1. Field of Invention
The invention relates generally to a subsea wellhead assembly. More specifically, the invention relates to a seal surface having voids filled with an elastomeric substrate having imbedded hollow beads that collapse under a setting force to shrink a volume of the substrate.
2. Description of Prior Art
Seals are typically inserted between inner and outer wellhead tubular members to contain internal well pressure. The inner wellhead member is generally a hanger for supporting either casing or tubing that extends into the well. Outer wellhead members are wellhead housings, or they can be a casing hanger when the inner member is a tubing hanger. A variety of seals located between the inner and outer wellhead members are known. Examples of known seals are elastomeric, metal, and combinations thereof. The seals may be set by a running tool, or they may be set in response to the weight of the string of casing or tubing. One type of metal-to-metal seal has seal body with inner and outer walls separated by a cylindrical slot, forming a āUā shape. An energizing ring is pushed into the slot in the seal to deform the inner and outer walls apart into sealing engagement with the inner and outer wellhead member. The energizing ring is typically a solid wedge-shaped member. During setting, the deformation of the seal's inner and outer walls exceeds the yield strength of the material of the seal ring, making the deformation permanent.
The seal surfaces on the inner and outer wellhead members may have wickers. Wickers comprise a set of annular parallel grooves formed in the seal surface. Typically, the wickers have saw tooth shapes, defining valleys and crests. The setting tool forces the seal surfaces of the seal assembly against the wickers, causing the crests to embed into the seal surfaces.
The seal assembly may have a secondary or emergency sealing portion below an upper sealing portion. The emergency sealing portion may comprise nose bellows having metal folds with corners or crests between each fold that form a metal to metal seal between the inner and outer wellhead members.
The subsea wellhead housing may be filled with drilling fluid or mud during the running and setting of an annulus seal assembly. The drilling mud contains ingredients and debris that can enter the voids of the sealing surfaces before the seal assembly sets. The voids may be between the folds of the nose ring bellows, if one is employed. The voids may be in the valleys of the wickers, if they are employed. The drilling fluid debris in the voids, can form a hydraulic lock during the setting operation, preventing the full setting of the seal assembly.
A method of forming a sealing engagement in a subsea wellhead assembly having an axis, includes providing a subsea wellhead component with a metal seal surface having voids. The voids are filled with an elastomeric substrate having hollow beads embedded therein. The wellhead component is then lowered into the sea and installed in the subsea wellhead assembly. The beads have sufficient strength to resist collapsing under a hydrostatic pressure of liquid within the subsea wellhead assembly to prevent shrinking of a volume of the substrate. Then, a setting force is exerted on the metal seal surface to form the sealing engagement. The setting force is at a level sufficient to collapse the beads and reduce the volume of the substrate within the voids.
The beads are filled with a compressible fluid, such as a gas. In the preferred embodiment, the beads comprise glass microspheres. The elastomeric substrate is substantially incompressible so as to avoid shrinking of the volume until the beads collapse.
The seal surface may comprise a set of wickers formed on a side wall of a bore of a wellhead housing, the wickers comprising parallel grooves having valleys and crests. The voids filled with the substrate comprise the valleys of the wickers. The method includes lowering a metal seal member into the bore of the wellhead housing. The setting force is exerted by radially moving the seal member against the wickers to embed the crests into the seal member and form the sealing engagement.
Alternately or in addition, the seal surface may comprises a seal body with folds defining crests and valleys, the voids comprising the valleys. In that instance, the setting force is exerted axially on the seal body, causing the folds to move toward each other and the crests to sealingly engage a portion of the wellhead assembly, to form the sealing engagement.
The beads are capable of withstanding collapsing up to a pressure in a selected range at least from 10,000 to 20,000 psi. The beads preferably collapse when in a range from 25,000 to 30,000 psi.
Some of the features and benefits of the present invention having been stated, others will become apparent as the description proceeds when taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
While the invention will be described in connection with preferred embodiments, it will be understood that it is not intended to limit the invention to those embodiments. On the contrary, it is intended to cover all alternatives, modifications, and equivalents, as may be included within the spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims.
The method and system of the present disclosure will now be described more fully hereinafter with reference to the accompanying drawings in which embodiments are shown. The method and system of the present disclosure may be in many different forms and should not be construed as limited to the illustrated embodiments set forth herein; rather, these embodiments are provided so that this disclosure will be thorough and complete, and will fully convey its scope to those skilled in the art. Like numbers refer to like elements throughout.
