Well production apparatus and method

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6454010
  • Patent Number
    6,454,010
  • Date Filed
    Thursday, June 1, 2000
    24 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, September 24, 2002
    22 years ago
Abstract
A well production apparatus includes a down-hole gear pump and a transport assembly to which the gear pump is attached. The transport assembly is formed from a string of modular pipe assemblies having one or more passages for carrying production fluid from the bottom of the well to the surface. The passages can be arranged in a side-by-side configuration, and include pressure and return lines for driving the gear pump. The gear pump includes a hydraulically driven motor that is ganged with a positive displacement gear set. Both the motor and the pumping section have ceramic wear surfaces, the ceramic being chosen to have coefficients of thermal expansion corresponding to the coefficients of thermal expansion of the gear sets. The pumps and rotors have ceramic bushings rather than ball or journal bearings, and are operable under abrasive conditions.
Description




FIELD OF INVENTION




This invention relates generally to the field of well production apparatus such as used, for example, in down-hole pumping systems in wells. It also relates to pumping apparatus and methods for use of that apparatus.




BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION




Specific challenges arise in oil production when it is desired to extract heavy, sandy, gaseous or corrosive high temperature oil and water slurries from underground wells. These slurries to be pumped range over the breadth of fluid rheology from highly viscous, heavy, cold crude to hot thermal fluids. Recent technological advances have permitted wells to be sunk vertically, and then to continue horizontally into an oil producing zone. Thus wells can be drilled vertically, on a slant, or horizontally. To date, although equipment is available to drill these wells, at present there is a need for a relatively efficient, and reasonably economical means to extract slurries from wells of these types.




In particular, it would be desirable to have a type of pump that would permit relatively efficient extraction of oil slurries from underground well bores that include horizontal and steam assisted gravity drainage (SAGD) or non-thermal conventional wells. In one SAGD, process twin horizontal wells are drilled in parallel, one somewhat above the other. Steam is injected into the upper bore. This encourages oil from the adjacent region of the oil bearing formation to drain toward the lower bore. The production fluids drawn from the lower bore can then be pumped from the lower bore to the surface.




It is advantageous to match the pumping draw down of the lower bore to the rate of steam injection used in the upper bore. This will depend on the nature of the oil bearing formation, the viscosity of the oil and so on. If the rates can be matched to achieve a relative balance, the amount of steam pressure required can be reduced, thus reducing the power of the steam injection system required, and resulting in a more economical process.




Pumping the production oil or slurry from the lower horizontal bore presents a number of challenges. An artificial lift, or pumping, system must be able to operate even when the “liquid” to be pumped is rather abrasive. For example, some design criteria are based on slurries that may contain typically 3% by weight, and for short periods as much as 30% by weight, of abrasives, such as sand The pumping technology must be capable of handling a high volume of formation solids in the presence of high gas oil ratios (GOR). The system may well be called upon to handle slugs of hydrocarbon gas and steam created by flashing of water into vapour. On occasion the system may run dry for periods of time. As such, it is desirable that the system be capable of processing gases, and of running “dry”. It is also desirable that a pump, and associated tubing, be able to operate to a depth of 1000 M below well-head, or more, with an allowance of 100 psi as the minimum flow-line input pressure. It is also desirable that the equipment be able to operate in chemically aggressive conditions where pH is +/−10.




Further still, it would be advantageous to be able to cope with a large range of viscosities—from thick, viscous fluids to water, and at relatively high temperatures. The chosen equipment should be operable in both vertical and horizontal well bores.




Another requirement is the ability to pump all of the available fluid from the well bore. To that end it is advantageous to be able to operate the pump as far as possible in depth into a horizontal section. The system needs to be able to operate at high volume capacities, i.e., high volumetric flow rates, and to operate reasonably well under saturated steam conditions while processing hydrocarbon gases. As far as the inventors are aware, there is at present no artificial lifting equipment that addresses these problems in a fully satisfactory manner. It would be desirable to have a relatively efficient high temperature, high volume pumping system that can accommodate a large range of production requirements, with the capability of being installed into, and operating from, the horizontal section of a well bore.




Other artificial lift systems have been tried. For example, one known type of pump is referred to as a “Pump Jack”. It employs sucker rod pumping with a down-hole plunger pump. This is a reciprocating beam pumping system that includes a surface unit (a gearbox, Pittman arms, a walking beam, a horsehead and a bridle) that causes a rod string to reciprocate, thereby driving a down-hole plunger pump.




Pump jack systems have a number of disadvantages. First, it is difficult to operate a down-hole reciprocating rod pump in a horizontal section because of the reliance on gravity to exert a downward force on the pump plunger. Further, a horizontal application may tend to cause increased pump wear due to curvature in the pump barrel (to get to the horizontal section) and increased sucker rod and tubing wear. Second, down-hole pumps are susceptible to damage from sand, high temperature operation, and other contaminants. Third, plunger pumps are prone to gas lock. Fourth, the downward stroke of the pump rod, being governed by gravity, is subject to “rod float”. That is, as the length of the rod increases, the rod itself has sufficient resiliency, and play, that the motion transmitted from the surface is not accurately copied at the plunger—it may be out of phase, damped, or otherwise degraded so that much pumping effort is wasted. Fifth, pump jacks tend to require relatively extensive surface site preparation. Horizontal units tend to require larger than normal pump units because of the need to activate (i.e., operate) the rod string around the bend of the “build section” as well as to lift the weight of the rod string.




Another type of pump is the progressive cavity pump, or screw pump. In this type of pump a single helical rotor, usually a hard chrome screw, rotates within a double helical synthetic stator that is bonded within a steel tube. Progressive cavity pumps also have disadvantages: First, they tend not to operate well, if at all, at high temperatures. It appears that the maximum temperature for continuous operation in a well bore is about 180 F. (80 C.). It is desirable that the pump be able to operate over a range of −30 to 350 C. (−20 to 650 F.), and that the pump be able to remain in place during steam injection. Second, progressive cavity pumps tend not to operate well “dry”. It is desirable to be able to purge hydrocarbon gases, or steam created by flashing water into vapour. As far as the present inventors are aware, progressive cavity pumps have not been capable of operation in high GOR conditions. Further, the synthetic stator material of some known pumps appears not to be suitable for operation with aromatic oils. Due to the design of the screws, and their friction fit, progressive cavity pumps tend to have little, if any, ability to generate high pressures, thereby restricting their use to relatively shallow wells. In addition, progressive cavity pumps tend to be prone to wear between the rotor and the stator, and tend to have relatively short service run lives between overhauls. Progressive cavity pumps do not appear to provide high operational efficiency.




Electric submersible pumps (ESP) include a down-hole electric motor that rotates an impeller (or impellers) in the pump, thereby generating pressure to urge the fluid up the tubing to the surface. Electric submersible pumps tend to operate at high rotational speeds, and tend to be adversely affected by inflow viscosity limitations. They tend not to be suitable for use in heavy oil applications. Electric submersible pumps tend to be susceptible to contaminants. Electric submersible pumps are not, as far as the inventors are aware, positive displacement pumps, and consequently are subject to slippage and a corresponding decrease in efficiency. The use of electric submersible pumps is limited by horsepower and temperature restrictions.




Jet pumps typically employ a high pressure surface pump to transmit pumping fluid down-hole. A down-hole jet pump is driven by this high pressure fluid. The power fluid and the produced fluid flow together to the surface after passing through the downhole unit. Jet pumps tend to have rather lower efficiency than a positive displacement pump. Jet pumps tend to require higher intake pressures than conventional pumps to avoid cavitation. Jet pumps tend to be sensitive to changes in intake and discharge pressure. Changes in fluid density and viscosity during operation affect the pressures, thereby tending to make control of the pump difficult. Finally, jet pump nozzles tend to be susceptible to wear in abrasive applications.




Gas lift systems are artificial lift processes in which pressurised or compressed gas is injected through gas lift mandrels and valves into the production string. This injected gas lowers the hydrostatic pressure in the production string, thus establishing the required pressure differential between the reservoir and the well-bore, thereby permitting formation fluids to flow to the surface. Gas lift systems tend to have lower efficiencies than positive displacement pumps. They tend be uncontrollable, or poorly controllable, under varying well conditions, and tend not to operate effectively in relatively shallow wells. Gas lift systems only have effect on the hydrostatic head in the vertical bore, and may tend not to establish the required drawdown in the horizontal bore to be beneficial in SAGD application. Further, gas lift systems tend to be susceptible to gas hydrate problems. The surface installation of a gas lift system may tend to require a significant investment in infrastructure—a source of high pressure gas, separation and dehydration facilities, and gas distribution and control systems. Finally, gas lift systems tend not to be capable of achieving low bottom-hole producing pressures.




Operation of a pump at a remote location in a bore hole also imposes a number of technical challenges. First, the pump itself can not be larger in diameter than the well bore. In oil and gas well drilling, for example, it can only be as large as permitted by the well-head blow-out preventer. A typical casing may have a diameter of 140 to 178 mm (5½ to 7 inches). A typical production tube has a diameter in the range of 73 to 89 mm (2¾ to 3½ inches). Providing power to a down-hole pump is also a challenge. An electric motor may burn out easily, and it may be difficult to supply with electrical power at, for example, ten thousand feet (3000 m) distance along a bore given significant line losses. A pneumatic or hydraulic pump can be used, provided an appropriate flow of working fluid is available under pressure. Whatever type of pump is used, it may tend to need to be matched in a combination with the available power delivery system.




In a number of applications, such as oil or other wells, it is desirable to conduct one or more types of fluid down a long tube, or string of tubing, while conducting another flow, or flows, in the opposite direction. Similarly, it may be advantageous to use a passageway, or a pair of passageways to conduct one kind of fluid, and another passageway for electrical cabling whether for monitoring devices or for some other purpose, or another pair of passageways for either pneumatic or hydraulic power transmission. In oil field operations it may be desirable to have a pair of passageways as pressure and return lines for hydraulic power, another line, or lines, for conveying production fluids to the surface, perhaps another line for supplying steam, and perhaps another line for carrying monitoring or communications cabling.




One method of achieving this end is to use concentrically nested pipes, the central pipe having a flow in one direction, the annulus between the central pipe and the next pipe carrying another flow, typically in the opposite direction. It may be possible to have additional annulli carrying yet other flows, and so on. Although singular continuous coiled tubing has been used, the ability to run an inner string within an outer concentric string is relatively new, and may tend to be relatively expensive. This has a number of disadvantages, particularly in well drilling. Typically, in well drilling the outside diameter of the pipe is limited by the size of the well bore to be drilled. This pipe size is all the more limited if the drilling is to penetrate into pockets of liquid or gas that are under pressure. In such instances a blow-out preventer (BOP) is used, limiting the outside diameter of the pipe. Typically, a drill string is assembled by adding modules, or sections of pipe, together to form a string. Each section is termed a “joint”. A joint has a connection means at each end. For example, one end (typically the down-hole end) may have a male coupling, such as an external thread, while the opposite, well-head, end has a matching female coupling, such as a union nut. It is advantageous in this instance to have a positive make-up, that is, to be able to join the “joints” without having to spin the entire body of the joint, but rather to have the coupling rotate independently of the pipe.




A limit on the outside diameter of the external pipe casing imposes inherent limitations on the cross-sectional area available for use as passageways for fluids. In some instances three or four passages are required. For example, this is the case when a motive fluid, whether hydraulic oil or water, is used to drive a motor or pump, requiring pressure and return lines, while the production fluid being pumped out requires one or more passages. The annulus width for four passages nested in a 3.5 inch tube is relatively small. The inventors are unaware of any triple or quadruple concentric tube string that has been used successfully in field operations.




As the depth of the well increases, the downhole pressure drop in the passages also increases. In some cases the well depth is measured in thousands of metres. The pressure required to force a slurry, for example, up an annular tube several kilometres long, may tend to be significant. One way to reduce the pressure drop is to improve the shape of the passages. For example, in the limit as an annulus becomes thin relative to its diameter, the hydraulic diameter of the resultant passage approaches twice the width, or thickness, of the annulus. For a given volumetric flow rate, at high Reynolds numbers pipe losses due to fluid friction vary roughly as the fourth power of diameter. Hence it is advantageous to increase the hydraulic diameter of the various passageways. One way to increase the hydraulic diameter of the passage is to bundle a number of tubes, or pipes, in a side-by-side configuration within an external retainer or casing in place of nested annulli. The overall cross-sectional area can also be improved by dividing the circular area into non-circular sectors, such as passages that have the cross-section shape of a portion of a pie.




Another important design consideration in constructing a pipe for deep well drilling, or well drilling under pressure, is that the conduit used be suitable for operation in a blow out preventer. This means that the pipe must be provided in sections, or joints, that can be assembled progressively in the blow out preventer to create, eventually, a complete string thousands, or tens of thousands, of feet long. It is important that the sections fit together in a unique manner, so that the various passages align themselves—it would not do for an hydraulic oil power supply conduit of one section to be lined up with the production fluid upward flow line of an adjacent section. Further, given the pressures involved, not only must the passage walls in each section be adequate for the operational pressure to which they are exposed, but the sections of pipe must have a positive seal to each other as they are assembled. Further still, given the relatively remote locations at which these assemblies may be used, and possibly harsh environmental conditions, the sections must go together relatively easily. It is advantageous to have a “user friendly” assembly for ease of pick-up, handling, and installation, that can be used in a conventional oil rig, for example.




Some of the tube passages must be formed in a manner to contain significant pressure. For an actual operating differential pressure in the range of 0-2000 p.s.i., it may be desirable to use pipe that can accommodate pressures up to, for example, 8,000 p.s.i. Seamless steel pipe can be obtained that is satisfactory for this purpose. Electrical resistance welded pipe (ERW) that is suitable for this purpose can also be obtained. The steel pipe can then be roll formed to the desired cross-sectional shape.




SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION




In an aspect of the invention there is a fluid displacement assembly having a first gear, a second gear, and a housing having a chamber defined therein to accommodate the gears. The first and second gears are mounted within the housing in meshing relationship. The housing has an inlet by which fluid can flow to the gears and an outlet by which fluid can flow away from the gears. The gears are operable to urge fluid from the inlet to the outlet, and at least a portion of the housing is made from a ceramic material.




In an additional feature of that aspect of the invention, the assembly is operable at temperatures in excess of 180° F. In another additional feature, the assembly is operable at temperatures at least as high as 350° F. In another additional feature, the ceramic material is part of a ceramic member, and is mounted within a casing. In still another feature, the ceramic material has a compressive pre-load.




In yet another feature the first and second gears are spur gears. In an alternative feature, the first gear is a spur gear and the second gear is a ring gear mounted eccentrically about the first gear. In a further feature, a ceramic partition member is mounted within the ring gear between the first gear and the second gear. In a further alternative feature, the first and second gears are a pair of gerotor gears.




