[go: up one dir, main page]

CA2613115C - System for controlling the flow of well fluid - Google Patents

System for controlling the flow of well fluid Download PDF

Info

Publication number
CA2613115C
CA2613115C CA002613115A CA2613115A CA2613115C CA 2613115 C CA2613115 C CA 2613115C CA 002613115 A CA002613115 A CA 002613115A CA 2613115 A CA2613115 A CA 2613115A CA 2613115 C CA2613115 C CA 2613115C
Authority
CA
Canada
Prior art keywords
sleeve
flow
fluid
valve
housing
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Fee Related
Application number
CA002613115A
Other languages
French (fr)
Other versions
CA2613115A1 (en
Inventor
Thomas W. Garay
Edward J. Zisk, Jr.
Brian A. Roth
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Baker Hughes Holdings LLC
Original Assignee
Baker Hughes Inc
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Priority claimed from US10/269,662 external-priority patent/US6782952B2/en
Application filed by Baker Hughes Inc filed Critical Baker Hughes Inc
Publication of CA2613115A1 publication Critical patent/CA2613115A1/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of CA2613115C publication Critical patent/CA2613115C/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Fee Related legal-status Critical Current

Links

Landscapes

  • Flow Control (AREA)
  • Lift Valve (AREA)

Abstract

A system for controlling the flow of well fluid between a well annulus and an internal flowbore of a tubing string, that system comprises a tubular housing in the tubing string having a fluid flow aperture through a tubular wall thereof around said flowbore. A
substantially coaxial tubular sleeve adjacent said housing for selectively obstructing the fluid flow area of said flow aperture; a first actuator for selectively displacing said sleeve in a first direction; and a second actuator for incrementally displacing said sleeve in a second direction wherein a fluid flow area through said aperture is changed in corresponding increments, and a force required to displace said sleeve from one flow rate increment to another increases incrementally.

