Not applicable.
The disclosure generally relates to methods and tools for cleaning pumping rods for reuse.
Once the natural drive is diminished by production, oil does not have enough pressure to flow up the tubing to the surface and is brought to the surface by artificial lift. One of the most widely used artificial lift systems is the beam pumping or sucker-rod pumping system (also called simply as a rod pumping system). This pumping system is composed of many components—some of which operate above ground and some underground. See
A rod pump (or insert pump) is run into the bottom of the well as a complete unit. In its simplest form the bottom-hole pump consists of a plunger working up and down in a closely fitted barrel. The plunger contains a check valve that permits fluid flow upward but not downward. Also called traveling valve, this check valve is usually of the ball-and-seat type in most modern pumps. This underground machinery is primarily driven by a surface pumping unit consisting of a motor and a fixed beam on the surface. The beam rocks up and down providing the driving force for the pump. Sucker rods connect the surface and the downhole components of the rod pumping system and allow fluid flow to the surface.
Sucker rods are hollow tubes most commonly made up of steel alloys.
Sucker rod strings lift heavy weight with every cycle and are under stress during downstroke as well as the upstroke. Thus, they are highly stressed and often fail because of these repeated load reversals.
Along with mechanical impacts, chemically induced damage to the sucker rods is common. These include corrosion damage due to the operation environment being rich in water, H2S, and/or CO2. Paraffin in the crude oil may also congeal in deposits on the rods.
Scale deposits, especially caused by corrosion on steel when the water cut of the operating well start increasing, is also a common chemical problem encountered by the sucker-rods. Carbonate scales formed on the sucker rods (as a by-product of corrosion) coats the rods. This slows corrosion, but if the carbonate deposits keep building up, it can increase the stress on the rods and result in mechanical failures. High tensile strength sucker rods should therefore be adequately protected against corrosion and scale deposition. This is usually achieved in the field by batch treating the rods with corrosion inhibitors. This further adds to the operating expense of production.
Once mechanically and/or chemically damaged, the rods may need replacing, but replacing sucker-rods is one of the most expensive tasks of a beam-pump system. In order to determine whether to replace or re-use the rods, they must be free from chemicals and/or oil residue as damage can be assessed only when the rods are clean.
Traditionally, a steel brush is abraded against the rod to clean out all deposits on and in the rod. This process is highly labor intensive, and the use of hand brush may leave some unreachable areas unclean on the rods. For example, in U.S. Pat. No. 405,051, deposited paraffins on sucker rods are removed using paraffin scrapers. These scrapers, however, are placed near the surface and scrape off only part of the rods. Paraffin scrapers have been useful in reducing expensive measures of removing deposits on the rods like hot oiling. But since paraffin scrapers do not completely remove the paraffin deposits from the rods, they are always coupled with other mechanical cleaning equipment.
Another method used to clean the rods is sand blasting wherein a rod to be cleaned is completely removed from the well and fed into a sandblasting cleaning station (e.g., U.S. Pat. No. 4,877,386). The rod is kept stationary, and a group of sandblasting nozzles radially move to clean out the rod. For this process, the rod is removed from the wellhead, physically moved to the sandblasting station and inserted between the nozzles for thorough cleaning.
Although sandblasting is a thorough cleaning process, it has several disadvantages, especially the need to physically remove the rods and transport them to the sandblasting station. This can add several days downtime before operations can resume at the well site. Another disadvantage is that large quantities of fines spent blasting the sand requires disposal, which is both troublesome and expensive to mitigate. Also, the nozzles used in a sandblasting process lead to “feathered” edges, rather than sharp and defined edges as needed for the threaded connectors. The rods in a wellhead normally have well defined specifications and by creating “feathered edges” the rods may lose their required specification, leading to expensive measures to re-adjust the rods.
Chemical solvent blasting can be used instead of sandblasting techniques. In this technique, the rod is removed from the beam pump and taken to a chemical cleaning station where is blasted with chemicals solvents such as kerosene for a period of time to rid of all the unwanted particles adhering to the rod. Potentially dangerous solvents like xylene, toluene, naphtha or caustic soda may also be used for the process depending on the extent of chemical deposition on the rods. Blasting with solvents does not lead to uniformly cleaned rods, however, and extensive inspection time is invested to check and clean them out. Further, the solvents themselves are toxic for people and can present fire and explosion hazards.
In US20140124001 application of non-toxic solid particles capable of sublimation are used as cleaning agents. These are used at a very low temperature to remove contaminants from the sucker rods using thermal-kinetic energy by causing sublimation of the particles to expand. The resulting micro-explosions remove contaminants. However, this process also requires physically removing the sucker rods and taking them to a station with non-toxic solid particle cleaning agents.
