This disclosure generally relates to a tool and method for damping lateral vibration in a drilling string.
In the recovery of hydrocarbons from the earth, wellbores are generally drilled using any of a variety of different methods and equipment selected according to the particular drilling site and objectives. When drilling a well, a drill bit is rotated in axial engagement against the formation to remove rock, to thereby form the wellbore to a desired depth. The drill bit is typically rotated via the rotation of a drill string to which the drill bit is coupled and/or by the rotary force imparted to the drill bit by a subsurface drilling motor.
Downhole vibrations and shocks (referred to collectively and/or interchangeably herein as “shock loads”) are induced by interactions between downhole tools and formations along the wellbore. Shock loads induced at points along the drill string are in turn transmitted to other components of the drill string and bottom hole assembly. Lateral shock loads imparted on the drill string can diminish the life of its interconnected members by accelerating the process of fatigue. Lateral shock loads may also cause damage to the wellbore itself, such as when lateral vibrations cause the drill string to contact the walls of the wellbore, for example. Additionally, excessive shock loads can cause spontaneous downhole equipment failure, wash-outs and a decrease in penetration rate.
The drill string 20 also includes a “tool string” 40 and a drill bit 50. When the drill string 20 is rotated, power and torque are transferred to the drill bit 50 and other downhole equipment coupled to a lower end of the drill string 20, such as to the “tool string” 40 attached to a longitudinal output shaft 45 of a downhole positive displacement motor. The drill bit 50 may alternatively rotated by the downhole positive displacement motor when the drill string 20 is not being rotated from the surface 12.
After drilling the wellbore 60, the wellbore 60 may be reinforced by a cementing operation with a casing 34 and a cement sheath 32 in the annulus between the casing 34 and the borehole.
During drilling, the surface equipment 14 pumps drilling fluid (i.e. drilling mud) 62, down the drill string 20 and out ports in the bit 50. The drilling mud then flows up the annulus 64 between the drill string and borehole wall. The surface equipment rotates the drill string 20, which in the implementations shown is coupled to the stator 24 of the downhole motor in the power section. The rotor 26 is rotated due to pumped fluid 62 pressure differences across the power section 22 relative to the stator 24 of a downhole positive displacement motor.
While drilling, the tool string 40 and/or the drill bit 50 may transmit vibrations that can travel along the drill string 20. For example, the drill pipe 21 may flex and contact the wellbore 60 or a wellbore wall 61, sending vibrations along drill string 20. A vibration damper assembly 100 is included along the tool string 40 to reduce the amount of vibration that is propagated along the tool string 40.
The piston assembly 200 will now be described, referring to both the exploded view provided by
A piston cap 210 is formed with an outer surface 212, an outer peripheral surface 214, and a threaded section 216. The outer surface 212 is semi-cylindrical in shape, with a radius and curvature that approximates that of the tubular housing 102. The outer peripheral surface 214 is formed with a diameter that substantially fills the smooth bore section 106 of a corresponding one of the transverse passageways 104. The outer periphery of the threaded section 216 is formed with circumferential threads that threadably mate with threads formed upon the inner circumference of the threaded bore section 108 of the corresponding one of the transverse passageways 104. A pair of spanner holes 218 is formed in the outer surface 212. In some implementations, the spanner holes 218 can accept the pins of a spanner wrench to assist in the assembly and disassembly of the transverse passageway 210 with the tubular housing 102.
A spring 220 is located about an upper section 232 of a damper piston 230. The upper section 232 is a generally cylindrical body that is formed to pass through an upper bore portion 240 formed radially through the piston cap 210. The upper section 232 is separated from a lower section 236 of the damper piston 230 by a circumferential ring 234. The circumferential ring 234 is formed about the outer periphery of the damper piston 230. The circumferential ring 234 has a diameter that substantially fills a lower bore portion 242 of the piston cap 210. The lower bore portion 242 is radially larger than and along the same axis as the upper bore portion 240 through the housing cap 210. The lower bore portion 242 has a diameter sized to slidably receive the circumferential ring 234. The lower bore portion 242 is formed partly through a radial section of the piston cap 210 opposite the outer surface 212.
The spring 220 rests against the circumferential ring 234 and becomes constrained axially about the upper section 232 within a spring chamber 244. The spring chamber 244 is defined between the circumferential ring 234 and the piston cap 210 and the lower bore portion 242 in the assembled form of the piston assembly 200. A fluid reservoir 246 is defined by the opposite side of the circumferential ring 234, the lower bore portion 242, and a support plate 250. The support plate 250 is formed as a disk with an outer diameter larger than that of the lower bore portion 242, and a central bore 252 formed to accommodate the lower section 236. The support plate 250 is removable, fastened to the piston cap 210 by a collection of fasteners 260, e.g., bolts, screws.
With reference to
Extension and retraction of the upper portion 232 of the damper piston 230 is damped by fluidic action. Referring back to
This resistance that is developed by the flow of fluid through the apertures 302 dampens the speed of the damper piston 230 in response to changes in the pressure of fluids provided within the bore 103 and/or to external forces acting upon the upper portion 232, e.g. when the upper portion 232 contacts the wellbore 60. In some embodiments, the apertures 302 can be configured to provide a predetermined amount of damping. For example, the quantity and/or bore sizes of the apertures 302 can be selected to provide various damping rates. In another example, check valves or other directional flow assemblies can be included in the damper piston 230 to provide a first damping rate during extension and a different damping rate during retraction of the upper portion 232. In yet another example, other appropriate assemblies may be included in the damper piston 230 to provide speed-dependent, e.g., progressive, damping rates during extension or retraction of the upper portion 232.
The electrical interface assembly 600 includes one or more electrical conductors 602. The electrical conductors 602 extend from an electrical connector 604a located at a first end 110a of the assembly 100 to an electrical connector 604b located at a second end 110b of the assembly 100. The electrical conductors 602 are routed through a conduit 606. In some embodiments, the conduit 606 can be electrically and/or mechanically isolated from the bore 103. For example, the conduit 606 may be electrically insulating, and/or protect the electrical conductors 602 from fluids within the bore 103.
The electrical connector 604a is supported by a bracket 610a, and the electrical connector 604b is supported by a bracket 610b. The brackets 610a, 610b position and orient the electrical connectors 604a, 604b relative to the tubular housing 102. For example, the brackets 610a, 610b can align the electrical connectors 604a, 604b with the central axis of the vibration damper assembly 100, and electrical contact can be made between the electrical connectors 604a, 604b and similar electrical connectors in adjacent tool string components when the adjacent tool string components are threaded into the vibration damper assembly 100.
A collection of seals 620 provide sealing contact between the tubular housing 102 and the brackets 604a, 604b. A collection of fasteners 630, such as bolts or screws, removably secures the bracket 604a to the first end 110a and the bracket 604b to the second end 110b.
While drilling, a vibration damper assembly 100 is inserted in the drill string 20. A first end portion of the spring 220 is contacted with at least a portion of the spring chamber 244 and a second end portion of the spring 220 is contacted with the circumferential ring 234, biasing the damper piston 230 in a retracted position such as the position shown in
Although a few implementations have been described in detail above, other modifications are possible. For example, the process flows described herein do not require the particular order shown, or sequential order, to achieve desirable results. In addition, other steps may be provided, or steps may be eliminated, from the described flows, and other components may be added to, or removed from, the described systems. Accordingly, other implementations are within the scope of the following claims.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US2013/073150 | 12/4/2013 | WO | 00 |