The present disclosure relates generally to a tubing hanger for use with a subsea wellhead, and in particular, a mechanism for positioning and locking a tubing hanger into a subsea wellhead.
Tubing hangers are employed in subsea wellheads used in, for example, oil and gas wells. The tubing hanger supports the tubing, or “string”, which extends down into the production zone of the well. The process of installing a tubing hanger into a wellhead generally involves positioning the tubing hanger on a landing seat in the wellhead using, for example, a running tool attached to the tubing hanger.
Movement of the tubing hanger inside the wellhead after installation is a known problem. Tubing hanger movement can be caused by, for example, torsional force applied to the tubing hanger due to thermal expansion and contraction of the tubing string. Excessive movement can change the orientation of the tubing hanger with respect to the wellhead, making it difficult to reinstall the running tool during subsequent operations or to subsequently install the subsea tree on the wellhead. Movement of the tubing hanger can also cause premature failure of the sealing system between the tubing hanger body and the wellhead housing, and the seals at the hydraulic and electric connectors between the tubing hanger and the subsea Christmas tree.
Various mechanisms for securing tubing hangers in wellheads have been devised in order to reduce movement of the tubing hanger in the wellhead. For example, locking mechanisms are often employed to lock the tubing hanger into place in the wellhead. In addition, means for preloading the tubing hanger in order to reduce undesirable axial and rotational movement of the tubing hanger have also been devised.
However, providing the desired preloading of the locked tubing hanger can be difficult to achieve when the landing seat of the tubing hanger inside the wellhead has uncertain axial position. The uncertainty of the axial position can be due, at least in part, to tolerance accumulations caused by the stacking of many components in the wellhead and debris that can accumulate on the landing seat during drilling operations.
To account for this uncertainty in axial seating position, tubing hanger designs have employed adaptive mechanisms in order to accommodate large dimensional variations and still achieve preloading. One typical form of this type of mechanism employs a locking ring with tapered inner surface, being pushed into the receptive profiles by applying a measured force to wedge a locking sleeve behind the locking ring. Because this type of locking ring relies on the friction between the tapered surfaces of the locking ring and the locking sleeve to maintain the locking ring in a preloaded locking state, it is necessary to employ additional locking (or anti-backoff) to prevent the loss of preload from the movements of the locking sleeve under vibration and other disturbance over long term field service. Moreover, the final axial position of the locking sleeve has large variation because the small taper angle used for maintaining the frictional self lock amplifies the manufacturing tolerance in diametric dimensions of the relevant components. Thus implementation of anti-backoff of the locking sleeve is often adaptive in nature and sometimes depending on friction itself. One example of a design that employs a lockdown mechanism with an actuating mandrel that includes an anti-backoff mechanism is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,516,875.
One design for a tubing hanger with a preloaded lockdown mechanism is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,145,006, issued to David R. June. In the June patent design, the tubing hanger is locked into place and then a torque ring is rotated to preload the locking mechanism. However, this design requires a tool, such as a mechanical torque tool, that can be run to the subsea wellhead to rotate the torque ring to its preloaded position. Further, the torque applied to provide the desired preload using the June patent design can be problematic. In deep water well completions, for example, applying torque at the top side over a long running string can be undesirable.
Other tubing hanger designs achieve preloaded locking with non-adaptive components, such as a locking ring with a non-tapered, cylindrical inner surface. Once the locking sleeve is forced into an axial position behind the locking ring, the preload is entirely determined by the deflections of the components within the load path that have controlled dimensional interferences and that are insensitive to the axial position of the locking sleeve. In one previous design, where a tubing hanger with such a locking mechanism was landed onto a shoulder with large axial position variation, a pre-installation measurement trip had to be made for each installation to determine the position of each landing shoulder so that the tubing hanger could be adjusted before installation to obtain the required dimensional interference. Such measurement trips not only add operational cost, which is significant in deep water application, but also introduce additional uncertainty.
Improved designs for locking a tubing hanger into a wellhead with preload would be a welcome addition in the art. The present disclosure is directed to overcoming, or at least reducing the effects of, one or more of the issues set forth above.
An embodiment of the present disclosure is directed to a tubing hanger for use in a wellhead. The wellhead includes a throughbore, a landing seat positioned in the throughbore, a landing groove positioned above the landing seat in the throughbore, and a locking groove in the throughbore. The tubing hanger comprises an expandable landing ring positioned on the tubing hanger for engaging the landing groove and a landing mechanism for expanding the landing ring radially outward from the tubing hanger. A locking ring for engaging the locking groove can be positioned on the tubing hanger. The tubing hanger can further include a locking mechanism for expanding the locking ring radially outward from the tubing hanger body and locking it into the locking groove.
Another embodiment of the present disclosure is directed to a method for locking a tubing hanger in a wellhead. The wellhead includes a throughbore, a landing seat positioned in the throughbore, a landing groove positioned above the landing seat in the throughbore, and a locking groove positioned in the throughbore. The method comprises expanding a landing ring positioned on the tubing hanger to engage the landing groove. A locking ring can be expanded to engage the locking groove, the locking ring being positioned on the tubing hanger. The locking ring is expanded after the expanding of the landing ring.
While the concepts of the present disclosure are susceptible to various modifications and alternative forms, specific embodiments have been shown by way of example in the drawings and will be described in detail herein. However, it should be understood that the present disclosure is not intended to be limited to the particular forms disclosed. Rather, the intention is to cover all modifications, equivalents and alternatives falling within the spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims.
