The present invention relates to a slotting geometry for metal pipe and a method of use of the same to line bore holes in porous earth formations to exclude entry of solid particles while permitting fluid flow.
Metal pipe having through-wall slots, referred to as “slotted liners”, are commonly used to line bore holes in porous earth formations to exclude entry of solid particles while permitting fluid flow through the liner wall. As is well known in the art, the selection of slotting geometry affects the structural capacity of the slotted liner in addition to its filtering characteristics. The selection of slot geometry thus typically considers the impact of slotting on the usual structural properties of axial, torsion and collapse load capacities. U.S. Pat. No. 1,620,412 (Tweeddale 1927) is an example of an early patent in which the importance of slot geometry was recognized.
The present invention relates to a slotting geometry for metal pipe, which provides a slotted liner with some unique properties.
According to a first aspect of the present invention there is provided a slotting geometry for a metal pipe having a tubular body having a first end, a second end, and a peripheral sidewall having slots arranged in a geometric pattern. The slots extend through the peripheral sidewall thereby permitting fluid communication from an exterior surface of the tubular body to an interior of the tubular body. The slotting geometry includes at least one integral substantially continuous unslotted helical coil extending around the peripheral sidewall for substantially the entire length of the tubular body. The slots are further arranged to leave the material attaching adjacent coils dimensioned to act as elongate struts. Individual struts are generally parallelogram shaped in the plane defined by the surface of the metal pipe, preferably having a length greater than twice their width. Under application of deforming loads the elongate struts thus dimensioned tend to pivot or hinge in their end region of attachment to the coils, and act to maintain the coil spacing in the direction of the strut constant. Both the first end and the second end of the tubular body have unslotted connecting portions, thereby facilitating connection with the tubular body.
According to another aspect of the present invention there is provided a slotted liner having the slotting geometry described above.
When the above described slotting geometry was developed, problems were being encountered in removing slotted liners from well bores. The slotted liners were being substantially restrained or gripped by contact with surrounding solid or packed materials. The slotting geometry and slotted liner described above was developed based upon two general principles: a left hand helix tends to decrease in diameter under the application of a right hand twist when kept at constant length; and a helix tends to expand when compressed in the absence of twist. Considering these geometric effects, it was realized that providing longitudinally oriented struts joining helical coils would ensure dominance of the first principle, namely right hand twist will cause a diameter reduction. When a length of such slotted liner is employed in a well bore having its upper end structurally connected to a tubular work string preparatory to attempting removal, this property supports removal of the liner by enabling the liner to be retracted from the confining material upon application of sufficient right hand torque at surface and transmitted through the work string to impose twist in the liner, beginning at its upper end and propagating downward. As retraction thus progresses downward, radial contact stress supporting frictional engagement with the bore hole, that would otherwise prevent removal and indeed rotation causing the twist, is eliminated or substantially reduced along the retracted liner length allowing the liner to be pulled out of the bore hole with greatly reduced drag. Retraction under application of right hand torque is preferred over left hand torque only because said work strings, typically used by industry, are joined by threaded connections that tend to unscrew under application of left hand torque. It is particularly advantageous that such a slotted liner can be provided without significant reduction of the structural capacity typically provided by existing slotted liner architectures and can use slots which are longitudinally oriented to take advantage of existing slotting equipment configured to only place longitudinal slots through the wall of metal pipe.
Once the method was developed it was realised that the inverse of this principle is also true, a left hand helix tends to increase in diameter under the application of a left hand twist. When the helix is part of a slotted liner, the slot width of longitudinal slots will tend to either increase or decrease depending upon whether the helix is being expanded or contracted. This provided a means to change the slot width of the slotted liner, by application of sufficient torsion or axial load either separately or in combination.
It was further realized that placing the slots at angles other than longitudinal, enabled the twist to be generated by application of axial load, allowing helically slotted structures that may for example be expanded or contracted by application of axial compression. Parameters defining the helical slotting pattern, according to the method of the present invention, thus allow broad control of the relationship between slot width and diameter change and the loads required to induce these changes.
