The use of rotary steerable systems is well known in downhole drilling operations. Rotary steerable systems are known, for example, to improve rate of penetration of drilling, provide improved hole cleaning owing to the continuous rotation of the drill string, and to provide more accurate well placement at a reduced overall cost as compared to mud motor/bent sub technology.
Numerous commercially available rotary steerable systems make use of hydraulically actuated pads (or blades) to steer. In such systems, the pads may be extended outward from the tool body or retracted inward towards the tool body to actuate and/or adjust the direction of drilling. While such rotary steerable systems are suitable in a wide range of drilling operations, there is room for further improvement. For example, there is a need to improve control of extension and retraction of the hydraulically actuated pads to provide improved wellbore position control, more efficient steering, and better hole quality.
A method for drilling a subterranean wellbore is disclosed. The method includes rotating a bottom hole assembly (BHA) in the wellbore to drill. The BHA includes a rotary steerable tool or a steerable drill bit having at least one external pad configured to extend radially outward into contact with a wall of the wellbore and thereby steer the drilling. A toolface demand is received and processed to compute open and close toolface angles for opening and closing a valve that actuates the steering pad. The rotation rate of the BHA is measured and processed to compute times for opening and closing the valve. The valve is opened and closed at the computed times and toolface angles at which the valve opens and closes are measured. The open and close toolface angles are compared with the measured toolface values to obtain a toolface error which is then processed to compute new open and close toolface angles.
This summary is provided to introduce a selection of concepts that are further described below in the detailed description. This summary is not intended to identify key or essential features of the claimed subject matter, nor is it intended to be used as an aid in limiting the scope of the claimed subject matter.
For a more complete understanding of the disclosed subject matter, and advantages thereof, reference is now made to the following descriptions taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
Disclosed embodiments relate generally to downhole drilling methods. For instance, some example embodiments relate to methods for actuating steering elements in a rotary steerable system.
Methods for drilling a subterranean wellbore are disclosed and in some embodiments the methods include rotating a BHA in the wellbore to drill. A toolface demand is received and processed to compute open and close toolface angles for opening and closing a valve that actuates a steering pad. The rotation rate of the BHA is measured and processed to compute times for opening and closing the valve. The valve is opened and closed at the computed times and toolface angles at which the valve opens and closes are measured. The open and close toolface angles are compared with the measured toolface values to obtain a toolface error which is then processed to compute new open and close toolface angles. The method may further optionally include making pressure measurements in the pad to obtain a steering impulse (or force). This steering impulse may be compared with a setpoint steering impulse to obtain a steering impulse error which may then be processed with the toolface error to compute the new open and close toolface angles.
The disclosed embodiments may provide various technical advantages and improvements over the prior art. For example, some embodiments may provide for improved steering efficiency as well as for a smoother hole profile and therefore improve overall hole quality. Disclosed embodiments may further provide for improved directional control by better controlling the toolface angles at which steering actuators (pads) extend and retract while drilling.
It will be understood by those of ordinary skill in the art that the deployment illustrated on
With continued reference to
While the disclosed embodiments are not limited in this regard, rotary steerable tool 50 may further include navigation (survey) sensors 85, 87, and 89 deployed in a sensor housing 80 (such as a roll-stabilized housing). These sensors 85, 87, and 89 may include, for example, tri-axial accelerometer 85 and tri-axial magnetometer 87 sensor sets and an inertial (gyroscopic) sensor 89. The navigation sensors may include substantially any suitable commercially available devices, for example, including conventional Q-flex type accelerometers or micro-electro-mechanical systems (MEMS) solid-state accelerometers, ring core flux gate magnetometers or magnetoresistive sensors, and MEMS type gyros.
Turning now to
Based on
As noted above, the direction of drilling may be controlled by actuating the pads 60 (in tools 50, 50′, and 70) with pressurized drilling fluid. The use of rotary valves in such pad actuation is well known. During an active steering mode the pads extend and retract in a predetermined range of toolface angles to cause the drill bit to drill in a predetermined direction. For example, when building (increasing) inclination, each pad may be extended at the low side of the wellbore and retracted at the opposing high side of the wellbore such that the drill bit turns upward (builds inclination). During a neutral mode (or phase) the toolface angle at which the pads extend and retract changes with time as the tool rotates such that drilling tends to proceed straight ahead. In such prior art arrangements, the steering ratio is defined by the ratio of the time in the active mode to the total time (where the time in active mode plus the time in neutral mode equals the total time).
The aforementioned pads 60 may also be independently actuated using digital valves (e.g., solenoid valves). During the active steering mode the pads extend and retract at predetermined toolface angles in a manner similar to that described above for rotary valve embodiments. During the neutral mode, the digital valves remain closed such that the pads are retracted and drilling tends to proceed straight ahead. While these rotary valve and digital valve control methodologies are generally serviceable, there is room for improvement and optimization, for example, to improve the timing and directional control valve/pad actuation to improve steering efficiency and directional control of the drilling operation.