Although all of these methods for removing contaminants from the sucker rods exist, current solutions still result in loss of productivity, impact the overall quality of the rods, and increase the costs of operation.
Thus, what is needed in the art are better methods and tools to clean deposits from rod strings before reusing or scrapping the rod strings. The ideal tool will be portable, allow the rods to be cleaned on location without transporting them off-site, have mechanism for removal of debris and also be reliable and cost-effective. This invention addresses one or more of these needs.
The present disclosure is directed to methods and tools for cleaning tubulars such as sucker rods, production tubing and drill string at well head sites. This involves portable cleaning equipment that can be present on site and used whenever cleaning is required. An air powered tool with wiper rings and a rotating brush element for removal of deposits due to scale or corrosion and other residue from the tubulars is disclosed.
The rod cleaning tool described herein includes an assembly that is fluidly connected to an air compressor. The air compressor drives a pinion gear, which in turn drives a circular planetary gear ring inside the cylindrical assembly to rotate the planetary gear. Brushes attached to the inner surface of the planetary gear (directly or indirectly) allow cleaning of the sucker rod. Since the bristles are on the interior surface of the annular ring, the brush is also annular. The bristles are sized so as to leave a gap or hollow in the center of the brush, and the rod is inserted into that hole for cleaning.
In one embodiment of the present disclosure, a vacuum line is attached to the tool to suction off all the debris and collect it in a drum onsite for further processing. Typically, the hose, trap and vacuum are outside the housing, but they could also be inside. The vacuum pump and trap may be a part of the tool, but may also be separate therefrom as any drum may suffice as a trap.
In some embodiments, the tool is mounted directly onto a separate pipe rack. However, it can also be a standalone device with its own mounting rack or the mounting rack may be omitted.
In one embodiment, the brush inside the rod cleaning tool is made of nylon. In other embodiments, the brush may be soft stainless-steel wool or made of brass. Combinations of bristle types are also possible. The tool may be sold with a variety of interchangeable brush heads, thus allowing a stiffer brush for scale and a softer brush for less rigid deposits.
In another embodiment, one or more split wiper rings are part of the tool and open via a latch and hinge mechanism to allow the sucker rod to be placed therein. In some variations, the wiper ring precedes the brushes, and wipe the rods free of easily removed deposits, allowing the brushes to tackle the more difficult deposits. In other embodiments, the wiper rings are positioned after the brush. In preferred embodiments there are a pair of split wiper rings bracketing the brush section.
In still other embodiments, the wiper rings are flexible, such that a hinge and latch mechanism is not needed, as the wiper rings flex enough to allow sucker rod entry. However, it is preferred that the wiper rings are pretty stiff (e.g., shore A 60-100, or 70-90), thus scraping off significant hard and soft debris. Suitable materials for the wiper rings include resins, rubber, resin- or rubber-coated metal. Suitable resins may include styrene butadiene, nitrile rubber, hydrogenated nitrile, carboxylated nitrile, fluorocarbon, and the like. One preferred material is polyurethane, such as MAXITHANE® by Inline, which is specially formulated for the rigorous conditions downhole. Another possibility is nitrile or polyurethane molded over high-density plastic or aluminum cores.
A “planetary gear system” as used herein are epicyclic gears consisting of two gears mounted so that the center of one or more gear(s) (called planet gear(s)) revolve around the center of the other (called sun gear). A carrier connects the centers of the two gears and rotates the planet and the sun gears such that the sun gear is fixed and the planet gear(s) roll around the sun gear. These systems are highly efficient in load distribution and are widely used in applications that require compact design. Herein we used a single large planetary gear with external teeth, driven by a single smaller sun gear with external teeth that itself is driven by air motor. Other gears that could be used herein include helical gears, metal bevel gears, high-power metal miter gears, high-power metal bevel gears, and the like.
The use of the word “a” or “an” in the claims or the specification means one or more than one, unless the context dictates otherwise.
The term “about” means the stated value plus or minus the margin of error of measurement or plus or minus 10% if no method of measurement is indicated.
The use of the term “or” in the claims is used to mean “and/or” unless explicitly indicated to refer to alternatives only or if the alternatives are mutually exclusive.
The terms “comprise”, “have”, “include” and “contain” (and their variants) are open-ended linking verbs and allow the addition of other elements when used in a claim. The phrase “consisting of” is closed and excludes all additional elements. The phrase “consisting essentially of” excludes additional material elements but allows the inclusions of non-material elements that do not substantially change the nature of the invention, such as instructions for use, buffers, and the like. Any claim or claim element introduced with the open transition term “comprising,” may also be narrowed to use the phrases “consisting essentially of” or “consisting of,” and vice versa. However, the entirety of claim language is not repeated verbatim in the interest of brevity herein.
