US20090145613A1 - Optical fiber for pumping and method - Google Patents

Optical fiber for pumping and method Download PDF

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Publication number
US20090145613A1
US20090145613A1 US12/186,705 US18670508A US2009145613A1 US 20090145613 A1 US20090145613 A1 US 20090145613A1 US 18670508 A US18670508 A US 18670508A US 2009145613 A1 US2009145613 A1 US 2009145613A1
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US
United States
Prior art keywords
cable
fluid
pumping
fiber
buoyancy
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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.)
Abandoned
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US12/186,705
Inventor
Martin P. Coronado
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Baker Hughes Holdings LLC
Original Assignee
Baker Hughes Inc
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Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Baker Hughes Inc filed Critical Baker Hughes Inc
Priority to US12/186,705 priority Critical patent/US20090145613A1/en
Publication of US20090145613A1 publication Critical patent/US20090145613A1/en
Abandoned legal-status Critical Current

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    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E21EARTH DRILLING; MINING
    • E21BEARTH DRILLING, e.g. DEEP DRILLING; OBTAINING OIL, GAS, WATER, SOLUBLE OR MELTABLE MATERIALS OR A SLURRY OF MINERALS FROM WELLS
    • E21B23/00Apparatus for displacing, setting, locking, releasing, or removing tools, packers or the like in the boreholes or wells
    • E21B23/08Introducing or running tools by fluid pressure, e.g. through-the-flow-line tool systems
    • GPHYSICS
    • G02OPTICS
    • G02BOPTICAL ELEMENTS, SYSTEMS OR APPARATUS
    • G02B6/00Light guides; Structural details of arrangements comprising light guides and other optical elements, e.g. couplings
    • G02B6/44Mechanical structures for providing tensile strength and external protection for fibres, e.g. optical transmission cables
    • G02B6/4401Optical cables
    • G02B6/4429Means specially adapted for strengthening or protecting the cables
    • G02B6/4438Means specially adapted for strengthening or protecting the cables for facilitating insertion by fluid drag in ducts or capillaries
    • GPHYSICS
    • G02OPTICS
    • G02BOPTICAL ELEMENTS, SYSTEMS OR APPARATUS
    • G02B6/00Light guides; Structural details of arrangements comprising light guides and other optical elements, e.g. couplings
    • G02B6/46Processes or apparatus adapted for installing or repairing optical fibres or optical cables
    • G02B6/50Underground or underwater installation; Installation through tubing, conduits or ducts
    • G02B6/502Installation methods in fluid conducts, e.g. pipelines
    • GPHYSICS
    • G02OPTICS
    • G02BOPTICAL ELEMENTS, SYSTEMS OR APPARATUS
    • G02B6/00Light guides; Structural details of arrangements comprising light guides and other optical elements, e.g. couplings
    • G02B6/46Processes or apparatus adapted for installing or repairing optical fibres or optical cables
    • G02B6/50Underground or underwater installation; Installation through tubing, conduits or ducts
    • G02B6/52Underground or underwater installation; Installation through tubing, conduits or ducts using fluid, e.g. air

