The present invention relates generally to recovery of petroleum crude oil from subterranean hydrocarbon reservoirs and, more particularly, to systems and methods for in-situ recovery of petroleum crude oil or bitumen from deposits of sand and shale.
Steam Assisted Gravity Drainage (SAGD) is one of the techniques for recovering tar-sand based high viscosity hydrocarbons or heavy oil, or commonly known as crude oil or bitumen, from subsurface geologic formations or reservoirs. The high viscosity of the crude oil or bitumen, which can exceed 106 centipoise, prevents it from flowing at natural reservoir temperatures; therefore, the bitumen deposits cannot be economically exploited by traditional oil well recovery technologies.
As shown in the example in
The heat from the continuously injected steam reduces the viscosity of the high crude oil and thus improves its mobility. The lower wellbore 11B collects the heated low viscosity crude oil that flows out of the formation, along with any water from the condensation of injected steam. The fluid mixture 14 entering the lower wellbore 11B is then pumped to the surface 16 for refining and oil production.
However, the SAGD techniques exhibit various problems that affect productivity and efficiency. In addition to the cost of drilling well pairs, steam generation and the associated emissions are major concerns in assessing the economic potential of such recovery operations.
One major problem is the requirement for large amounts of energy to produce the steam and hence deliver sufficient heat to stimulate the heavy oil bearing reservoir. Such required large amounts of energy is usually obtained by burning natural gas which is often available in the tar-sand fields, which also generates unwanted gas emissions, particularly carbon dioxide emissions causing environmental pollution. Furthermore, difficulties in maintaining or controlling the temperature of the crude oil during the extraction can also pose difficulties.
From the foregoing, therefore, there is a need for a novel system and a method, which overcomes the many disadvantages of the conventional heavy crude oil recovery technologies, for efficiently mobilizing and recovering a significant amount of crude oil from subsurface heavy crude oil reservoirs.
An aspect of the present invention includes a system for recovering hydrocarbons from a subsurface reservoir, comprising a continuous wellbore extending from a first surface location to a second surface location, the continuous wellbore including a first inclined wellbore section extending from the first surface location to the subsurface reservoir, a substantially horizontal wellbore section lying within the subsurface reservoir, and a second inclined wellbore section extending from the subsurface reservoir to the second surface location; a plurality of heater-lifter units disposed within the substantially horizontal wellbore section, the heater-lifter units being configured to apply heat to the subsurface reservoir to produce a hydrocarbon fluid and to sweep the hydrocarbon fluid along a direction of motion of the heater-lifter units to mechanically lift the hydrocarbon fluid to the first surface location and the second surface location; a carrier line carrying the heater-lifter units in a spaced apart fashion, the carrier line extends through the continuous wellbore and between the first and second surface locations; and a lifting mechanism configured to move the carrier line and thus the heater-lifter units coupled to the carrier line in bidirectional manner in the continuous wellbore to mechanically lift the hydrocarbon fluid to the first surface location and the second surface location by sweeping the hydrocarbon fluid through the continuous wellbore with the heater-lifter units.
Another aspect of the present invention includes a method for recovering hydrocarbons from a subsurface hydrocarbon reservoir, comprising forming a first inclined wellbore section of a continuous wellbore by drilling from a wellbore entry location at the surface to the subsurface hydrocarbon reservoir; forming a substantially horizontal wellbore section of the continuous wellbore after deviating an end of the first inclined wellbore section and then drilling until an end of the substantially horizontal wellbore section, the substantially horizontal wellbore section lying within the subsurface hydrocarbon reservoir; forming a second inclined wellbore section of the continuous wellbore after deviating the end of the substantially horizontal wellbore section and then drilling until a wellbore exit location at the surface; applying heat to a portion of the subsurface reservoir surrounding the substantially horizontal wellbore section from a plurality of heater-lifter units movably disposed within the substantially horizontal wellbore section; producing hydrocarbon fluids flowing into the substantially horizontal wellbore section from the portion of the subsurface reservoir; and moving the heater-lifter units in bidirectional manner within the continuous wellbore to mechanically lift the hydrocarbon fluids to the wellbore entry location and the wellbore exit location by sweeping the hydrocarbons fluids with bidirectional motion of the heater-lifter units.
