BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1 Field of the Invention
This invention relates generally to a wellhead assembly for an oil and gas well. The invention may find use in a tubing hanger arrangement used in completion of an offshore oil and gas well and in completion of land oil and gas wells.
2. Description of the Prior Art
U.S. Pat. No. 7,604,047 which issued on Oct. 20, 2009 and U.S. Patent 7,419,001 illustrate and describe a universal tubing hanger suspension assembly for an offshore well that includes a tubing hanger housing that is positioned in the wellhead housing independently of knowledge of details of a wellhead housing in which the tubing hanger is to be placed. As shown in FIG. 1, the prior tubing hanger suspension assembly 10 includes a tubing hanger housing 12 and a tubing hanger lower assembly 14. After the tubing housing 12 is installed in the wellhead 8 a Christmas tree connector 4 is run and connects to the housing 12, for mounting a Christmas tree on the wellhead 8.
Production tubing 22 is coupled to the bottom of the tubing hanger 12 by a threaded connection 20, with pin threads 5 cut in the tubing hanger housing 12 body coupled with box threads 6 of the production tubing 22. The tubing hanger housing 12 is supported in place by locking and sealing mechanism 34 between tubing hanger lower assembly 14 and production casing 18 below wellhead 8. The production casing hanger 18a is supported on the casing hanger 25. Both the tubing hanger housing 12 and the production tubing 22 must be made of Corrosion Resistant Alloy (CRA) material, because highly corrosive contaminants such as H2S in production fluid flowing in the production tubing 22 also contacts the interior of the tubing hanger housing 12. Accordingly, the large tubing hanger housing 12 as well as the production tubing 22 must be fabricated of expensive Corrosion Resistant Alloy.
It has been found that cutting the pin threads 5 of the large tubing hanger housing 12 of Corrosion Resistant Alloy material is extremely exacting, subject to error, resulting in a very high expense and risk of failure while fabricating the tubing hanger 12.
IDENTIFICATION OF OBJECTS OF THE INVENTION
A primary object of the invention is to provide an arrangement by which a tubing hanger housing for a well completion system can be coupled to production tubing, yet not be subjected to “wetting” by production fluid, resulting in reduced material and fabrication costs for the tubing hanger housing.
Another object of the invention is to provide a tubing hanger and production tubing assembly for oil and gas completion arrangements, where the tubing hanger housing and the production tubing are made of two distinctly different materials and components which, after assembly, are deployed as one assembly and landed in an oil and gas well.
Another object of the invention is to provide an arrangement such that production tubing and a tubing hanger body can be made of two different materials in order to,
- (1) save expensive material costs for the large tubing hanger body;
- (2) save costs of weld inlays and material incompatibility for the tubing hanger body and the production tubing;
- (3) save costs of difficult machining processes by detaching the production tubing from the tubing hanger body during machining prior to assembly;
- (4) allow a tubing hanger and production tubing to be deployed as an assembled unit; and
- (5) allow higher tubing hanger load carrying capabilities.
Another object of the invention is to provide a subsea tubing string suspension system with production tubing of Corrosion Resistant Alloy (CRA) which is threaded into a tubing hanger housing body of non-CRA material with a seal sub of CRA material with metal-to-metal or elastomeric sealing between the top of the production tubing and the bottom of a subsea tree.
Another object of the invention is to provide a production tubing extension sleeve for connection to the tubing hanger body, where the tubing extension sleeve is fabricated of CRA material and the tubing hanger body is fabricated of non-CRA high yield materials, the connection providing isolation of the tubing hanger body from the corrosive production fluid, and the non-CRA material of the tubing hanger body allowing smaller and stronger load bearing surfaces as compared with CRA materials, resulting in high load carrying during testing and subsequent tubing loads.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 illustrates a prior art completion assembly with a tubing hanger housing of CRA material with a lower suspension assembly also of CRA material connected to its bottom end and a subsea tree connected to its top end where the tubing hanger housing body is wetted by production fluid flowing from the production tubing.
FIG. 2 illustrates an arrangement of the invention with a tubing hanger housing body of non-Corrosion Resistant Alloy material (CRA) secured in the wellhead by a tubing hanger lower assembly with a production tubing extension sleeve for production tubing of CRA material secured by threading to the tubing hanger housing body and a seal sub of CRA material landed and connected to the production extension sleeve.
FIG. 3 illustrates a first alternative tubing hanger and production tubing extension sleeve arrangement of the invention where the tubing hanger is landed conventionally on a productive casing hanger shoulder, but with the tubing hanger fabricated of non-Corrosion Resistant Alloy, but with the production tubing fabricated from CRA with a seal sub of CRA material landed on a shoulder of the production tubing extension sleeve in an arrangement which protects the tubing hanger body from contact with the production fluid; and
FIG. 4 illustrates a second alternative tubing hanger body of conventional steel alloy material and a production tubing extension sleeve of CRA material landed in a tubing head and with a seal sub landed on the production tubing extension sleeve for protecting the tubing hanger body from corrosive well fluid flowing through the production tubing.
DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
FIG. 1 as described above illustrates a prior art arrangement of a tubing hanger housing 12 and production tubing 22 run into a wellhead 8 where the tubing hanger body 12 is supported by a tubing hanger lower assembly 12 by a locking and sealing assembly 34 between the tubing hanger lower assembly 14 and the production casing 18. The table which follows lists the reference numbers used to describe the items in the FIG. 1 prior art tubing hanger housing-production tubing connection arrangement.