In a further additional feature of the invention, the gears are sandwiched between a pair of first and second yokes mounted to either axial sides thereof Each of the yokes has a pair of first and second bores formed therein to accommodate first and second shafts. Each of the yokes has a gear engagement face located next to the gears. Each of the gear engagement faces has a peripheral margin conforming to the arcuate portions of the internal wall of the housing, and each of the yokes is biased to lie against the gears.




In another aspect of the invention there is a gear pump having a first gear, a second gear, and a housing having a chamber defined therein to accommodate the gears. The first gear is mounted on a shaft having an axis of rotation. The first and second gears are mounted in the housing in meshing engagement. The housing has an inlet by which fluid can flow to the gears and an outlet by which fluid can flow away from the gears, and the shaft is mounted in ceramic bushings within the housing. In another feature of that aspect of the invention, the ceramic bushings include ceramic inserts mounted in a metal body.




In a further aspect of the invention there is a gear pump having a first gear, a second gear, and a housing having a cavity defined therein to accommodate the first and second gears. The first and second gears are mounted in meshing relationship within the housing. The housing has an inlet by which fluid can flow to the gears and an outlet by which fluid can flow away from the gears. The gears are operable to displace fluid from the inlet to the outlet. The first gear is mounted on a first shift having a first axis of rotation. The first and second gears each have a first end face lying in a first plane perpendicular to the axis of rotation. A moveable wall is mounted within the housing to engage the first end faces of the gears. The moveable wall has a ceramic surface oriented to bear against the first end faces of the first and second gears.




In an additional feature of that aspect of the invention, the moveable wall is a head of a piston and, in operation, the piston is biased toward the first end faces of the first and second gears. In another feature, the piston is hydraulically biased toward the gears. In another feature, each of the first and second gears has a second end face lying in a second plane spaced from the first plane, and a second moveable wall is mounted within the housing to bear against the second end faces of the first and second gears. In another feature, both of the moveable walls are biased toward the gears. In another additional feature, the end walls are heads of respective first and second pistons, the pistons being moveable parallel to the axis of rotation. In a further additional feature, the ceramic surface is a plasma carried on a metal substrate.




In another additional feature, the second gear is mounted on a second shaft extending parallel to the first shaft. The ceramic surface is formed on a body having a first bore defined therein to accommodate the first shaft and a second bore defined therein to accommodate the second shaft, the body being displaceable along the shafts. In a further feature, at least one of the bores has a wall presenting a ceramic bushing surface to one of the shafts. In another feature the body has a passageway formed therein to facilitate flow of fluid. In a further feature, the body has passageways formed therein to facilitate flow of fluid to and from the inlet and the outlet.




In still another aspect of the invention, there is a gear pump assembly having a pair of first and second mating gears, mounted on respective first and second parallel shafts in meshed relationship; and a housing for the gears, the housing having an inlet by which fluid can flow to the gears and an outlet by which fluid can flow away from the gears. The gears are operable to urge fluid from the inlet to the outlet. The housing includes a gear surround having two overlapping bores defined therein conforming to the gears in meshed relationship, and the surround presents a ceramic internal surface to the gears.




In an additional feature the surround is formed of a transformation toughened zirconia. In a further feature, the surround is made of a ceramic monolith. In another feature, the surround has a compressive pre-load. In a still further feature, the surround is mounted within a shrink fit casing member. In yet another feature, the ceramic monolith has a co-efficient of thermal expansion corresponding to the co-efficient of thermal expansion of the gears. In another additional feature, the gear pump assembly has a movable endwall mounted to ride in the overlapping bores.




In another additional feature, the shafts each have an axis of rotation and the gears each have first and second end faces lying in first and second spaced apart parallel planes, the parallel planes extending perpendicular to said axis. A movable piston is mounted to ride within the overlapping bores, and the piston has a face oriented to engage the first end faces of the gears.




In another aspect of the invention, there is a gear pump assembly having a first gear mounted on a first shaft, the first shaft having a first axis of rotation; and a second gear mounted on a second shaft, the second shaft having a second axis of rotation, the axes lying in a common plane. The first and second gears are mounted to mesh together in a first region between the axes. A gear surround has an internal wall defining a cavity shaped to accommodate the gears. The internal wall has a first portion formed on an arc conforming to the first gear and a second portion, formed on another arc, to conform to the second gear. The first and second portions lie away from the first region. The internal wall has a third portion between the first and second portions. The third portion lies abreast of the first region and has a first passageway formed therein to carry fluid to the cavity adjacent to the gears to one side of the plane. The internal wall has a fourth portion lying between the first and second portions. The fourth portion lies abreast of the first region to the other side of the plane from the third portion. The fourth portion has a second passageway formed therein to carry fluid from the cavity. The gears are operable to transfer fluid from the first passageway to the second passageway.




In an aspect of the invention, there is a modular well pipe assembly. There is a pipe wall structure having at least first and second passages defined side-by-side therein. The pipe wall structure has a first end and a second end. The first and second ends have respective first and second end couplings matable with other end couplings of modular pipe assemblies of the same type. The end fittings have alignment fittings for aligning the first and second passages with corresponding first and second passages in other modular pipe assemblies of the same type.




In an additional feature of that aspect of the invention, the pipe wall structure includes a hollow outer casing and at least first and second conduits for carrying fluids mounted side-by-side within the casing. In another additional feature of that aspect of the invention, one of the end couplings has a seal mounted thereto. The seal has porting defined therein corresponding to the passages. The seal is placed to maintain segregation between the passages when the modular pipe assembly is joined to another modular pipe assembly of the same type. In yet another additional feature, the end coupling is engageable with a mating modular pipe assembly to compress the seal.




In still another additional feature, the pipe wall structure includes a first conduit member and a second conduit member mounted within the first conduit member. The first conduit member has a continuous wall. The continuous wall has an inner surface defining a periphery of an internal space. The second conduit member occupies a first portion of the internal space of the first conduit member and leaves a remainder of the internal space of the first conduit member. The second conduit member has a continuous wall. The continuous wall of the second conduit member has the second side by side passage defined therewithin.




The continuous wall of the second conduit has an external surface. A portion of the external surface of the second conduit member is formed to conform to a first portion of the inner surface of the first conduit member, and is located there adjacent. The first passage is defined within the remainder of the internal space of the first conduit member. In still yet another additional feature, the inner surface of the first conduit member has a second portion bounding a portion of the first passage.




In another additional feature of that aspect of the invention, the inner surface of the first conduit member has a second portion. The external surface of the second conduit member has a second portion. The second portion of the inner surface of the first conduit member and the second portion of the external surface of the second conduit member co-operate to bound at least a portion of the first passageway. In yet another additional feature of that aspect of the invention, the first conduit member has a round cylindrical cross-section. The second conduit member continuous wall has a portion lying along a first chord of the cylindrical cross-section. In still another additional feature, the chord is a diametrical chord. In another additional feature, the second conduit member has another portion lying along a second chord of the cylindrical cross-section. In a further additional feature of that aspect of the invention, the second conduit member occupies a sector of the cylindrical cross-section between the first and second chords.




In yet a further additional feature, the pipe wall structure includes a third conduit member. The third conduit member has a continuous wall having a third side-by-side passage defined therewithin. The third conduit member has an external surface. A portion of the external surface is shaped to conform to, and is located adjacent to a second portion of the inner surface of the first conduit member.




In still a further additional feature, the pipe wall structure includes a third conduit member. The third conduit member has a continuous wall having a third side-by-side passage defined therewithin. The second conduit member has an internal wall surface. The third conduit member continuous wall has an external surface. A portion of the external surface of the third conduit member is shaped to conform to, and is mounted against, a portion of the internal wall surface of the second conduit member.




In another additional feature of that aspect of the invention, the pipe wall structure includes a first conduit member, a second conduit member, and a third conduit member. The second and third conduit members are mounted side-by-side within the first conduit member. In yet another additional feature, the second conduit member has a circular cross-section. In still another additional feature, the second and third conduit members have circular cross-sections. In a further additional feature, a fourth conduit member is mounted within the first conduit member. In still a further additional feature, the first conduit member has a circular internal wall surface. The second, third and fourth conduit members have circular cross sections and are mounted in tangential engagement with the circular internal wall surface of the first conduit member. In another additional feature of that aspect of the invention, each of the second, third and fourth conduit members is tangent to at least one of the others. In still another additional feature, at least one of the second and third conduit members is hexagonal in cross-section.




In yet another additional feature, at least one of the second and third conduit members is pie shaped in cross-section. In a further feature of that aspect of the invention, the pie shape is chosen from the set of pie shapes consisting of (a) a half of a pie; (b) a third of a pie; (c) a quarter of a pie; and (d) a sixth of a pie.




In another feature of that aspect of the invention, the pipe wall structure includes a first conduit member and a second conduit member mounted within the first conduit member. The second conduit member has a continuous wall bounding the second passage. The second passage has a periphery and a cross-sectional area. The second conduit member continuous wall has an internal surface defining the periphery of the second passage. The second passage has a hydraulic diameter that is less than the dividend obtained by dividing the perimeter by π. In another additional feature, the second conduit member is free of convex portions.




In another additional feature of that aspect of the invention, the pipe wall structure includes a first conduit member and a second conduit member mounted within the first conduit member. The second passage has a perimeter ‘P’, a cross-sectional area A and a hydraulic diameter D


H


. The second conduit member has a continuous wall having an inside surface defining the perimeter ‘P’ of the second passage and A<(P


2


/4π). In still another additional feature, the second conduit member is free of convex portions.




In yet another additional feature, the pipe wall structure includes a first, outer, conduit member having an inner wall surface and a second, inner, conduit member mounted within the first conduit member. The inner conduit member has an outer wall surface. The inner wall surface of the outer conduit member and the outer wall surface of the inner conduit member bound a region intermediate the outer conduit member and the inner conduit member. A third conduit member defines a third passage therewithin in side-by-side relationship to the second passage. The third conduit member is located in the region intermediate the inner wall surface of the outer conduit member and the outer wall surface of the inner conduit member.




In another additional feature of that aspect of the invention, the third conduit member has an outer wall surface. The outer wall surface of the third conduit member has a first portion engaging the inner wall surface of the outer conduit member and a second portion engaging the outer wall surface of the inner conduit member. In still another additional feature, the first portion of the third conduit member is shaped to conform to a portion of the inner wall surface of the outer conduit member. The second portion of the third conduit member is shaped to conform to a portion of the outer wall surface of the inner conduit member. In yet another additional feature, the region between the outer and inner conduits is annular. In another additional feature, the inner conduit member is concentric to the outer conduit member. In yet another additional feature, an annulus is defined between the inner and outer conduit members and the third conduit member occupies a sector of the annulus. In another additional feature of that aspect of the invention, a plurality of conduit members each occupy sectors of the annulus.




In a further aspect of the invention, there is a fluid displacement apparatus having (a) a motor unit having a first gearset having an output shaft, the output shaft having an axis of rotation defining an axial direction; an inlet by which fluid can flow to the first gearset, and an outlet by which fluid can flow away from the first gearset; (b) a gear pump unit mounted axially with respect to the motor unit, the pump unit having a second gearset connected to be driven by the output shaft of the first gearset; an inlet by which production fluid can be flow to the second gearset; and an outlet by which the production fluid can flow away from the second gearset; and (c) a transport apparatus having a first end and a second end, the second end being connected axially relative to the motor unit and the pump unit. The transport apparatus has a first passageway defined therein in fluid communication with the inlet of the motor unit by which fluid under pressure can be directed to the first gearset to turn the output shaft; and at least a second passageway defined therein in fluid communication with the outlet of the pump unit by which the production fluid from the second gearset can be conveyed to the first end of the transport apparatus.




In an additional feature of that aspect of the invention, the apparatus includes a plurality of the motor units connected axially together to drive the output shaft. In another additional feature, the apparatus includes a plurality of the gear pump units connected axially together.




In another additional feature, the transport apparatus has at least a third passageway defined therein. The third passageway is in fluid communication with the outlet of the first gearset to permit return fluid from the first gearset to be carried to the first end of the transport apparatus. In still another feature, the transport apparatus has another passageway defined therein by which electrical cabling can extend between the first and second ends.




In still another feature, the first and second passageways extend in side-by-side relationship. In a further feature, the transport apparatus includes a bundle of conduits defining the passageways, the bundle being mounted within a retainer. In yet another feature, the transport apparatus includes a plurality of modular pipe joints connected together in a pipe string. In another feature, the gear pump unit is free of ball and roller bearings.




In still another feature, the motor unit is mounted in a cylindrical housing, the housing having a production fluid passageway defined therein, the production fluid passageway being in fluid communication with the outlet of the second gearset and with the second passageway of the transport apparatus to permit production fluid from the gear pump to flow in the axial direction past the motor unit. In a further feature, the gear pump unit is mounted in a cylindrical housing, the cylindrical housing having porting defined therein to permit production fluid to flow to the inlet of the gear pump unit.




In a further feature of that aspect of the invention, the fluid displacement apparatus includes a plurality of the motor units mounted axially together and a plurality of the gear pump units mounted axially together. Each of the motor units has an axially extending pressure passage defined therein communicating with the inlet thereof, and an axially extending return passage defined therein communicating with the outlet thereof. The pressure passages of the motor units are in fluid communication to form a common high pressure passageway. The return passages of the motor units are in fluid communication to form a common low pressure passageway; and a plate is mounted between the motor units and the gear pump units to close off the high pressure and low pressure passages from the pump units.




In still another aspect of the invention, there is a well production apparatus for transporting a production fluid from a downhole portion of a well to a wellhead. The apparatus includes a transport assembly having a first end located in the downhole portion of the well and a second end located at the wellhead. A gear pump is connected to the first end of the transport assembly. The transport assembly has at least one passageway defined therein for conducting production fluid from the first end to the second end. The transport assembly has a power transmission member that extends between the first and second ends thereof The transmission member is connected to permit the gear pump to be driven from the wellhead. The gear pump is operable to urge production fluid from the first end of the transport assembly to the wellhead.




In another aspect of the invention, there is. a method of moving production fluid from a well to a wellhead. The method includes the steps of (a) mounting a gear pump to a first end of a transport apparatus; (b) introducing the first end of the transport apparatus into the well and locating the gear pump in the well; and (c) driving the gear pump from outside the well to urge production fluid from the production region to the wellhead.




