1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates generally to the field of roller cone (“rock”) bits used to drill wellbores through earth formations. More specifically, the invention is related to structures for cutting elements (“inserts”) used in roller cone bits having a single roller cone.
2. Background Art
Roller cone bits are one type of drill bit used to drill wellbores through earth formations. Roller cone bits include a bit body adapted to be coupled to a drilling tool assembly or “drill string” which rotates the bit as it is pressed axially into the formations being drilled. The bit body includes one or more legs, each having thereon a bearing journal. The most commonly used types of roller cone drill bits include three such legs and bearing journals. A roller cone is rotatably mounted to the bearing journal. During drilling, the roller cones rotate about the respective journals while the bit is rotated. The roller cones include a number of cutting elements, which may be press fit inserts made from tungsten carbide and other materials, or may be milled steel teeth. The cutting elements engage the formation in a combination of crushing, gouging and scraping or shearing action which removes small segments of the formation being drilled. The inserts on a cone of a three-cone bit are generally classified as inner-row insert and gage-row inserts. Inner row inserts engage the bore hole bottom, but not the well bore wall. Gage-row inserts engage the well bore wall and sometimes a small outer ring portion of the bore hole bottom. The direction of motion of inserts engaging the rock on a two or three-cone bit is generally in one direction or a very small limited range of direction, i.e., 10 degrees or less.
One particular type of roller cone drill bit includes only one leg, bearing journal and roller cone rotatably attached thereto. The drilled hole and the longitudinal axis of this type of bit are generally concentric. This type of drill bit has generally been preferred for drilling applications when the diameter of the hole being drilled is small (less than about 4 to 6 inches [10 to 15 cm]) because the bearing structure can be larger relative to the diameter of the drilled hole when the bit only has one concentric roller cone. This is in contrast to the typical three-cone rock bit, in which each journal must be smaller relative to the drilled hole diameter.
An important performance aspect of any drill bit is its ability to drill a wellbore having the full nominal diameter of the drill bit from the time the bit is first used to the time the cutting elements are worn to the point that the bit must be replaced. This a particular problem for single cone bits because of the motion (trajectory) of the cutting elements as they drill the wellbore. Essentially all but a few centrally positioned cutting elements on the cone eventually engage the wellbore wall at the gage diameter. The inserts on a single cone bit go through large changes in their direction of motion, typically anywhere from 180 to 360 degrees. Such changes require special consideration in design. The inserts on a single cone bit undergo as much as an order of magnitude more shear than do the inserts on a conventional two or three cone bit. Such amounts of shear become apparent when looking at the bottom hole patterns of each type of bit. A single cone bit creates multiple grooves laid out in hemispherically-projected hypotrochoids, a configuration similar to ink paths generated by drawing instruments in a toy sold under the trade mark SPIROGRAPH by Tonka Corp., Minnetonka, Minn. 55343. A two or three cone bit, in contrast, generates a series of individual craters or indentations. Shearing rock to fail it will typically cause more wear on an insert than indenting an insert to compressively fail rock. Therefore, the inserts on a single cone bit wear faster than the inserts on a two or three cone bit. As the cutting elements on a single cone bit wear, therefore, the drilled hole diameter reduces correspondingly.
One way to maintain full drilled diameter in a single cone bit is to include fixed cutters on the bit body. The fixed cutters may be tungsten carbide inserts. Typically, the fixed cutters will be affixed to the bit body at a position axially above the roller cone on the bit. A single cone bit known in the art which includes the foregoing features is described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,119,797 issued to Hong et al. The bit shown therein includes special inserts in an “intermittent contact zone” on the roller cone, and both active and passive gage protection inserts or buttons on the bit body axially above the roller cone.
While the bit described in the Hong et al. '797 patent is effective in maintaining full diameter of the drilled hole, using fixed cutters as described increases the “gage length” of the drill bit. This may lessen the ability of such a bit to be used in directional drilling applications. Directional drilling includes drilling the wellbore along a selected trajectory, typically other than vertical. Having fixed cutters and/or gage pads on the bit body also increases the torque required to turn the bit, which is not desirable, and in some cases limits the rotary speed that the bit can be turned, leading to reduced drilling rates.
It is therefore desirable to have a single cone rock bit which can better maintain full gage diameter during its useful life, while remaining useful in directional drilling applications.
One aspect of the invention relates to a roller cone drill bit which includes a bit body adapted to be coupled to a drill string. A bearing journal depends from the bit body. A single roller cone is rotatably attached to the bearing journal. The roller cone has a plurality of inserts disposed at selected positions about the cone. The journal defines a rotation angle with respect to an axis of rotation of the bit such that the roller cone includes a wall contacting zone and a bottom contact zone. At least one of the inserts disposed in the wall contact zone. has an extension portion terminating in a substantially planar upper surface.
In some embodiments, the extension portion defines a tapered profile. In some embodiments, the tapered profile includes a concave profile part which contacts the upper surface. In some embodiments, the tapered profile includes a convex portion. In some embodiments, the extension portion and the upper surface define an elliptical cross section.
Another aspect of the invention relates to a roller cone drill bit which includes a bit body adapted to be coupled to a drill string, a bearing journal depending from the bit body and a single roller cone rotatably attached to the bearing journal. The roller cone has a plurality of inserts disposed at selected positions thereon. The journal defines a rotation angle with respect to an axis of rotation of the bit such that the roller cone includes a wall contacting zone and a bottom contact zone thereon. At least one of the inserts disposed in the wall contacting zone has a super hard material wafer disposed in an upper surface thereof.
Other aspects and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the following description and the appended claims.
