This invention relates in general to production of oil and gas wells, and in particular to a tool and method for accessing an annulus within a wellhead assembly. More specifically, the tool and method disclosed herein can create an access port, while maintaining the well at pressure, through a wellhead housing to an annulus within the housing.
Hydrocarbon producing wellbores have casing lining the wellbore and production tubing suspended within the casing. Some wellbores may employ multiple well casings of different diameters concentrically arranged in the wellbore thereby forming at least one annulus between the tubulars. In some instances, well maintenance may require access to an annulus. For example, a casing string may develop a leak thereby pressurizing an annulus between the leaking casing string and adjacent casing. Other sources of leaks include tubing, packers, wellhead packoffs, and faulty casing cement bond.
Pressure in the annulus can be controlled by introducing a high specific gravity fluid into the annulus, thereby isolating the wellhead from the pressure. In addition to adding fluid directly to the top of the annulus through a wellhead, hydraulic hose systems have been used to inject fluid into the pressurized annulus. The hose generally includes a nozzle element lowered proximate to the annulus bottom where the fluid is discharged from the hose. However not all wellhead assemblies include access to a wellhead annulus. In these instances the wellhead housing may be bored through to form an access port. Since currently known methods of boring do not “hot tap”, i.e. form the bore while the annulus is pressurized, the annulus must be vented to atmosphere before creating the access port.
Shown in a side sectional view in
Disclosed herein is a method of providing an access path to an annulus in a wellhead assembly; in one example the method includes providing an apparatus with a housing, a selectively extendable and selectively rotatable plunger assembly, and a boring element on an end of the plunger assembly. An end of the housing is sealingly connected to an outer surface of the wellhead assembly, and the boring element is rotated by rotating the plunger assembly, and then boring an opening through the wellhead assembly by extending the plunger assembly in a direction along the housing and rotatingly contacting the wellhead assembly with the boring element to thereby provide pressure communication between the annulus and the housing. The method may further include retracting the boring element from the wellhead assembly and accessing the annulus through the opening. The boring element can be retracted from the wellhead assembly by providing a seal between the boring element and the wellhead assembly, replacing the plunger assembly with an annulus remediation system having an elongate flexible member, removing the seal, and inserting an end of the flexible member through the opening and into the annulus. The apparatus can further include a motor having a drive shaft coupled to the plunger assembly, so that operating the motor rotates the plunger assembly. Extending the plunger assembly in a direction along the housing may be done by introducing pressurized fluid into the plunger assembly. In one example, the plunger assembly is made up of a mandrel, a sliding sleeve circumscribing the mandrel, a plenum between the mandrel and the housing, a fluid fitting radially coupled in the housing in fluid communication with the plenum, an axial bore in the mandrel, and bore inlets formed through the mandrel between the plenum and axial bore, so flowing pressurized fluid from the fluid fitting, through the plenum, bore inlets, and axial bore, directs the fluid into the sleeve from the axial bore. The apparatus can further have a passage axially provided in the housing, and the method can also include selectively sealing the passage between the wellhead housing and the mandrel. The apparatus may further optionally have an annular space between the sleeve and the housing and an annular piston attached to the sleeve outer periphery that extends into sealing contact with the housing inner surface; the method can further include moving the boring element away from the wellhead assembly by providing pressurized fluid into the annular space on the side of the piston facing the wellhead assembly. The method may further involve directing a fluid flow at the boring element as it rotatingly contacts the wellhead assembly.