In an additional feature of that aspect of the invention, the method includes the steps of providing a passageway in the transport apparatus for carrying production fluid from the production region to the wellhead; and providing a power transmission member to carry power for the wellhead to the gear pump. In still another feature of the invention, the method includes the steps of: (a) mounting an hydraulic motor to the gear pump; (b) providing a first passageway in the transport apparatus for carrying production fluid from the production region to the wellhead; (c) providing a second passageway in the transport apparatus for carrying hydraulic fluid to the hydraulic motor; and (d) supplying hydraulic fluid under pressure through the second passageway to operate the hydraulic motor and the gear pump. In a further additional feature, the method includes the step of providing a third passageway in the transport apparatus and directing a return flow of hydraulic fluid from the hydraulic motor through the third passageway to the wellhead.




In another additional feature, the method includes the steps of preparing a well bore having a horizontal production region, and introducing the gear pump into the horizontal production region. In another feature, the method includes the steps of: (a) preparing a horizontal production region of the well; (b) preparing a well bore above the horizontal production region; (c) introducing steam into the well bore, and (d) the step of driving the gear pump follows the step of introducing the steam into the well bore. In still another additional feature, the transport apparatus is a modular pipe joint apparatus and the method includes the step of incrementally introducing one pipe joint after another into the well. In another additional feature, the step of introducing includes passing the gear pump and the pipe joints through a well head blow out preventer.




These and other aspects and features of the invention are described herein with reference to the accompanying illustrations.











BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS





FIG. 1



a


shows a general schematic illustration of a steam assisted gravity drainage oil production system having a down-hole production unit;





FIG. 1



b


shows a schematic illustration of the down-hole production unit of

FIG. 1



a;







FIG. 2



a


shows a side view of the down-hole production unit of

FIG. 1



a;







FIG. 2



b


shows a side view of the down-hole production unit of

FIG. 2



a


with its external casings removed;





FIG. 2



c


shows a longitudinal cross-section of the down-hole production unit of

FIG. 2



a


taken on section ‘


2




c





2




c


’ as shown on

FIG. 3



b;







FIG. 3



a


shows a cross-section taken on section ‘


3




a





3




a


’ of

FIG. 2



b;







FIG. 3



b


shows an end view of

FIG. 2



a;







FIG. 3



c


shows a cross-section taken on section ‘


3




c





3




c


’ of

FIG. 2



c;







FIG. 3



d


shows a cross-section taken on section ‘


3




d





3




d


’ of

FIG. 2



c;







FIG. 3



e


shows a cross-section taken on section ‘


3




e





3




e


’ of

FIG. 2



c;







FIG. 3



f


shows a cross-section taken on section ‘


3




f





3




f


’ of

FIG. 2



c;







FIG. 3



g


shows a cross-section taken on section ‘


3




g





3




g


’ of

FIG. 2



c;







FIG. 3



h


shows a cross-section taken on section ‘


3




h





3




h


’ of

FIG. 2



c;







FIG. 3



i


shows a cross-section taken on section ‘


3




i





3




i


’ of

FIG. 3



d;







FIG. 4



a


shows an end view of a top or intermediate stage motor unit of the down-hole production unit of

FIG. 2



b;







FIG. 4



b


shows a cross-section on section ‘


4




b





4




b


’ of

FIG. 4



a;







FIG. 4



c


shows a cross-section on section ‘


4




c





4




c


’ of

FIG. 4



a;







FIG. 4



d


shows a side view of a fitting of

FIG. 4



a;







FIG. 4



e


shows an exploded view of the fitting of

FIG. 4



d;







FIG. 4



f


shows an end view of the fitting of

FIG. 4



d;







FIG. 4



g


shows a cross-sectional view taken on section ‘


4




g





4




g


’ of

FIG. 4



f;







FIG. 5



a


shows an end view of a bottom stage motor unit of the down-hole production unit of

FIG. 2



b;







FIG. 5



b


shows a cross-section on section ‘


5




b





5




b


’ of

FIG. 5



a;







FIG. 5



c


shows a cross-section on section ‘


5




c





5




c


’ of

FIG. 5



a;







FIG. 6



a


shows an end view of a top or intermediate stage pump unit of the down-hole production unit of

FIG. 2



b;







FIG. 6



b


shows a cross-section on section ‘


6




b





6




b


’ of

FIG. 6



a;







FIG. 6



c


shows a cross-section on section ‘


6




c





6




c


’ of

FIG. 6



a;







FIG. 7



a


shows an end view of a bottom stage pump unit of the down-hole production unit of

FIG. 2



b;







FIG. 7



b


shows a cross-section on section ‘


7




b





7




b


’ of

FIG. 7



a;







FIG. 7



c


shows a cross-section on section ‘


7




c





7




c


’ of

FIG. 7



a;







FIG. 8



a


shows an exploded view of a positive displacement gear pump assembly of the down-hole production unit of

FIG. 2



a;







FIG. 8



b


shows an end view of the gears of the gear assembly of

FIG. 8



a;







FIG. 8



c


shows an. assembled perspective view of the positive displacement gear pump of

FIG. 8



a;







FIG. 8



d


shows an exploded view of an alternate positive displacement gear assembly to that of

FIG. 8



a;







FIG. 8



e


shows an end view of the gears of the gear assembly of

FIG. 8



d;







FIG. 8



f


shows an exploded view of a further alternate positive displacement gear assembly to that of

FIG. 8



a;







FIG. 8



g


shows an end view of the gear assembly of

FIG. 8



f;







FIG. 8



h


shows a perspective view of an alternate piston for the assembly of

FIG. 8



a;







FIG. 8



i


shows a perspective view of another alternate piston for the assembly of

FIG. 8



a;







FIG. 9



a


shows a side view of an assembled multi-passage pipe assembly according to an aspect of the present invention;





FIG. 9



b


shows an isometric view of a pair of the multi-passage pipe assemblies of

FIG. 9



a


joined together;





FIG. 9



c


shows an exploded isometric view of the pair of multi-passage pipe assemblies of

FIG. 9



b


in a separated condition;





FIG. 9



d


is a cross-sectional view of the pipe assemblies of

FIG. 9



a


showing the join;





FIG. 10



a


is an isometric view of a tube member of the multi-passage pipe assembly of

FIG. 9



a;







FIG. 10



b


is a cross-sectional view of the tube member of

FIG. 10



a;







FIG. 11



a


is a plan view of a seal for the pipe assemblies of

FIG. 9



a;







FIG. 11



b


is a diametral cross-section of the seal of

FIG. 11



a;







FIG. 11



c


is a detail of a portion of the cross-section of the seal of

FIG. 11



b;







FIG. 12



a


shows an isometric view of an alternate assembly to that of

FIG. 9



a;







FIG. 12



b


is a detail view of a seal for the assembly of

FIG. 12



a;







FIG. 12



c


is a detail of a portion of the assembly of

FIG. 12



a


as assembled;





FIG. 13



a


is a plan view of a seal retainer for the pipe assemblies of

FIG. 12



a;







FIG. 13



b


is a side view of the seal retainer of

FIG. 13



a;







FIG. 13



c


is a detail of a cross-section of the seal retainer of

FIG. 13



a;







FIG. 14



a


is a plan view of a seal for the pipe assemblies of

FIG. 12



a;







FIG. 14



b


is a diametral cross-section of the seal of

FIG. 14



a;







FIG. 14



c


is a detail of a portion of the cross-section of the seal of

FIG. 14



b;







FIG. 14



d


is a plan view of an alternative seal for the assembly of

FIG. 12



a;







FIG. 14



e


is a diametral cross-section of the seal of

FIG. 14



d;







FIG. 14



f


is a detail of a portion of the cross-section of the seal of

FIG. 14



e;







FIG. 15



a


shows a cross-sectional view of the tube assembly of

FIG. 9



a


taken on section ‘


15




a





15




a’;







FIG. 15



b


shows a cross-sectional view of an alternate tube assembly to that of

FIG. 15



a


, having a pair of semi-circular tubes mounted side-by-side;





FIG. 15



c


shows a cross-sectional view of an alternate tube assembly to that of

FIG. 15



a


, having three passages, one being larger than the other two;





FIG. 15



d


shows a cross-sectional view of an alternate tube assembly to that of

FIG. 15



b


, having two tubes, one being larger than the other, the tubes meeting on a chord of a circle offset from the diametral plane;





FIG. 15



e


shows a cross-sectional view of an alternate tube assembly to that of

FIG. 15



d


, having two tubes, one being larger than the other two, the tubes meeting on radial planes;





FIG. 16



a


shows a cross-sectional view of an alternate tube assembly to that of

FIG. 15



a


, having three equal sized passages with radially extending webs;





FIG. 16



b


shows a cross-sectional view of an alternate tube assembly to that of

FIG. 15



a


, having three unequal tubes with radially extending webs;





FIG. 17



a


shows a cross-sectional view of an alternate tube assembly to that of

FIG. 15



a


, having six equal pie-shaped passages;





FIG. 17



b


shows a cross-sectional view of an alternate tube assembly to that of

FIG. 15



a


, having seven hexagonal tubes;





FIG. 18



a


shows a cross-sectional view of an alternate tube assembly to the tube assembly of

FIG. 15



c


, in which the largest passage occupies more than half the tube area;





FIG. 18



b


is similar to

FIG. 18



a


, but shows a tube assembly having three tubes, and in which one tube occupies a minor sector of the tube area;





FIG. 18



c


shows a cross-sectional view of an alternate tube assembly to that of

FIG. 15



a


, having two unequal pairs of tubes with non-radial webs;





FIG. 18



d


shows a cross-sectional view of an alternate tube assembly to that of

FIG. 15



a


, having four unequal tubes;





FIG. 19



a


shows a cross-sectional view of an alternate tube assembly to that of

FIG. 15



a


, having two round tubes within a round casing;





FIG. 19



b


shows a cross-sectional view of an alternate tube assembly to that of

FIG. 15



a


, having three round tubes within a round casing;





FIG. 19



c


shows a cross-sectional view of an alternate tube assembly to that of

FIG. 15



a


, having four round tubes bundled within a circular outer wall;





FIG. 20



a


shows a cross-sectional view of an alternate tube assembly to that of

FIG. 15



a


, having two equal outer tubes arranged about a central tube;





FIG. 20



b


shows a cross-sectional view of an alternate tube assembly to that of

FIG. 15



a


, having two unequal outer tubes arranged about a central tube;





FIG. 21



a


shows a cross-sectional view of an alternate tube assembly to that of

FIG. 15



a


, having three equal outer tubes arranged about a central tube;





FIG. 21



b


shows a cross-sectional view of an alternate tube assembly to that of

FIG. 21



a


, having three unequal outer tubes arranged about a central tube;





FIG. 22



a


shows a cross-sectional view of an alternate tube assembly to that of

FIG. 15



a


, having four equal outer tubes arranged about a central tube;





FIG. 22



b


shows a cross-sectional view of an alternate tube assembly to that of

FIG. 15



a


, having four outer tubes, one larger than the others, arranged about a central tube;





FIG. 22



c


shows a cross-sectional view of an alternate tube assembly to that of

FIG. 15



a


, having four unequal outer tubes arranged about a central tube;





FIG. 23



a


shows a cross-sectional view of an alternative pipe assembly to that of

FIG. 15



a


having a semi-circular tube nested within a circular tube;





FIG. 23



b


shows a cross-sectional view of an alternate pipe assembly to that of

FIG. 23



a


, having two pie-shaped side-by-side tubes nested within a circular tube;





FIG. 23



c


shows a cross-sectional view of an alternate pipe assembly to that of

FIG. 23



a


, having three pie-shaped side-by-side tubes nested within a circular tube;





FIG. 23



d


shows a cross-sectional view of an alternate pipe assembly to that of

FIG. 23



a


, having two circular side-by-side tubes nested within a circular tube;





FIG. 23



e


shows a cross-sectional view of an alternate pipe assembly to that of

FIG. 23



a


, similar to that of

FIG. 20



a


, but having one of the non-circular tubes removed;





FIG. 24



a


shows a cross-sectional view of an alternate pipe assembly to that of

FIG. 23



a


, having a pie-shaped tube nested within a semi-circular tube, nested within a circular tube;





FIG. 24



b


shows a cross-sectional view of an alternate pipe assembly to that of

FIG. 24



a


, having a pair of pie-shaped tubes nested side-by-side within a semi-circular tube, nested within a circular tube; and





FIG. 25

shows cross-sectional views of extruded pipe assembly cross-sections providing alternatives to the pipe assembly of

FIG. 15



a.













DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION




The description which follows, and the embodiments described therein, are provided by way of illustration of an example, or examples of particular embodiments of the principles of the present invention. These examples are provided for the purposes of explanation, and not of limitation, of those principles and of the invention. In the description which follows, like parts are marked throughout the specification and the drawings with the same respective reference numerals. The drawings are not necessarily to scale and in some instances proportions may have been exaggerated in order more clearly to depict certain features of the invention.




By way of a general overview, an oil extraction process apparatus is indicated generally in

FIG. 1



a


as


20


. It includes a first bore


22


having a vertical portion


24


and a horizontal portion


26


. Horizontal portion


26


extends into an oil bearing formation


28


at some distance below the surface. For the purposes of illustration, the vertical scale of

FIG. 1



a


is distorted. The actual depth to horizontal portion


26


may be several kilometres. A steam generating system


30


is located at the well head and is used to inject steam at temperature T and pressure R down bore


22


. Horizontal portion


26


is perforated to permit the steam to penetrate the adjacent regions of formation


28


.




A second well bore is indicated as


32


. It has a vertical portion


34


and a horizontal portion


36


, corresponding generally to vertical portion


24


and horizontal portion


26


of bore


22


. Horizontal portion


36


runs generally parallel to, and somewhat below, horizontal portion


26


. A section (or sections)


38


of horizontal portion


36


runs through oil bearing formation


28


, and is perforated to permit production fluid to drain from formation


28


into section


38


. The injection of steam into formation


28


through portion


26


is undertaken to encourage drainage of oil from formation


28


. It will be appreciated that alternative types of wells can also have analogous vertical or inclined perforated sections.




A production fluid lift system in the nature of a pumping system is designated generally as


40


. It is shown schematically in

FIG. 1



b


. It includes a power generation system


42


at the well head, in the nature of a motor


44


that drives a hydraulic pump


46


. A transport system


48


carries power transmitted from system


42


to the downhole end


50


of bore


32


, and carries production fluid from downhole end


50


to the well head


52


. A collection and separation system, such as a holding tank


54


is located at the well head to receive the production fluid as it exits transport system


48


. A hydraulic reservoir


56


receives returned hydraulic fluid HF, and has a sump whence hydraulic fluid is again drawn into hydraulic pump


46


. Respective filters are indicated as


57


and


59


.