A demand toolface is received at 104. The demand toolface may be received, for example, from an outer control loop or downlinked from a directional driller at the surface and is generally selected based on a desired drilling direction. For example, the demand toolface may be 180 degrees (i.e., pointing in the downward direction) to build inclination (i.e., to push the bit upwards).
The received toolface demand is processed in 106 to compute open and close toolface angles TFset_o and TFset_c (tool face angles at which the valve(s) is/are to be opened and closed thereby extending and retracting the pad). These open and close toolface angles define a toolface range over which the valve is open (and over which the pad is extended) and are computed so as to steer drilling along the desired direction based on the received toolface demand. In one embodiment, the toolface demand may represent a toolface centerpoint TFset_cp and the open and close toolface angles may be computed from a predetermined toolface range TFset_width that define the toolface range over which the valve is open. For example only, in an embodiment in which TFset_cp is 90 degrees and TFset_width is 120 degrees the open and close toolface angles TFset_o and TFset_c may be computed to be 30 and 150 degrees (90±120/2).
With continued reference to
The open and close toolface angles computed in 106 and the rotation rate measured in 108 are processed in combination at 110 to compute corresponding times topen and tclose for opening and closing the valve. As described above, the pad(s) may be independently extended and retracted by opening and closing corresponding digital valves in the tool. Opening the valve connects the rotary steerable pad with pressurized drilling fluid in the steering tool and thereby rapidly extends the pad (e.g., into contact with the wellbore wall). Closing the valve disconnects the pad from the pressurized drilling fluid and enables the pad to be retracted (e.g., via contact with the wellbore wall and venting of the fluid into the annulus).
With continued reference to
The toolface values may be measured at 112 using substantially any known sensors, for example, including the triaxial accelerometers 85 and magnetometers 87 and/or gyroscopic sensors 89 described above with respect to
It will be appreciated that the pads may be repeatedly extended and retracted while drilling and steering (via repeatedly opening and closing the corresponding valve). Moreover, the steering tool generally includes three circumferentially spaced pads, each of which is intended to extend and retract at the open and close toolface angles while the tool rotates in 102. As such there may be a large number of valve openings and closings to evaluate. In certain embodiments, it may be advantageous to evaluate multiple valve openings and closings at steps 108, 110, and 112 to compute a mean or median average error.
For example, the open and close toolface angles and the rotation rate may be processed at 110 to compute a plurality of times topen(i) and tclose(i) for opening and closing individual ones of the valves within a preselected time window (where i=1, 2 . . . m with m representing the number of pad extensions and retractions in the time window). The time window may include substantially any suitable time interval, for example, counted in time or tool rotations (revolutions). In example embodiments, the time window may be from about 5 to about 50 tool revolutions or from about 1 to about 50 seconds (the disclosed embodiments are of course not limited to these ranges). The toolface measurements may then be evaluated at 114 at the times topen(i) and tclose (i) to obtain corresponding measured toolface values TFmeas_o(i) and TFmeas_c(i). These measured toolface values may be compared with the open and close toolface angles computed in 106 to compute corresponding errors ETF(i). Error statistics may be computed and evaluated at 116 to compute the new open and close toolface angles. These statistics may include substantially any suitable statistics for evaluating the error including a mean error, a median error, a standard deviation of the error, an error distribution, and the like.
It will be further appreciated that the feedback mechanism described above in
A toolface demand is received at 126. The demand toolface may be received, for example, from an outer control loop or downlinked from a directional driller at the surface and is generally selected based on a desired drilling direction (as described above with respect to FIG. 5). While not depicted it will be understood that a measurement time window and or a steering ratio is received or selected at 124 or 126.