Another aspect of the present invention includes an apparatus for heating a subsurface hydrocarbon reservoir surrounding a substantially horizontal perforated section of a cased continuous wellbore extending between a first ground surface opening and a second ground surface opening and recovering the hydrocarbon products released thereby, comprising a plurality of heater-lifter units movably disposed within the substantially horizontal perforated section of the cased continuous wellbore, each heater-lifter unit comprising, an elongated housing defined by a cylindrical peripheral wall facing the inner surface of the substantially horizontal wellbore section and two end-walls sealing the ends of the elongated housing, a plurality of heating members protrude outwardly from the cylindrical peripheral wall, the heating members being configured to heat the subsurface hydrocarbon reservoir to produce hydrocarbon fluids which fill the substantially horizontal wellbore section, and a plurality of flexible sweeping members protruding outwardly from the cylindrical peripheral wall of the heater units, the flexible sweeping members being configured to sweep and carry the hydrocarbon fluids along the direction of motion of the heater-lifter units, a carrier line configured to carry the plurality of heater-lifter units in a spaced apart fashion within the continuous wellbore and include electrical power and data lines connecting the heater-lifter units to a surface power and control center; and a lifting mechanism configured to move the carrier line in bidirectional manner to mechanically lift the hydrocarbon fluids to the first ground surface opening and the second ground surface opening by sweeping the hydrocarbon fluid through the continuous wellbore with bidirectional motion of the heater-lifter units.
Yet another aspect of the present invention includes a system for recovering hydrocarbons from a subsurface reservoir, comprising a continuous wellbore extending from a first surface location to a second surface location, the continuous wellbore including a first inclined wellbore section extending from the first surface location to the subsurface reservoir, a substantially horizontal wellbore section lying within the subsurface reservoir, and a second inclined wellbore section extending from the subsurface reservoir to the second surface location; and a pressured gas assembly configured to supply a flow of pressured gas into the continuous wellbore from the first surface location so as to apply pressured gas to the subsurface reservoir surrounding the substantially horizontal wellbore section to produce a hydrocarbon fluid and to flow the hydrocarbon fluid along a direction of the flow of pressured gas to the second surface location.
These and other aspects and features of the present invention will become apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art upon review of the following description of specific embodiments of the invention in conjunction with the accompanying figures, wherein:
The present invention provides embodiments of a well system and a method for recovering high viscosity hydrocarbon materials, such as bitumen, heavy oil or heavy crude oil, from subterranean or subsurface oil formations by treating the hydrocarbon material in-situ in the reservoir to reduce its viscosity and subsequently lifting the low viscosity hydrocarbon material to the surface. Bitumen or heavy crude oil contained in subsurface sand tars or oil sands is semi-solid and immobile in subsurface reservoir conditions and does not flow unless its viscosity is reduced. Such subsurface reservoirs may be under an overburden earth layer with no economic value, which cannot be recovered by traditional surface mining methods using for example excavation methods.
In one embodiment, in order to access a high economic value subsurface hydrocarbon material deposit, the present invention initially forms a continuous wellbore drilled from the surface down to and across a hydrocarbon material bearing reservoir and back up to the surface. The continuous wellbore may extend from a surface entry opening to a surface exit opening by following an underground path to cross the subsurface reservoir, i.e. a subterranean oil formation containing the hydrocarbon material.
The continuous wellbore of the present invention may be a single wellbore having a wellbore path changing direction under predetermined angles to reach the subsurface reservoir from a surface access location, extend through the subsurface reservoir and leave the subsurface reservoir to reach another surface access location.