Transport system


48


terminates at a downhole production unit


60


, described in greater detail below. Production unit


60


includes a power conversion unit, namely a hydraulic motor section


62


, that is driven by the pressurized hydraulic fluid (such as water) carried in pressure line


65


and return line


66


by transport system


48


from and to hydraulic pump


46


to convert the transported power to a mechanical output, namely torque T in a rotating output shaft. Production unit


60


also includes a pump section


64


that is driven by hydraulic motor


62


, pump section


64


being operable to urge production fluids PF to the surface by way of production fluid lift line


68


through transport system


48


. A blow out preventer indicated as BOP, engages transport system


48


at well head


52


since the well pressure, and temperature, may be well above atmospheric.




Downhole production unit


60


is shown in greater detail in the illustrations of

FIGS. 2



a


to


8




c


. As a note of preliminary explanation, the frame of reference for production unit


60


, when deployed in production, is a well bore that can be vertical, inclined or horizontal. In the explanation that follows, whether the well is horizontal, or vertical, or inclined, references to up, or upward, mean along the bore toward the wellhead. Similarly, references to down, or downward, mean away from the well head. In a consistent manner, when the unit is being assembled into a long string at the well head, the orientation of up and down corresponds to how personnel at the well head would see the unit, or its components as they are being assembled and introduced into the well. For the purposes of operation, the local portion of the well bore occupied at any one time by production unit


60


approximates a round cylinder having a central longitudinal axis CL, defining an axial direction either up or down, with corresponding radial and circumferential directions being defined in any plane perpendicular to the axial direction.




Downhole production unit


60


is shown, as assembled, in

FIGS. 2



a


,


2




b


and


2




c


. Starting at the upward end, the endmost portion of transmission system


48


is shown with casing removed as


70


. Portion


70


has four conduit members in a bundle that terminates at a female coupling


72


. The four conduit members, identified in

FIG. 3



a


as


74


,


75


,


76


and


77


and carry, respectively, in conduit member


74


, downflowing hydraulic motor fluid (the pressure supply line


65


); in conduit member


75


, upflowing hydraulic motor fluid (the return line


66


); and in conduits


76


and


77


, pumped production fluid flowing upward, (i.e., the production fluid lift line


68


to the well head).




Female coupling


72


connects with the male end coupling of motor section


62


. Motor section


62


has a first, or upward transition coupling in the nature of a motor section inlet plate


80


; a first motor unit namely upper motor assembly


82


; a second motor unit namely lower motor assembly


84


; a second, or lower transition coupling in the nature of a motor section outlet plate


86


; and an external casing


88


. Pump section


64


is connected to the lower end of motor section


62


. Pump section


64


has a first, or upper, pump unit namely upper pump assembly


90


, and a second, or lower, pump unit namely lower pump assembly


92


. The direction of the various fluid flows through these units is described more fully below.




The basic unit of construction of each of first and second motor units


84


and


86


is a positive displacement gear assembly


100


, shown in detail in

FIGS. 5



a


to


8




a


. Gear assembly


100


is shown in exploded view in

FIG. 8



a


. First and second pump assemblies


90


and


92


employ positive displacement gear assemblies


101


which are almost identical to assembly


100


in construction but are, in the illustrated configuration, somewhat larger in diameter as shown in

FIG. 20

, and assemblies


101


have thicker shrink fit casings


127


. For the purposes of the present description, a description of the elements of assembly


100


will serve also to describe the components of pump assemblies


101


.




As shown in

FIG. 8



a


, gear assembly


100


includes a pair of matched first and second gears


102


and


104


mounted to respective stub shafts


106


and


108


. Stub shafts


106


and


108


are parallel such that their axes lie in a common plane. When gears


102


and


104


engage, there is continuous line contact between mating lobes in a meshing region located between the axes of rotation of shafts


106


and


108


such that there is no clear passage between the engaging teeth. Stub shafts


106


and


108


are arranged such that gears


102


and


104


are mounted toward one end of their respective stub shafts, such that a short end


110


protrudes to one side of each gear, and a long end


112


protrudes to the other. Each long end


112


has a set of torque transmission members, in the nature of a set of splines


114


to permit torque to be received or transmitted as may be appropriate. Gears


102


and


104


are engaged such that the respective long ends of stub shafts


106


and


108


protrude to opposite sides of the matched gears, that is, one extending to in the upward axial direction, and one extending in the downward axial direction.




First and second pistons are indicated as


116


and


118


. Each has a body having an eyeglass shape of first and second intersecting cylindrical lobes


119


,


120


with a narrowed waist


121


inbetween. Each of the lobes has a circular cylindrical outer portion formed on a radius that closely approximates the tip radius of gears


102


and


104


. Each body has a pair of parallel, first and second round cylindrical bores


122


and


123


, formed in the respective first and second lobes, of a size for accommodating one or another end of stub shafts


106


and


108


. The centers of the bores correspond to an appropriate centreline separation for gears


106


and


108


. In the preferred embodiment of

FIG. 8



a


, pistons


116


and


118


are made of steel with ceramic face plates for engaging the end faces of gears


102


and


104


, and ceramic inserts that act as bushings for the respective ends of stub shafts


106


and


108


.




Alternative embodiments of pistons can be used, as shown in

FIGS. 8



h


and


8




i


, for example. In

FIG. 8



h


, an alternative piston


115


is shown having a generally ovate form with a single relief


117


to accommodate adjacent fluid flow in the axial direction. In

FIG. 8



i


, a further alternative piston


119


has an ovate form lacking a relief, such that the adjacent surround member carries has the flow passage formed entirely therewithin. Although pistons


116


and


118


are made of steel, as noted above, they could also be made from a metal matrix composite material (MMC) having approximately 20-30% Silicon Carbide by volume, with Aluminum, Nickel and 5% (+/−) Graphite, with ceramic surfaces for engaging gears


102


and


104


.




Gears


102


and


104


, shafts


106


and


108


, and pistons


116


and


118


, when assembled, are carried within a surrounding member in the nature of a ceramic surround insert


124


. Insert


124


has a round cylindrical outer wall and is contained within a mating external casing


126


. External casing


126


is a steel shrink tube that is shrunk onto insert


124


such that casing


126


has a tensile pre-load and ceramic insert


124


has a corresponding compressive preload, such as may tend to discourage cracking of insert


124


in operation, and may tend to enhance service life. Insert


124


has an internal, axially extending cylindrical peripheral wall


130


of a lobate cross-section defining gear set cavity therewithin.




It is preferred that insert


124


be formed of a transformation toughened zirconia (TTZ) stabilized with magnesium. However, other materials can be used depending on the intended use. Other ceramics that can be used includ, but are not limited to, alumina or silicon carbide, or alternatively, a plasma coated steel. The ceramic chosen has a similar co-efficient of thermal expansion to gears


106


and


108


, pistons


116


and


118


and surround shrink tube, casing


126


, to be able to function at elevated temperatures. The ceramic material also tend to be relatively resistant to abrasives. The combination of high hardness, and thermal expansion similar to steel is desirable in permitting operation with abrasive production fluids at high temperatures.




Pistons


116


and


118


can be made from silicon carbide, as noted above, or reaction bonded silicon nitride, tungsten carbide or other suitable hard wearing ceramic with or without graphite for lubricity. These materials can be shrunk fit or braised to a metal surround of substrate for high temperature applications, or to a metal matrix material for low temperature applications.




Gears


102


and


104


are made from a tough material suited to high temperature and abrasive use, such as steel alloy EN30B, cast A10Q or Superimpacto (t.m.). The material can be carburized and subjected to a vanadium process for additional hardening.




Wall


130


has first and second diametrically opposed lobes


132


and


134


each having an arcuate surface formed on a constant radius (i.e., forming part of an arc of a circle), the centers of curvature in each case being the axis of rotation of stub shafts


106


and


108


respectively, and the radius corresponding to the tip radius of gears


102


and


104


. As such, lobes


132


and


134


describe arcuate surface walls of a pair of overlapping bores centered on the axes of shafts


106


and


108


respectively. Pistons


116


and


118


fit closely within, and are longitudinally slidable relative to, lobes


132


and


134


. Wall


130


also has a pair of first and second diametrically opposed transverse outwardly extending bulges, indicated as axial fluid flow accommodating intake and exhaust lobes


136


and


138


which define respective axially extending intake and exhaust (or inlet and outlet) passages. As shown in the cross-sectional view of

FIG. 8



b


, when assembled, if the gears turn in the counter-rotating directions indicated by arrow ‘A’ for gear


104


and arrow ‘B’ for gear


102


, fluid carried at the intake passage


135


defined between lobe


136


and the waist


121


of pistons


116


and


118


can occupy the cavity defined between successive teeth of gears


102


and


104


, to be swept past arcuate wall lobes


132


and


134


respectively. However, as the gears mesh, the volume of the cavities between the teeth is reduced, forcing the fluid out from between the teeth and into the exhaust passage


137


defined between lobe


138


and the waist of piston


118


.




Casing


126


has a longitudinal extent that is greater than insert


124


, such that when insert


124


is installed roughly centrally longitudinally within casing


126


, first and second end skirts


140


and


142


of casing overhang each end of insert


124


(i.e., the skirts extend proud of the end faces of insert


124


). Each of skirts


140


and


142


is internally threaded to permit engagement by a retaining sleeve


144


,


146


. Retaining sleeves


144


and


146


are correspondingly externally threaded, having notches to facilitate tightening, and an annular shoulder


148


that bears against whichever type of end plate adapter may be used. In the example of

FIG. 8



a


, a first end flow adapter fitting, or end plate, is indicated as end plate


150


, and a second end flow adapter fitting, or second end plate, is indicated as


152


. The internal features of plates


150


and


152


are described more fully below.




End plate


150


has a first end face


154


, facing away from gears


102


and


104


and a second end face


156


facing toward gears


102


and


104


. Externally, end plate


150


has a round cylindrical body having a smooth medial portion


158


, a first end portion


160


next to end face


154


, and a second end portion in the nature of a flange


162


next to second end face


156


. Portion


160


is of somewhat smaller diameter than portion


158


, and is externally threaded to permit mating engagement with, in general, a union nut of a next adjacent pump or motor section. Flange


162


has a circumferential shoulder


164


lying in a radial plane, such that when retaining ring


144


is tightened within casing


124


, shoulder


148


of retaining ring


144


bears against shoulder


164


, thus drawing end plate


150


toward gears


102


and


104


.




Second end face


156


of plate


150


has a seal groove


166


into which a static seal


168


seats. Seal


168


is of a size and shape to circumscribe the entire lobate periphery of internal peripheral wall


130


of insert


124


. Face


156


also has a pair of indexing recesses


170


,


171


into which dowels pins


172


and


173


seat. Insert


124


has corresponding dowel pin recesses


174


,


175


, such that when assembled, dowel pins


172


,


173


act as an alignment means in the nature of indexing pins, or alignment governors, to ensure alignment of plate


150


with insert


124


in a specific orientation. As described below, end plate


150


. has a number of internal passages, and the correct alignment of those passages with stub. shafts


106


and


108


and with passages


135


and


137


of insert


124


is required for satisfactory operation of unit


100


. The outward face of piston


116


, that is, face


178


which faces toward plate


150


(or


152


) and away from gears


106


and


108


, has a rebate against which an omega seal


180


can bear, with a seal backup


182


located behind seal


180


. When retaining ring


144


is tightened, seals


180


,


182


and


168


are all compressed in position. If the direction of rotation of gears


102


and


104


is reversed, the role of intake and exhaust is also reversed. The ability to reverse the direction of rotation of the gearset, or to operate the gearset as a motor, depends on the seals employed. Omega seals


180


of the preferred embodiment are mono-directional seals which tend to resist leakage past face


178


from passage


137


back to passage


135


. They do not work equally well in the other direction.




End plate


152


has a first end face


184


, facing away from gears


102


and


104


, and a second end face


186


facing toward gears


102


and


104


. Externally, end plate


152


has a round cylindrical body having a smooth medial portion


188


, a first end portion


190


next to end face


184


, and a second end portion in the nature of a flange


192


next to second end face


186


. Portion


190


is of somewhat smaller diameter than portion


188


, and is externally smooth to permit longitudinal travel of a mating female union nut


194


. Portion


190


terminates in an end flange


196


having a shoulder that engages a spiral retaining ring


198


of nut


194


when nut


194


is tightened on an adjacent fitting of the next adjacent motor or pump section. Flange


192


has a circumferential shoulder


200


lying in a radial plane, such that when retaining ring


146


is tightened within casing


126


, shoulder


148


of retaining ring


146


bears against shoulder


200


, thus drawing end plate


152


toward gears


102


and


104


. First end face


184


is also provided with O-ring seals


197


for sealing the connection between its own fluid passages (described below) and the passages of an adjoining fitting when assembled.




Second end face


186


of plate


152


has a seal groove


166


into which another static seal


168


seats. As above, seal


168


is of a size and shape to circumscribe the entire periphery of internal peripheral wall


130


of insert


124


. Face


186


also has another pair of indexing recesses


170


,


171


into which further dowels pins


172


and


173


seat. Insert


124


has corresponding dowel pin recesses


174


,


175


, such that when assembled, dowel pins


172


,


173


act as an alignment means in the nature of indexing pins, or alignment governors, to ensure alignment of plate


152


with insert


124


in a specific orientation. As described below, end plate


152


has a number of internal passages, and the correct alignment of those passages with stub shafts


106


and


108


and with passages


135


and


137


of insert


124


is required for satisfactory operation of unit


100


. The outward face of piston


118


, that is, face


178


which faces toward plate


152


and away from gears


102


and


104


,. has a rebate against which an omega seal


180


can bear, with a seal backup


182


located behind seal


180


. When retaining ring


146


is tightened, seals


180


,


182


and


168


are all compressed in position, in the same manner as noted above.




When unit


100


is fully assembled, and in operation, pistons


116


and


118


are urged against the end faces of gears


102


and


104


by hydrodynamic pressure, such that hydraulic fluid will tend not to seep easily from the high pressure port to the low pressure port. Inasmuch as there are neither ball nor journal bearings, and inasmuch as the body of the assembly is predominantly hard, abrasion resistant ceramic, with tough, hardened steel fittings, the unit is able to operate at relatively high temperatures, that is, temperatures in excess of 180 F. The unit may tend also to be operable at temperatures up to 350 F. or higher.




As noted above, each of motor units


82


and


84


and each of pump units


90


and


92


employs a gear assembly unit


100


. The difference between motor units


82


and


84


is in the respective transition plates used between the units. These plates act as fluid manifolds by which the various fluids are directed to the correct destinations.