There will first be described a slotted liner, generally indicated by reference numeral 1, having a slotting geometry in accordance with the teachings of the present invention. There will then be, described unique methods of using the slotted liner in field applications, with reference to
According to the preferred embodiment of the present invention, the method of placing slots through the wall of a metal pipe in a helical pattern is implemented to produce a helically slotted tubular article having longitudinal slots disposed along two helical paths suitable for use as a retractable slotted liner. Referring now to
The length of the slots 4 are chosen to be less than the pitch of the individual helical paths 5 and 6 to leave unslotted helical intervals forming two helical coils 8 & 9 through the helically slotted interval 7. The circumferential regions between the slots 4 thus effectively form longitudinal struts 10 having upper and lower ends 11 & 12 respectively. The circumferential spacing of the slots 4 will be seen to control the width of the struts 10, which width is preferably arranged to provide struts 10 having a length to width ratio of at least two (2). It will be seen in
Referring now to
Application of torque beyond that required close the slots, tends to force the edges 17 of adjacent struts 10 together reacting tension developed in the coils 8 & 9. This tension in the coils 8 & 9 combined with the normal and friction forces induced by contact along the strut edges 17 tends to resist further twist and provides a substantial increase in failure torque above that required to just close the slots.
Utility—Relating to Ease of Removal of Slotted Liner
The present invention was specifically conceived as a means to support removal of cemented or ‘sanded-in’ slotted liners located inside the well bores of petroleum wells. Removal of the liner may be motivated by a variety of recompletion objectives such as plugging of the slots, incremental drilling, chemical treatment, reperforating, etc. Slotted liners may be deployed to restrain solids inflow by placement directly in the open hole wellbore or inside wellbores already supported by perforated casing. Over time, the borehole material tends to slough in against the slotted liner in open hole completions. Similarly, where the slotted liner is placed inside cased hole, solids restrained by the liner accumulate in the annulus between the perforated casing and slotted liner exterior during production of fluids tending to form a solids pack. Attempts to remove such packed-in or ‘sanded in’ liners by application of axial load tends to meet with resistance from the confining solids pack, in many cases exceeding the axial load capacity of the liner and thus preventing removal.
Slot geometries are sought to maintain adequate levels for these capacities to support installation and in-situ loads without undue change in slot gap size as the primary variable controlling filtration behaviour.
Given this design approach, slot geometries offering maximum axial load capacity are chosen to support removal requirements. The slotting pattern most commonly employed to provide high axial load capacity and significant collapse and torque capacity places short longitudinally oriented slots through the wall of a tubular in circumferentially evenly spaced groups at axially spaced intervals, where the axial spacing is greater than the slot length. This slotting pattern creates, from the original tube, a structure that is a series of rings separated by integrally attached struts.
In addition, measures may be taken to reduce drag force. Connections between lengths of slotted liner are chosen to be external flush, and the exterior of the liner may be coated to reduce the friction coefficient existing at the solids pack liner interface. While these methods known to the art are helpful in reducing the drag developed per unit length, even modest lengths of liner commonly installed in vertical wells often still develop sufficient drag to prevent removal. Removal of liner from the long intervals of horizontal well bores is even more difficult.
For example technological advances in directional drilling within the oil industry have enabled wells to be completed with long horizontal sections in contact with the reservoir. Such long horizontal well bores, often in excess of 1,000 m, permit fluids to be injected into or produced from a much greater portion of the reservoir, than would be possible from a vertical well, with commensurately greater recovery of petroleum from a single well.
Where such reservoirs are comprised of weak rock such as unconsolidated sandstone, the horizontal section may be completed with slotted liners to prevent closure of the bore hole through collapse or sloughing of the reservoir material. Even modest radial stress developed from sand collapsed against the installed liner develops sufficient drag to prevent removal of conventionally designed slotted liners from such long wells. However the relatively high cost of drilling such wells makes the availability of remedial recompletion measures such as the removal of under performing slotted liner even more valuable.
The method of the present invention is directed to providing such helically slotted metal pipe where the slots,
Said helical paths are,
The slot length is selected to be less than the spacing between adjoining helix paths, thus providing a tubular article having struts disposed along one or more coaxial helical paths separated by and attached to the edges of one or more unslotted generally continuous coaxial helical coils, said slotted paths and coils having their upper and lower ends co-terminating in respective upper and lower unslotted pipe ends of similar diameter. The slot length and circumferential spacing is arranged so that said struts have a length generally greater than their width, and preferably at least two times greater.