Also described herein is an apparatus for providing access to an annulus within a wellhead assembly. In one example the apparatus include a tubular body, a selectively extendable and selectively rotatable plunger assembly disposed in the body, a rotating drive source coupled to the plunger assembly, an open end on the body sealingly connectable to the wellhead assembly, and a boring element on an end of the plunger assembly facing the body open end, so that when the plunger assembly is extended and rotated, the boring element rotatingly can contact and bore a hole in the wellhead assembly. The body may be disposed at an oblique angle to the wellhead assembly axis, so that when the boring element bores the hole in the wellhead assembly, the hole is directed downward and inward. In one example, the plunger assembly includes a sleeve rotatingly coupled with a mandrel and slidable thereon. A pressurized fluid source can be included with the apparatus that is in communication with a space in the plunger assembly and a motor coupled to the plunger assembly. Boring an opening through the wellhead assembly can provide pressure communication between the annulus and the housing. In one example, the housing has a tubular end portion circumscribing the plunger assembly, a valve body connected to an end of the end portion, and an annular adapter having a side connected to the side of the valve body opposite the end portion and another side comprising the housing open end and connected to the wellhead assembly. A port may be formed through the adapter having an inlet in selective fluid communication with a supply of fluid and a discharge directed towards the wellhead assembly, so that when the boring element is boring an opening through the wellhead assembly, fluid flow from the discharge can cool the boring element and irrigate away particles of the wellhead assembly machined by the boring element. Optionally included are a plenum within the body and circumscribing a portion of the mandrel, an axial bore formed through the mandrel, a port formed through the body adjacent the plenum, a pressurized fluid source in selective communication with the port, bore inlets in the mandrel extending between the plenum and axial bore, and a closed end on the sleeve in pressure communication with the axial bore, so that when pressurized fluid flows into the axial bore a force is applied to the closed end to urge the sleeve away from the mandrel. The apparatus may yet further optionally include a bypass port extending from the axial bore to the mandrel outer surface. The sleeve, in one example, includes an annular portion with an open end in which the mandrel is slidingly received and a solid portion forming the closed end, wherein the boring element is on the end of the sleeve opposite the open end. The apparatus may optionally have an annular piston circumscribing the sleeve outer that extends radially outward into sealing contact with the housing inner circumference and a supply of pressurized fluid selectively in fluid communication on the side of the piston facing the wellhead assembly, so that when pressurized fluid is introduced to the side of the piston facing the wellhead assembly, the sleeve slides coaxially within the housing away from the wellhead assembly and retracts the boring element from within the opening bored through the wellhead assembly.
Also disclosed herein is a wellhead assembly with a wellhead housing, tubulars coaxially depending within the wellhead assembly defining an annulus between the tubulars, a tubular member having an end sealingly attached to an outer portion of a sidewall of the wellhead housing, a passage within the tubular member extending along its axis, a selectively rotatable plunger assembly provided within the passage and having a selectively telescoping end, a boring element on the telescoping end, a pressurized fluid source in selective communication with the plunger assembly, so that when pressurized fluid is supplied to the plunger assembly, the telescoping end is extended to contact the boring element with the wellhead housing, and a motor having a rotatable drive shaft attached to the non-telescoping end of the plunger assembly, so that when the motor activates the rotatable drive shaft and the boring element contacts the wellhead housing, the rotating boring element machines an opening through the wellhead housing. The plunger assembly may include an annular mandrel having an end coupled to the motor drive shaft, an axial bore in the mandrel in selective communication with pressurized fluid, a sleeve rotationally coupled to the mandrel and slideable with respect to the mandrel along the mandrel axis, and a piston surface on the sleeve defined by a wall substantially perpendicular to the sleeve axis. In one example, the sleeve is insertable within the axial bore and the piston surface is on the end of the sleeve within the bore. Optionally, the sleeve includes an annular portion that circumscribes the mandrel, and the piston surface comprises a solid portion of the sleeve adjacent the annular portion.
The apparatus and method of the present disclosure will now be described more fully hereinafter with reference to the accompanying drawings in which embodiments are shown. This subject of the present disclosure may, however, be embodied in many different forms and should not be construed as limited to the illustrated embodiments set forth herein; rather, these embodiments are provided so that this disclosure will be thorough and complete, and will fully convey the scope of the invention to those skilled in the art. Like numbers refer to like elements throughout. For the convenience in referring to the accompanying figures, directional terms are used for reference and illustration only. For example, the directional terms such as “upper”, “lower”, “above”, “below”, and the like are being used to illustrate a relational location.
It is to be understood that the subject of the present disclosure is not limited to the exact details of construction, operation, exact materials, or embodiments shown and described, as modifications and equivalents will be apparent to one skilled in the art. In the drawings and specification, there have been disclosed illustrative embodiments of the subject disclosure and, although specific terms are employed, they are used in a generic and descriptive sense only and not for the purpose of limitation. Accordingly, the subject disclosure is therefore to be limited only by the scope of the appended claims.