Starting at the top, or upper, end of the string, transport system


48


ends at a first manifold, namely motor section inlet plate


80


. Motor section


62


includes a pair of modular gear assemblies


100


, ganged together, and motor section outlet plate


86


. A round cylindrical casing


214


is welded to inlet plate


80


and outlet plate


86


, leaving a generally annular passageway


216


defined between an outer peripheral wall, namely the inner face of casing


214


, and the exterior surface of the ganged gear assemblies, which are designated as upper motor assembly


82


and a lower motor assembly


84


.




As shown in

FIGS. 2



c


,


2




d


,


3




a


,


3




b


,


3




c


,


3




d


, and


3




i


, motor section inlet plate


80


has a cylindrical body having a medial flange


222


that extends radially outward to present a circumferential face about which one end of casing


214


is welded. To the upward side of flange


222


, there is an externally threaded end portion


224


that mates with a female coupling


72


of transport system


48


. To the other, downward side of flange


222


there is an intermediate portion


228


that has a smooth cylindrical surface, and, downwardmost, there is an externally threaded end portion


230


that mates with union nut


194


of upper motor assembly


82


. Taken on the cross-sections of

FIG. 3



c


,


3




d


and


3




i


, it can be seen that inlet plate


80


has first and second parallel, axially extending through bores


232


and


234


defining hydraulic fluid supply and return passages


233


and


235


which communicate with transport system supply tubes


75


and


74


. Inlet plate


80


also has a pair of parallel, axially extending blind bores


236


and


238


let in from upward face


240


, and which terminate at dead ends


241


and


242


. Porting for bores


236


and


238


is provided by perpendicular blind cross bores


244


and


246


extend radially inward through the wall of intermediate portion


228


. When assembled, bores


236


and


238


, and cross-bores


244


and


246


define passageways


237


and


239


which provide a fluid communication pathway between annular passageway


216


and, ultimately, tubes


76


and


77


of transport system


48


.




Upper motor assembly


82


has a union nut


194


as described above, which engages threaded end portion


230


of motor section inlet plate


80


. As shown in

FIGS. 2



c


and


4




b


, plate


150


has a pair of parallel longitudinally extending through bores


250


and


251


defining hydraulic fluid intake and exhaust passages


252


and


253


that communicate with the respective intake and exhaust passages


135


and


137


of the positive displacement gear assembly


100


containing gears


102


and


104


of unit


82


. Taken on the perpendicular longitudinal cross-section of

FIG. 4



c


, plate


150


has a pair of parallel countersunk bores


254


and


256


. Bores


254


and


256


dead end at the blocked interface with motor section inlet plate


80


in line with dead ends


241


and


242


. Bore


256


is occupied by splined end


114


of stub shaft


106


of gear


102


, such that shaft


106


is an idler. Bore


254


is unoccupied. As shown in

FIG. 4



c


, an internally splined coupler is indicated as


258


. Coupler


258


is employed when assembly


82


is an intermediate motor assembly (i.e., neither the top nor the bottom unit in a string of several motor assemblies). Coupler


258


is removed when used in a top unit such as assembly


82


since there is no shaft above it in the string with which to connect, and coupler


258


would otherwise foul the blind end face of plate


80


.




As shown in

FIG. 4



b


, plate


151


of upper motor assembly


82


has a pair of parallel longitudinally extending through bores


260


and


261


defining hydraulic fluid intake and exhaust passages


262


and


263


that communicate with the respective intake and exhaust passages


135


and


137


of the positive displacement gear section containing gears


102


and


104


of unit


218


. Taken on the perpendicular longitudinal cross-section of

FIG. 4



c


, plate


151


has a pair of parallel countersunk bores


264


and


266


. Bores


264


and


266


are open clear through to corresponding countersunk bores of the next adjacent motor unit, namely lower motor unit


84


. Bore


264


is occupied by splined end


108


of stub shaft


104


of gear


104


. Bore


266


is unoccupied.




Upper plate


270


of lower motor assembly


84


is identical to plate


150


of upper motor unit


82


. Union nut


194


of plate


270


of lower motor assembly


84


engages the external thread


268


of plate


151


of upper motor assembly


82


. In this case an internally splined transmission coupling shaft


272


engages the downwardly extending splines of stub shaft


108


of upper motor assembly


82


, and the upwardly extending splines of stub shaft


106


of lower motor assembly


84


such that when the upper shaft is driven, torque is transmitted by coupling shaft


272


to the lower shaft. The broadened countersunk portions of bores


254


and


256


accommodate coupling shaft


272


.




Plate


271


of lower motor assembly


84


is shown in

FIGS. 2



c


,


5




b


and


5




c


. It is identical to plate


151


of upper motor assembly


82


except insofar as it does not have hydraulic fluid transfer passages corresponding to passages


262


and


263


, but rather is dead ended opposite the ends of passages


135


and


137


of unit


100


of assembly


84


, thus closing the end of the hydraulic pump fluid circuit. As a result, the only ways for hydraulic fluid to pass from the pressure, or supply side is through the positive displacement gear sets of either upper motor assembly


82


or lower motor assembly


84


. Given the positive engagement of coupling shaft


272


, these gearsets are locked together to turn at the same rate, and any output torque is available on driven stub shaft


108


of lower motor assembly


84


.




Motor section outlet plate


86


has a medial, radially outwardly extending flange


274


, an upwardly extending first body end portion


276


, and a second, downwardly extending second body end portion


278


. End portion


276


has an external flange


280


and a union nut


194


by which it is mounted to the external threads


282


of lower plate


271


of lower motor assembly


84


. Flange


274


has a circumferential step into which the bottom margin of casing


214


seats, and is welded. Second body end portion


278


is externally threaded to accept a union nut


283


attached to pump section


64


. As shown in

FIGS. 2



c


and


3




g


, motor outlet plate


212


has a longitudinal bore


281


that extends inwardly (i.e., upwardly), from downward face


284


past the longitudinal position of the upward facing shoulder


286


of flange


280


. A lateral notch, or aperture


288


is formed in second end portion


278


to permit fluid communication between passage


216


and the passage


290


defined by bore


281


and aperture


288


. Motor section outlet plate


86


has a second longitudinal bore


292


aligned with shaft


108


of lower motor assembly


84


, and a tail shaft, or transfer shaft, in the nature of driven shaft


294


extends from a splined coupling


272


mounted to shaft


108


of lower motor assembly


84


to connect with upper pump assembly


90


.




Upper pump assembly


90


is shown in

FIGS. 2



c


,


3




h


,


6




a


,


6




b


and


6




c


. Upper pump assembly


90


has a first, or upper plate


300


and a lower plate


301


mounted to upper and lower sides of a gear assembly


101


. As noted above, gear assembly


101


is identical in construction to gear assembly


100


, but is somewhat larger in diameter as shown in

FIG. 2



c


, and has a thicker shrink fit casing


127


. Upper plate


300


has a cylindrical body having a first, upward face


302


, a second, downward face


304


, a first, upward portion


306


next to face


302


having a flange and a union nut


194


as described above, and a smooth cylindrical exterior surface


308


. In the same manner as plate


150


, upper plate


300


also has a second, or lower outwardly stepped cylindrical portion


310


having a smooth surface and an end flange


312


to be captured by a retaining ring, or sleeve


144


as described above, and fixed in position relative to external pump casing


127


. Plate


300


has a first pair of parallel longitudinally extending, round cylindrical, through-bores


312


and


314


. Bore


312


defines within its walls is an outflow, or exhaust passage


316


. Bore


314


defines within it an inlet passage


318


, or an inlet manifold leading to gear assembly


100


of upper pump assembly


90


. An cross-bore


320


intersects bore


314


and provides inlet ports by which production fluid can enter passage


314


. Whereas exhaust passage


316


is open to passage


290


of motor outlet section plate


86


, inlet passage


318


is dead ended at plate


86


.




In the perpendicular cross section, shown in

FIG. 6



c


, plate


300


has a pair of first and second parallel longitudinal countersunk bores


320


and


322


, bore


320


being occupied by stub shaft


106


of upper pump assembly


90


, and bore


322


being unoccupied. An inwardly splined coupling mates with driven shaft


294


of plate


86


described above such that driving rotation of shaft


294


will tend to turn the gearset of upper pump assembly


90


, thus driving production fluid from passage


318


to passage


316


.




Lower plate


301


has a cylindrical body having a first, upward face


332


, a second, downward face


334


, a first, upward portion


336


next to face


332


. In the same manner as member


151


, lower plate


301


also has a first, or upper outwardly stepped cylindrical portion


338


having a smooth surface and an end flange


340


to be captured by a retaining sleeve


146


as described above, and fixed in position relative to external pump casing


127


. Lower plate


301


also has a second, lower portion having a threaded cylindrical exterior surface


342


. Plate


301


has a first pair of parallel longitudinally extending round cylindrical, through-bores


344


and


346


. Bore


344


defines within its walls an outflow, or exhaust passage


348


that is in fluid communication with passage


316


and with the exhaust side of the positive displacement gearset of lower pump assembly


92


. Bore


346


defines within it an inlet passage


350


, or an inlet manifold leading to gear assembly


100


of lower pump assembly


92


. Inlet passage


350


is open to inlet passage


318


, making a common inlet manifold passage.




In the perpendicular cross section, shown in

FIG. 6C

, plate


301


has a pair of first and second parallel longitudinal countersunk bores


360


and


362


, bore


360


being occupied by stub shaft


108


of upper pump assembly


90


, and bore


362


being unoccupied.




Lower pump assembly


92


also has an upper plate


370


and a lower plate


371


. Upper plate


370


is identical to upper plate


300


. Lower plate


371


is similar to lower plate


301


, but while having drive shaft bores,


372


and


373


, is dead ended opposite the intake and exhaust passages


135


and


137


of the positive displacement gearset of lower pump assembly


92


.




A perforated external casing


375


is carried outside upper and lower pump assemblies


90


and


92


, and has ports, or apertures


376


by which production fluid can enter and find its way to intake passages


318


.




When all of the above units are assembled in their aligned positions, it can be seen that when hydraulic fluid is supplied under pressure to motor section


62


, the various gearshafts are forced to turn, thus driving the upper and lower pump sections to urge production fluid from the inlet side, represented by passages


318


, to the outlet or exhaust side, represented by passages


316


. The production fluid is then forced upwardly through the series of inter-connected production fluid passages, namely item numbers


290


,


216


,


237


and


239


to passages


74


and


75


of transport system


48


, and thence to the well head.




Although a preferred embodiment of production unit has now been described, various alternative embodiments can be used. For example, with appropriate substitution of top and bottom plates and with appropriate lengths of casing tubes, a motor-and-pump production unit can be assembled with only a single motor unit, or a single pump unit. Since the upper motor and pump units respectively have lower end fittings that correspond to their own top end fittings, it is possible to string together a large number of such motor assemblies, or such pump assemblies, in intermediate positions as may be required at a given site depending on the desired flowrate and the physical properties of the production fluid, such as viscosity. The number of motor assemblies need not equal the number of pump assemblies, and may be greater or lesser as may be appropriate given the circumstances of the particular well from which production fluid is to be extracted.




Other types of positive displacement gear pumps can also be employed.

FIGS. 8



d


and


8




e


show views of a positive displacement gear assembly


400


having a first, or internal gear


402


, an external ring gear


404


mounted eccentrically relative to internal gear


402


, and a spacer in the nature of a floating crescent


406


mounted in the gap between gears


402


and


404


. External gear


404


is mounted concentrically about the longitudinal axis


401


of gear assembly


400


, generally, the axis of rotation of gear


402


being eccentric relative to axis


401


. The internal concave arcuate face


408


of crescent


406


is formed on a circular arc having a radius of curvature corresponding to the outer tip radius of internal gear


402


. The external, convex arcuate face


410


of crescent


406


is formed on a circular arc having a radius of curvature corresponding to the tip radius of the inwardly extending teeth of ring gear


404


. As gears


402


and


404


turn, the interstitial spaces between the teeth define fluid conveying cavities, and when the teeth mesh the cavity volumes are diminished so that the fluid is forced out. Consequently, as the gears turn, fluid is transferred between intake and exhaust port regions


412


and


414


. Alternatively, when a pressure differential is established between port regions


412


and


414


, gear assembly


400


acts as a motor providing output torque to shaft


416


upon which inner gear


402


is mounted. In either case, the direction of rotation will determine which is the intake port, and which is the exhaust. Shaft


416


is splined at both ends


418


and


420


, permitting power transfer transmission to, and from, adjacent pump or motor units.




The gear set formed by gears


402


and


404


, crescent


406


and shaft


416


is mounted within a round cylindrical annulus, or housing, namely ceramic insert


422


, which is itself contained with a shrink-fit external steel tube casing


424


. As above, casing


424


has a tensile pre-load, and imposes a compressive radial pre-load on insert


422


.




First and second end plates are indicated as


426


and


428


. Each has a counter sunk eccentric bore


430


for close fitting accommodation of a ceramic bushing


432


which seats about shaft


416


and has an end face that abuts one face of inner gear


402


. Bore


430


is sufficiently large at its outer end to permit engagement of an internally splined coupling by which torque can be transferred to an adjacent shaft, in a manner analogous to that described above. Each of end plates


426


and


428


has a first end face


427


that locates adjacent a face of ring gear


404


, and has an outer peripheral seal groove and a static seal


429


seated therein to bear against a shoulder of insert


422


. Locating means, in the nature of indexing sockets and mating dowel pins


433


determine the orientation of end plates


426


and


428


relative to the respective axes of rotation of gears


402


and


404


, and to each other.




End plate


426


is nominally the upward end plate of the assembly, and has a flange


434


to be engaged by a retaining ring


436


. Retaining ring


436


is externally threaded and engages the internally threaded overhanging upward end skirt


437


of casing


424


in the manner of retainer


144


and skirt


140


described above. A union nut


438


and retaining ring


439


engage an end face flange


440


in the manner of union nut


194


described above. End plate


428


is the same as end plate


426


externally, with the exception that the distal portion


441


is externally threaded to mate with a union nut of an adjacent pump or motor assembly, or other fitting.




Internally, end plates


426


and


428


each have a pair of parallel, round cylindrical longitudinally extending bores


442


and


444


let inward from the end face most distant from gears


402


and


404


, and extending toward gears


402


and


404


, defining respective internal passageways. Each has an enlarged port


446


,


448


in the nature of an arcuate, circumferentially extending rebate at the respective end face


427


of plate


426


or


428


that is located adjacent to gears


402


and


404


. These rebates act as intake and exhaust galleries for gears


402


and


404


, the function depending on the direction of rotation of the gears.




Given the symmetrical nature of assembly


400


, it can be seen that it can be operated either as a motor or as a pump, and, with appropriate interconnection transition plates analogous to plates


80


, and


86


, several units can be ganged together as parallel (or, serial) pump stages or motor stages, with the shafting and splined couplings permitting transmission of mechanical torque between the various stages.




