This application is not related to any pending United States or international patent application.
This application is not involved in any federally sponsored research or development.
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Underground reservoirs of petroleum hydrocarbons are tapped by drilling wells from the earth's surface to penetrate, producing formations. Liquid hydrocarbons, or crude oil, may be forced to the earth's surface by formation pressure when a well is first drilled. However, when the formation pressure is insufficient to force the crude oil to the earth's surface, either due to an inherent low formation pressure or when a formation had been produced for an extended period of time such that its pressure has diminished, it is then necessary to pump the crude oil to the earth's surface. Oil wells are traditionally pumped using a sucker rod pump in which actuated by a string of sucker rods extending from the earth's surface. Vertical reciprocation causes constant reversal of stresses in an oil well pumping system resulting in fairly high wear rates. Further, when a well is exceptionally deep, such as 5,000 ft. or greater, problems associated with reciprocating sucker rods are greatly intensified.
One system that has been developed to produce crude oil from a deep well is by the use of hydraulically actuated pumps. The most common type of hydraulically actuated positive displacement down hole pumps employ pressure fluid that flows co-mingled back to the earth's surface with the production fluid. In some installations a separate return line is employed so that the hydraulic fluid employed for pumping action is re-circulated back to the earth's surface independently of the production fluid. However this system required parallel hydraulically operated fluid lines in addition to the production fluid passageway and the installation of this latter type of pump is more difficult. Therefore, the most common way of actuating a down hole hydraulically actuated pump utilizes the arrangement wherein power fluid is forced down central tubing to actuate a reciprocating pump engine to force production fluid into an annular area between the interior of a casing and the exterior of power tubing to the earth's surface and in which the spent power fluid is co-mingled with the production fluid. This system requires only concentric piping that is substantially easier to install and remove than parallel piping.
A typical hydraulically actuated downhole pump has a fluid powered motor, or ‘engine’, that produces reciprocal action and a reciprocating pump with a motor piston and a pump piston in axial alignment and connected by a piston rod. A typical pump is in the order of about 1.9 inches to 3.8 inches in diameter and from about 6.5 ft. to 25 ft. or longer and is positioned in a bottom hole assembly of a well casing. A well casing is typically in the order of about 4½ inches to 9 inches in diameter and the tubing used to supply high-pressure hydraulic fluid to actuate the pump may typically be from about 1½ inches to 3½ inches in diameter. As stated above, commingled power fluid and production fluid flows back to the earth's surface in the annual area between the interior of the casing and the exterior of the tubing.
A basic description of the operation and function of a bottom hole hydraulically actuated pump can be obtained from U.S. Pat. No. 2,081,223 entitled “Fluid Operated Deep Well Pump” that issued on May 25, 1937. This patent shows that hydraulically actuated downhole pumps have been known for at least 60 years.
Hydraulically actuated pumps must be removed periodically from a well for repair of worn parts and replacement of seals. The life of a hydraulically actuated pump depends upon many factors, a primary one being the nature of the fluid being handled, that is, whether the fluid is inherently corrosive and also upon where the production fluid carries entrained abrasive components, such as sand. Systems have been developed wherein the pump can be removed from a bottom hole location by the application of hydraulic fluid pressure. This eliminates the need for inserting a retrieval tool into the power fluid supply tubing for attachment to the upper end of the hydraulically actuated pump to physically remove the pump. The pump of the present disclosure is particularly adaptable for hydraulic removal. To remove a pump hydraulically, such as the pump described herein. fluid pressure is imposed in the annulus area, that is within the casing and exterior of the power supply tubing so that pressure is applied below the pump to force the pump upwardly within the power supply tubing to the earth's surface.
In order to obtain more pumping power, especially for operations at greater depths, multiple engine pumps have been developed. For an example of a multi-engine pump reference may be had to U.S. Pat. No. 3,653,786 entitled “Fluid Operated Pump Assembly With Tandem Engine” issued Apr. 4, 1972. In a pump of this design two fluid operated motors are positioned in tandem, one above the other with the motor pistons connected by an axial in-line piston rod. Some dual engine configurations require porting to the exterior of the pump to provide fluid paths around various components while other multi-engine pumps use internally ported arrangements. While the invention herein is described as it is applied to a single piston engine the invention can be combined with multiple engine or multiple pump systems.
For more background information reference may be had to the following previously issued United States patents:
The invention herein provides a hydraulically actuated downhole pump responsive to hydraulic pressure from fluid supply tubing that extends from the earth's surface, the pump having a piston vertically reciprocal in a cylinder with valving to force fluid from an underground formation to the earth's surface upon upward movement of the piston and valving to permit fluid bypass as the piston moves downwardly in the cylinder. The pump includes a reversing valve, as a part of an engine pump piston, having a first and second position and wherein in the first position a flow channel is opened to direct fluid pressure from the fluid supply tubing to force the piston upwardly in the cylinder. In its second position the reversing valve opens a flow channel to cause the piston to move downwardly.
An overall object of the invention is to provide the combination of a pilot valve and a reversing valve in which the reversing valve is hydraulically actuated to move from its first to its second position in response to hydraulic fluid pressure controlled by the pilot valve.
One object of the invention is to provide an improved pilot valve carried with the pump piston and moveable to an upper and a lower position. The pilot valve controls flow passageways to hydraulically move the reversing valve from its first to its second position.