The continuous wellbore may include a first wellbore section, a second wellbore section including perforations and a third wellbore section. The first wellbore section of the continuous wellbore may extend downwardly from the ground surface entry opening and penetrates into the subsurface reservoir containing the hydrocarbon material, establishing a first access path to the subsurface reservoir from the surface. Within the subsurface reservoir, the second wellbore section, where the hydrocarbon production occurs, may extend substantially horizontally, i.e., about perpendicular to the axis of gravitation, from the lower end of the first wellbore section to a predetermined distal end of the second wellbore section. Finally, the third wellbore section of the continuous wellbore may extend upwardly from the distal end of the second wellbore section to the ground surface exit opening, providing a second access path to the subsurface reservoir from the surface. This single continuous wellbore may be formed using directional drilling techniques in a single drilling operation.
In one embodiment, a dual function apparatus of the present invention may be used to extract the hydrocarbon material by first heating the hydrocarbon material and then mechanical lifting it to the surface. This dual function apparatus will be called heater-lifter unit hereinafter.
A heater-lifter module including a plurality of heater-lifter units, or heater-sweeper units, may be disposed within the substantially horizontal second wellbore section to perform two functions: first, to deliver in-situ heat to the hydrocarbon material to flow it into the second wellbore section, and, second, to sweep the low viscosity hydrocarbon material from the second wellbore section to the surface. In order to perform these two functions, each heater-lifter unit may include a plurality of heating members and a plurality of sweeping members distributed radially over the outer surfaces of the heater-lifter units. The heating members of the heater-lifter units may be configured to apply heat to the portion of the reservoir adjacent the substantially horizontal second wellbore section so as to reduce the viscosity of the hydrocarbon material contained therein. As the viscosity of the hydrocarbon material is reduced, the hydrocarbon material may transform into a hydrocarbon fluid which flows into the substantially horizontal second wellbore section through the perforations therein.
A carrier system including a carrier line may be configured to carry and support the heater-lifter units of the heater module in a spaced apart fashion. The carrier line may extend through the continuous wellbore and between the entry opening and the exit opening. A moving mechanism may be configured to move the carrier line and thus the heater-lifter units throughout the continuous wellbore toward either the entry opening or the exit opening so that the collected hydrocarbon fluid is recovered and brought to the surface through the entry and exit openings with the sweeping action of the sweeping members on the heater-lifter units. In order to increase the recovery efficiency the heater-lifter units may be moved in a bidirectional manner, the moving mechanism may move the heater-lifter units first toward one of the surface openings to deliver the collected hydrocarbon fluid to the surface after a first heating step, and then toward the other surface opening after a second heating step to deliver the collected hydrocarbon fluid to the surface.
The present invention may provide several advantages over prior art systems. Firstly, the system of the present invention may include only one wellbore extending between two ground surface locations, as opposed to, for example, the prior art's two well SAGD systems. Secondly, in one embodiment, the heater-lifter units may generate heat downhole and in-situ within the oil bearing reservoir. This may avoid cooling and condensation problems of the steam using SAGD systems, which pump steam into well from the surface. The present invention may also use limited amounts of power which lowers unwanted atmospheric emissions and the production cost.
Furthermore, the present invention may advantageously provide mechanical lifting of the extracted hydrocarbon material from the lowest depth of the continuous wellbore by being able to move the heater-lifter units toward both well heads at the entry opening and the exit opening. In typical SAGD technologies, the reduced viscosity hydrocarbon material in the wellbore is recovered using a pump which is lowered down to a location where the curved section of the wellbore between the vertical and horizontal portions begins. The pump may not be placed into the horizontal portion of SAGD wellbores because of the wellbore's near L shaped design. The system of the present invention also makes the repair operations much simplified when they are needed because the wellbore is accessible from two surface locations.
Referring now to
The distance between the entry location 112A and the exit location 112B may be in the range of about 500 meters to about 5 kilometers. The continuous wellbore 100 may generally include three sections, namely, a first wellbore section 100A, a second wellbore section 100B and a third wellbore section 100C. In one embodiment, the second wellbore section 100B of the continuous wellbore 100 may be extended along a substantially straight path within the subterranean formation 102 containing the hydrocarbon material. Furthermore, the second wellbore section 100B may be substantially horizontal with respect to the first and third wellbore sections 100A and 100C. The second wellbore section 100B may be along an X-axis which may be perpendicular to the gravitational axis depicted as Y-axis in
In one embodiment, the continuous wellbore 100 (the wellbore 100 hereinafter) may be drilled in a single drilling operation using three consecutive stages to form each section of the wellbore 100. The drilling operation may be, for example, performed using a rotary drilling system including a drill string and a drill bit to form the wellbore 100 of the present invention. Accordingly, at a first stage, the first wellbore section 100A may be formed extending downwardly from the entry opening 110A and penetrating into the subterranean formation 102 under a suitable angle for a predetermined distance. Within the subterranean formation 102, the wellbore 100 may be gradually deviated while drilling until the first angle A1 is obtained, which deviation action results in a first elbow section 101A or first curved section. The length of the first elbow section 101A may be in the range of about 50-200 meters.
