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| United States Patent | 4134453 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/4134453.html |
| Inventor(s) | Love; Robert G. (Duncan, OK);
Shelton; Robert Q. (Duncan, OK);
McCalla, Jr.; Joseph B. (Corpus Christi, TX) |
| Abstract | Apparatus and a method for cutting round perforations and elongated slots
in well flow conductors used in solution mining. The apparatus comprises a
jet nozzle head for discharging a fluid to cut the perforations and slots,
a string of continuous tubing for handling the jet nozzle head in a well
bore, a tubing injector or tubing guide, a tubing storage reel having a
flow conducting central hub connected with the tubing on the reel for
forcing the abrasive fluid into the tubing at the reel, fluid pump and
storage means connected with the reel hub, means for mounting the tubing
injector above a well, and a wellhead having annular stripper rubber for
sealing around the tubing and a side outlet for fluid returns. The method
includes the steps of supporting the nozzle head on a first end of the
tubing, lowering the nozzle head in a well bore with the tubing injector
until the nozzle head is at the desired depth, pumping a fluid through the
hub of the storage reel into the tubing and outwardly through the nozzle
head until the perforations are cut. For slotting the tubing and nozzle
head are reciprocated the distance equal to the length of slots desired.
The returns from the nozzle head flow upwardly in the annulus to the
wellhead and outwardly through the side outlet. |
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Title Information  |
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Drawing from US Patent 4134453 |
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Method and apparatus for perforating and slotting well flow conductors |
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| Publication Date |
January 16, 1979 |
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| Filing Date |
November 18, 1977 |
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Title Information  |
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Description  |
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This invention relates to perforating and slotting well flow conductors and
more particularly relates to slotting and perforating well flow conductors
used in solution mining.
In essentially all types of wells including oil and gas wells, water wells,
and wells which are drilled for the purpose of solution mining, it is a
well known practice to case the wells by inserting a pipe or flow
conductor to the desired depth and cementing the conductor in place by
pumping cement downwardly, out of the lower end of the flow conductor, and
upwardly around the flow conductor within the wellbore where the cement is
allowed to set and securely fix the flow conductor in the wellbore.
Various types of materials are used for the flow conductors. For example,
in oil and gas wells and water wells in most instances the casing is made
up of steel or iron pipe joints. In some wells, however, such as those
used in solution mining where minerals such as uranium, sulphur, copper,
and nickel are washed or bleached from an earth formation, the well casing
may be of a non-metallic type such as formed of a polyvinyl chloride
material or glass reinforced thermosetting epoxy resin material. In all
these various types of wells in order to carry out the particular process
for which the well has been drilled, it is necessary to provide
perforations which are generally round or elongated slots through the well
casing to permit communication between the well bore and the earth
formation around the cemented well casing so that flow may occur either
from the formation into the wellbore through the casing or from the
wellbore outwardly through the casing into the formation. In the case of
solution mining, usually one or more central production wells are located
within a ring of injection wells, thus both the injection and producing
wells must be perforated or slotted in order to flow the solutions between
the wells for removal of the desired minerals. One type of available
apparatus and method which has been used to perforate and slot well casing
and other well flow conductors has usually involved running and pulling of
an operating string made up of a plurality of pipe sections connected
together end to end and run into the well and pulled by a means of a rig
or derrick mounted over the well adapted to manipulate the string by
sequentially adding or removing the pipe sections one at a time. This is a
time-consuming and expensive process which involves individually
connecting together adjacent pipe section ends during both running and
pulling each time a pipe section is handled.
Other types of apparatus and methods which have been used to perforate well
casing and other well flow conductors have involved using explosive
charges. However, while the use of explosive charges to perforate well
casing and other flow conductors is a convenient well completion means,
the jets of hot gaseous material emanating from the explosive charges upon
detonation tend to damage the surrounding wellbore formation. In this
connection, if the well casing is of non-metallic type, such as a
polyvinyl chloride material or a glass fiber reinforced thermosetting
epoxy resin material, the jets of hot gaseous material emanating from the
explosive charges, while temporarily perforating the well casing, cause
the material surrounding the perforations to be heated sufficiently to
flow into the perforations subsequent to their formation thereby causing
the well casing to become impervious to the flow of formation fluids into
the wellbore. Also in the case of a glass fiber reinforced thermosetting
epoxy resin material type well casing, when an explosive charge is used to
perforate the well casing, the well casing is usually shattered and is
subject to delamination from the effects of the jet of hot gaseous
materials emanating from the explosive charge.