A further alternative gear assembly is shown in

FIGS. 8



f


and


8




g


as


450


. All of the components of assembly


450


are the same as those of assembly


400


of

FIGS. 4



c


and


4




d


described above, except that in place of the positive displacement gear assembly of gear


402


, gear


404


and crescent


406


, assembly


450


employs a positive displacement gear assembly in the nature of a gerotor assembly


452


. Gerotor assembly


452


has an inner gerotor element


454


and a mating outer gerotor element


456


. Outer gerotor element


456


is concentric with the longitudinal centerline


458


of assembly


450


generally, and inner gerotor element


454


is mounted on an eccentric parallel axis. In the manner of gerotors generally, as the gerotor elements turn, variable geometry cavities defined between respective adjacent lobes of the inner and outer elements expand and contract, drawing in fluid at an intake side


460


, and expelling it at an exhaust region


464


(as before, intake and exhaust depend on the direction of rotation of the elements). As above, appropriate porting permits assembly


450


to be used as a motor or a pump, and several units can be linked together to form a multi-stage pump or multistage motor. Shafting and splined couplings can be used to transfer mechanical torque from stage to stage.




Operation of the foregoing preferred and alternative embodiments of production units and their associated motor or pump units requires a supply of hydraulic fluid, and transport of the production fluid to the surface. To that end, transport system


48


employs a multi-passage conduit that is now described in greater detail. By way of a general overview, and referring to

FIGS. 9



a


,


9




b


, and


9




c


, a pipe string “joint” in the nature of a modular pipe assembly is shown as


520


. It has a casing


522


and an interconnection in the nature of a male fitting


524


at one end, and a female fitting in the nature of a female coupling


526


at the other, such that a string of modular pipe assemblies


520


can be joined together. A pipe bundle


528


is contained within casing


522


, and a seal


530


of matching profile to bundle


528


is clamped between adjacent assemblies


520


when a string is put together. Notably, the pipes of bundle


528


lie side by side, rather than being nested concentrically one within the other. For the purposes of illustration, the length of the assembly or assemblies shown is shorter in the illustrations than in actual fact. In use a typical assembly length would be 10 or 12 m (32.8 to 39.5 ft), and the pipe bundle diameter would be about 15 cm (6 in.). Other lengths and diameters can be used. The longitudinal, or axial direction is indicated in the figures by center line axis CL of casing


522


.




During deployment or installation, pipe assembly


520


is mounted to another pipe assembly, then introduced into a well bore a few feet, another similar section of pipe is added, the string is advanced, another string is added and so on. Although assembly


520


can be used in a horizontal well bore application, the assembly at the well head is generally in the vertical orientation. Thus

FIGS. 9



a


,


9




b


, and


9




c


each have arrows indicating “Up” and “Down” such as well rig workers would see at the well head.




Examining the Figures in greater detail, casing


522


is round and cylindrical and serves as an external bundle retainer. It is preferred that casing


522


be shrink fit about bundle


528


. In the preferred embodiment of

FIG. 9



d


, casing


522


is made from mild steel pipe. The type of material used for the casing may tend to depend on the application. For example, a stainless steel or other alloy may be preferred for use in more aggressive environments, such as high sulfur wells. Casing


522


has a pair of first and second ends,


534


and


536


. Male fitting


524


is mounted at first end


534


. Female coupling


526


is mounted about casing


522


, and is longitudinally slidable and rotatable with respect to second end


536


. A retaining ring


542


is mounted flush with second end


536


, and a start flange,


544


, is mounted inboard of ring


542


. Start flange


544


is a cylindrical collar having one turn of a single external thread


545


. As shown in

FIG. 9



a


, first and second indexing dogs


546


and


548


, protrude longitudinally, or axially, from first and second ends


534


and


536


respectively. At corresponding positions indicated by arrows


550


and


552


, assembly


520


has sockets into which dogs of other mating pipe assemblies can locate. During assembly of a string of pipes at the well head, dogs


546


and


548


engage matching sockets in the next adjacent assemblies, thus ensuring their relative alignment as the string is assembled.




As shown in

FIGS. 9



b


and


9




c


, each of pipe assemblies


520


has four parallel conduit members, or pipe sections, in the nature tubes,


554


,


556


,


558


and


560


arranged in a bundle within casing


522


. In the

FIGS. 9



b


and


9




c


all of tubes


554


,


556


,


558


and


560


have the same cross-section, being that shown in

FIGS. 10



a


and


15




a


. That section has the shape of a right angle sector of a circle, that is, a pie-shaped piece approximating a quarter of a pie, with smoothly radiused corners. In the preferred embodiment of

FIGS. 10



a


and


15




a


, tube


560


has an outer arcuate portion


562


, having an outside radius of curvature of 2.75 inches to suit a pipe having an inside, shrink fit diameter of 5.5 inches. Tube


560


also has a first side


564


, and a second side


566


at right angles to first side


564


. Arcuate portion


562


and sides


564


and


566


are joined at their respective common vertices to define a closed wall section,


570


. Section


570


has an external wall surface


572


, and an internal wall surface


574


, each having respective first and second straight portions and an arcuate portion, with radiused corners.




Section


570


is made by roll forming a round pipe of known pressure rating into irregular pie shape shown. This can be done in progressive roll forming stages. Section


570


is a seamless pipe. Other types of pipe can also be used, such as a seamed ERW pipe, or an extruded pipe capable of holding the pressures imposed during operation.




Internal wall surface


574


defines a passageway, indicated generally as


580


, along which a fluid can be conveyed in the axial, or longitudinal direction, whether upward or downward. When casing


522


is shrunk fit in place, tubes


554


,


556


,


558


and


560


have a combined outer surface approximating a circle and are held in place against each other's respective first and second external side portions by friction.




In the cross-section of

FIG. 9



d


, a pair of assemblies


520


are shown as connected in an engaged or coupled position. Female coupling


526


has a circular cylindrical body


582


having an internal bore


584


defined therewithin. At one end body,


582


has an end wall


583


having an opening


585


defined centrally therein, opening


585


being sized to fit closely about casing


522


. At the other end body


582


has a cylindrical land


586


that has an internal thread


588


for mating engagement with the external male thread


590


of male fitting


524


of an adjacent assembly


520


.




Body


582


also has an internal relief


592


defined therein. Relief


592


is bounded by a first shoulder


594


, on its nominally upward end. As assembled, first shoulder


594


bears against the upward facing annular end face


598


of start flange


544


, and, as female internal thread


588


engages male external thread


590


, the upper and lower assemblies


520


are drawn together, compressing seal


530


in the process.




When the upper and lower assemblies


520


are not joined together, female coupling


526


is backed off such that the first turn of internal thread


588


downstream of relief


592


engages the single external thread


545


of start flange


544


. This results in female coupling


526


being held up at a height to permit a well worker to make sure that seal


530


is in place on the downward assembly


520


, and indexed correctly relative to dogs


546


and


548


, before the two units are joined together.




Seal


530


is shown in plan view in

FIG. 11



a


. It has a circular external circumference


602


, with first and second dog locating notches


604


and


606


shown diametrally opposed from each other, notches


604


and


606


acting as alignment governors, or indexing means. When located on the end of a pipe assembly


520


, notch


604


, for example, locates on dog


546


, and when two such pipe assemblies are joined, the other dog, namely dog


548


of the second pipe assembly, will locate in the opposite notch, namely notch


606


. Although the preferred embodiment is shown in

FIG. 11



a


, the notches need not be on 180 degree centers, but could be on an asymmetric, or offset 90 degrees, such as may be suitable for ensuring that the dogs line up as indexing devices to ensure that adjoining sections of pipe, when assembled have the correct passages in alignment. Seal


530


has four quarter pie shaped openings


610


,


612


,


614


, and


616


defined on 90 degree centers, such as correspond to the general shape of the cross-section of passageway


580


of each of tubes


554


,


556


,


558


and


560


. With these openings so defined, seal


530


is left with a four-armed spider


615


in the form of a cross. A fifth, rather smaller, generally square aperture


618


, is formed centrally in spider


615


, such as may be suitable for permitting the passage of electrical wires for a sensing or monitoring device. As can be seen in the sectional view of

FIGS. 11



b


and


11




c


, seal


530


has grooves


620


and


622


formed on opposite sides (that is, front and back, or upper and lower as installed), each of grooves


620


and


622


having the shape, in plan view, to correspond to the shape of a protruding lip of the end of each of tubes


554


,


556


,


558


and


560


. The mating shapes locate positively, again ensuring alignment, and, when squeezed under the closing force or female coupling


526


, a seal is formed, tending to maintain the integrity, that is, the segregation, of the various passageways from pipe to pipe as the string is put together.




The approximate centroids of the passages of tubes


554


,


556


,


558


, and


560


are indicated as


600


. It will be noted that unlike nested pipes, whether concentric or eccentric, none of the passages defined within any or the respective pipes is occluded by any other pipe, and none of the centroids of any of the pipes fall within the profiles of any of the other pipes. Put another way, the hydraulic diameter of each of the pipes is significantly greater than the hydraulic diameter that would result if four round cylindrical tubes were nested concentrically, one inside the other, with equivalent wall thicknesses. The useful area within casing


522


may also tend to be greater since the sum of the peripheries of the tubes, multiplied by their thickness may tend to yield a lesser area than the wall cross-sectional area of four concentric pipes.




The embodiment of

FIG. 15



a


is currently preferred. Such an embodiment has a number of advantages. First, all of the pipe segments are of the same cross-section, which simplifies manufacture, assembly and replacement. Second, in an application where the multi-passage conduit assembly so obtained is used to drive a down-hole hydraulic pump, one passage can be used to carry hydraulic fluid under pressure, another passage can be used to carry the hydraulic fluid return flow, a third passage can carry the production fluid that is to be pumped out of the well, and the fourth passage or the central gap can be used for electrical cabling, such as may be required for monitoring equipment.





FIGS. 12



a


to


12




c


show an alternative embodiment to pipe assembly


520


, namely pipe assembly


521


. As above, the general arrangement of quarter-pie-shaped tubes, the use of retaining. collars, and the use of male and female fitting to draw adjacent pipe joints together is generally as described above. Assembly


521


differs from assembly


520


in that one pair of the pie-shaped pipes


525


is longitudinally stepped relative to another pair


527


, permitting the elimination of dogs


546


and


548


. To accommodate this step, each of pairs


525


and


527


is provided, at its joining interface with a corresponding adjacent pair of an adjacent pipe joint, with a pair of seals


529


,


531


, and a seal retainer


533


. In the example shown in

FIGS. 12



a


,


12




b


,


13




a


,


13




b


and


13




c


, seal retainer


533


is a frame having a semicircular shape, in plan view, with a pair of quarter-pie shaped openings


535


,


537


defined therein. The peripheral wall of each of openings


535


and


537


has an inwardly protruding medial rib, or ridge,


539


having upward and downward facing shoulders


541


.




Two alternative examples of seal are shown for engaging, that is, seating within, retainer


533


. In

FIGS. 14



a


,


14




b


and


14




c


, a quarter-pie shaped seal


543


has an internal peripheral arcuate face


547


that, when installed, faces, and defines a portion of the flow passageway for, the fluid to be transported. On the opposite, or back face, seal


543


has a pair of outwardly protruding external ribs


549


, defining a square shouldered rebate


555


between them sized to engage ridge


539


of retainer


533


. To either longitudinal side of ribs


549


, seal


543


has a pair of pipe-wall engaging lands,


551


. The skirts formed by the distal edges


553


of lands


551


are flared outward a small amount (for example, about 4 degrees). In use, engagement with the mouth of a similarly shaped tube will necessitate inward deflection of the flared ends, forming a snug interference fit. Alternatively, as shown in

FIGS. 14



d


,


14




e


and


14




f


, a quarter-pie shaped seal


553


is generally similar to seal


543


, having a relief


565


for engaging ridge


539


, but rather than having square shoulders, have tapered shoulders


557


leading to lands


559


. In use seal


543


, or


553


, is mated with each aperture in retainer


533


, and seated on the end of one of the tube pairs. The flat faces


561


of retainer


533


bear against the end faces of the respective tube pairs.




It is not necessary that equal pairs of tubes be stepped to give an indexing feature to the assembly. For example, rather than a pair, a single pipe could be advanced to give a unique assembly orientation. A number of possible alternative configurations are possible. An advantage of the example shown in

FIGS. 14



a


,


14




b


and


14




c


is that it permits use of a single type of symmetrical end seal, in a single type of retainer. That is, fewer parts need to be stocked, and the parts that are stocked can be inserted with either face up or down to achieve the same fit.




Alternative Embodiments of Conduit Members




In the alternative side-by-side embodiments of

FIGS. 15



a


to


23




e


, none of the cross-sectional areas of any of the individual tube sections overlaps the area of any other, as would be otherwise be the case in a nested pipe arrangement. Further, it is a matter of mathematical calculation that the centroid of the cross-sectional area of any of the tube sections of the preferred embodiment of

FIG. 15



a


, or the alternative embodiments of

FIGS. 15



b


to


23




e


, lies outside the cross-sectional area of any of the other tubes that are in side-by-side relationship. The hydraulic diameter, D


h


of a passageway is given by the formula:








Dh=


4


A/P








Where:




A=Cross sectional area of the passage; and




P=Perimeter of the passage.




In each side-by-side example, whether in

FIG. 15



a


or any of

FIGS. 15



b


to


23




e


, the hydraulic diameter of at least two of the tubes are less than the quotient obtained by dividing the perimeter of the particular tube by π. Similarly, in each of the side-by-side examples provided in

FIG. 15



a


and

FIGS. 15



b


to


23




e


, the cross-sectional area of at least two of the tubes is less than the square of the perimeter divided by 4π.




In the alternative embodiment of

FIG. 15



b


, a pipe assembly


650


has a pair of semi-cylindrical tubes


652


and


654


nested in a side-by-side manner within an outer casing


656


. Each of semi-cylindrical tubes


652


and


654


has a tube wall that has a flat portion


658


, and an arcuate portion


660


, joined at smoothly radiused corners to form a semi-circular D-shape as shown. As above, tubes


652


and


654


are seamless steel tubes of a known pressure rating that have been roll formed through progressive dies to achieve the smoothly radiused D-shape shown.




The tube walls of tubes


652


and


654


each have an internal surface


662


or


664


defining an internal passageway


666


,


668


along which fluids can be conducted. Each passageway has a cross-sectional area, neither cross-sectional area overlapping the other, and neither having a centroid lying within the cross-sectional area of the other. The external surfaces of flat portions


658


of tubes


652


and


654


engage along a planar interface lying on a diametral plane of casing


656


. As above, casing


656


is shrink fit about tubes


652


and


654


, creating a tensile pre-load in casing


656


, and a compressive pre-load in arcuate portions


660


of tubes


652


and


654


. A seal of suitable shape is used in place of seal


530


described above at the connections between successive tube assemblies.