Definitions

  • a fiber optic cable includes at least one optic fiber; and a buoyancy modifying coating on the at least one optic fiber, the coating comprising at least one microballoon and a matrix material.
  • a method for installing at least one optic fiber cable in a tubular includes coupling a fluid carrier to an optic fiber cable with viscous drag forces; pumping the fluid into a tubular structure having a downhole directed leg and an uphole directed leg; and displacing at least a portion of the mass of the cable independently of the pumping of the cable.
  • a fiber optic cable pumping system includes a first tubular having a first inside dimension extending from a surface location to a downhole location; a second tubular having a larger inside dimension than the first inside dimension in fluid conveying communication with the tubular at the downhole location and extending back to the surface location; a fluid in the first and second tubulars; and a fiber optic cable being selectively buoyant in the fluid.
  • FIG. 1 is a perspective schematic view of a portion of an optic fiber cable according to the teaching hereof.
  • FIG. 1 a perspective view of a portion of an optic fiber cable 10 (one or more fibers) modified such that the buoyancy of the fiber is controllable relative to the fluidic material that will act as a carrier fluid to pump the fiber through a tubular (not shown) such as, for example, a control line.
  • an optic fiber cable 10 is coated with a buoyancy enhancing material 12 such as, for example, a microballoon bearing coating material.
  • a buoyancy enhancing material 12 such as, for example, a microballoon bearing coating material.
  • a material includes a number of microballoons, or microspheres (for example ureaformaldehyde type manufactured by Colton Chemical Company, Cleveland, Ohio, phenolic microballoons which are commercially available from a number of sources including, for example, www.fiberglasssuply.com, or glass microballoons made by 3M Corporation) disposed within a matrix of another material such as, for example, polytetrafluoroethylene material.
  • the individual microballoons may be of sizes that range from about 20 microns to about 200 microns and may contain air, helium, or any other gas to selectively adjust the specific gravity of each individual sphere thereby affecting the overall buoyancy of the coating material and thus the cable 10 . While many different depositable materials are employable, it is to be recognized that because an adjustment of buoyancy toward the positive buoyancy end of the spectrum is the desired end result, the material should not be particularly dense. In addition, because the cable is to be run in a downhole environment, a matrix material having properties resistant to environmental conditions downhole will be more effective.
  • materials having a low coefficient of friction enhance the concept disclosed herein by ensuring that contact between the cable 10 and an inside dimension of the tubular in which the cable 10 is pumped will have a minimum of frictional drag against the tubular.
  • Polytetrafluoroethylene was noted above as one possible matrix material because it possesses all of the foregoing attributes.
  • the coating material resulting from admixture of the microspheres with the matrix material is in one embodiment deposited immediately on the cladding of a fiber cable 10 .
  • optic fibers include a cladding to enhance internal reflectance. Further disclosure in this regard is not necessary nor is it germane to the instant disclosure.
  • the material is applied to the cable 10 by an extrusion method common in the art of coating optic fibers. Since the method is commonly known, no further disclosure thereof is warranted or appropriate.
  • the microballoons have a density less than that of the carrier fluid, which may be hydraulic fluid, such that a neutral or greater buoyancy of the cable 10 in the carrier fluid is achieved.
  • the matrix material may or may not have a density greater than that of the carrier fluid.
  • greater buoyancy is better until and unless the combination of components renders the buoyancy great enough to hinder the downhole trip under the viscous drag force of the moving fluid or causes a sufficient contact with a wall of a deviated segment of the tubular to increase a detrimental frictional component of the system enough to deter its desired operation.
  • the buoyancy of the cable 10 is great enough to cause the cable to make any degree of pressured contact with a wall of the tubular, then contact friction in that location will detract from the viscous drag force thereby reducing efficiency of the system.
  • the buoyancy of the cable 10 significantly reduces the reliance on viscous drag to be transported back to surface.
  • the return trip to surface requires no viscous drag at all as the fiber itself has sufficient buoyancy to float back to surface. This allows the added advantage that the tubular in which the cable is being pumped can be enlarged in cross section for the section of the tubular associated with the return trip to surface.
  • the larger cross section tubular helps to reduce hydraulic frictional losses and reduces the input pressure needed at the surface of the downhole leg of the system. And because the fluid velocity is not necessary due to the buoyant condition of the cable, the operation is still successfully completed. Moreover, due to the buoyancy of the cable 10 , it is less likely to “bunch up” in the tubular but rather is much more likely to remain substantially straight in the upward leg of the tubular. It is further to be understood, however, that although buoyancy is noted to be neutral or greater, it is to be appreciated that even a negative buoyancy overall that is more positive than the cable 10 without the buoyancy modifying coating is still better than without the modifying coating.

Abstract

A fiber optic cable includes at least one optic fiber; and a buoyancy modifying coating on the at least one optic fiber, the coating comprising at least one microballoon and a matrix material.