Consistent with the primary purpose of the present invention, it was recognised that application of sufficient right hand torque to such a left hand helically slotted pipe, having longitudinally aligned slots forming longitudinally aligned struts, will tend to induce said initially longitudinally aligned struts to rotate counter-clockwise about their centres by hinging at their ends in their region of attachment to the edges of the continuous helical coils. This rotation allows the pipe to twist, the slots to close and the diameter of the attached helical coil or coils to simultaneously reduce, thus providing an overall reduction in slotted pipe diameter. Where slots placed along the helical path are longitudinally aligned, the magnitude of diameter reduction obtained when the helically slotted pipe is twisted an amount sufficient to close the slots is approximately equal to the open area ratio of the slotted pipe, as typically used to characterize slotted liner, i.e., ratio of sum of pipe surface area intersected by slots to total pipe surface area over slotted interval. It will be apparent to one skilled in the art, that for typical open area magnitudes in the range of a few percent, this provides practically useful diameter reductions with respect to the stiffness of the confining material in most if not all well bore completion applications. It will also be apparent to one skilled in the art that the material properties must be matched to the desired amount of deformation to avoid fracture, particularly in the region at the ends of the struts where hinges form. However, the ductility typically available from steels used to form slotted liners provides a useful range of strut rotation.
By comparison of this helically slotted structure to that of the commonly used conventional slotting pattern, providing rings attached by circumferential rows of struts, it was further recognized that for similar slot densities and strut dimensions, the helical coil or coils of the present invention provide collapse resistance in a manner similar to the rings of the conventional architecture. Moreover, the longitudinally aligned helical struts provide very similar elastic torque and axial load capacities. Together these properties meet the additional advantages sought with respect to the existing practice for slotted liner design: little change in structural capacity and ready adaptability to existing longitudinal slotting equipment.
The practical utility of such helically slotted pipe is improved if the closure torque, i.e., the torque at which diameter reduction causing slot closure occurs, is less than the capacity of the connections typically available in industry to join lengths of slotted liner. It will be evident to one skilled in the art that the loss of shear strength at the free edges of longitudinal slots through the pipe wall tends to generally reduce the torsional stiffness and yield torque. Therefore through appropriate selection of material and slot and helix dimensions, helically slotted pipe designs having closure torques well below that of the unslotted tube body can be readily obtained.
The axial and torsional loads applied to retrieve slotted liners from downhole, must be manipulated from surface through a work string. Therefore precise control of downhole torque (torque at the liner) is difficult. In addition, as the twist propagates downward, any remaining drag will require greater torque at the liner top to continue the downward propagation of twist. It is therefore advantageous if the helically slotted liner torque capacity, i.e., torque causing structural failure, is significantly greater than the closure torque to thus provide a large ‘safety margin’ and improve the chance of loosening restrained slotted liner to greater depths.
As described above with reference to
Variation of Preferred Embodiment Supporting: Utility—Relating to Ease of Removal of Slotted Liner
While the body of slotted liner joints may be helically slotted to enable reduction of diameter upon application of torque causing twist according to the teachings of the present invention, the un-slotted intervals between joints of slotted liner required for connections remain largely unchanged. The drag from these intervals will therefore not be reduced to the same degree as occurs where the diameter is reduced. It is therefore desirable to find means to reduce the drag occurring in this interval is short in length and preferably of a diameter less than the initial un-retracted pipe diameter.
Referring now to
Utility—Relating to Surface and In Situ Changes of Slot Width:
The load-deformation mechanism provided by helically slotted tubular articles provides utility beyond diameter reduction to facilitate slotted liner retrieval. This mechanism, by which loads can be arranged to cause rotation of longitudinally aligned struts connecting the edges of adjacent coils in helically slotted pipe, can be used to increase or decrease both the diameter and slot size. The interaction of the various geometry variables provided by the helically slotted pipe architecture provides for a large degree of flexibility in these load vs deformation relationships. As already pointed out, the material properties of the pipe must also be considered to obtain the desired amount of deformation without fracture, particularly in the region at the ends of the struts where hinges form.
