Not applicable.
Not applicable.
Accumulators are devices that provide a reserve of hydraulic fluid under pressure. Accumulators are used in, for example, hydraulically-operated systems where hydraulic fluid under pressure operates a piece of equipment or a device. The hydraulic fluid may be pressurized by a pump that maintains the high pressure required.
If the piece of equipment or the device is located a considerable distance from the pump, for example, a significant pressure drop can occur in the hydraulic conduit or pipe which is conveying the fluid from the pump to operate the device. Therefore, the flow may be such that the pressure level at the device is below the pressure required to operate the device. Consequently, operation may be delayed until such a time as the pressure can build up with the fluid being pumped through the hydraulic line. This result occurs, for example, with devices located in a body of water at great depth, such as with a subsea test tree (“SSTT”) and blowout preventer (“BOP”) equipment, which is used to shut off a wellbore to secure an oil or gas well from accidental discharges to the environment. Thus, accumulators may be used to provide a reserve source of pressurized hydraulic fluid for such types of equipment.
In addition, if the pump is not operating, or if no pump is used, accumulators can be used to provide the source of pressurized hydraulic fluid to enable the operation of the piece of equipment or device.
Accumulators conventionally include a compressible fluid, e.g., gas such as nitrogen, helium, air, etc., on one side of a separating mechanism in a pressure resistant container, and a substantially incompressible fluid (e.g., hydraulic oil) on the other side of the separating mechanism. When the hydraulic fluid is released from the accumulator and the system pressure drops below the pressure on the gas side of the separating mechanism, the separating mechanism will move in the direction of the hydraulic fluid side of the separating mechanism, displacing the stored hydraulic fluid into the piece of equipment or the device as required.
When temperature changes within an accumulator, the precharge gas pressure will increase with increasing temperature and decrease with decreasing temperature. Changes in gas pressure affect the usable fluid volume that an accumulator can deliver. A near constant precharge pressure under varying temperatures would produce a near constant usable volume of fluid delivered by the accumulator. Accumulators known in the art use two chambers, one gas precharge chamber and on operating hydraulic fluid chamber. One solution to the problem of cooling of the gas pressure charge, and its consequent pressure reduction, is addressed in U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 2005/0022996A1, filed by Baugh and entitled, Temperature Compensation Of Deepwater Accumulators. The design disclosed in the Baugh publication includes heating of the gas by subsea heating elements to increase the temperature of the accumulator pre-charge gas.
There continues to be a need for improved temperature compensated accumulators.
A temperature compensated accumulator according to one aspect of the invention includes a generally cylindrical housing having a first longitudinal end and a second longitudinal end. Each longitudinal and having a port therein. The housing divided into three sections by two longitudinally spaced apart bulkheads. A first piston is disposed in the housing on one side of the first bulkhead. The first piston separates an hydraulic fluid chamber at a first longitudinal end of the housing and a gas precharge pressure chamber on the other side of the first piston. A second piston disposed in the housing on one side of the second bulkhead. The second piston separates an ambient pressure chamber at a second longitudinal end of the housing and an atmospheric chamber disposed between the second piston and the second bulkhead. A connecting rod disposed between the first and second pistons. A pressure relief valve and a check valve are in pressure communication between the gas precharge pressure chamber and a pressure relief chamber. The pressure relief chamber is defined between the first bulkhead and the second bulkhead. The pressure relief chamber includes a longitudinally movable pressure barrier. The pressure relief valve is set to a preselected value within a range of pressure safely containable by the housing. The pressure is barrier engageable with a stop feature on the connecting rod such that an increase in ambient chamber pressure compresses gas discharged into the relief chamber back into the gas precharge chamber through the check valve.
A method for operating an accumulator according to another aspect of the invention includes charging an hydraulic fluid chamber with hydraulic fluid and charging a gas precharge pressure chamber adjacent thereto and separated by a first piston to a selected precharge pressure. The gas precharge chamber is exposed to a temperature above that at which the charging was performed. Excess pressure in the gas precharge chamber is vented to a pressure relief chamber adjacent the gas precharge pressure chamber. The hydraulic fluid is released to operate a device. Ambient pressure outside the accumulator is used to compress the vented excess pressure back into the gas precharge chamber.
Other aspects and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the description and claims which follow.
Accumulator efficiency increases during operations over a wide range of temperatures if a constant gas pressure can be maintained. Specifically, the invention allows pressurization of the accumulator gas to the maximum working pressure of the accumulator housing without having to account for temperature changes during operations, which may cause the gas precharge pressure to increase over the maximum pressure for which the accumulator housing is designed. During operation, increasing operating temperatures (e.g., by hot subsurface fluids moving out of the wellbore 18 in
For purposes of the present description, the precharge gas may be nitrogen, a gas which is commonly used for charging accumulators.
The interior of the housing 10B may be separated into three hydraulically isolated sections by a bulkheads 10A and 112. The bulkheads may have an opening enabling a connecting rod 17 to pass freely therethrough, while maintaining a pressure seal (such as by using o-rings or similar sealing element. The other end of the connecting rod 17 is coupled to a second piston 15. One side of the second piston 15 is exposed to the external ambient pressure 5 and the other side is exposed to an atmospheric pressure chamber 4 or vacuum chamber. A third piston 9 or separator is movable both along the connecting rod 17 and within the interior wall of the housing 10B. The third piston 9 is sealed to the interior wall of the housing 10 and to the connecting rod 17, such as by using o-rings or similar seals. Motion of the third piston may under certain conditions be transferred by pressure bled off from chamber 2 and to the connecting rod 17 by a stop 113 formed in the connecting rod. The third piston 9 defines relief pressure chambers 3 and 3a between the bulkhead 10A and 112 and the third piston 9 inside the housing 10B.
The gas precharge pressure chamber 2 and the relief pressure chamber 3a are in fluid communication with each other through a pressure relief valve 7 and a check valve 8.
The accumulator 10 described above may enable the gas precharge pressure to be maintained at a safe level and relatively constant throughout all temperature conditions at a defined fluid system working pressure. When operating temperatures increase above the precharge state temperature, the pressure will increase in the gas precharge chamber 2. If the pressure therein exceeds the set operating pressure of the pressure relief valve 7 the excess pressure will be relieved into the pressure relief chamber 3a expanded from zero volume when piston 9 is compressed against the stop 113 due to the pressure generated by the excess pressure in chamber 2. The result is a near constant pressure in the pressure precharge chamber 2 as the accumulator temperatures increases. Thus, the accumulator design may be used for surface operations and for pressure balanced accumulators in subsea applications as shown in
Preferably, the relief valve 7 and check valve 8 are installed in a suitably formed receptacle in the housing 10B of the accumulator 10 to allow the valves to be changed out without disassembling the accumulator 10.
After operating in a high temperature environment, the accumulator 10 may be returned to a low temperature condition by discharging the fluid and then recharging it again with fluid using a hydraulic pump. When the accumulator 10 hydraulic fluid is drained, e.g., to operate a device such as in the SSTT (
Refer to
Referring to
Operation A (
Operation B (
Operation C (
Operation D (
After completing discharge of the hydraulic fluid, the accumulator 10 may be returned to operation A (
It will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that in the example shown in
While the invention has been described with respect to a limited number of embodiments, those skilled in the art, having benefit of this disclosure, will appreciate that other embodiments can be devised which do not depart from the scope of the invention as disclosed herein. Accordingly, the scope of the invention should be limited only by the attached claims.
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