The received toolface demand is processed at 128 to compute open and close toolface angles TFset_o and TFset_c (tool face angles at which the valve(s) is/are to be opened and closed thereby extending and retracting the pad), for example, as described above with respect to
With continued reference to
The valves may then be opened and closed at the corresponding times topen(i) and tclose(i). Toolface measurements may be made at 134 to determine the actual toolface values TFmeas_o(i) and TFmeas_c(i) at which the valves open and close. For example, toolface measurements may be made continuously while rotating (e.g., at intervals of about 1 to about 10 milliseconds) to obtain toolface values as a function of time as described above with respect to
Drilling fluid pressure measurements may also be made at 136. For example, the pressure may be measured in piston cavity 87 (
I
steer(i)=Popen(i)·Apiston·[tclose(i)−topen(i)]
where Popen(i) represent the piston cavity pressure measurements, Apiston represents the area of the pad/piston on which the fluid pressure acts such that Popen(i)·Apiston represent piston forces, and tclose(i)−topen(i) represent the time intervals over which the valve is opened (and the pad is extended). It will be understood that the disclosed embodiments are not limited to the above equation. For example, steering impulses Isteer(i) may also be computed as follows:
I
steer(i)=Fpiston(i)·[tclose(i)−topen(i)]
where Fpiston(i) represent piston forces. These piston forces may be determined via multiplying average forces by a piston area as described above. The forces Fpiston(i) may alternatively and/or additionally be determined by integrating the above described continuous pressure measurements over the time intervals tclose(i)−topen(i). These computed steering impulse values may be compared with the received steering impulse setpoint at 142 to compute corresponding steering impulse errors ESI(i). In one example the steering impulse errors ESI(i) may include ratios of the steering impulse setpoint Isteer_set to the measured steering impulses Isteer(i).
The toolface errors ETF(i) and the steering impulse errors ESI(i) may be processed individually or in combination at 144 to compute new open and close toolface angles. In one example embodiment, the toolface errors ETF(i) may be processed to compute a new toolface centerpoint TFset_cp and the steering impulse errors ESI(i) may be processed to compute a new width of the toolface range TFset_width. For example only, the new open and close toolface angles may be computed according the following equations:
TFset_cp(new)=TFset_cp+Ave[ETF(i)] EQ. 1
TFset_width(new)=Ave[ESI(i)]·TFset_width EQ. 2
where TFset_cp and TFset_width are related to TFset_o and TFset_c, for example, as follows:
TFset_cp=(TFset_oTFset_c)/2 EQ. 3
TFset_width=TFset_c−TFset_o EQ. 4
and where
As described above with respect to
It will be appreciated that the disclosed methods may be configured for implementation via one or more controllers deployed downhole (e.g., in a rotary steerable tool such as one of the rotary steerable tools 50 described above with respect to
It will be understood that this disclosure may include numerous embodiments. These embodiments include, but are not limited to, the following embodiments.
A first embodiment may comprise a method for drilling a subterranean wellbore. The method includes (a) rotating a bottom hole assembly (BHA) in the subterranean wellbore to drill, the BHA including a rotary steerable tool or a steerable drill bit having at least one external pad configured to extend radially outward into contact with a wall of the wellbore when a corresponding valve is opened and thereby steer the drilling; (b) receiving a toolface demand; (c) processing the toolface demand to compute open and close toolface angles for opening and closing the valve; (d) measuring a rotation rate of said BHA rotation in (a); (e) processing the BHA rotation rate measured in (d) and the open and close toolface angles computed in (c) to compute times for opening and closing the valve; (f) opening and closing the valve at the times computed in (e); (g) measuring toolface angles at which the valve opens and closes in (f); (h) comparing the open and close toolface angles computed in (c) and the toolface angles measured in (g) to compute at least one toolface error; and (i) processing the toolface error to compute new open and close toolface angles.
A second embodiment may include the first embodiment further comprising (i) repeating (d) through (i) while drilling in (a).
A third embodiment may include any one of the first through second embodiments wherein (a) further comprises selecting a steering ratio and selecting a time window for computing the times in (e).
A fourth embodiment may include any one of the first through third embodiments wherein (e) further comprises processing the time window to compute a plurality of times for opening and closing the valve topen(i) and tclose(i), wherein i=1, 2, . . . m where m represents a number of pad extensions in the time window.
A fifth embodiment may include any one of the first through fourth embodiments wherein (g) comprises measuring a plurality of toolface angles at which the valve opens and closes in (f) corresponding to the plurality of times for opening and closing the valve computed in (e).
A sixth embodiment may include any one of the first through fifth embodiments wherein (h) comprises computing a plurality of toolface errors corresponding to said measured plurality of toolface angles at which the valve opens and closes.
A seventh embodiment may include any one of the first through sixth embodiments wherein (h) further comprises computing at least one of a mean, a median, a standard deviation, and a distribution of the plurality of toolface errors.
An eighth embodiment may include any one of the first through seventh embodiments wherein the toolface error is computed in (h) by subtracting the measured toolface angles from the open and close toolface angles computed in (c).
A ninth embodiment may include any one of the first through eighth embodiments wherein (b) further comprises receiving a steering impulse setpoint; (g) further comprises measuring a fluid pressure in the pad when the valve is open; (h) further comprises processing the fluid pressure in the pad to compute a steering impulse and comparing the computed steering impulse with the steering impulse setpoint to compute a steering impulse error; and (i) further comprises processing the steering impulse error and the toolface error to compute the new open and close toolface angles.