Once the deviation operation is completed, at a second stage, the wellbore 100 may be further extended by forming the second wellbore section 100B to exploit the subterranean formation 102. As described above, the second wellbore section 100B may be substantially horizontal. Once a desired length is reached for the second wellbore section 100B, the wellbore 100 may be gradually deviated, this time, in an upward direction towards the surface 104 while drilling until the second angle A2 is obtained. This second deviation action results in a second elbow section 101B or a second curved section. The length of the second elbow section 101B may also be in the range of about 50-200 meters. Once the second deviation operation is completed, at a third stage, the wellbore 100 may be yet further extended by forming the third wellbore section 100C which exits the surface 104 at the exit opening 110B.
Depending on the depth and length of the subterranean formation 102, the first and third wellbore sections 100A and 100C may have a length in the range of about 100-600 m. The second wellbore section 100B may have a length in the range of about 500-5000 m, preferably about 1000-2000 m. The second wellbore 100B section may be located at a depth in the range of about 100-500 m. The length of the first and second elbow sections 101A and 101B may be in the range of about 50-200 meters. A curving rate of the first and second elbow sections may be between about 5 degrees per 30 m (5°/30 m) and about 20 degrees per 30 m (20°/30 m), preferably between about 8 degrees per 30 m (8°/30 m) and about 15 degrees per 30 m (15°/30 m).
It will be appreciated that in this embodiment an exemplary single curved path of the wellbore 100 shown in
Referring now to
After casing the wellbore 100, the entire length or a predetermined length of the second wellbore section 100B may be perforated using a perforation gun, thereby providing a multiplicity of perforations 122, i.e., holes or slots, which may be distributed along the entire length of the second wellbore section 100B which is substantially horizontal. Alternatively, the perforations 122 may be made in the tubes before the casing step, thus not requiring cementing and perforation forming operations. The perforations 122 define openings in the casing 120 and in the cement layer located between the casing 120 and the subterranean formation 102 and thereby provide communication with thousands of square meters of subterranean formation 102 including the hydrocarbon material such as bitumen. The cement layer which may surround the casing 120 in one embodiment is not shown in
As shown in
A carrier line 204 or cable of the system 200 may support the heater-lifter module 201 within the wellbore 100 and connects the heater-lifter module 201 to a lifting mechanism 220 configured to move the heater-lifter module by moving the carrier line 204. As will be described more fully below, the low viscosity hydrocarbon material collected in the second wellbore section 100B may be recovered by moving the heater-lifter module 201 towards the entry opening 110A or the exit opening 110B of the wellbore 100. As the heater-lifter module 201 is moved by the lifting mechanism 220, the low viscosity hydrocarbon material may be swept along the moving direction of the heater-lifter module 201, either towards the entry opening 110A or the exit opening 110B, and swept out of the wellbore 100 to be stored in storage tanks 230 of the system 200.