Description

SYSTEM FOR CONTROLLING THE FLOW OF WELL FLUID

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
[0001] The present invention relates to the field of downhole well tools. More specifically, the invention relates to a downhole tool that provides a selectively variable fluid flow area between the well annulus and the interior flow bore of a well tube.
DESCRIPTION OF RELATED ART
(0002] The economic climate of the petroleum industry drives producers to continually improve the efficiency of their recovery systems. Production sources are increasingly more difficult find and exploit. Among the many newly developed production technologies is directed drilling. Deviated wells are drilled to follow the layering plane of a production formation thereby providing extended production face within the production zone. In other cases, a wellbore may pass through several hydrocarbon bearing zones.
(00031 One manner of increasing the production of such wells is to perforate the well production casing or tubing in a number of different locations, either in the same hydrocarbon bearing zone or in different hydrocarbon bearing ones, and thereby increase the flow of hydrocarbons into the sell. However, this manner of production enhancement also raises reservoir management concerns and the need to control the production flow rate at each of the production zones. For example, in a well producing from a number of separate zones, or lateral branches in a multilateral well, in which one zone has a higher pressure than another zone, the higher pressure zone may produce into the lower pressure zone rather than to the surface.
Similarly, in a horizontal well that extends through a single zone, perforations near the "heel" of the well (nearer the surface) may begin to produce water before those perforations near the "toe" of the well. The production of water near the heel reduces the overall production from the well. Likewise, gas coning may reduce the overall production from the well.
[0004] A manner of alleviating such problems may be to insert a production tubing into the well, isolate each of the perforations or lateral branches with packers and control the flow of fluids into or through the tubing. However, typical flow control systems provide for either on or off flow control with no provision for throttling of the flow. To fully control the reservoir and flow as needed to alleviate the above-described problems, the flow must be throttled.
[0005] A number of devices have been developed or suggested to provide this throttling although each has certain drawbacks. Note that throttling may also be desired in wells having a single perforated production zone. Specifically, such prior art devices are typically either wireline retrievable valves, such as those that are set within the side pocket of a mandrel or tubing retrievable valves that are affixed to the tubing.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0006] An object of the present invention is a downhole valve for well flow regulation that incorporates a sliding sleeve to alter the fluid flow area between the well annulus and well tube flow bore. The tubular valve housing is ported with fluid flow openings in cooperative alignment with fluid flow ports through the sliding sleeve. When the sleeve ports are aligned with the housing ports, fluid flow is accommodated between the well annulus and the tube flow bore. When the sleeve ports are axially offset from the housing ports, fluid flow between the well annulus and the tube flow bore is obstructed. Sleeve port alignment is in graduated increments between a fully open valve and a fully closed valve.
[0007] Each increment of sleeve displacement is driven by a predetermined volume of hydraulic fluid released from a novel stepping valve. In one directional sequence, a distinctive fluid pressure also is required to step the sleeve from the prior increment to the next. Accordingly, greater fluid pressure is required to increase the valve flow area from one area increment to the next. Moreover, the pressure required for each shift of the sleeve is distinctive to the flow area increment that the sleeve is advancing toward (or from).
[0008] At each incremental location of the sleeve, the sleeve position is secured by a respective detent channel that accommodates a resiliently expanding snap ring.
Each ring detent is flanked by a channel wall set at a predetermined acute angle.
Steepness of the channel wall dictates the pressure required to radially constrict the resiliently biased snap ring. Provision of a distinctive channel wall angle respective to each valve flow area setting of the sleeve translates to a distinctive hydraulic pressure from the stepping valve essential to shift the sleeve from a particular setting.
[0008a1 Accordingly, in one aspect of the present invention there is provided a system for controlling the flow of well fluid between a well annulus and an internal flowbore of a tubing string, said system comprising:
a tubular housing in said tubing string having a fluid flow aperture through a tubular wall thereof around said flowbore;
a substantially coaxial tubular sleeve adjacent said housing for selectively obstructing the fluid flow area of said flow aperture;
a first actuator for selectively displacing said sleeve in a first direction;
and a second actuator for incrementally displacing said sleeve second direction wherein a fluid flow area through said aperture is changed in corresponding increments, and a force required to displace said sleeve from one flow rate increment to another increases incrementally.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
[0009] For a thorough understanding of the present invention, reference is made to the following detailed description of the preferred embodiments, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in which like reference characters designate like or similar elements throughout the several figures of the drawing. Briefly:
FIGURE 1 is an axial length section of the invention presented in four longitudinal segments, 1A, 111, 1C and 1D, respectively;
FIGURE 2 is an axial section view of a first embodiment of the stepping valve actuator;
and FIGURE 3 is an axial section view of a second embodiment of the stepping valve actuator.
DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0010] In the following description, numerous details are set forth to provide an understanding of the present invention. However, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that the present invention may be practiced without these details and numerous variations or modifications from the described embodiments may be possible.
[0011] As used herein, the terms "up" and "down", "upper" and "lower", "upwardly" and "downwardly" and other like terms indicating relative positions above or below a given point or element are used in this description to more clearly describe some embodiment of the invention. However, when applied to equipment and methods for 3a use in wells that are deviated or horizontal, such terms may refer to a left to right or right to left relationship as appropriate.
[0012] Generally, preferred embodiments of the invention provide a variable flow area valve assembly that includes an axially sliding valve sleeve adapted to regulate the flow of fluid through one or more orifices in the valve housing. The sleeve is axially translated from one flow area position to the next by the pressure of a measured volume of hydraulic fluid bearing on a cross-sectional area of the sleeve. A
valve actuator operably attached to the valve housing transmits, from a surface source, the measured volume of hydraulic fluid necessary to shift the valve sleeve position from one flow increment to the next in a sequence of several locations between a fully open position to a fully closed position. The change in fluid flow area as the sleeve is actuated through the incremental positions varies so that predetermined changes in flow condition can be provided. As used herein, flow condition may refer to pressure drop across the valve and/or flow rate through an orifice in the valve.
[0013] At each position increment of the sleeve translation range between fully open and fully closed, the sleeve is secured from uncontrolled displacement by a resilient snap ring set in a sleeve ring seat. At each designated flow area position, is a detent channel in the valve housing. The snap ring on the sleeve expands into a respective detent channel. Each detent channel is defined between parallel channel walls.
At least one wall of each channel is formed at an acute angle to the housing axis with each angle being progressively steep. Consequently, a relationship may be established between the channel wall angle respective to a particular flow area setting and the hydraulic pressure from the valve actuator necessary to displace the sleeve from the particular flow area to another.
(0014] With respect to FIG. 1A, the "upper" end of the invention assembly includes an index housing 10 shown in cross-section to be a tubular element having a number of circumferential channels 40a through 40g turned about the internal bore perimeter 11. The side walls of these channels are set at distinctive acute angles. The side walls of the channel 40a may be cut at 25 , for example. Representatively, the side wall cut for channel 40b may be cut at 30 , the sidewall angle of channel 40c may be , the sidewall angle for channel 40d may be 45 , the sidewall angle for channel 40e may be 50 and the sidewall angle of channel 40f may be 60 .
[00015) As shown by FIG. 1B, the lower end of the index housing 10 threadably assembles with a tubular actuator housing 12. The assembly j oint between the index housing 10 and the actuator housing 12 corppresses a chevron sea130 that wipes the outer cylindrical surface of an axially shifted flow regulator sleeve 20.
[0016] The lower end of the actuator housing 12 threadably assembles with a tubular sub 14 as shown by FIG. 1D. The bottom end of the sub 14 threadably assembles with a tubular bottom housing 16. The thread joint between the sub 14 and the bottom housing 16 compresses a chevron seal 34 against the outer cylindrical surface of the axially shifted sleeve 20.
100171 The tubular wall of the actuator housing 12 is perforated by a number of elongated orifices 28 as seen from FIG. 1C. In open alignment with the actuator housing orifices 28 are the corresponding orifices 26 through a seal compression sleeve 24. The compression sleeve 24 engages the intermediate chevron seal 36 and is secured by an outer clamp 18. The chevron seal 36 wipes the regulator sleeve 20 surface.
100181 Within the housing bore, a tubular sleeve 20 is disposed for a sliding seal fit with the chevron seals 30, 34 and 36. Through the lower end of the sleeve 20 tube wall, a number of elongated orifices 22 may be provided to cooperate with the housing orifices 26 and 28. The upper end of the regulator sleeve 20 carries a resilient snap ring 42 in a caging channel 44 shown by FIG. lA. The outer corners of the snap ring 42 are chamfered to facilitate radial constriction of the snap ring perimeter by an axial thrust on the sleeve 20. The sleeve is designed for an operative stroke between the detent channels 40a and 40g, inclusive. The snap ring 42 seats into each detent channe140 for a respective fluid flow relationship through the orifices 22, 26 and 28. When the snap ring 42 is seated in detent channe140a, the valve is fully closed. When the snap ring 42 is seated in detent channel 40g, the valve is fully open. At each of the detent channel positions between 40a and 40g, a progressively increasing flow area is provided by increased alignment between the sleeve orifices 22 and the housing orifices 26, 28.
[0019] Along the outer surface of the sleeve 20 and aligned between the upper housing seal 30 and the intermediate seal 36 is a chevron seal 32 shown by FIG. 1C.
The seal 32 is secured to the sleeve 20 and moves with it as a load piston.
The sea132 wipes the internal bore wall of a housing cylinder 13 and divides it into two variable volume pressure chambers 46 and 48. The upper pressure chamber 46 is served by a closing hydraulic conduit 50 from a surface source of hydraulic pressure supply as illustrated by FIG. 1B. The lower pressure chamber 48 is served by a hydraulic conduit 52 from the control actuator 60 as shown by FIG. 1C. The control actuator 60 is supplied with hydraulic fluid from the well surface through conduit 54 as shown by FIG. 1B for opening the valve.
[0020] One embodiment of the control actuator 60 is illustrated in detail by FIG. 2.