A tenth embodiment may include the ninth embodiment wherein (i) comprises processing the toolface error to compute a new toolface centerpoint and processing the steering impulse error to compute a new toolface range.
An eleventh embodiment includes a method for drilling a subterranean wellbore. The method comprises (a) rotating a bottom hole assembly (BHA) in the subterranean wellbore to drill, the BHA including a rotary steerable tool or a steerable drill bit having a plurality of external pads configured to extend radially outward into contact with a wall of the wellbore when a corresponding valve is opened and thereby steer the drilling; (b) receiving a toolface demand and a steering impulse setpoint; (c) processing the toolface demand to compute open and close toolface angles for opening and closing the valve; (d) measuring a rotation rate of said BHA rotation in (a); (e) processing a preselected time window, the BHA rotation rate measured in (d), and the open and close toolface angles computed in (c) to compute a plurality of times for opening and closing the valve, topen(i) and tclose(i), wherein i=1, 2, . . . m where m represents a number of pad extensions in the time window; (f) opening and closing the valve at the times computed in (e); (g) measuring a plurality of toolface angles at which the valve opens and closes in (f); (h) comparing the plurality of toolface angles measured in (g) and the open and close toolface angles computed (c) and to compute a corresponding plurality of toolface errors; (i) measuring piston fluid pressures when the valve is open in (f); (j) processing the piston fluid pressures with the corresponding times for opening and closing the valve to compute corresponding steering impulses; (k) processing the steering impulses computed in (j) and the steering impulse setpoint received in (b) to compute a corresponding plurality of steering impulse errors; and (l) processing the steering impulse errors and the toolface errors to compute new open and close toolface angles.
A twelfth embodiment includes the eleventh embodiment further comprising (m) repeating (d) through (l) while drilling in (a).
A thirteenth embodiment includes any one of the eleventh through the twelfth embodiments wherein: the toolface errors are computed in (h) by subtracting the measured toolface angles from the open and close toolface angles computed in (c); and the steering impulse errors are computed in (k) by dividing the steering impulse setpoint by the steering impulse measurements.
A fourteenth embodiment includes any one of the eleventh through the thirteenth embodiments wherein (f) further comprises computing at least one of a mean, a median, a standard deviation, and a distribution of each of the plurality of toolface errors and the plurality of steering impulse errors.
A fifteenth embodiment includes any one of the eleventh through the fourteenth embodiments wherein (l) comprises processing the toolface errors to compute a new toolface centerpoint and processing the steering impulse errors to compute a new toolface range.
Although a method for drilling a subterranean wellbore has been described in detail, it should be understood that various changes, substitutions and alterations may be made herein without departing from the spirit and scope of the disclosure. Additionally, in an effort to provide a concise description of these embodiments, not all features of an actual embodiment may be described in the specification. It should be appreciated that in the development of any such actual implementation, as in any engineering or design project, numerous embodiment-specific decisions will be made to achieve the developers' specific goals, such as compliance with system-related and business-related constraints, which may vary from one embodiment to another. Moreover, it should be appreciated that such a development effort might be complex and time consuming, but would nevertheless be a routine undertaking of design, fabrication, and manufacture for those of ordinary skill having the benefit of this disclosure.
Additionally, it should be understood that references to “one embodiment” or “an embodiment” of the present disclosure are not intended to be interpreted as excluding the existence of additional embodiments that also incorporate the recited features. For example, any element described in relation to an embodiment herein may be combinable with any element of any other embodiment described herein.
A person having ordinary skill in the art should realize in view of the present disclosure that equivalent constructions do not depart from the spirit and scope of the present disclosure, and that various changes, substitutions, and alterations may be made to embodiments disclosed herein without departing from the spirit and scope of the present disclosure. Equivalent constructions, including functional “means-plus-function” clauses are intended to cover the structures described herein as performing the recited function, including both structural equivalents that operate in the same manner, and equivalent structures that provide the same function. It is the express intention of the applicant not to invoke means-plus-function or other functional claiming for any claim except for those in which the words ‘means for’ appear together with an associated function.
The terms “approximately,” “about,” and “substantially” as used herein represent an amount close to the stated amount that is within standard manufacturing or process tolerances, or which still performs a desired function or achieves a desired result. For example, the terms “approximately,” “about,” and “substantially” may refer to an amount that is within less than 5% of, within less than 1% of, within less than 0.1% of, and within less than 0.01% of a stated amount. Further, it should be understood that any directions or reference frames in the preceding description are merely relative directions or movements. For example, any references to “up” and “down” or “above” or “below” are merely descriptive of the relative position or movement of the related elements.
This application claims the benefit of, and priority to, U.S. Patent Application No. 63/262,812, filed Oct. 21, 2021, which application is incorporated herein by this reference in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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63262812 | Oct 2021 | US |