In this kind of two tube embodiment, water (or another suitable working fluid) can be used as the working fluid to drive the downhole pump, such that one passage such as passage


668


carries water under pressure down to the pump, and the other passage


666


carries both the production fluid and the return flow of the water used to drive the pump. Such a system may tend to require a relatively large supply of clean working fluid. The working fluid and the production fluid will tend to need to be separated at the surface, so a significant settling or other separation system may tend to be required.




In a two tube arrangement, it is not necessary that the two tubes have cross-sections of equal area. For example, as shown in pipe assembly


670


of

FIG. 15



d


, depending on the pressures in the tubes, it may be desired that the pressure supply flow (in the downward passage) be rather smaller than the return flow (in the upward passage), which carries both the working fluid and the production fluid. Since line losses vary with the square of mean flow velocity, it may be desired for the smaller volumetric flow to be carried in a smaller tube. Hence down flow tube


672


is smaller in cross-sectional area than return flow tube


674


. That is, the corresponding flat portions


676


and


678


of tubes


672


and


674


do not have a diametral surface, but rather run along, and have an abutting interface at, a chord


675


offset from the diametral centerline


679


.




Although the offset in

FIG. 15



d


is achieved along an offset chord, this need not be the case. As shown in

FIG. 15



e


, a pipe assembly


680


has an outer casing


682


shrink fit about two internal tubes


684


and


686


. The smaller of these, tube


686


, has the shape of a pie shaped piece, with radiused corners, subtending a minor arc of the circular inner face of casing


682


. The large piece


684


, has the shape of the remainder of the pie, with smoothly radiused corners. The side portions of tubes


684


and


686


meet along planar interfaces that extend radially relative to the axial centerline of casing


682


.




In the alternative embodiment of

FIG. 16



a


, a pipe assembly


690


has a set of three tubes


691


,


692


and


693


of equal passage size. Each of tubes


691


,


692


and


693


occupies one third of the area within shrink fit casing


694


, and has side wall portions


696


and


697


that extend radially outward from the center of casing


694


and an arcuate circumferential portion


695


that is placed in mating engagement with casing


694


. The inner face


698


of each of tubes


691


,


692


or


693


defines an internal passageway,


699


, having a cross sectional area that is roughly 120 degrees of arc, or ⅓ of the area: of casing


694


, less the thickness of the walls forming the periphery of passageway


699


.




A three pipe embodiment of pipe assembly is shown in

FIG. 15



c


as


700


. In a three pipe embodiment, one pipe can be used, for example, to carry hydraulic fluid under pressure, such as to drive a downhole hydraulic pump; a second pipe can provide the return line; and the third pipe provides the conduit by which production fluid is conveyed to the surface. This may tend to avoid mixing of the return and production fluid flows in the return of a two pipe system, and may also tend to avoid the need for a large settling or separation system at the discharge end of the production flow pipe. Alternatively, the working fluid can be fed down one pipe, production fluid and the return of the working fluid can be provided by a second of the three pipes, and the third pipe can carry electronic cables.




In pipe assembly


700


a first roll-formed tube of known pressure rating is shown as


701


. It is roughly semi-circular in shape, with radiused corners. It has a flat portion


702


and an arcuate portion


703


for mating engagement within the round cylindrical inner surface of a shrink fit casing


704


. Second and third tubes


706


and


708


have the shape of quarter-pie pieces, each with radiused corners. Each has first and second flat


710


,


711


portions meeting at a right angled radiused corner, the flat portions extending more or less radially outward to meet an arcuate portion


712


suited for engaging an arc of the circumferential inner face of casing


704


. The various flat portions of tubes


701


,


706


and


708


meet on radial planes of casing


704


. Each of tubes


701


,


706


and


708


has an internal face defining the periphery of a passageway,


714


,


715


,


716


respectively, each passageway having a cross-sectional area defined within that periphery.




The various pipes need not necessarily be of the same size, particularly if the flow of working fluid for driving the pump is under high pressure, but relatively low flow. It may be preferable for the cross-section of the passage for conveying the production fluid, namely


714


to be larger than the others, as shown in the embodiment of

FIG. 15



c


, particularly since line losses tend to vary in turbulent flow as the square of the mean velocity of the fluid, and the mean velocity of the fluid is determined by dividing the volumetric flow by the passage area. Given that the pressure and return lines are carrying very nearly the same volumetric flow rate of a largely incompressible fluid (differing only to the extent of the pressure difference multiplied by the bulk modulus of compression of the fluid at the given operating temperature), pressure and return passages


715


and


716


can most conveniently be made the same size, as shown in this embodiment.




As with the example of

FIG. 15



c


, the pie-shaped tubes need not be of equal size. Thus, in

FIG. 16



b


, a pipe assembly


720


has an external casing


722


and three internal tubes


724


,


725


and


726


, which are in other ways similar to tubes


691


,


692


and


693


, except that tube


724


subtends a pie shape of about ⅙ of casing


722


, tube


725


subtends a pie shape of about ⅓ of casing


722


, and tube


726


subtends about ½ of casing


722


. In this case, if for example, a gas under pressure such as air or steam, or an inert gas, is used as the driving fluid to operate a pneumatic pump, the return line, at lower pressure, may need to have a larger cross-sectional area to keep gas velocity somewhat lower.





FIG. 17



a


shows a pipe assembly


730


having a set of six equal side-by-side pie-shaped tubes


732


contained within an external cylindrical casing


734


. Each of tubes


732


is a roll-formed tube similar to tube


726


, above. As the number of tubes in the bundle increases, and given the need for a reasonable radius on the roll-formed tubes, the size of the gap


733


at the center of the bundle increases, and becomes a significant passageway for cables or other wiring as may be desired. A central tube can also be obtained as shown in

FIG. 17



b


in which a tube assembly


735


has a cluster of smoothly radiused, side-by-side hexagonal tubes


736


retained within an external casing


738


. In such an assembly each of the available tubes can be used for a different function, or, alternatively, the operator can select two or more hexagonal tubes for one purpose, another pair for another purpose, and the remaining two for yet some other purpose or purposes. The selection of tubes is associated with the provision of an appropriate downhole manifold and well-head manifold, and suitable seals between successive the pipe assembly sections to maintain segregation between the various passageways.





FIGS. 18



a


and


18




b


show alternative configurations to that of

FIG. 15



c


. In

FIG. 18



a


a pipe assembly


740


has an external casing


742


and three internal tubes


744


,


745


and


746


, each having an internal wall defining the periphery of an internal passage. Tubes


745


and


746


are mirror images of each other, and tube


744


is rather larger such that the flat interface of tube


744


with tubes


745


and


746


lies along a chord


748


offset from the diametral plane


747


of casing


742


. Tube


744


occupies more than half of the inner cross-sectional area of casing


742


.

FIG. 18



b


shows a pipe assembly


750


having a casing


752


and three internal tubes


754


,


755


and


756


, each having an internal wall defining the periphery of an internal passage. Tubes


755


and


756


are mirror images of each other, and tube


754


occupies the remainder of the cross-sectional area not occupied by tubes


755


and


756


. The flat interface of the external surface of the flat portion of tube


754


with the external surface of flat portions of tubes


755


and


756


lies along a chord


758


offset from the diametral plane


757


of casing


752


such that tube


754


occupies less than half of the cross-sectional area of casing


752


.





FIG. 18



c


shows an embodiment of a four tube variation of the embodiments of

FIGS. 18



a


and


18




b


. In this instance a tube assembly


760


has a retainer in the nature of an external casing


762


and four internal roll-formed tubes


764


,


765


,


766


, and


767


. Tubes


764


,


765


,


766


and


767


are of unequal sizes. The planar interface between the external surfaces of tubes


764


and


765


lies on a chord that is offset from a diametral plane


768


by a step distance α, and the interface between the external surfaces of tubes


766


and


767


is offset from diametral plane


768


by a step distance P. In the most general case, P is not equal in magnitude to α.





FIG. 18



d


shows a further variation of an embodiment of a four tube pipe assembly


770


, having a casing


772


and four tubes


774


,


775


,


776


, and


777


. Tubes


774


,


775


,


776


and


777


are of unequal sizes. The planar interface between the external surfaces of tubes


774


and


775


lies on a chord that is offset from a diametral plane


778


by a step distance ψ. Tubes


776


and


777


are pie-shaped, and are unequal in size.




In each case, by providing tubes in a side-by side configuration, overall resistance to fluid flow in the assembly may tend to be reduced over that achievable with concentric nested pipes. It may tend also to reduce the need for spiders or other means for maintaining specific spacing of the pipes that might otherwise be required for concentric pipes. That is, the pipes are formed such that they can lie side-by-side within the outer retainer. The shape of the tube walls can be adjusted by roll forming to achieve planar interfaces between the internal pipes to give hydraulic diameters that are less than the result obtained by dividing 4A/π, while continuing to use pipes that have either flat portions or concave arcuate portions. The examples described thus far do not have convex peripheral portions, such as would occur with a re-entrant curve. In a re-entrant curve, (a) the local radius of curvature extends away from the wall portion toward a local focus point and (b) the local focus point of the radius of curvature lies outside the cross-sectional area of the particular pipe.




In some instances it may be acceptable merely to place round pipes side-by-side within a casing. In

FIG. 19



a


a two-tube pipe assembly is shown as


780


. It has a round cylindrical outer casing


782


and a pair of round, internal tubes


783


and


784


mounted within casing


782


and tangent to the inside surface of casing


782


. Each of tubes


783


and


784


has a known pressure rating, and each has an internal passageway


785


,


786


having a periphery and a known cross-sectional area. The remaining spaces


787


,


788


between the internal wall of casing


782


and the outer wall surfaces of tubes


783


and


784


can be used to carry services such as electrical cabling. In the alternative, if casing


782


has a known pressure rating, fluids under pressure can be carried in the passageways formed by spaces


787


and


788


, although they have less favourable hydraulic diameters and cross-sectional shapes than might otherwise be desired.





FIG. 19



b


shows a pipe assembly


790


that differs from pipe assembly


780


in that it has an outer casing


792


housing a set of three internal tubes


793


,


794


and


795


of round cylindrical section, and of somewhat smaller diameter than tubes


783


and


784


. Once again, casing


792


can be a pipe of known pressure rating, and the interstitial spaces


796


,


797


, and


798


can be used to carry electrical or other services.

FIG. 19



c


shows a further variation of pipe assembly


800


, that differs from assemblies


780


and


790


by having a casing


802


and four circular internal tubes


803


,


804


,


805


and


806


.




In some cases it is also possible to improve hydraulic properties of a pipe assembly even when one or more tubes in a pipe bundle pipe have local portions that have re-entrant, or convex walls.

FIG. 20



a


shows a three-tube pipe assembly


810


that has a shrink fit round cylindrical outer casing


812


. A central round cylindrical pressure rated seamless steel tube


814


is located concentrically to casing


812


. A pair of half-doughnut, or kidney shaped, tubes


815


and


816


are contained within casing


812


and form a sandwich about central tube


814


. Each of tubes


815


and


816


has a tube wall that has an outer arcuate portion


817


of a circular arc suitable for engaging the inner surface of casing


812


, and an inner arcuate portion


818


, opposed to outer arcuate portion


817


, that has an external surface formed on an arc suitable for engaging the outer surface of circular cylindrical tube


814


. Tubes


815


and


816


also have first and second radial portions


819


and


820


that are joined to portions


817


and


818


to form a hollow, closed, kidney shape as noted, the vertices being smoothly radiused. The inner surface of this kidney-shaped wall defines the periphery of internal passage


821


. Tube


816


is of the same construction as tube


815


, the two tubes meeting at the planar external faces of portions


819


and


820


that lie on a diametral plane


822


of casing


812


. In this instance, portion


818


is convexly curved relative to passage


821


. That is, the local radius of curvature extends away from passage


821


to a local focus of the local radius of curvature that lies outside passage


821


. However, the centroid of the cross-sectional area of passage


821


lies within passage


821


, rather than falling within the cross-sectional area of the internal passage


824


of central tube


814


.




The configuration of

FIG. 20



a


, in effect, splits the annular space between central tube


814


and casing


812


in half across the diameter of casing


812


, rather than by trying to nest a third pipe concentrically between central tube


814


and casing


812


. The resulting passages will tend to have a combined area that is greater than can be achieved with concentric tubes of the same wall thickness, and will have larger hydraulic diameters, with a consequent reduction in resistance to fluid flow.




It is not necessary that tubes


815


and


816


be of equal size. Pipe assembly


825


of

FIG. 20



b


is similar to pipe assembly


810


, but rather than have kidney-shaped pipes of equal size, assembly


825


has first and second pipes


826


and


828


of unequal size, meeting on radial interfaces.





FIG. 21



a


shows a cross-section of another, four-tube, modular pipe assembly


830


, having a casing


832


, a central tube


834


mounted concentrically within casing


832


, and three equal tubes


836


,


837


and


838


clustered about central tube


834


and meeting at radial planar interfaces on 120 degree centers. Each of tubes


836


,


837


and


838


occupies a sector that is a third of the annular space between casing


832


and central tube


834


. As noted above, it is not necessary that the tubes be of equal sizes.

FIG. 21



b


shows a cross-section of a modular pipe assembly


840


having a casing


842


, a round cylindrical central tube


844


, and three tubes of different sizes


846


,


847


, and


848


, describing, respectively, 75, 120 and 165 degrees of arc. In general, the arcuate extent of the tubes may be chosen, with all sizes different, two the same, or three the same as may be desired or convenient.





FIG. 22



a


shows a cross-section of a five-tube modular pipe assembly


850


having a casing


852


, a central tube


854


, and four equal sectoral tubes


855


,


856


,


857


and


858


, each occupying a quarter-sector space.

FIG. 22



b


shows a similar four-tube arrangement but with a single semi-sectoral tube


860


, and a pair of quarter-sectoral tubes


862


and


864


.

FIG. 22



c


shows yet another alternative five-tube arrangement, in which each of sectoral tubes


865


,


866


,


867


and


868


occupies a different sized sector, being respectively 60, 75, 90 and 135 degrees of arc being radial interfaces. In general, all sizes may be different, or two, three or four sectors can be the same size as may be desired.




