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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a hydraulic pressure propelled device for
carrying out measurements and interventions during injection or production
in a deflected well.
By the expression "deflected well" is meant here not only wells which are
slightly deflected but also those which are greatly deflected and which
require pumping of the equipment to reach the production zone.
The invention is more especially applicable for carrying out measurements,
for example of pressure and flow rate, at the level of geological
formations or any other intervention in a well when it is a question of
revealing the flow pattern of the productive part of a deflected blowout
well. Such measuring techniques are well known by specialists and will not
be described in greater detail here.
The measuring or intervention instrument may for example be a well-logging
probe. It may be connected electrically to the surface by a well-logging
cable, or it may not be connected to the surface, comprising in this case
a self-contained power supply and a memory for storing the data.
2. Description of the Prior Art.
It is already known from U.S. Pat. No. 4,349,072 to lower, at the end of a
cable into the vertical and deflected part of a well, a probe fixed to the
lower end of an extension which may reach a length at most equal to the
length of the drain (for example about 500 to 1300 m). In its upper part
the extension is connected to a propulsion system generally called a
"locomotive", formed of cups whose rubber lining provides substantially
total sealing with the inner walls of the tubing. This locomotive is
itself attached to the cable.
When the weight of the assembly is not sufficient for lowering the
equipment into the pressurized well, the volume situated above the
locomotive is pressurized by pumping, so as to push the equipment (probe
and extension) into the deflected zone which interests the producer. The
measurements are made during the pushing phase when the probe is in the
production zone, or during the rising phase. These measurements may be
advantageously repeated.
Because of the seal provided by the linings, it is not possible for the
fluid to flow freely and rise to the surface. Under these conditions, flow
rate measurements, for example, in a well under production become
impossible, unless a second tubing is used and is reversed for the rising
fluid, but this solution is costly and must be provided during equiping of
the well, for the operation of lowering two tubings must be simultaneous.
Moreover, the whole of the equipment (probe, extension and locomotive) is
raised by pulling on the cable. If the production tubing has a
substantially constant diameter and since the linings provide good
sealing, a decompression phenomenon may be observed and so aspiration of
the fluid, likely to create pressure imbalances, and fluid displacements
leading to uncontrolled starting up of production.
It is known more particularly from French Pats. Nos. A-2,473,652 and
2,500,419 to move a probe in a well by means of a liquid fluid pumped from
the bottom of the well, passing through the pumping means and flowing
through at least one aperture situated above an automatically controlled
inflatable sleeve. The fluid will exert a pressure on the sleeve which
will therefore advance into the well.
Devices are also known, as described in the U.S. Pat. No. 3,070,167, which
comprises members having springs which are expanded or compressed so that
these members provide sealing with the tubing and may allow the extension
to be pumped into the well.
U.S. Pat. No. 2,122,697 also mentions a sensor lowered by circulation
through pumping and which is then anchored at the bottom of the well by
means of a deformable membrane and springs; whereas the U.S. Pat. No.
3,104,714 relates to a pumped tool having an electric cable and which
comprises shoes which will brake and prevent the tool from rising.
Numerous problems appear in production well-logging when it is a question
of the production of blow-out wells, i.e. wells under pressure. There is a
problem first of all in introducing the assembly of the tools into a
pressurized well.
It is also known to use an air lock (generally having a length of 10 meters
or so), at the surface, for lowering and raising in a pressurized
deflection well a welllogging probe and an extension, element by element.
Each operation requires more especially a series of valve manipulations,
pressurizing and drain operations which are long and tiresome, to the
extent that an extension must be assembled for reaching 300 to 500 meters
for example.
It is also known to lower a probe and an extension into a pressurized well
by snubbing in which each of the elements of the tubing, after being
screwed, is forcibly moved from the surface by a hydraulic cylinder. They
may be also introduced by coil tubing in which the continuous tubing is
wound on a large drum and is driven into the pressurized well by rollers
disposed at the surface. Such equipment is heavy and costly, even fairly
fragile, more especially the coil tubing.
Finally, it is quite possible to meet variations of diameter in the
production tubing during the advance of the well-logging equipment.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
Such drawbacks are considerably reduced and such problems advantageously
solved by using a device in accordance with the present invention, usable
for carrying out, during fluid injection or production operations,
measurements or interventions in a deflected well passing through a
geological formation, said well being equipped with tubing. The device
comprises at least one measuring or intervention instrument fixed at one
end of an extension whose other end forming the upper end, is provided
with sealing members allowing the device to be propelled in said tubing
under a hydraulic pressure effect, the device being further connected to
the surface by a flexible line such as an electric cable feeding the
probe.