An actuation cylinder 61 contains a stepping piston 62 for control of hydraulic fluid flow through the cylinder 61 along a direction of orientation from the supply conduit 54 to the sleeve control conduit 52. The stepping piston 62 has a sliding seal 65 with the wall of cylinder 61. A return spring 66 exerts a resilient bias on the stepping piston toward the fluid in-flow end of the cylinder 61. An orifice closure plug 63 projects axially from the out-flow end of the stepping piston to align with the entrance orifice of the sleeve control conduit 52. Distinctively, the volume 64 of cylinder 61 that is displaced by translation of the stepping piston 62 from the in-flow end of the cylinder 61 as illustrated by FIG. 2 to closure of the conduit 52 by the plug substantially corresponds to the displaced volume of the lower sleeve chamber 48 for advancement of a single opening increment e.g. to move the sleeve snap ring 42 from the detent channel 40b to the detent channel 40c. A plurality of stepping piston 62 strokes may be required to move the sleeve 20 from an initial opening of the valve as illustrated by FIG. 1A and the axial distance between detent channels 40a and 40b.
[00211 The stepping piston 62 further comprises a fluid flow check valve 76 that is oriented to permit a reverse flow of fluid at a limited flow rate from the sleeve control conduit 52 toward the supply conduit 54 by lifting the valve closure off the valve conduit seat against the bias of closure spring 77.
[0022) Also within the body of the stepping piston 62 is a stepping valve 70 that comprises an orifice closure pintle 74 acting against the valve seat 73 around the flow orifice 71. A spring 75 exerts resilient bias on the pintle 74 to open the flow orifice 71. However, a salient end 78 of the pintle 74 projects above the in-flow end-plane of the pintle 74 to close the orifice 71 when the stepping piston 62 is pressed against the in-flow end of the cylinder 61 by the bias of return spring 66.
100231 As illustrated by FIG.1D, the regulator sleeve 20 is in the closed valve position. Opening of the valve to a minimum flow rate increment requires the sleeve 20 to be advanced upwardly to move the snap ring 42 from the detent position 40a illustrated to the adjacent detent position 40b. Such linear displacement of the sleeve position relative to the housing requires a finite volumetric increase in the lower pressure chamber 48. This finite volume of hydraulic fluid is displaced from the displacement chamber portion 64 of the actuation cylinder 61 by the stepping piston 62 as the piston is translated along the cylinder length.
[0024] Opening hydraulic pressure is directed from the surface along the opening hydraulic line 54 into the upper chamber 68 of the cylinder 61. The initial pressure differential across the opposite faces of the piston 62 closes both piston valves 70 and 76 and overcomes the spring bias 66 to drive the piston 62 toward the control conduit 52 thereby displacing the fluid volume 64 from the cylinder 61.
[0025] At the end of the piston 62 stroke, the plug 63 closes the entrance orifice of conduit 52 to terminate the fluid displacement from the actuation cylinder 61.
Closure of the conduit 52 is signaled to the surface by an abrupt increase in the pressure of opening line conduit 54. The fluid displaced from actuation cylinder 61 is channeled into the lower sleeve chamber 48 to drive the sleeve snap ring 42 from detent channe140a to 40b. The resilient bias of the snap ring 42 into the channel 40b secures the sleeve position at that location.
[0026] Upon receipt of the abrupt pressure increase, pressure in the opening conduit 54 is released at the surface and the return spring 66 is allowed to drive the stepping piston 62 toward the in-flow end of the cylinder 61. Without the high pressure differential across the stepping valve 70, the spring 75 displaces the pintle 74 from the valve seat 73 to permit a bypass flow of fluid from the conduit 54 through the orifice 71 into the displacement chamber 64 of cylinder 61 until the pintle salient 78 abuts the end wall of the cylinder.
[0027] The foregoing procedure is repeated for each increment of sleeve opening except that the pressure supplied to the opening conduit 54 that is required to overcome the progressively increased angle of each detent channel wall 40c through 40g increases correspondingly. Hence, by the pressure value required to advance the sleeve an increment, the identity of the opening increment may be known.
100281 From any position of relative opening, the valve may be closed by a surface directed pressure charge along closing conduit 50 into the upper sleeve chamber 46.
See FIGs. 1B and 1C. Correspondingly displaced fluid in the lower sleeve chamber 48 follows a reverse flow path along the actuator control conduit 52 into the cylinder 61 and past the stepping piston 62 through the check valve 76.
[0029] An alternative embodiment of the invention control actuator 60 is illustrated by FIG. 3. In this embodiment, the check valve 76 is omitted as separate apparatus.
The bias force of stepping valve opening spring 75 is modified to keep the orifice 71 open against the closing bias of return spring 66 to pen.nit a controlled bypass flow of fluid from the lower sleeve chamber when the valve is closed.
[0030] Use of sleeve retainer detent channels 40 having progressive side wall angles is one method of informational feedback for indicating the sleeve position. It should be understood by those of skill in the art that other devices may be used to accomplish the same end such as linear transducers.
[0031] Other applications for the actuator valve 60 described herein may include stepping control for under-reaming tools. It may also be used in a drill-stem testing tool to set an inflatable packer for pressure reversals without unsetting the tool. In another application, the actuator may be used to step set an inflatable packer to different inflation pressures. Similar to the present embodiments, the actuator may be used to step set a gas lift valve into different flow rate positions.
[0032] Although the invention has been described in terms of particular embodiments which are set forth in detail, it should be understood that this is by illustration only and that the invention is not necessarily limited thereto. Alternative embodiments and operating techniques will become apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art in view of the present disclosure. Accordingly, modifications of the invention are contemplated which may be made without departing from the spirit of the claimed invention.