Another object of the invention is to provide an improved actuator probe within the pump upper portion which is arranged to move the pilot valve from its upper to a lower position when the pump piston reaches the top end of its stroke and to cause the reversing valve to move from it's first to a second position to thereby reverse the direction of travel of the pump piston downwardly. Provision is made to provide a hydraulic shock absorbing means to prevent substantial metal to metal contact of the pilot valve with the actuator probe.
A further object of the invention is an improved arrangement of the reversing valve's spool that more effectively employs hydraulic pressure to move the valve from its second position back to its first position when the pump piston reaches the lower end of its stroke.
Another object of the present invention to provide a hydraulically actuated down hole pump including an improved valving system.
A better understanding of the invention will be obtained from the following detailed description of the preferred embodiment and the claims taken in conjunction with the attached drawings.
Although reference herein may be made only to
Referring first in
Thus, the objective of this invention is to provide a system for forcing crude oil that enters into casing 14, through perforation 16, to the earth's surface. Also as previously stated, one means of lifting hydrocarbon to the earth's surface is by means of a sucker rod reciprocated pump. However this invention is directed to a completely different pumping system in which fluid is produced hydraulically. For this purpose there is installed within casing 14 a string of power fluid tubing 18 that extends from a high pressure power fluid source at the earth's surface to the producing formation. As shown in
At the upper end of the pump as shown in
The portions described up to this point are more or less typical of hydraulically actuated positive displacement bottom hole pumps, particularly of the type that can be re-circulated back to the earth's surface hydraulically and as such form background for the invention but the elements described to this point are not critical to the unique aspect of the invention.
The pulp system of the invention essentially extends from the pump top plug 56 (
The next portion of the pump as shown in
The engine is the heart of the invention. Referring to
Finally, as seen in
As shown in
Reversing valve sleeve 114 and pilot valve body 124 share non-circular external surfaces, such as being essentially square, to provide exterior flow channels 176 within the interior of engine mandrel 118. (See
Reversing valve sleeve 114 has a central passageway 168 extending through it. Openings 178 and 179 communicate the central passageway 168 with the annular space between sleeve 114 and engine mandrel 118. The central passageway 168 defines, in part, cylindrical surface 180 to receive the precision close tolerance cylindrical surface 148 of the reversing valve 116. As previously described first vertical passageway 170 extends from intermediate lateral passageway 172 to first lateral port 162, of the pilot valve body 124, via first vertical passageway 160. Vertical passageway 174 extends the full length of reversing valve sleeve 114 and communicates at its upper end with the pilot valve body second vertical passageway 164 and opening 166.
As seen in
The perspective view of
The operation of the apparatus of this invention will now be described, first with regard to
When the pump engine reaches the upper end of its travel, it is necessary to re-direct power fluid to cause the pump piston 74 to move in the reverse or downward direction. The action that takes place when the pump piston 74 reaches the top of its travel is best illustrated in
As soon as the piston reverses direction and begins to move downward, the pilot valve stem 132 moves back to its upward position. The pilot valve stem 132 remains at all times in the upward position, whether the piston is moving up or down, except for the brief time that it is displaced by actuator probe 142 at the top of the engine piston upward stroke. When reversing valve 116 has been moved to its upward, or second position by the momentary displacement of pilot valve stem 132 the reversing valve 116 remains in its second position even though pilot valve stem 132 returns to its upper position as soon as the piston has moved downward far enough to remove contact between actuator piston 136 and actuator probe 142.
When the piston reaches the bottom of its stroke increased fluid pressure causes reversing valve 116 to move from its upper, second position, to its lower or first position. Note that reversing valve 116 is tubular having an open passageway 146 there through. The reversing valve 116, as seen in
The movement of the reversing valve 116 back to the position shown in
While all components of the invention are important, critical components include: pilot valve stem 132; reversing valve 116; upper valve sleeve 114; lower pilot sleeve 126; lower valve sleeve 110; pilot valve body 124; upper pilot sleeve 130; and actuator probe 142. The flow paths in upper valve sleeve 114; lower valve sleeve 110 and pilot valve body 124 are crucial to the operation of the invention. Accordingly cross-sectional reviews showing some of these components are shown in
Of significance to the improved operation of the pump of this invention is, as has been previously mentioned, the configuration of reversing valve 116 and particularly the provision wherein the reversing valve has an intermediate flange 152. When the pump reaches its lower limits of travel to cause reversing valve 116 to immediately and positively move from its upper or second position to its first or lower position and in doing so, to reverse the direction of fluid pressure flow so that pressure is applied to the lower end of the engine piston to move it upwardly thereby move the pump piston upwardly to force produced fluid from the producing formation into the annular area 30 and thereby ultimately to the earth's surface.
The claims and the specification describe the invention presented and the terms that are employed in the claims draw their meaning from the use of such terms in the specification. The same terms employed in the prior art may be broader in meaning than specifically employed herein. Whenever there is a question between the broader definition of such terms used in the prior art and the more specific use of the terms herein, the more specific meaning is meant.
While the invention has been described with a certain degree of particularity, it is manifest that many changes may be made in the details of construction and the arrangement of components without departing from the spirit and scope of this disclosure. It is understood that the invention is not limited to the embodiments set forth herein for purposes of exemplification, but is to be limited only by the scope of the attached claim or claims, including the full range of equivalency to which each element thereof is entitled.
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