The carrier line 204 may connect the heater-lifter units 202 to one another, for example, the first heater unit 202A to the second heater-lifter unit 202B and the second heater-lifter unit 202B to the third heater-lifter unit 202C. A first portion 204A of the carrier line 204 may extend through the elbow section 101A and the first wellbore section 100A and exits the wellbore 100 through the entry opening 110A at the entry location 112A. The first portion 204A of the carrier line 204 may connect the first heater-lifter unit 202A to a first spool 220A of the lifting mechanism 220 at the entry location 112A. Similarly a second portion 204B of the carrier line 204 may extend through the elbow section 101B and the third wellbore section 100C and exits the wellbore through the exit opening 110B of the wellbore 100 at the exit location 112B. The second portion 204B of the carrier line 204 may connect the third heater-lifter unit 202A to a second spool 220B of the lifting mechanism 220 at the exit location 112B. The heater-lifter units 202 of the heater-lifter module 201 may be spaced apart from one another by a predetermined distance. The lifting mechanism 220 may include motors, generators, power sources, control systems, mechanical and electrical assemblies to rotate and control the operation of the first spool 220A and the second spool 220B and hence the movement of the carrier line 204.
Referring to
The sweeping members 308 may sweep the hydrocarbon fluid 130 toward the exit and entry locations 112A and 112B as the heater-lifter unit 202 is moved during the recovery stage. The sweeping members 308 may have a blade-like cross-section. The heating members 306 and the sweeping members 308 may radially and continuously extend from the outer surface of the cylindrical peripheral wall 302, and thereby both may be circular or ring shaped. On the peripheral wall 302, the sweeping members 308 may be generally located adjacent the side walls 304 and may be grouped near both ends of the substantially cylindrical peripheral wall 302 of the heater-lifter housing 300 in a symmetrical fashion. The combination of side walls 304 and the sweeping members 308 surrounding the side walls at the ends of the heater-lifter housing 300 may advantageously function as a plunger when moved along the inner cylindrical surface of the wellbore 100 to lift the collected hydrocarbon fluid 130 to the surface of the ground. The heating members 306 may be disposed over the peripheral wall portion located between the sweeping members 308 and symmetrically distributed thereon. The heating members 306 may be evenly distanced apart from one another to effectively transfer heat to the perforated casing and hence the surrounding subterranean formation 102 containing the hydrocarbon material.
The heating members 306 may be an integral part of a heating chamber 310 including one or more heating elements 312 disposed within the heating chamber to generate the heat or radiation that heats the heating members 306 contacting the casing 120. The heating elements 312 may be electrical resistors or resistance wires made of ceramics or metal alloys, such as Ni—Cr alloys, Kanthal™, Constantan, Manganin and the like. The heating elements 312 receive electrical power through a power-data cable 314 extended through the carrier line 204 secured to the side walls 304 of the heater-lifter housings 300. The power-data cable 314 may be connected to a power-data center, probably a mobile power-data center (not shown), on the surface 104. Each heater-lifter unit 202 may include temperature sensors TS, pressure sensors PS and one or more control circuitry 315 to monitor and control the operation of each heater-lifter unit 202 via the power-data line 314 from the power-data center (not shown). The temperature sensors TS, such as TS1, TS2, TS3 and TS4, and pressure sensors PS, such as PS1 and PS2, may be disposed on the exposed surfaces of the heater-lifter housing 300, such as on the top surfaces 307 of heating members 306 and on the peripheral wall 302 of the heater-lifter housing 300. Both the temperature sensors TS and the pressure sensors PS may be connected to the control circuitries 315 disposed within a first chamber 317A and a second chamber 317B of the heater-lifter housing 300. The first and second chambers 317A and 317B may be filled with heavy oil for thermal insulation for the circuitries 315. The carrier line 204 may be a flexible line which may be made of a high strength flexible stainless steel mesh tubing insulated with abrasion and corrosion resistant flexible polymers.