A general structure for a single cone roller cone bit which can be made according to various embodiments of the invention is shown in cut away view in
The other end of the bit body 1 includes a bearing journal 1A to which a single, generally hemispherically shaped roller cone 6 is rotatably mounted. In some embodiments the cone 6 may be locked onto the journal 1A by locking balls 1B disposed in corresponding grooves on the outer surface of the journal 1A and the interior surface of the cone 6. The means by which the cone 6 is rotatably locked onto the journal 1A is not meant to limit the scope of the invention. The cone 6 is formed from steel or other high strength material, and may be covered about its exterior surface with a hardfacing or similar material intended to reduce abrasive wear of the cone 6. In some embodiments, the cone 6 will include a seal 8 disposed to exclude fluid and debris from entering the space between the inside of the cone 6 and the journal 1A. Such seals are well known in the art.
The cone 6 includes a plurality of cutting elements thereon at selected positions, which in various embodiments of the invention are inserts 5, 7 generally interference fit into corresponding sockets (not shown separately) in the outer surface of the cone 6.
The journal 1A depends from the bit body 1 such that it defines an angle α between the rotational axis 9 of the journal 1A and the rotational axis of the bit 11. The size of this angle α will depend on factors such as the nature of the earth formations being drilled by the bit. Nonetheless, because the bit body 11 and the cone 6 rotate about different axes, the motion of the inserts 5, 7 during drilling can be roughly defined as falling within a wall contacting zone 10, in which the insert 7 located therein at least intermittently contact the outer diameter (wall) of the wellbore, and a bottom contact zone 12, in which the inserts 5 located therein are in substantially continuous contact with the earth formations, and generally do not contact the outer diameter (wall) of the wellbore during drilling. The inserts 7 in the wall contacting zone 10 therefore define the drill diameter 14 of the bit. By having inserts for the wall contacting zone 10 which minimize axial wear, but maintain suitable cutting action against the formations being drilled, the life of the bit can be extended, while having relatively high penetration rates.
The inserts 5, 7 may be made from tungsten carbide, other metal carbide, or other hard materials known in the art for making drill bit inserts. The inserts 5, 7 may also be made from polycrystalline diamond, boron nitride or other super hard material known in the art, or combinations of hard and super hard materials known in the art.
Various embodiments of this aspect of the invention include at least one insert 7 in the wall contacting zone 10, and preferably substantially all the inserts 7 therein to be configured such that an uppermost surface of the insert 7 is substantially planar. In some embodiments, an outer surface of an extension portion of the insert 7 presents a substantially flat or a concave profile to the formation during drilling. For purposes of the invention, substantially planar may include a radius of curvature on the upper surface of at least 25 percent of the diameter of the wellbore drilled by the bit. In some embodiments, substantially all the inserts 5, 7 may have a substantially planar upper surface, according to that described above and to other configurations which will be further explained, in order to improve drilling efficiency.
In some embodiments the upper surface has a convex radius of curvature between about 25 and 50 percent of the wellbore diameter, and more preferably being equivalent to the radius of the wellbore diameter or bit diameter.
One embodiment of the inserts is shown in
Another embodiment of the insert is shown in
The generally tapered extension portion 20B and substantially planar upper surface 24B define an elliptical cross-section. The elliptical cross-section is more clearly observable in
Another embodiment of the insert is shown in
As shown in
It is known in the art that inserts on a single cone bit can go through a 360 degree change in the direction of motion, with the amount of time at each direction of motion not being equal. Therefore it is desirable to have an insert that has a “cutting flank rake angle”, θ, adapted to optimize the efficiency of the inserts based on their trajectory for cutting the borehole. An example of such an insert is shown in
Generally speaking, various embodiments of inserts to be used with a single cone rock bit according to one aspect of the invention have a substantially planar upper surface, and an extension portion having a flat or at least partially concave profile. The profile of the extension portion in some embodiments is generally tapered. In some embodiments, the extension portion profile is substantially perpendicular to the upper surface. Preferably, the juncture of the upper surface and the extension portion is not gradually radiused, but instead forms a relatively sharp transition between the upper surface and the extension portion with a maximum 0.06 inch radius or is chamfered. Using a larger radius or forming chamfer larger than 0.06 inches is believed to reduce the cutting efficiency as well as unnecessarily reduce the amount of material near the upper surface (24C in
One embodiment of another aspect of the invention is shown in
An alternative embodiment of the insert shown in
Another configuration of an insert for a single-cone bit according to the invention is shown in
Another configuration of insert is shown at 7H in
A single cone drill bit made according to this aspect of the invention may have improved ability to maintain full gage diameter while drilling over the useful life of the bit as compared with prior art bits.
While the invention has been described with respect to a limited number of embodiments, those skilled in the art, having benefit of this disclosure, will appreciate that other embodiments can be devised which do not depart from the scope of the invention as disclosed herein. Accordingly, the scope of the invention should be limited only by the attached claims.
This application claims the benefit, pursuant to 35 U.S.C. § 120, as a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/407,922, which claims priority pursuant to 35 U.S.C. § 119 of U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 60/375,360 filed on Apr. 25, 2002, both applications are incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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5833021 | Mensa-Wilmot et al. | Nov 1998 | A |
6119797 | Hong et al. | Sep 2000 | A |
6161634 | Minikus et al. | Dec 2000 | A |
6167975 | Estes | Jan 2001 | B1 |
7100711 | Witman et al. | Sep 2006 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20070107946 A1 | May 2007 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60375360 | Apr 2002 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10407922 | Apr 2003 | US |
Child | 11501472 | US |