The device of the invention has a position for propulsion in the tubing and
a position for measurements or interventions and the device comprises
means supporting the sealing members, the means being adapted on the one
hand for uncovering at least one opening allowing the fluid to flow all
along the tube and the extension in the measurement or intervention
position of the device and, on the other hand, for closing the opening in
the propulsion position.
In a preferred embodiment, the means comprise two elongate elements one of
which is fixed to the upper part of the extension and comprises at least
two openings situated on each side of the sealing members and the other of
which is mobile, comprises a least one opening situated above the sealing
members and may be moved by sliding, under the effect of a pull exerted on
the cable, or by a member remotely controlled from the surface, for
example a motor, from a first position corresponding to closure of the
openings to a second position which uncovers said openings.
In a particularly advantageous embodiment, the means comprise at the upper
part of said extension a membrane defining an annular chamber of variable
volume, said chamber being connectable to an auxiliary pressurized fluid
source for giving to said volume a value ensuring substantial sealing and
allowing propulsion by injection of fluid from the surface, said chamber
being also able to be placed under depression so as to allow the flow of
injection or production fluid in said tubing, about said membrane and
means for adjusting the pressure in said chamber.
The invention is more particularly applicable when the wells passing
through the geological formation are deflected through an angle such that
the probe cannot be lowered by gravity and, for example, by an angle of
more than 40.degree. with respect to the vertical.
When the device is used in non blow-out wells, injection measurements may
be made. Under these conditions, a pull on the cable frees the openings of
the device of the invention and the injected fluid may flow. The
measurements are made during the injection phase, preferably by raising
the whole of the equipment (the opening being thus maintained). On the
other hand, in the case of blow-out wells at low or high pressures, the
flow rate measurements, for example, are made while the fluid is produced
which will then be recovered at the surface.
The upper mobile part of the extension comprising the opening may also be
moved by means remote controlled from the surface, such as an electric
control actuating a motor.
The uncovered opening has a section substantially equal to the section
between the tubing and the extension so as to minimize pressure losses.
The means supporting the sealing members comprise anchorage on the flexible
line at a point such that the length of said flexible line in the
extension allows the opening to be uncovered. It is for example at least
equal to the length of the extension to which is added the length of the
opening along the axis of the well.
The upper element sliding with respect to the lower element may comprise
locking systems, for example electromechanical systems, remote controlled
from the surface for maintaining the opening in the closed position during
pumping, during lowering of the equipment, or for maintaining the opening
in the open position during raising of the equipment and during the
production and measurement phase.
The means for adjusting the pressure in the variable volume chamber may
comprise a compensation chamber in communication both with the inside of
the tubing and with the auxiliary fluid source.
The invention also relates to equipment useable for carrying out, during
fluid injection or production operations, measurements or interventions in
a well passing through a geological formation, this equipment comprising
in combination a device such as described above and a remote control
sub-surface valve, through which the device may slide in the open position
of this valve.
The valve may define with the surface an air lock of a length equal to the
length of the device.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
The invention will be better understood from the following description
illustrated by the accompanying drawings in which:
FIG. 1 shows the environment of the device of the invention,
FIGS. 2 and 3 illustrate a detailed view of the device during the pumping
phase and the measuring phase,
FIGS. 3A and 3B show a variant of the apparatus of the invention,
FIGS. 4A and 4B illustrate the general view of the extension and of the
device of the invention in the case of production tubings of different
diameters, and
FIGS. 5 and 6 show a detailed view of another embodiment of the invention.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
FIG. 1 shows a well 1 equipped with a first tubing 1a having an inner
diameter for example equal to 40 cm, vertical from the surface 3 and which
is deflected in its end part.
Another tubing 1b, for example of 24 cm, contained in the first tubing is
lowered into the deflected part of the well, the space between the two
tubings being cemented. This tubing 1b is extended by a third tubing 5 of
about 18 cm in diameter which comprises holes 5a for recovering the
production of a horizontal drain 4. A tubing support 1c provides
connection with tubing 1d and tubing 5, whereas a seal 1d is made between
tubing 5 and the production tubing 2 of about 8 cm, at the end of which is
situated a restriction or "nogo" 40.
Extension 15 and probe 8, for example, have been pumped, that is to say
pushed by a fluid (gas-oil for example) into tubing 2, by means of a
locomotive 16, from the surface.