In each of the examples of

FIGS. 20



a


,


20




b


,


21




a


,


21




b


, and


22




a


,


22




b


and


22




c


, the concentric central tube, such as tube


814


, is maintained in position relative to the casing by the radial wall of the surrounding tubes. That is, the shape of the tubes occupying the annular space between the casing and the central tube is such as to act in the manner of a spider to maintain the relative position of the central tube to the casing, although the central tube and the casing do not contact each other directly. The same is true of the central hexagonal tube in the bundle of hexagonal tubes shown in

FIG. 17



b.







FIG. 23



a


shows a modular pipe assembly


870


having an external casing


872


that is a seamless steel tube of known pressure rating. A roll-formed seamless steel tube


874


, also of known pressure rating, is formed into a D-shape, or hollow semi-circular form. The outer wall surface of arcuate portion


876


of tube


874


is of a radius to mate with the inner surface of casing


872


. When located as shown in

FIG. 23



a


, a first passageway


878


is defined within the inner wall surface of tube


874


, and a second passageway


880


is defined between the outer surface of straight portion


882


of tube


874


and the remaining half


884


of the inner surface of casing


872


that is not engaged by portion


876


of tube


874


. The result is a two-tube configuration generally similar to that shown in

FIG. 15



b


and described above. Tube


874


can be held in its nested position within casing


872


by a bonding agent, or by welding, or by other mechanical means that does not impair the integrity of the passageways.





FIG. 23



b


shows a modular pipe assembly


890


that is similar to assembly


870


, but has two nested roll formed tubes


892


and


894


, each occupying a sector roughly equal to ⅓ of the space within pressure rated casing tube


895


, such that three side-by-side passages


896


,


897


and


898


are formed. This yields a three passageway result similar to the tube bundle configuration of

FIG. 16



a


.

FIG. 23



c


shows a modular pipe assembly


900


that is again similar to assemblies


870


and


890


, but in this case has three internal roll-formed tubes


902


,


903


and


904


each occupying about a quarter sector of the space defined within outer pressure rated tube


905


. This yields a side-by-side four passageway result similar to that of

FIG. 15



a


. Sectoral tubes such as


892


and


894


, or


902


,


903


and


904


can be used singly or in equal or unequal combinations as may be suitable for a given application.





FIGS. 23



d


and


23




e


represent further alternatives to the assemblies of

FIGS. 23



a


,


23




b


and


23




c


. In

FIG. 23



d


, an outer pressure rated tube


910


has a pair of round circular tubes


912


and


913


nested side-by-side eccentrically within tube


910


. This yields a pair of relatively small, round cylindrical passages


914


and


915


within tubes


912


and


913


, and a larger, irregularly shaped passage


918


, in the remaining space within the inner wall of tube


910


. Tubes


912


and


913


can be bonded or welded in place, or can be held in place by other mechanical means, such as a bracket or spider, that does not impair the integrity of the passageways.

FIG. 23



e


uses an outer pressure rated tube


920


, a kidney shaped tube


922


nested within outer tube


920


, and a central tube


924


nested against tube


922


, concentric with outer tube


920


, yielding a result generally similar to that of

FIG. 20



a.






An advantage of the alternative embodiments of

FIGS. 23



a


-


23




e


, is that by omitting one of the internal tubes of the analogous cross-sections of

FIGS. 15



a


,


16




a


,


15




b


,


19




c


, or


20




a


(or of others of the above described cross-sections as may be suitable) the cross-sectional area otherwise occupied by the wall thickness of the omitted tube is made available for carrying fluids or other services. For a given volumetric flowrate, mean velocity is determined by the available cross-sectional area. Losses vary as the square of the mean velocity of the fluid, and hydraulic diameter also improves. For example, a 6 inch outer pipe with a 0.25 inch wall thickness, and an inner tube of 0.217 inch wall thickness, the potential increase in area for a semi-circular tube is significant. In each case, notwithstanding that one or several pipes are nested within another, the relationships of the passageways remains a side-by-side relationship, rather than a concentric relationship.





FIG. 24



a


shows a modular pipe assembly


930


having an outer conduit in the nature of a seamless steel tube


932


of known pressure rating. As in the alternative embodiment of

FIG. 23



a


, a second conduit member in the nature of a roll formed seamless steel tube


934


formed in the shape of a semi-circle is located within the hollow interior region defined by the inside surface of tube


932


, the outer surface of the arcuate portion of tube


934


being formed to engage a portion of the inner surface of the continuous peripheral wall of tube


932


. In addition, a third conduit member, in the nature of a seamless steel tube


936


, roll formed into a shape of a quarter-pie piece, more or less, is located within tube


934


. Tube


936


has an arcuate outer surface shaped to engage a portion, roughly half, of the inside face of the arcuate portion of the peripheral wall of tube


934


and a flat portion whose outside surface lies against a portion of the inside face of the flat portion of tube


934


. As shown, this configuration of tubes defines three parallel side-by-side passages,


937


,


938


and


939


. Passage


937


is defined, or bounded, by half of the inside arcuate face of outer tube


932


and the outer face of the back, or straight portion of tube


934


. Passage


938


is defined, or bounded, by half of the inner surface of the straight portion of tube


934


, half of the arcuate inner surface of tube


934


, and the outer surface of the radial leg portion of the wall of tube


936


that extends at right angles to the diametral flat portion of tube


934


. Passage


939


is defined, or bounded, by the interior face of the peripheral wall of tube


936


.




The alternative embodiment of

FIG. 24



b


is similar to that of

FIG. 24



a


in having a D-shaped tube


942


located within a circular tube


940


, but differs to the extent that rather than having a third tube nested within tube


940


, third and fourth tubes


944


and


946


are located in side-by-side arrangement within the D-shaped cavity of tube


942


. As shown, tubes


944


and


946


are unequal. In the general case of either the embodiment of

FIG. 24



a


or

FIG. 24



b


, the pipes need not be equal in size, need not have right angled corners, and need not have straight sides lying on diametral chords of outer tube


942


, but may have proportions suited for the flows to be carried, may lie on sectors of non-square angles, and may have side portions that lie on chords offset from the diameter of the respective tubes.





FIG. 25

shows eight variations of cross-sections of extruded tube that could be used as an alternative to the multi-tube assemblies described above, the sections having a suitable pressure rating. The proportions of the pipe walls and webs are not drawn to scale. In principle it is possible to extrude tubes corresponding to any of the sections described above. Member


950


corresponds to assembly


690


. Member


951


corresponds to assembly


520


. Member


952


corresponds to assembly


750


. Member


953


corresponds to assembly


770


, and is intended to represent the general case of any four passage duct. Member


954


corresponds to assembly


810


. Member


955


corresponds to assembly


830


. Member


956


corresponds to assembly


850


, and member


957


corresponds to assembly


860


of

FIG. 22



b


, or more generally, a four passage duct that includes a central tube.




Various embodiments of the invention have now been described in detail. Since changes in and or additions to the above-described best mode may be made without departing from the nature, spirit or scope of the invention, the invention is not to be limited to those details, but only by the appended claims.



Claims
  • 1. A fluid displacement apparatus comprising:a motor unit having a first gearset having an output shaft, said output shaft having an axis of rotation defining an axial direction; an inlet by which fluid can flow to said first gearset; and an outlet by which fluid can flow away from said first gearset; a gear pump unit mounted axially with respect to said motor unit, said pump unit having a second gearset connected to be driven by said output shaft of said first gearset; an inlet by which production fluid can flow to said second gearset; and an outlet by which the production fluid can flow away from said second gearset; and a transport apparatus having a first end and a second end, said second end being connected axially relative to said motor unit and said pump unit; and said transport apparatus having a first passageway defined therein in fluid communication with said inlet of said motor unit by which fluid under pressure can be directed to said first gearset to turn said output shaft; and at least a second passageway defined therein in fluid communication with said outlet of said gear pump unit by which the production fluid from said second gearset can be conveyed to said first end of said transport apparatus.
  • 2. The fluid displacement apparatus of claim 1 wherein said apparatus includes a plurality of said motor units connected axially together to drive said output shaft.
  • 3. The fluid displacement apparatus of claim 1 wherein said apparatus includes a plurality of said gear pump units connected axially together.
  • 4. The fluid displacement apparatus of claim 1 wherein said apparatus includes a plurality of said motor units and a plurality of said gear pump units mounted axially together.
  • 5. The fluid displacement apparatus of claim 4 wherein said first and second passageways extend in side-by-side relationship.
  • 6. The fluid displacement apparatus of claim 1 wherein said transport apparatus has at least a third passageway defined therein, said third passageway being in fluid communication with said outlet of said first gearset to permit return fluid from said first gearset to be carried to said first end of said transport apparatus.
  • 7. The fluid displacement apparatus of claim 1 wherein said transport apparatus has another passageway defined therein by which electrical cabling can extend between said first and second ends.
  • 8. The fluid displacement apparatus of claim 1 wherein said transport apparatus includes a bundle of conduits defining said passageways, said bundle being mounted within a retainer.
  • 9. The fluid displacement apparatus of claim 1 wherein said transport apparatus includes a plurality of modular pipe joints connected together in a pipe string.
  • 10. The fluid displacement apparatus of claim 1 wherein said transport apparatus includes a plurality of modular pipe joints connected together in a string, each of said pipe joints having said passageways defined therein in side-by-side relationship.
  • 11. The fluid displacement apparatus of claim 1 wherein said output shaft is mounted in bushings, and said bushings present a ceramic surface to said output shaft.
  • 12. The fluid displacement apparatus of claim 1 wherein said second gearset includes an input shaft connected to said output shaft of said first gearset, said input shaft being carried in at least one bushing, said bushing presenting a ceramic surface to said input shaft.
  • 13. The fluid displacement apparatus of claim 1 wherein said gear pump unit is free of ball and roller bearings.
  • 14. The fluid displacement apparatus of claim 1 wherein said motor unit is mounted in a cylindrical housing, said housing having a production fluid passageway defined therein, said production fluid passageway being in fluid communication with said outlet of said second gearset and with said second passageway of said transport apparatus to permit production fluid from said gear pump unit to flow in the axial direction past said motor unit.
  • 15. The fluid displacement apparatus of claim 1 wherein said gear pump unit is mounted in a cylindrical housing, said cylindrical housing having porting defined therein to permit production fluid to flow to said inlet of said gear pump unit.
  • 16. The fluid displacement apparatus of claim 1 wherein said motor unit and said gear pump unit are both mounted within respective first and second axially extending round cylindrical housings, said first housing being ported to permit production fluid to flow to said inlet of said gear pump unit, said second housing having at least one production unit passageway defined therewithin by which production fluid flowing from the outlet of said gear pump unit can be transported to said second passageway of said transport apparatus.
  • 17. The fluid displacement apparatus of claim 1 wherein said second gearset includes a pair of meshing gears, said gear pump unit includes a surround member having a cavity defined therein to accommodate said second gearset, and said surround presents a ceramic surface to said gears.
  • 18. The fluid displacement apparatus of claim 17 wherein said surround and said second gearset have corresponding coefficients of thermal expansion.
  • 19. The fluid displacement apparatus of claim 17 wherein said surround has a compressive pre-load.
  • 20. The fluid displacement apparatus of claim 17 wherein said surround is mounted within a shrink fit casing.
  • 21. The fluid displacement apparatus of claim 1 wherein:said fluid displacement apparatus includes a plurality of said motor units mounted axially together and a plurality of said gear pump units mounted axially together; each of said motor units has an axially extending pressure passage defined therein communicating with said inlet thereof, and an axially extending return passage defined therein communicating with said outlet thereof; said pressure passages of said motor units being in fluid communication to form a common high pressure passageway; said return passages of said motor units being in fluid communication to form a common low pressure passageway; and a plate is mounted between said motor units and said gear pump units to close off said high pressure and low pressure passages from said pump units.
  • 22. The fluid displacement apparatus of claim 21 wherein each of said motor units has an output shaft, and said output shafts are connected through each of the gearsets of said motor units to transmit torque to said input shaft of said pump unit.
  • 23. The fluid displacement apparatus of claim 21 wherein:one of said motor units is a first end unit closest to said transport apparatus, and another of said motor units is a second end unit farthest from said transport apparatus; a first end plate connects said first motor end unit to said transport unit; an intermediate plate connects said first end motor unit to another motor unit axially adjacent thereto; and a second end plate connects said second end motor unit to said gear pump units; said intermediate plate has axial high and low pressure passageways defined therein to permit fluid communication between said high and low pressure passageways of said motor units, and at least one axial bore accommodating a shaft carrying torque from said first end motor unit to the next motor unit adjacent thereto; said second end plate is mounted to close off said high and low pressure passageways from said gear pump units; and said first end plate has a first passage defined therein to permit supply of high pressure fluid from said first passageway of said transport apparatus to said high pressure passageway of said motor units, a second passage defined therein to permit discharge from said low pressure passageway to flow to said transport apparatus and at least a third passage defined therein to permit production fluid to flow from said gear pump units to said second passageway of said transport apparatus.
  • 24. A method of moving production fluid from a well to a wellhead said method comprising the steps of:providing a transport apparatus having a first end for introduction into the well, and a second end for location outside the well; providing a hydraulic motor having a gearset in a housing, the motor having an inlet, and an outlet, and an output shaft; providing a gear pump having a gearset in a housing, the gear pump having an input shaft, an inlet, and an outlet; mounting the hydraulic motor to the first end of the transport apparatus; mounting the gear pump to the hydraulic motor and connecting the output shaft of the hydraulic motor to the input shaft of the gear pump; providing a first passageway in the transport apparatus for carrying production fluid from the production region to the wellhead; establishing the output of the gear pump in fluid communication with the first passageway in the transport apparatus; providing a second passageway in the transport apparatus for carrying hydraulic fluid from outside the well to the inlet of the hydraulic motor; introducing the first end of the transport apparatus into the well and locating the gear pump in a production region of the well; supplying hydraulic fluid under pressure through the second passageway to operate the hydraulic motor; and thereby driving the gear pump to urge production fluid from the production region to the wellhead.
  • 25. The method of claim 24 further including the step of providing a third passageway in the transport apparatus and directing a return flow of hydraulic fluid from said hydraulic motor through said third passageway to the well head.
  • 26. The method of claim 24 wherein said method includes the steps of preparing a well bore having a horizontal production region, and introducing the gear pump into the horizontal production region.
  • 27. The method of claim 24 wherein said method includes the steps of:preparing a horizontal production region of the well; preparing a well bore above the horizontal production region; introducing steam into the well bore, and said step of driving the gear pump follows the step of introducing the steam into the well bore.
  • 28. The method of claim 24 wherein the transport apparatus is a modular pipe joint apparatus and said method includes the step of incrementally introducing one pipe joint after another into the well.
  • 29. The method of claim 28 wherein the step of introducing includes passing the motor, gear pump and the pipe joints through a well head blow out preventer.
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