In accordance with the present invention there are provided apparatus and a
method for perforating and slotting well flow conductors. The preferred
apparatus includes a string of continuous tubing of a length sufficient to
reach a depth in the well at which the perforations or slots are desired,
a jet nozzle head connected with a first free end of the continuous
tubing, a storage reel for the continuous tubing having a fluid conducting
central hub connected with the second end of the continuous tubing on the
storage reel, pump and fluid storage apparatus connected with the hub of
the storage reel for pumping fluid through the storage reel hub into the
continuous tubing, a tubing injector mounted above the well in which the
method is to be carried out for running and pulling the continuous tubing
and jet nozzle head, and a well head on the well flow conductor provided
with an annular stripper rubber member for sealing around the continuous
tubing as it is run and pulled, and a side outlet into the wellhead below
the stripper rubber for fluid returns from the wellhead. The method is
carried out by connecting the jet nozzle supported on the continuous
tubing from the reel through the tubing injector and the wellhead into the
well flow conductor. The tubing is lowered by means of the injector until
the jet nozzle is at the depth in the well at which the perforations or
slots are to be formed. A fluid is then pumped through the storage reel
hub into the continuous tubing and outwardly into the wellbore through the
jet nozzle head. The discharging jets cut the desired perforations in the
flow conductor in the wellbore with the fluid returns passing upwardly in
the annulus of the wellbore around the continuous tubing and outwardly
through the side outlet of the wellhead below the stripper rubber. If
slots ar desired in the flow conductor, the tubing injector is operated to
reciprocate the tubing and the jet nozzle head a distance equal to the
length of the slots desired until the slots are cut. The continuous tubing
and jet nozzle head are then removed from the wellbore by means of the
tubing injector.
The foregoing advantages and the preferred embodiments of the invention
will be better understood from the following specification taken in
conjunction with the accompanying drawings wherein:
FIG. 1 is a side view in elevation and section in schematic form of a cased
wellbore in which perforations are cut in accordance with the invention,
the continuous tubing and jet nozzle head, the wellhead, the continuous
tubing injector, and the storage reel and fluid pump and fluid storage
tank employed in carrying out the method of the invention;
FIG. 2 is an enlarged side view in elevation of the jet nozzle head
employed in the invention; and
FIG. 3 is a view in section along the line 3--3 of the nozzle head shown in
FIG. 2.
Referring to FIG. 1, the invention is shown in its preferred embodiment. A
continuous tubing type jet perforating and slotting system 10 is shown
supported over a well 11 which is provided with a well casing 12 which has
been cemented in the wellbore at 13. The apparatus of the invention is
employed to form perforations 14 in the well casing 12 to communicate from
the wellbore with the earth formations 15 around the wellbore.
The perforating and slotting system 10 includes a string of continuous
tubing 20 supporting a jet nozzle head 21, a continuous tubing injector 22
mounted on a platform 23, a continuous tubing guide assembly 24 operable
with the injector 22, a continuous tubing storage reel 25, a pump 30
connected with the storage reel, and a fluid storage tank 31 connected
with the pump.
The continuous tubing used in the invention is preferably a form of
flexible tubing which may be made of a material such as steel and which is
constructed to be stored on a reel and is adapted to be wound onto and
from the reel without exceeding the acceptable stress standards for the
tubing. Such tubing is available in sizes ranging from one-half inch to 1
inch outside diameter. The size selected must be large enough to permit
the fluid to be injected without a pressure drop sufficient to affect the
cutting ability of the jet streams emitted from the jet nozzle head.
The conditions tubing is operated through a wellhead 32 mounted on the wall
casing 12 for sealing around the continuous tubing and directing the flow
of the fluid returns as discussed in detail hereinafter.
The wellhead 32 includes a pipe section 33 connectable by a coupling 34
with the upper end of the conductor 12. An outlet 35 is secured with the
pipe section 33 for the discharge of fluid returns passing up the flow
conductor in the annulus around the continuous tubing string. Above the
outlet 35 a seat flange 40 is formed in the pipe section to support an
annular stripper rubber member 41 which is held in place and forced
radially inwardly around the continuous tubing by a plurality of
circumferentially spaced set screws or bolts 42 which typically may
comprise six or more such set screws. The outlet 35 may simply discharge
to the ground around the wellhead or may be connected back into the tank
31 for recirculation of the fluid used to form the perforations and slots
in the well casing.