On the surface, a control cabin controls the handling, lifting and fluid
pumping operations. A traction cable 6 (diameter for example of 8 mm),
driven by a winch 7, is connected to a probe support and to a well-logging
probe 8 of standard type (diameter 4.3 cm for example) which may be self
contained or connected by an electric cable to the surface, this latter
being also able to be the pulling cable. The pulling cable also supports
the extension elements.
The surface equipment comprises:
a blow out plug 9 or BOP formed of plugs equipped with jaws providing
sealing on the bodies of closure tubes equipped with retaining wedges and
a plug equipped with jaws providing sealing on cable 6,
snubbing type pressure equipment, not shown in the Figure; by snubbing is
meant means for lowering tubular material under pressure,
an air lock 11 limited by the equipment of the blow out plug 9 at the
surface and a sub surface valve 33 disposed in tubing 2, at a depth such
that the length of the air lock is substantially greater than that of the
extension which it is desired to introduce into the deflected portions 5
of the well,
a system of pumps providing, through well head connections 14, pumping of a
fluid for lowering the probe and pumping of the product fluid.
The well-logging probe 8 and its support are fixed, either to screwed
elements of the snubbing or to the coil tubing (flexible tube wound on a
reel) which form the extension 15, of a diameter close to that of a probe
and of a length, for example, between 100 and 500 mm and connected
possibly to the surface by an electric probe-surface connection through a
single connector at the level of the probe or through a multiplicity of
connectors, each being disposed substantially in the vicinity of each
element.
The propulsion means, the assembly of screwed elements, the probe support
and the well-logging probe have preferably a diameter less than the
opening diameter of the valve.
At the upper end of the extension is to be found the device of the
invention illustrated in FIG. 2, with the propulsion system 16 or
locomotive comprising one or more sealing elements 17 (or cups) for
providing sealing with the production tubing 2, this device fixed to the
cable 6.
FIGS. 2 and 3 show an advantageous embodiment of the device of the
invention.
The upper element of extension 15 comprises a screwable prolongation 19
having an inner diameter substantially equal to that of the extension. The
lower part of this prolongation is provided with at least a first lateral
hole 20 for allowing, if required, fluid to flow through the prolongation;
its upper part is also provided with at least a second lateral hole 21
through which the fluid is discharged towards the surface. Each of these
openings is situated on each side of the position of locomotive 16. The
role of these openings 20 and 21 may be reversed, if injection work is to
be carried out.
The mobile element or sliding liner 22 comes and covers the prolongation
19. This liner comprises two openings 20a and 21a situated on each side of
the locomotive. It is fixed to cable 6 in its upper part and a pin 23
housed in an antirotation groove 24 only allows axial movement of the
sliding liner 22 when cable 6 is subjected to a traction force from bottom
to top. Cable 6 was fixed at the surface to the sliding liner 22 at an
anchorage point 27, after having taken the precaution of leaving a little
slack so as to allow the sliding liner to move.
A sliding means for the liner comprises a sealing cup 17 of locomotive 16.
In the pumping position, it rests at 26 on the low stop 25 of the
prolongation 19 of the extension and thus closes off the openings 20, 20a,
21 and 21a thus preventing any fluid flow. During production of the fluid
(FIG. 3) a pull on the cable causes the liner 22 to rise as far as the
stop formed by pin 23 and the openings are freed. The fluid may then flow.
FIG. 3A illustrates another particularly advantageous embodiment in which
the opening 20 through element 19 remains permanently open, the sliding
liner 22 only covering openings 21.
The section of the fluid inlet and outlet openings is preferably
substantially equal to the section of the annular space between tubing 2
and extension 15, so as to minimize the pressure loss.
In a particularly advantageous embodiment (FIG. 4A), when the production
tube comprises elements of decreasing diameter, for example three elements
A, B C (30, 31, 32) of respective diameters .phi..sub.A, .phi..sub.B,
.phi..sub.C, such that .phi..sub.A >.phi..sub.B >.phi..sub.C, the pumping
operation may be carried out over several stages of cups 17a, 17b, 17c of
different diameters, each stage stopping at the level of the restriction
considered. Only the stage 17c of the smallest diameter .phi..sub.C
comprises a sliding liner 22 which allows production of the fluid and the
corresponding production measurements to be carried out (FIG. 4B).