It is to be further understood that the scope of the present disclosure is not limited to the exact details of construction, operation, exact materials, or embodiments shown and described, as modifications and equivalent will be apparent to one skilled in the art. In the drawings and specification, there have been disclosed illustrative embodiments and, although specific terms are employed, they are used in a generic and descriptive sense only and not for the purpose of limitation. Accordingly, the improvements herein described are therefore to be limited only by the scope of the appended claims.
An example embodiment of a subsea wellhead assembly 20 is shown in a side partial sectional view in
A nose ring assembly 30 is shown mounted on a lower end of the seal member 28 and beneath the inner leg. Partially coaxially within the seal member 28 is an annular energizing ring 32, having a lower wedge-shaped extension shown inserted in the slot between the outer and inner legs of the seal member 28. In the example of
Referring now to
Each adjacent fold 44 defines a wedge-shaped void, valley, or space in which is disposed a volume compensating material 48. The compensating material 48 provides a barrier to debris and other undesirable material that may otherwise enter into the space between the folds 44. In one example embodiment, the compensating material 48 is shown having a series of hollow beads or microspheres 50 that are dispersed within a substrate 52. Examples of microspheres 50 include a compressible fluid, such as a gas, encapsulated inside of a load-bearing non-porous housing, such as a glass or ceramic. The shape of microspheres 50 is preferably spherical, but it could differ. The substrate 52 may include elastomeric materials, such as rubber, composites, and the like. Normally, substrate 52, apart from microspheres 50, will be incompressible but deformable. Microspheres 50 for this use may be in a variety of diameters, typically 0.001 to 002 inches.
Microspheres 50 must have the ability to withstand the fluid pressure imposed on seal assembly 26 before setting. The fluid pressures will depend on the type of liquid within wellhead housing 24, the depth of the sea, as well as test pressures that may occur. Wellhead housing 24 may be located thousands of feet below the sea surface, resulting in a high hydrostatic fluid pressure. Also, higher pressures can be exerted on the liquid 59 (
Substrate 52, along with the dispersed microspheres 50, will be installed between folds 44 while seal assembly 26 is at the surface. Substrate 52 may be initially in a liquid state that cures. Then seal assembly 26 is lowered down the drilling riser (not shown) into subsea wellhead 24. The shape of folds 44 remains constant during the running procedure because compensating material 48 will not shrink in volume as the hydrostatic fluid pressure increase. Prior to setting, the volume of compensating material 48 remains the same as at the surface, preventing debris in drilling fluid 59 from entering the voids between folds 44. After landing seal assembly 26 will be set or energized.
In the example embodiment of
When the seal assembly 26 is in the set position of
Moreover, the spheres 50 within the compensating material 48 will fracture or collapse and the encapsulated gas in the spheres 50 will compress in response to the setting forces (and pressures) encountered while energizing the seal assembly 26. The collapsing spheres 50 and compression of the gas allows axial compression of the nose ring body 38, with folds 44 moving axially toward each other. Thus, should any liquid 59, such as drilling fluid in wellhead housing 24, enter the space between adjacent folds 44, the compensating material 48 compresses to make up for the presence of the liquid 59 so that movement of the folds 44 is not restricted when the seal assembly 26 is being energized.
In one example of use, the seal assembly 26 described herein may be used in an emergency situation wherein an initial seal has failed. In such an example, deformations, such as the discontinuities 58 of
Before lowering wellhead housing 70 into the sea, a substrate 80 will be applied to wickers 74. Substrate 80 is preferably an elastomeric material, such as silicone rubber, that is deformable, but not compressible. That, is the volume of substrate 80 does not shrink under pressure, although the shape of substrate 80 may deform. Normally, substrate 80 is applied to wickers 74 as a liquid, then allowed to cure so as to bond to the metal wickers 74. Substrate 80 preferably completely fills the voids create by wicker valleys 78. Once cured, the inner diameter of substrate 80 is cylindrical and flush with wicker crests 76.
Hollow beads 82 are dispersed throughout substrate 80 before it is applied to wickers 74. Beads 82 preferably are hollow microspheres, but the shapes may vary. Beads 82 are formed of a rigid, load supporting material such as glass. The hollow, sealed interior of each bead 82 is filled with a compressible fluid, namely a gas such as air. Beads 82 will fracture or collapse when under a selected pressure.