The jet nozzle head 21 includes a tubular body 43 closed at a lower end by
a plate 44 and secured at the upper end with a coupling section 45 used to
connect the nozzle head with the free end of the continuous tubing 20. The
upper and lower ends of the body 43 are each provided with radially
outwardly extending centralizer ribs 50 circumferentially spaced at
90.degree. intervals around the upper and lower ends of the nozzle head to
function as centralizers for keeping the nozzle head centrally located
within the well casing as it is lowered and retrieved and operated within
the casing. A set of upper jet nozzles 51 are secured around the body 43
at 90.degree. intervals opening into the body below the upper centralizer
set. Similarly a set of identical lower jet nozzles 52 are secured through
the nozzle head body on 90.degree. circumferential spacing, each of the
lower nozzles being located equidistant between the adjacent pair of upper
nozzles 51 as evident in both FIG. 2 and FIG. 3. The particular
configuration of jet nozzle head illustrated will provide a total of eight
round perforations in the well casing comprising an upper set of four at
90.degree. intervals and a lower set of four at 90.degree. intervals
spaced at 45.degree. intervals between the upper perforations. If slots
are desired, the nozzle head will provide eight longitudinal slots of any
desired length spaced at 45.degree. intervals around the well casing. The
jet nozzles 51 and 52 are made of a suitable abrasive resistant material
which will permit the use of either a non-abrasive fluid or an abrasive
fluid to be pumped through the nozzles to form the perforations or slots
in the well casing and preferably have diameters ranging from 0.03125
inches to 0.093 inches to form a perforation or slot which is sufficiently
large enough to allow the ingress of formation fluids but small enough to
resist the ingress of formation materials.
The continuous tubing injector 22 is one of a number of available apparatus
which straightens and drives the continuous tubing downwardly through the
wellhead into the wellbore and pulls the tubing from the wellbore. One
such available unit is known as the OTIS CONREEL CONTINUOUS TUBING UNIT
illustrated and described in Otis Engineering Corporation Catalog Sheet
5117A published October 1976 which also illustrates the tubing guide
assembly 24. Another unit which may be used to insert and pull the
continuous tubing is illustrated in U.S. Pat. No. 3,182,877 issued May 11,
1965 to D. T. Slator, et al.
The guide assembly 24 has a curved member 53 secured with the injector 22
supporting a plurality of guide rollers 54 aligned along a suitable arc
which will permit the required change of direction in the continuous
tubing as it moves between the reel 25 and the injector 20. An outer guide
rail 55 is secured with the member 53 formed along an arc parallel with
the member 53 and the rollers 54 to hold the continuous tubing against the
rollers as it moves between the reel and the injector. The guide rail
assembly is a part of the OTIS CONREEL UNIT previously referred to.
The storage reel 25 for the continuous tubing is a suitable available reel
which also is a part of the OTIS CONREEL UNIT as previously identified
having a central hub connected with the second end of the continuous
tubing 20 and providing a fluid connection with the second end of the
tubing leading to a conduit 60 running from the reel hub to the pump 30.
The pump is connected by conduit 61 with the storage tank 31 so that fluid
in the storage tank may be discharged from the tank into the second end of
the continuous tubing string 20 through the reel hub as the tubing is
unwound from the reel.
For the operation of the system 10 to provide perforations or slots in the
well casing 12, the tubing injector 22 is supported on the platform 23
over the wellbore 11. The continuous tubing 20 on the storage reel 25 is
manipulated from the storage reel through the guide assembly 24 and the
injector 22 until the free end of the tubing extends downwardly below the
platform from the ejector. The free end of the continuous tubing is
inserted through the stripper rubber 41 within the wellhead 32, with the
wellhead off of the upper end of the well casing 12. The jet nozzle head
21 is then connected with the free end of the continuous tubing and the
rjet nozzle head 21 is placed downwardly into the upper end of the well
casing 12. The well head 32 is then mounted on the upper end of the well
casing by means of the coupling 34. The sew screws 42 are adjusted to
tighten the stripper rubber 41 around the continuous tubing to prevent any
leakage of the cutting fluids through the wellhead along the tubing.
The injector 22 is then operated to pull the continuous tubing 20 from the
reel 25 through the guide assembly 24 and push the tubing through the
wellhead into the wellbore until the jet nozzle head 21 is at the depth in
the wellbore at which the perforations 14 are desired in the well casing
12. As the jet nozzle head 21 is lowered in the well casing and when the
jet nozzle head reaches the desired depth in the casing, the guide fins 50
moving along the inner wall surface of the well casing 12 keeps the jet
nozzle head at a central location along the axis of the well casing.
A suitable fluid is prepared and placed in the storage tank 31. The fluid
may comprise either water or sandmixed with water in a concentration range
of about one-eighth to 1 pound of sand per gallon of water. Depending upon
the diameter of the nozzles 51 and 52 and the type of material to be
perforated, the sand may range in size from 40-60 mesh size to 200 mesh
size with 100 mesh size sand generally being the most satisfactory. A gel
comprising a thixotropic solution such as water, bentonite, and sand may
be used so the sand will remain suspended when flow ceases, and will flow
when pumping resumes.