FIG. 1 illustrates an artificial air lock 11 and more particularly the
sub-surface valve 33 disposed in the production line 2. This valve ensures
safety and air lock-surface equipressurization during the assembly and
disassembly phases of the probe and of the extension and of the device of
the invention, and air lock-well equipressurization during the lowering
and raising phases of the whole of the equipment.
A manual remote control transmits energy from the surface to valve 33
through either a hydraulic or gas unit 34 and a duct 35 so as to open it
or close it at will during the different operational phases and especially
so as to prevent any uncontrolled closure following an over pressure,
which would cause breakage of the cable if the probe and the extension
were already engaged under the valve. Of course, the valve is also of an
automatic closure type so as to comply with the safety standards in force.
When the pressure of the well is low, but sufficient for production
purposes, it is possible to "kill" the well with an appropriate brine and
to avoid using a sub-surface valve, the well-logging equipment being
lowered by gravity and possibly by pumping in the deflected part of the
drain.
A particularly advantageous embodiment of the invention is described
hereafter.
A sub-surface valve 33 is disposed beforehand in a production tubing 2 at a
distance at least equal to the length between the well head and the end of
the probe, namely about 300 m. This valve is permanently open, with
closure control, or it may be permanently closed, with opening control.
The valve is closed. The air lock thus created is at atmospheric pressure.
The following are introduced successively, the measuring probe 8 fixed to
cable 6, then extension 15, element by element, and the propulsion system
16, 17 and 19 mounted on the device and the invention. An electric
connection is formed possibly by means of a bottom connector. The packing
36 about the cable is closed at the surface and the pressure is balanced
on each side of valve 33 and then it is opened by remote control from the
surface. The probe and the extension are moved by gravity then by pumping,
into the production stringer 2. With cable 6 connecting the extension to
the surface the depth may be checked at any time as well as the movement
of the extension and the lowering speed. The extension may be by pulling
on the cable. A substantial increase in pressure detectable at the surface
means that the locomotive has arrived in contact with the restriction or
"nogo" 40 disposed at the lower end of the production tubing 2.
The extension and the probe are then in the production drain 4. By pulling
on the cable, the sliding liner 22 is moved without touching the rest of
the equipment, since the cable has a little slack inside the device. This
operation allows the fluid to flow through the holes 5a of the production
zone and from there to the surface and to pass through the openings 20 and
21 thus freed in the device of the invention. Thus measurements may be
carried out, for example flow rate measurements, using the production
tubing which served for moving the probe and the extension.
The probe and the extension may be moved by pushing or pulling the cable.
The measurements may then be stationary, or made continuously during the
movement, so as to define a dain flow-pattern.
It is particularly advantageous to repeat the movement of the probe in the
production zone several times and so to repeat the measurements by first
of all pumping for moving the assembly and then by pulling the cable.
Once the recordings are made, the probe-extension assembly and the
propulsion system are raised without decompression since the sliding liner
is open and since the fluid may be transferred from the upper part to the
lower part of the propulsion system. With the assembly raised above the
sub-surface valve 33, this valve is closed and the air lock drained. A
variant of the device of the invention is particularly advantageous when
the tubing has variations of diameter is illustrated in FIGS. 5 and 6. It
comprises an extension prolongation 19 fixed both to cable 6 and to the
upper part of the extension. This prolongation is provided laterally with
at least one hole 45 through which an auxiliary fluid flows (oil or
viscous grease or gas) which will be accomodated in a annular chamber of
variable volume 46 defined by a polymer membrane 47 and the prolongation.
This viscous fluid is caused to flow in a duct 51 by means of a piston 48
which is driven by a motor 49 and which moves in a reservoir 50. Another
chamber 52, called a compensation chamber, sends in the reverse direction
by means of another piston 53 on which bears a compressed spring 54, an
amount of fluid which flows through another duct 51 in relation with at
least one hole 45 and which allows the pressures to be balanced between
the fluid contained in the production tubing 2 and the auxiliary fluid.
Before pumping the extension and the probe into the well, the piston is
controlled for sending the auxiliary viscous fluid into the volume of the
annular space defined by the membrane thus providing sealing against the
production tubing. Another embodiment of the propulsion system is thus
formed and pumping of the equipment may take place quite correctly.
For making measurements during injection or production, it is sufficient to
partially empty the variable volume of the annular chamber 46 so that the
fluid may flow freely.
A diameter control means coupled to the motor may be advantageously mounted
upstream or downstream for passing over possible restrictions or
variations of diameter the in the tubing likely to be met with.
It would still be within the scope of the invention to use device variants
based on the above indicated means.
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Description  |
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