Description

    CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION
  • This application is a divisional application of U.S. Ser. No. 11/950,790, filed Dec. 5, 2007, the contents of which are incorporated by reference herein in their entirety.
  • BACKGROUND
  • In the hydrocarbon recovery industry, instrumenting and sensing are more and more regularly desirable. With the advent of optic fiber sensors and the ability to pump them into the downhole environment, operators desires for their use has only increased.
  • The art of pumping of fibers into the downhole environment is well known and thus its drawbacks and/or limitations have also become well know. For example, because pumping is generally accomplished utilizing a loop of tubular material such as a control line, the distance through which the fiber must travel is twice the distance from the surface to the target location downhole, one leg down and one leg back. This is potentially problematic as the target location becomes more remote (e.g. deeper) from the initiation or surface location. In order to maintain a tractive force on the fiber within the control line, a minimum velocity must be maintained in a carrier fluid. Viscous drag is the basis for the tractive force exerted on the fiber. With increasing distance, the amount of fiber implicated grows and this requires that the velocity of the carrier fluid increase also. With increasing length, however, frictional considerations become more significant until a practical limit is reached above which fiber pumping is simply not considered feasible. This is because there is a practical limit to how much pressure can be employed to drive fluid through the control line without simply bursting the control line at the source. No method has heretofore resolved this issue.
  • SUMMARY
  • A fiber optic cable includes at least one optic fiber; and a buoyancy modifying coating on the at least one optic fiber, the coating comprising at least one microballoon and a matrix material. A method for installing at least one optic fiber cable in a tubular includes coupling a fluid carrier to an optic fiber cable with viscous drag forces; pumping the fluid into a tubular structure having a downhole directed leg and an uphole directed leg; and displacing at least a portion of the mass of the cable independently of the pumping of the cable. A fiber optic cable pumping system includes a first tubular having a first inside dimension extending from a surface location to a downhole location; a second tubular having a larger inside dimension than the first inside dimension in fluid conveying communication with the tubular at the downhole location and extending back to the surface location; a fluid in the first and second tubulars; and a fiber optic cable being selectively buoyant in the fluid.
  • BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
  • FIG. 1 is a perspective schematic view of a portion of an optic fiber cable according to the teaching hereof.
  • DETAILED DESCRIPTION
  • In accordance with the present disclosure, it will be appreciated that an entirely different approach to the pumping length limitation has been successful in increasing distances over which fiber may be pumped. In addition, the teachings herein also allow for pumping pressure and fluid velocity for a conventional pumping distance to be reduced. Referring to FIG. 1, a perspective view of a portion of an optic fiber cable 10 (one or more fibers) modified such that the buoyancy of the fiber is controllable relative to the fluidic material that will act as a carrier fluid to pump the fiber through a tubular (not shown) such as, for example, a control line.
  • In one embodiment, an optic fiber cable 10 is coated with a buoyancy enhancing material 12 such as, for example, a microballoon bearing coating material. Such a material includes a number of microballoons, or microspheres (for example ureaformaldehyde type manufactured by Colton Chemical Company, Cleveland, Ohio, phenolic microballoons which are commercially available from a number of sources including, for example, www.fiberglasssuply.com, or glass microballoons made by 3M Corporation) disposed within a matrix of another material such as, for example, polytetrafluoroethylene material. The individual microballoons may be of sizes that range from about 20 microns to about 200 microns and may contain air, helium, or any other gas to selectively adjust the specific gravity of each individual sphere thereby affecting the overall buoyancy of the coating material and thus the cable 10. While many different depositable materials are employable, it is to be recognized that because an adjustment of buoyancy toward the positive buoyancy end of the spectrum is the desired end result, the material should not be particularly dense. In addition, because the cable is to be run in a downhole environment, a matrix material having properties resistant to environmental conditions downhole will be more effective. Yet further, materials having a low coefficient of friction enhance the concept disclosed herein by ensuring that contact between the cable 10 and an inside dimension of the tubular in which the cable 10 is pumped will have a minimum of frictional drag against the tubular. Polytetrafluoroethylene was noted above as one possible matrix material because it possesses all of the foregoing attributes.
  • The coating material resulting from admixture of the microspheres with the matrix material is in one embodiment deposited immediately on the cladding of a fiber cable 10. One of skill in the art will recognize that optic fibers include a cladding to enhance internal reflectance. Further disclosure in this regard is not necessary nor is it germane to the instant disclosure. In one embodiment, the material is applied to the cable 10 by an extrusion method common in the art of coating optic fibers. Since the method is commonly known, no further disclosure thereof is warranted or appropriate. In each embodiment, the microballoons have a density less than that of the carrier fluid, which may be hydraulic fluid, such that a neutral or greater buoyancy of the cable 10 in the carrier fluid is achieved. It will be noted, however, that the matrix material may or may not have a density greater than that of the carrier fluid. Generally, greater buoyancy is better until and unless the combination of components renders the buoyancy great enough to hinder the downhole trip under the viscous drag force of the moving fluid or causes a sufficient contact with a wall of a deviated segment of the tubular to increase a detrimental frictional component of the system enough to deter its desired operation. More specifically, if the buoyancy of the cable 10 is great enough to cause the cable to make any degree of pressured contact with a wall of the tubular, then contact friction in that location will detract from the viscous drag force thereby reducing efficiency of the system. Providing that the buoyancy does not reach levels that cause the system to reach the noted and similar difficulties, the greater the buoyancy, the better. This is because after the fiber is pumped to the downhole target location and begins its trek back uphole, the buoyancy of the cable 10 significantly reduces the reliance on viscous drag to be transported back to surface. In some embodiments, the return trip to surface requires no viscous drag at all as the fiber itself has sufficient buoyancy to float back to surface. This allows the added advantage that the tubular in which the cable is being pumped can be enlarged in cross section for the section of the tubular associated with the return trip to surface. While this will reduce the fluid velocity and would therefore be thought by one of ordinary skill in the art to be contraindicated, in connection with the cable as disclosed herein, the larger cross section tubular helps to reduce hydraulic frictional losses and reduces the input pressure needed at the surface of the downhole leg of the system. And because the fluid velocity is not necessary due to the buoyant condition of the cable, the operation is still successfully completed. Moreover, due to the buoyancy of the cable 10, it is less likely to “bunch up” in the tubular but rather is much more likely to remain substantially straight in the upward leg of the tubular. It is further to be understood, however, that although buoyancy is noted to be neutral or greater, it is to be appreciated that even a negative buoyancy overall that is more positive than the cable 10 without the buoyancy modifying coating is still better than without the modifying coating.
  • While preferred embodiments have been shown and described, modifications and substitutions may be made thereto without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. Accordingly, it is to be understood that the present invention has been described by way of illustrations and not limitation.