One application where variation of slot width is valuable occurs where very small slot widths are required to filter out finer grained material. To obtain these small slot widths, typically less than 0.010″, it is advantageous if the slots can be cut with wider more robust saw blades and subsequently reduced in width. As already described, right hand twist applied to left hand helically slotted pipe with longitudinally aligned slots reduces the gap size. Where the slot and helix geometries are arranged so that twist produces plastic deformation at the strut ends where hinges tend to form, the method of the present invention may thus be used to permanently adjust the width of slots by application of torsion, perhaps in combination with axial load, following placement of the slots in the pipe wall. This adjustment may be carried out at surface or indeed downhole, supported by appropriate fixturing. Downhole or in-situ adjustment of the slot width need not be restricted to permanent changes since load may be retained by use of appropriate fixturing reacted into the borehole. The present invention, therefore, provides a method to narrow the width of slots placed in the wall of helically slotted pipe by application of load.
Utility—Relating to In-Situ Expansion:
The present invention provides a method of placing slots in such slotted liners to enable significant diametral expansion or retraction, in combination with changes of slot width, under application of axial and torsional loads, separately or in combination. The ability to expand slotted liners in-situ finds utility in applications where a larger in-situ diameter is desired than installation restrictions allow. The ability to retract slotted liners improves the ability to remove liners in applications where contact with the borehole would otherwise significantly resist movement. The ability to change slot width, subsequent to cutting slots in pipe, is a useful adjunct to manufacturing methods, particularly where small slot widths are required and to enable change of slot width downhole to support in-situ control of slotted liner filtering characteristics.
Referring now to
The ability to increase the diameter of helically slotted liner finds utility in industry applications where expandable sand screen (ESS) liners are desirable. These applications require liners capable of installation through up hole intervals of smaller diameter than the final in-situ expanded diameter, which expanded diameter provides benefits deriving from reduced flow loss inside the liner and improved support of the borehole mitigating collapse forces.
It will be evident that according to the teachings of the present invention, helical slotted liner configured to expand upon application of axial compressive load, as disclosed above, can be made to provide these benefits. Referring now to
Example of Liner Designed for Retrieval Applications.
It will be apparent to one skilled in the art, that selection of the various dimensional parameters defining the slot pattern of the helically slotted tubular article, allows for a large amount of adjustment in performance parameters. The following example illustrates one relationship obtained between slotting parameters and retraction performance.
In one arrangement of the preferred embodiment, a sample was prepared having 1.9 inch long, 0.020 inch wide slots placed through the wall of a 3.5″ outside diameter by 2.992 inside diameter API grade L80 steel pipe at 12° increments on 6 inch pitch helical paths over a 60 inch interval. This sample was placed in a load frame capable of applying combined tension and torsional loads. A tension of 5,000 lb was applied while torque was increased. It was found that a torque of approximately 2000 ftlb was required to initiate significant plastic deformation and 2700 ftlb was required to just close the slots and provide a diameter reduction of approximately 0.12 inches. After closure of the slots the torque was increased to 5800 ftlb without noticeable failure or collapse of the pipe section. With this torque applied the axial load was then incremented to approximately 145,000 lb again without noticeable failure or collapse of pipe section. It will be apparent to one skilled on the art that these performance parameters are of practical utility in applications requiring removal of such a slotted liner from well bores.
This and many other similarly useful helically slotted tubular articles may be provided by following the teachings of the present invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2357883 | Sep 2001 | CA | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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1620412 | Tweedale | Mar 1927 | A |
4343359 | Krause | Aug 1982 | A |
5366012 | Lohbeck | Nov 1994 | A |
6315040 | Donnelly | Nov 2001 | B1 |
6354373 | Vercaemer et al. | Mar 2002 | B1 |
6382318 | Whitlock | May 2002 | B1 |
6523611 | Bakker et al. | Feb 2003 | B1 |
20030079886 | Schetky et al. | May 2003 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20030062170 A1 | Apr 2003 | US |