Shown in
A valve assembly 52 is shown flangedly bolted to the end of the housing 32 opposite the motor 48. The valve assembly 52 includes an automatic valve actuator 54 coupled on top of a valve body 56. A gate 57 is shown residing within the lower portion of the valve body 56 and can be actuated by manipulating the valve actuator 54. As shown, the gate 57 is in the open position, thereby allowing passage and pressure communication through the valve assembly 52. A flange 58 on an end of the body 32 bolts to a flange on the valve body 56. An adaptor 60 is shown attached to the valve assembly 52 on the side opposite the body 32. On its side opposite the valve body 56, the adaptor 60 is shown attached onto the outer surface of a conventional wellhead housing 14A of a wellhead assembly 10A. Bolts anchored in boltholes 25A anchor the adaptor 60 to the wellhead housing 14A, other attachment methods include welded, threaded, or interference fittings. The adaptor 60 is shown attached proximate to the port 22A with threadingly inserted threaded plug 24A. Port 22A is on a radial line substantially perpendicular to the housing 14A axis. The annular configuration of the housing 32, valve body 56, and adaptor 60 form a passage 62 that axially extends within the annulus entry system 30.
An optional cleaning fluid circuit 63 is illustrated coupled to a port 64 extending through the adaptor 60 and directed towards the terminal end of the passage 62. As will be described in more detail below, providing fluid flow through this circuit 63 can provide cooling to the boring element 50 and also remove any machined particles that may be produced while operating the boring element 50. An additional port 66 is provided through the adaptor 60 having an end that communicates with the passage 62. Fittings 68, 70 are shown inserted respectively in the ports 64, 66. The cleaning fluid circuit 63 may optionally be driven by a pump 71 shown having a discharge side coupled to line 72 that terminates at fitting 68. For collecting machined cuttings, an optional filter 73 is shown in fluid communication with fitting 70 via line 74. Fluid, once leaving the filter 73, is drawn into pump 71 via suction line 75.
Referring now to
Referring now to the embodiment of
An example of the boring element 50 contacting the wellhead assembly 10A is illustrated in a side partial sectional view in
Referring back now to
The plunger assembly 34 can be returned to its retracted mode by reversing the flow direction through the hydraulic circuit 36. An example of retracting the plunger assembly 34 is shown in a side sectional view in
As shown in
In an example of use of the system 30 described herein, the port 22A communicating with flow line 20A is plugged by inserting the threaded plug 24A therein. A tool (not shown) is coupled with the flow line 20 downstream of the valve 21. The tool includes a shaft that is insertable in the flow line 20 and up to the port 22A. A seal, also insertable into the flow line 20, spans across the space between the shaft and flow line 20 and maintains a pressure barrier in that space as the shaft traverses within the flow line 20. The plug 24A attaches to the free end of the shaft and is inserted into the port 22A by opening the valve 21, urging the shaft past the valve 21 so the plug 24A contacts the port 22A, then rotating the plug 24A to engage threads in the port 22A. Since the plug 24A seals the port 22A, the flange 19 can be unbolted without depressurizing the annulus 18A.
The system 30 (
The passage 62 through the adapter 60 is shown at an angle of about 45° with respect to the port 22A. By angling the boring element 50 downward as it forms the hole in the wellhead housing 14A, avoids contact with the wellhead assembly 10A tubing hanger (not shown). However other angles for the passage 62 are included with the scope of the present disclosure, example angles range from about 10° to about 80°, and increments of about 1° in that range.
The present system and method described herein, therefore, is well adapted to carry out and attain the ends and advantages mentioned, as well as others inherent therein. While a presently preferred embodiment has been given for purposes of disclosure, numerous changes exist in the details of procedures for accomplishing the desired results. For example, in an alternative embodiment, the sleeve 90 may be disposed within the axial bore 78 and slidable therein by providing pressurized fluid against one of its ends. These and other similar modifications will readily suggest themselves to those skilled in the art, and are intended to be encompassed within the spirit of the present invention disclosed herein and the scope of the appended claims.