Reference Numbers for the Prior Art Arrangement of FIG. 1
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Number
Item
|
|
4
Christmas tree connector
|
5
pin threads in tubing hanger housing
|
6
box threads in production tubing
|
8
wellhead
|
10
tubing hanger suspension assembly
|
12
tubing hanger housing
|
14
tubing hanger lower assembly
|
18
production casing
|
18a
production casing hanger
|
20
threaded connection
|
22
production tubing
|
25
casing hanger
|
34
locking and sealing mechanism
|
|
FIG. 2 illustrates the improved (as compared to the Prior Art arrangement of FIG. 1) having a tubing hanger housing body 120, a production tubing extension sleeve 220, and a tubing production string 219 for an arrangement similar to that of FIG. 1. The tubing hanger body 120 and production tubing 220 are supported via a tubing hanger lower assembly 140 which is locked, sealed and supported by locking and sealing assembly 340 between the tubing hanger lower assembly 140 and production casing 180. The embodiment of FIG. 2 finds special application for expensive subsea wells where the tubing hanger housing 120 can be supported in the wellhead without knowledge of the wellhead dimensions and arrangement. The extension sleeve 220 is connected to tubing hanger body 120 by threads 200. Tubing hanger body 120 is made of an alloy steel, not of a Corrosion Resistant Alloy, an arrangement possible, because the box threads 201 of the tubing hanger body 120 are in threaded connection with pin threads of the production tubing extension sleeve 220. As a result, the tubing hanger housing body 120 is not in contact or “wetted” with the production fluid flowing through the production tubing string 219 and production tubing extension sleeve 220. The production tubing extension sleeve 220 is made of a Corrosion Resistant Alloy (CRA) and pin threads 202 are cut in it so as to couple it with the box threads 201 of the tubing hanger housing body 120 of non-CRA material.
The seal sub 500, also of CRA material, is coupled to tubing extension sleeve 220 by means of a metal to metal or elastomeric seal 210. A tube 501 of the subsea tree, when coupled to the wellhead and tubing hanger body 120 also includes a metal-to-metal or elastomeric seal 210 for sealing with the seal sub 500.
Reference Numbers for the Invention of FIG. 2
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Number
Item
|
|
|
40
Christmas tree connection
|
80
wellhead
|
120
tubing hanger housing
|
140
tubing hanger lower assembly
|
180
production casing
|
190
subsea tree
|
200
threaded connection
|
201
box threads of tubing hanger body
|
202
pin threads of production casing
|
210
metal-to-metal and/or elastomeric seal
|
220
production tubing
|
340
locking and sealing assembly
|
500
seal sub
|
501
tube in subsea tree
|
|
FIG. 3 illustrates an alternative embodiment of the invention where a tubing hanger body 1200 is supported from a shoulder 1801 of production casing hanger 1800, rather than with a locking and seal assembly like that labeled 18 and 180 of FIGS. 1 and 2. The embodiment of FIG. 3 may find application in land based wells or subsea wells. The embodiment of FIG. 3 needs no tubing hanger lower assembly like that labeled 140 and 14 of FIGS. 1 and 2. In all other respects the embodiment is similar to that of FIG. 2 with tubing hanger 1200 made of non-CRA material, but with seal sub 5000 and production tubing 2000 made of CRA material. A listing of reference numbers and items for the embodiment of FIG. 3 follows:
Reference Numbers for the Embodiment of FIG. 3
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Number
Item
|
|
1000
wellhead
|
1020
casing hanger
|
1200
tubing hanger
|
1800
production cashing hanger
|
1801
shoulder
|
1900
Christmas tree
|
2000
threaded connection
|
2010
box threads
|
2020
pin threads
|
2100
metal-to-metal and/or elastomeric seal
|
2200
production tubing
|
5000
seal sub
|
5010
tube in subsea tree
|
|
FIG. 4 illustrates another alternative embodiment of the invention where a tubing hanger body 1201 lands on and is supported from landing shoulder 151 of tubing head 1001. Production tubing 2202 is coupled to tubing hanger 1201 preferably in the same way as described in the embodiments of FIGS. 2 and 3. The tubing hanger body 1201 is fabricated of a non-CRA steel alloy while the production tubing 2202 is fabricated of CRA material. The coupling of production tubing 2202 with tubing hanger 1201 is preferably with pin threads on the production tubing 2202 arranged for screwing into box threads of tubing hanger body 1201, but coupling arrangements other than threaded arrangements may be possible. The seal sub 5001 of CRA material seals with the production tubing 2202 in a way like that shown in FIGS. 2 and 3. Metal-to-metal and/or elastomeric seals 2101 seal the Christmas tree tube 5020 of Christmas tree 1910 to the seal sub 5001. The arrangement of FIG. 4 may be used for land wells, and allows cheaper fabrication of the tubing hanger 1201 for wells with highly corrosive hydrocarbons flowing through production tubing 2202 of the well. A listing of reference numbers and items for the embodiment of FIG. 4 follows.
Reference Numbers for the Embodiment of FIG. 4
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Number
Item
|
|
|
151
landing shoulders
|
1001
tubing head
|
1201
tubing hanger body
|
1910
Christmas tree
|
2101
metal-to-metal and/or elastomeric seal
|
2202
production tubing
|
5001
seal sub
|
5020
Christmas tree tube
|
|
Method of Correcting Manufacturing Defects of a Prior Art Tubing Hanger Body.
FIG. 1 shows a prior art tubing hanger body 12 which is made of CRA material. Under certain manufacturing machining conditions, the threads 5 could be damaged, a circumstance in the past requiring scrapping of the entire expensive body piece 12. With the inventive concepts described in this specification, the body piece 12 need not be scrapped, but rather the threads 5 of body piece 12, may be over-machined to eliminate thread cutting in the CRA material of body piece 12, thereby creating a machined bore in the body piece 12. A sleeve of CRA material (not illustrated) can be installed to fit within the machined bore of the body piece, with the sleeve having pin threads at its lower end which can be screwed into the box threads 6 of the production tubing 22.