The fluid is pumped from the tank 31 into the hub of the reel 25 through
the conduit 60. The fluid flows through the reel hub into the second end
of the continuous tubing 20 which is secured with the hub on the reel. The
fluid is pumped through the continuous tubing downwardly into the wellbore
to the jet nozzle head 21. The fluid is forced outwardly through the
nozzles 51 and 52 impinging upon the inner wall surface of the well casing
12. The fluid within the annulus in the well casing around the head 21 and
the continuous tubing 20 flows upwardly along the wellbore to the wellhead
32 from which the returning fluids flow outwardly through the outlet 35
below the stripper rubber 41 which prevents any leakage from the wellhead
along the continuous tubing. The fluids either are discharged to some
disposal facilities, onto the ground, or back to the storage tank 31. The
circulation of the fluid through the jet nozzle head 21 is continued until
the abrasive action of the fluid cuts through the well casing 12 and the
surrounding sheath of cement 13 into the earth formation 15.
The jetting action is continued until the desired number of perforations
are cut through the well casing 12 and the cement sheath 13. The length of
time required to cut the perforations will vary depending upon the
operating conditions and the materials of which the well casing is made
and the materials included in the abrasive fluid. Previously conducted
surface tests on a casing section provide a guide as to the maximum time
required to accomplish the necessary cutting. Under some conditions an
indication of the cutting of the perforations may be obtained by a change
in the volume of the returns through the outlet 35. Another method of
determining when the casing is properly cut is the lowering of a camera,
though this does require pulling the tubing 20 and jet nozzle head 21.
Longitudinal slots may be cut in the well casing 12 and the cement sheath
13 by reciprocating the jet nozzle head 21 using the tubing injector 22 to
move the continuous tubing and the jet nozzle head upwardly and downwardly
until slots of the desired length are cut. During reciprocation of the jet
nozzle head 21, each of the jet nozzles 51 and 52 will cut a longitudinal
slot in the well casing.
When the desired perforations or slots have been cut in the well casing the
continuous tubing 20 and jet nozzle head 21 may be removed from the well.
The tubing injector 22 is used to pull the tubing 20 and jet nozzle head
21 upwardly until the jet nozzle head 21 is pulled into the wellhead 32.
The coupling 34 is then manipulated to release the pipe section 33 from
the upper end of the well casing. The wellhead 32 along with the jet
nozzle head 21 are lifted from the upper end of the well casing 12 and the
jet nozzle head 21 is then disengaged from the end of the continuous
tubing 20. The tubing injector 22 and the reel 25 are then operated to
fully withdraw the continuous tubing 20 from the well. The well may then
be equipped with such other wellhead facilities as are required for the
particular procedure to be carried out in the well.
When perforating polyvinyl chloride material well casing, it is preferable
that the fluid used be only water which is ejected at a pressure of 5,000
psi to 15,000 psi, preferably 8,000 psi to 10,000 psi, to yield
satisfactory results. Furthermore, the nozzle jet head 21 should be within
one to 20 jet nozzle diameters of the well casing to produce holes
sufficiently small in diameter in the casing to exclude formation
materials from flowing into the well casing during formation production.
In the case where glass fiber reinforced thermosetting epoxy resin material
well casing is to be perforated, it is desirable to use an abrasive fluid
supplied at a pressure less than 4,000 psi to yield satisfactory results.
In this instance, it is desirable to maintain the nozzle jet head 21
within two to twenty, preferably two or three, jet nozzle diameters of the
well casing to produce holes sufficiently small in diameter in the casing
to exclude formation materials from flowing into the well casing during
formation production. If the jet nozzle head 21 is within a distance of
less than two jet nozzle diameters of the well casing, excessive nozzle
jet wear occurs on the exterior surface of the nozzle jets due to the
abrasive fluid splashing on the nozzle jet exterior surfaces. If the
nozzle jet head 21 is more than twenty nozzle jet diameters from the well
casing, the perforations made by the nozzle jet head 21 are large enough
to allow formation materials to flow into the wellbore. In this
connection, if glass fiber reinforced thermosetting epoxy resin material
well casing is perforated using water only as the fluid, the well casing
will delaminate and break rather than be cleanly perforated.
It will now be seen that a new and improved method and apparatus for using
continuous tubing to provide perforations or longitudinal slots in a well
casing has been described and illustrated. The use of the continuous
tubing allows the procedure to be carried out in one continuous sequence
of steps without the necessity for the more expensive and time consuming
procedure of using pipe sections which are connected and disconnected with
each other during the running and pulling of the tubing string and jet
nozzle head 21. However, if desired, conventional pipe sections are a
continuous string of reinforced rubber hose may be used as the tubing
string. If pipe sections or a continuous string of reinforced rubber hose
is used rather than the continuous steel tubing, the OTIS CONREEL
CONTINUOUS TUBING UNIT must be replaced with conventional manifolding
equipment including a tubing guide for insertion of the tubing into the
wellhead and, in the case of a continuous string of reinforced rubber
hose, the use of a storage reel is optional.
It would be understood that these and other modifications can be made
within the scope of the invention and the following claims will be
understood to include such modifications as do not depart from the broad
scope of the invention.
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Description  |
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