The wellhead 102 includes a throughbore 106 defined by a wellhead housing wall 108. A landing seat 110 is positioned in throughbore 106 and can be any top profile of installed equipment below the tubing hanger, usually with large axial positional variation. In an embodiment, the landing seat 110 can be a casing hanger packoff, which may act to seal the wellhead housing wall 108 and the casing hanger. In other embodiments, the landing seat may be another piece of equipment that does not act as a seal, such as other equipment installed before the tubing hanger 100.
A landing groove 114 can be positioned above the landing seat 110 in the throughbore 106 for receiving a landing ring 116. A locking groove 118 can be positioned above the landing groove 114 in the throughbore 106. Landing groove 114 and locking groove 118 can be formed in throughbore 106 by any suitable method, such as by machining the grooves in the surface of wellhead housing wall 108 that forms the outer perimeter of throughbore 106.
Tubing hanger 100 can include a tubing hanger body 214. Tubing hanger body 214 can include one or more fluid passages therein (not shown), as is well known in the art. In an embodiment, tubing hanger 100 can also include one or more annulus fluid passages 124 positioned around the tubing hanger production bore 122.
As discussed above, an expandable landing ring 116 is positioned on the tubing hanger 100 for engaging the landing groove 114. As more clearly illustrated in
The landing mechanism 200 can be positioned to engage the landing seat 110 during installation of the tubing hanger 100 into the wellhead. As illustrated in
The embodiment of the landing mechanism illustrated in
In an embodiment according to
The resultant force from landing ring 116 contacting landing groove 114 and lower load ring 204 can enable landing ring 116 to expand along the lower tapered surfaces 114A,114B of landing groove 114 upward, thereby separating landing ring 116 from landing ring actuator 202. This separation is illustrated by the space 223 shown in
Surface 217 of landing ring 116 and surface 219 of load ring 204 are shaped so that continued travel of the tubing hanger into the well will not significantly change the lateral position of landing ring 116. For example, in the illustrated embodiment, surface 217 and surface 219 are both cylindrically shaped without a taper relative to the axial movement of load ring 204, so that little or no lateral force is applied to landing ring 116 as the load ring 204 continues moving into the well. The tubing hanger can be stopped when the load bearing surface 221 of lower load ring 204 makes contact with landing ring 116, resulting in the tubing hanger being fully supported by landing ring 116, as shown in
In
The initial expansion of landing ring 116 can therefore result from landing ring actuator 202 reaching a stop (such as making contact with preinstalled landing seat 110) so that the tapered contact between landing ring 116 and landing ring actuator 202 creates a resultant radial expansion force for landing ring 116. Due to the initial radial expansion, the tapered surface 211 of landing ring 116 contacts lower load ring 204 and a surface 215 of landing ring 116 contacts landing ring actuator 202, thereby producing the resultant expansion force in the second stage until the landing ring 116 makes contact with landing groove 114 (See
Various other designs of the landing mechanism are contemplated. For example, in an embodiment of
Referring again to
The locking ring can be made of any suitable material that will provide the desired support, and one of ordinary skill in the art would readily be capable of choosing suitable materials. Examples of suitable materials include metals, such as INCONEL 718, which is commercially available from Alloy Wire International LDT, a company located in the U.K. Other examples of suitable materials are well known in the art.
Referring back to
The locking mechanism 126 can be mechanically independent of the landing mechanism 200. For example, the landing mechanism 200 is capable of expanding the landing ring 116 by employing the downward force of the tubing hanger 100 during installation without actuation by the running tool 104. After the landing ring 116 has been expanded into the landing groove 114, the locking mechanism 126 is capable of direct actuation via the controls of running tool 104 to expand the locking ring 120 into the locking groove 118. In an embodiment, the landing mechanism 200 is not capable of direct actuation via the running tool 104 controls to expand the landing ring 116.
A potential benefit of this system is the ability to lock the tubing hanger without significant friction forces on the locking ring 120. This is because the landing ring 116 can support the weight of the tubing hanger, in the manner discussed above, during the engagement of the locking ring 120 with the locking groove 118.
The tubing hangers of the present application can be operated by any suitable method that provides the desired preloading and locking. The method can include expanding a landing ring positioned on the tubing hanger to engage a landing groove. The landing ring can be expanded by any suitable method.
In an embodiment, the method can be carried out using the apparatus in the embodiment of
In the above described embodiments, the landing ring and locking ring are illustrated as comprising a single integral component. However, in an alternative embodiment, both a landing ring and a locking ring can be replaced by segmented components with similar cross sections.
In an alternative embodiment, both a landing ring and a locking ring can be expanded using, for example, running tool or some other apparatus that can control the expansion of the landing and locking rings. Thus, the landing and locking rings can be actuated by any suitable methods that allow the tubing hanger to be accurately positioned in the wellhead prior to locking, so that locking of the tubing hanger can provide the desired preloading. Given the teachings of the present application, one of ordinary skill in the art would readily be able to make and use tubing hangers for implementing such methods.
Although various embodiments have been shown and described, the present disclosure is not so limited and will be understood to include all such modifications and variations as would be apparent to one skilled in the art.
The present disclosure claims benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/090,462, filed Aug. 20, 2008, and U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/090,000, filed Aug. 19, 2008, both of which applications are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61090462 | Aug 2008 | US | |
61090000 | Aug 2008 | US |