Claims (2)

What is claimed is:
1. A system for controlling the flow of well fluid between a well annulus and an internal flowbore of a tubing string, said system comprising:
a tubular housing in said tubing string having a fluid flow aperture through a tubular wall thereof around said flowbore;
a substantially coaxial tubular sleeve adjacent said housing for selectively obstructing the fluid flow area of said flow aperture;
a first actuator for selectively displacing said sleeve in a first direction;
and a second actuator for incrementally displacing said sleeve in a second direction wherein a fluid flow area through said aperture is changed in corresponding increments, and a force required to displace said sleeve from one flow rate increment to another increases incrementally.
2. A system according to claim 1 wherein said sleeve is restrained at each position increment by a resilient detent mechanism.
CA002613115A 2002-10-11 2003-10-01 System for controlling the flow of well fluid Expired - Fee Related CA2613115C (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US10/269,662 2002-10-11
US10/269,662 US6782952B2 (en) 2002-10-11 2002-10-11 Hydraulic stepping valve actuated sliding sleeve
CA2501839A CA2501839C (en) 2002-10-11 2003-10-01 Hydraulic stepping valve actuated sliding sleeve

Related Parent Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
CA2501839A Division CA2501839C (en) 2002-10-11 2003-10-01 Hydraulic stepping valve actuated sliding sleeve

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
CA2613115A1 CA2613115A1 (en) 2004-04-22
CA2613115C true CA2613115C (en) 2008-12-23

Family

ID=39153760

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
CA002613115A Expired - Fee Related CA2613115C (en) 2002-10-11 2003-10-01 System for controlling the flow of well fluid

Country Status (1)

Country Link
CA (1) CA2613115C (en)

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
CA2613115A1 (en) 2004-04-22

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
CA2643138C (en) Hydraulic stepping valve actuated sliding sleeve
US6973974B2 (en) Valves for use in wells
US6068015A (en) Sidepocket mandrel with orienting feature
US5535767A (en) Remotely actuated adjustable choke valve and method for using same
US6494264B2 (en) Wellbore flow control device
US4494608A (en) Well injection system
CA2521934C (en) Pressure actuated tubing safety valve
US8931570B2 (en) Reactive in-flow control device for subterranean wellbores
US8443901B2 (en) Inflow control device and methods for using same
US6241015B1 (en) Apparatus for remote control of wellbore fluid flow
US5971004A (en) Variable orifice gas lift valve assembly for high flow rates with detachable power source and method of using same
US6227302B1 (en) Apparatus and method for controlling fluid flow in a wellbore
US20030183392A1 (en) Multi-positioned sliding sleeve valve
AU2013289086A1 (en) Wellbore servicing assemblies and methods of using the same
US7090033B2 (en) Drill string shutoff valve
US7055607B2 (en) Seal assembly for a safety valve
NL2019726B1 (en) Top-down squeeze system and method
US20070295514A1 (en) Multi-Rotational Indexer
CA2483174C (en) Drill string shutoff valve
CA2613115C (en) System for controlling the flow of well fluid
US10392898B2 (en) Mechanically operated reverse cementing crossover tool
US20250369318A1 (en) Autonomous flow control device and method
WO2000000717A1 (en) Sidepocket mandrel for orienting a gas lift valve

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
EEER Examination request
MKLA Lapsed