In order to maintain and clean sucker rods in operation without sending them to a different site for cleaning, a portable cleaning tool is described herein.
Air supply hose 307 provides air from the compressor 305 to the air motor (not visible in
We have shown the air compressor as outside the unit, but it could also be integral and containing within the housing. However, a separate air compressor is preferred as minimizing tool size and increasing portability. Likewise for the vacuum pump. If preferred, the air motor can be exchanged with an electric motor, but our current preference is for air motors to drive the various gears.
The housing will of course need to allow access to the interior in order to change out the brushes and/or wiper rings, and thus may have a hinged door or removable hatch or the entire device may hinge open in the same way that the split wiper section opens. However, these details are omitted for simplicity in this figure.
A sun gear 507 drives the planetary gear 503 and causes the brushes 505 to scrape the sucker rod (not shown). A disk bearing 511, raceway, three or more roller bearings, or other support supports the planetary gear, allowing it to rotate, while being held in place inside the housing. There may be two disc bearings, one on each side of the ring, leaving the enter free for sun gear contact. Alternatively, three or more roller bearings may be positioned around the annular ring, allowing it to be held in position and still rotate.
Although not visible in this figure, the device could have more than one planetary gear and brush, each moving in opposite directions, to prevent the rod from spinning under the friction (see instead
A compressed air drive or ‘air motor’ 509 connects to the sun gear 507 and provides the power to rotate the brush. However, an electric motor could be used if preferred. In addition, although we discuss a planetary and a sun gear, other gear arrangements will work as well.
We have shown the housing 501, planetary gear 503 and brush 505 as each unitary, since the bristles are expected to be flexible enough to allow the ends of the rods to pass therethrough, but if desired, these could also be split to allow the device to open to receive the sucker rod, then closed and latched in place. This will complicate the tool, but may be needed for specialty rods of complex shapes that cannot penetrate a closed annular brush.
The bristles may be nylon or other resin, soft brass, steel, or combinations thereof, and thin enough to flex. The bristles may be arranged in any suitable arrangement, such as in even rows, staggered rows, a stacked hexagonal or triangular arrangement, in a spiral arrangement (which may assist with movement along the rod), etc.
The entire assembly can be moved back and forth, or even up or down, and the brushes accordingly clean out the debris on the stretch of the rod where the cleaning assembly is positioned. This back and forth or up and down driving motion is controlled by controllers on-site and can be manual, or driven by motor, or driven by gears operably coupled with one or more roller bars. If so, these gears can also be driven by air motor and air compressor or by electric motor, as preferred.
Note that these figures are simple schematics, and not intended to reflect actual size, placement and/or shapes, which may vary. For example, the hoses are shown, but may be placed differently. Indeed, the air compressor, vacuum and dust trap may all be contained within the housing, and not external as shown. In addition, housings are shown as boxes, but may be other shapes, e.g., cylindrical. Likewise, the stand is shown as a simple triangle, but may be any suitable shape, and may support the sucker rod as well as the rod cleaning assembly.
Further, if one or more of the roller bars are connected to a motor, they can be turned, thus propelling the sucker rod through the tool. Ideally, the device would include sensors to reverse the direction of movement when the device encounters the enlarged end of the sucker rod, thus moving the rod back and forth or up or down through the tool. Preferably, the roller bars are rubber or resin coated, so as to not provide metal-metal contact with the sucker rods and also provide enough friction to move the sucker rod.
In more detail, in
In
An exemplary portable sucker rod cleaning device may be located on-site during production operations. When cleaning of the sucker rod is desired, the sucker rods are pulled from the well. The cleaning tool assembly is placed on a mounting rack and each sucker rod needing cleaning is inserted into the tool in sequence. If a split wiper assembly is used, the wiper housing is latched in place. After proper adjustment and assessing zones on the rod to be cleaned, the air-powered motor is turned on to activate the planetary ring gear system to clean the rod. By left and right motion of the cleaning assembly, which may be an externally applied force, or internally applied by the roller bars or other mechanism, the brush will clean the rod of debris. The debris removed by the brush will fall to the bottom of the cylindrical cleaning assembly where it is suctioned off using a vacuum hose. All the suctioned debris is collected in a drum on-site for safe disposal. See e.g.,
We have shown the housing as having a flat base, but a conical base would aid in debris collection and removal. See
The invention includes any one or more of the following embodiments, in any combination(s) thereof.
The following references are incorporated by reference in their entirety for all purposes:
A special report from NORRIS, available as “Sucker rod failure analysis”. perf-chem.com/storage/UserFileFolder/Norris_Brochure_2.pdf.
This application claims priority to U.S. Ser. No. 63/373,573, filed Aug. 26, 2022, and incorporated by reference in its entirety for all purposes.
Number | Date | Country | |
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63373573 | Aug 2022 | US |