top cap 30, barrel (cylinder) 10, and bottom connector 20. During deployment, the shear ring 50 keeps the tool in place until it reaches its target location in the well bore. Then the wireline sends current to the tool, which energizes the igniter to shoot a flame that lights the power charge generating expanding gas in the power charge chamber 45. The pressurized gas escapes the power charge chamber 45 through the gas ports (flow ports 46 and port holes 44 in the embodiments of
The movement continues setting the plug into the well bore. Plugs with shear values from 28,000 pounds (lbs) to 55,000 lbs attach to the tool by way of a wireline adapter kit (WAK). Once the shear value of the plug has been reached, the WAK will shear loose from the plug. The OTA continues moving relative to the mandrel until, as shown in
As shown in
Some embodiments of a gas operated setting tool, such as those of
In an embodiment, a barrel 10 and a bottom connector 20 are separate machined parts that screw together forming a lower piston. This serves two purposes. First, it makes machining the part less expensive. Second, it provides direct contact of the pressurized gas with the piston rod's piston section, producing more prompt movement of the tool when contact with the pressurized gas is introduced. This means that the cylinder 10 sees less pressure for a shorter duration because the tool is already stroking before the cylinder 10 experiences pressure. In contrast, prior art setting tools must pressurize analogous components significantly before stroking can begin. An embodiment's barrel 10 and bottom connector 20 have direct contact with the mandrel piston and gas vents pass through the mandrel piston coming to the top of the bottom connector's lower piston. Once the gas is introduced the lower portion the OTA immediately begin a downward movement to begin the setting process of the plug or packer. This enables the gas to act in a direct manner to actuate the tool for setting the plug or packer.
In an embodiment, the shear ring 50 prevents movement (anti-preset) of the OTA until the power charge has fired. Prior art setting tools use a screw that penetrates radially to prevent premature movement. A matching circular ledge is machined onto both the top cap 30 and the mandrel 40 to avoid the possibility of damage to the “anti-preset” system during the hook up process of the plug or packer or the hook up to the gun string since rotation of the tool will not damage a circumferential shear ring 50. For safety, it is important for the setting tool to come to the surface without any of the gas that operated the tool remaining inside it. Embodiments have a double pressure relief machined onto the lower portion of the mandrel. An embodiment can use a gas generating power charge that is standard to the industry. An embodiment can accommodate a firing head that attaches to mandrel and then to a gun string that is common to the industry. Unlike prior art setting tools, an embodiment can simultaneously use a “Go Style” gas generating power charge and a “Baker Style” lower end hook up connection.
In the example of
This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 16/696,832 filed Nov. 26, 2019, which is a continuation-in-part of International Patent Application No. PCT/US2019/37125 filed on Jun. 13, 2019, which claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 62/697,590 filed on Jul. 13, 2018. The disclosures of the above-identified patent documents are incorporated herein by reference.
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20210285298 A1 | Sep 2021 | US |
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Parent | PCT/US2019/037125 | Jun 2019 | US |
Child | 16696832 | US |