The heating members 306 and optionally the entire heating chamber 310 may be made of high thermal conductivity materials such copper alloys, aluminum alloys or the like. In one embodiment, the diameter of the circular top surface 307 of each heating member 306 (heating member diameter) may be made slightly less than the inner diameter of the casing 120 to facilitate the movement of the heater-lifter units 202 within the wellbore 100 with minimum friction. For example, the heating member diameter may be made about 2 cm to 6 cm, preferably about 2.5 cm to 4 cm, less than the inner diameter of the casing 120. The sweeping members 308 may be made of flexible, heat and chemical corrosion resistant materials, such as flexible polymers or rubbers which may withstand the operation temperatures within the wellbore 100 or composites such as flexible polymers reinforced with flexible steel meshes or flexible stainless steel meshes. The flexibility property of the sweeping members 308 may enable them to efficiently sweep the hydrocarbon fluid along the inner surface of the casing tube 120 while reducing the friction thereon as the heater-lifter units 202 are moved toward the surface during the recovery stage. In this respect, in order to increase the sweeping efficiency, the diameter of top ends 309 of the sweeping members 308 (sweeping member diameter) may be made equal to or greater than the inner diameter of the casing 120. For example, the sweeping member diameter may be made about 0 cm-5 cm, preferably about 2 cm-4 cm greater than the inner diameter of the casing 120. In other words, the height of sweeping members 308 is greater than the height of heating members 306 when their height measured from the outer cylindrical surface of the peripheral wall 302 to the top ends 309 of the sweeping members 308 and to the top surface 307 of the heating members 306. In one embodiment, the diameter of the outer cylindrical surface of the peripheral wall 302 (heater-lifter housing diameter) of the heater-lifter housing 300 may be made about 2 cm-8 cm less than the inner diameter of the casing 120. An exemplary length for heater-lifter housing 300 may be in the range of about 2-20 m, preferably about 8-10 m.
As an example, for a casing having 7 inches (17.8 cm) outer diameter and 6⅛ inches (15.55 cm) inner diameter, a heater-lifter unit may have a heating member diameter of about 13.5 cm-14.5 cm, or 13.5 cm-15.55 cm, a sweeping member diameter of about 15.5 cm-18 cm, a heater-lifter housing diameter of about 10 cm-13 cm, and a heater-lifter housing length of about 800 cm-1000 cm.
In one embodiment, one or more springs S located at both ends of the heating chamber 310A may provide compressibility to the heating members 306A. Springs S may be disposed between a base ring 311 of the heating chamber 310A and lower ends 307A of the heating members 306A. The springs S may allow heating members 306A to move between a rest state (fully extended) when there is no force on them, and a compressed state when there is a force applied on them. As shown in
As shown in
In another embodiment of the present invention, at least one pressured gas supply assembly configured to supply pressured gas into the continuous wellbore from either the first surface location or the second surface location to treat the subterranean hydrocarbon formation surrounding the substantially horizontal wellbore section with pressured gas to produce hydrocarbon fluids. The hydrocarbon fluids produced or mobilized by gas treatment may be swept by the pressured gas flow in the direction of the pressured gas flow toward the selected surface location and get stored.
As shown in
In one embodiment, in operation, only one of the gas supply units 420A and 420B may be used for the gas treatment and the recovery of the hydrocarbon material. For example, in one exemplary operation, a pressured gas flow 425 from the first gas supply unit 420A may be flowed through the wellbore 100. As the pressured gas flow 425 moves through the second wellbore section 100B which includes the perforations 122, the gas may interact with the hydrocarbon material through the perforations 122, causing the resulting viscosity reduction. As the gas dissolves in the hydrocarbon material, i.e., bitumen, the hydrocarbon material may be swelled and the viscosity of the hydrocarbon material lowered. The low viscosity hydrocarbon material or hydrocarbon fluid getting collected in the second wellbore section 100B may be continuously swept by the incoming pressured gas flow 425, in the direction of the gas flow, toward the exit opening 110B and collected in the storage 230 at the exit location 112B. The same operation may be performed using a pressured gas flow from the second gas supply unit 420B and the hydrocarbon fluid can be stored at the entry location 112A. The pressured gas flow 425 may optionally be heated to accelerate the mobilization of the hydrocarbon materials. The pressured gas supply assembly 420 may alternatively be an integral part of the system 200 described above. In such case, both gas supply units 420A and 420B may be used to supply a pressured gas flow or a heated pressured gas flow in the same direction as the direction of motion of the heater-lifter unit shown for example in
At step 502B, this time, using the system 400 described in
Although aspects and advantages of the present invention are described herein with respect to certain preferred embodiments, modifications of the preferred embodiments will be apparent to those skilled in the art. Thus the scope of the present invention should not be limited to the foregoing discussion, but should be defined by the appended claims.