For the purposes herein, the collapsing pressure required must be high enough to withstand the hydrostatic pressure of the liquid in bore 72 of wellhead housing 70 once wellhead housing 70 is installed. The pressures will depend on the depth of the sea above wellhead housing 70, the type of liquid contained in bore 72, and whether any test pressures are imposed. Before heads 82 are collapsed, a drilling riser (not shown) will be attached to wellhead housing 70. At times during drilling of the well, the riser and wellhead housing bore 72 will be filled with drilling fluid or mud, which is normally heaver in weight than sea water. Wellhead housing 70 may be thousands of feet below the sea level in deep water subsea wells, thus the hydrostatic pressure can be thousands of pounds per square inch. In certain operations, the pressure of the drilling fluid within wellhead housing 70 may be higher than hydrostatic pressure, such as test pressures. To withstand typical fluid pressures, beads 82 should not collapse until reaching pressures of about 10,000 to 20,000 psi. However, beads 82 are configured to collapse during seal setting operations, thus may collapse above 20,000 psi and preferably collapse in a range from 25,000 to 30,000 psi.
The diameters of beads 82 may vary, but are quite small in order to locate within valleys 78. The percentage volume of heads 82 within substrate 80 before collapsing can vary, however, the percentage is preferably greater than 50 percent. The total volume of beads 82 should be high enough to cause substrate 80 to shrink significantly when beads 82 undergo collapsing. For example, the volume of substrate 80 including beads 82 should shrink sufficiently once beads 82 collapse to expose crests 76 to a desired radial depth, such as about 0.020 inch. The volume decrease once beads 82 collapse thus could be about 20 to 40 percent, for example, of the initial volume. As the elastomeric substrate 80 will not shrink under pressure, the shrinkage occurs entirely due to the collapsing of beads 82 and the compression of the gas contained in beads 82. The collapsing of each bead 82 greatly reduces the volume that each bead previously occupied within substrate 80.
Referring again to
A seal assembly 88 will be lowered into the pocket between wickers 74 and 86, then set to form a sealing engagement between casing banger 84 and wellhead housing 70. Seal assembly 88 may vary in configuration. In this example, seal assembly 88 has a metal seal body 90, preferably steel, with inner and outer legs separated by a slot 92. An energizing ring 94 retained by a retaining ring 96 initially locates at the upper end of slot 92. Energizing ring 94 has a radial width greater than the radial dimension of slot 92.
In the operation of the embodiment of
One or more casing hangers 84 will be set within wellhead housing 70. Seal assembly 88 will be lowered into the pocket between casing hanger 84 and wellhead housing wickers 74. Drilling mud or another liquid would be within bore 72 as seal assembly 88 lands on an external shoulder of casing banger 84. A downward axial force is then applied to energizing ring 94 to moves the outer seal surface of seal body 90 into sealing engagement with wickers 74 and the inner seal surface of seal body 90 into sealing engagement with wickers 86. The setting force causes crests 76 of wickers 74 to embed into the outer sealing surface of seal body 90 as well as the crests of wickers 86 to embed into the inner sealing surface of seal body 90. The outward radial movement of the outer surface of seal body 90 applies a pressure to substrate 80 that is high enough to fracture or collapse beads 82. The fracturing of beads 82 allows the volume of substrate 80 within each valley 78 to reduce sufficiently to expose a desired radial dimension of crests 76. The drilling mud previously between seal body 90 and wickers 74 will be squeezed above and or below wickers 74 are the outer surface of seal body 90 contacts wicker crests 76. The same shrinkage will also occur to the substrate within casing hanger wickers 86, if employed.
The present invention described herein, therefore, is well adapted to carry out the objects and attain the ends and advantages mentioned, as well as others inherent therein. While presently preferred embodiments of the invention have been given for purposes of disclosure, numerous changes exist in the details of procedures for accomplishing the desired results. These and other similar modifications will readily suggest themselves to those skilled in the art, and are intended to be encompassed within the spirit of the present invention disclosed herein and the scope of the appended claims. For example, the substrate and beads of
This application is a continuation-in-part of Ser. No. 13/310,172, filed Dec. 2, 2011.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 13310172 | Dec 2011 | US |
Child | 14821355 | US |