Claims (6)

1. A method for installing at least one optic fiber cable in a tubular comprising:
coupling a fluid carrier to an optic fiber cable with viscous drag forces;
pumping the fluid into a tubular structure having a downhole directed leg and an uphole directed leg; and
displacing at least a portion of the mass of the cable independently of the pumping of the cable.
2. The method for installing as claimed in claim 1 wherein the displacing includes causing the cable to be buoyant in the fluid.
3. The method for installing as claimed in claim 1 wherein the causing the cable to be buoyant in the fluid is by adjusting the density of the fluid to greater than that of the cable.
4. The method for installing as claimed in claim 1 wherein the causing the cable to be buoyant in the fluid is by coating the cable at least in part with a coating having a buoyancy greater than that of the cable.
5. The method for installing as claimed in claim 1 wherein the coating includes admixing at least one microballoon.
6. The method for installing as claimed in claim 1 wherein the displacing includes floating.
US12/186,705 2007-12-05 2008-08-06 Optical fiber for pumping and method Abandoned US20090145613A1 (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US12/186,705 US20090145613A1 (en) 2007-12-05 2008-08-06 Optical fiber for pumping and method

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US11/950,790 US7570858B2 (en) 2007-12-05 2007-12-05 Optical fiber for pumping and method
US12/186,705 US20090145613A1 (en) 2007-12-05 2008-08-06 Optical fiber for pumping and method

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US11/950,790 Division US7570858B2 (en) 2007-12-05 2007-12-05 Optical fiber for pumping and method

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US12/186,705 Abandoned US20090145613A1 (en) 2007-12-05 2008-08-06 Optical fiber for pumping and method

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AU (1) AU2008335530A1 (en)
BR (1) BRPI0820015A2 (en)
CA (1) CA2707041A1 (en)
NO (1) NO20100854L (en)
RU (1) RU2010127368A (en)
WO (1) WO2009076058A1 (en)

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO2015002870A1 (en) * 2013-07-02 2015-01-08 The Penn State Research Foundation Composite cable assembly with neutral buoyancy
US9885848B2 (en) 2013-07-02 2018-02-06 The Penn State Research Foundation Composite cable assembly with neutral buoyancy
US9927263B2 (en) 2013-07-02 2018-03-27 The Penn State Research Foundation Intrusion detection system for an undersea environment

Families Citing this family (4)

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CA2800839A1 (en) * 2010-07-11 2012-01-19 Halliburton Energy Services, Inc. Downhole cables for well operations
WO2017038734A1 (en) * 2015-08-31 2017-03-09 三井化学株式会社 Copolymer and lubricating oil composition
US10927645B2 (en) 2018-08-20 2021-02-23 Baker Hughes, A Ge Company, Llc Heater cable with injectable fiber optics
CN115410760A (en) * 2021-05-27 2022-11-29 中国海洋大学 Zero-buoyancy cable and deep sea equipment

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WO2015002870A1 (en) * 2013-07-02 2015-01-08 The Penn State Research Foundation Composite cable assembly with neutral buoyancy
US9606314B2 (en) 2013-07-02 2017-03-28 The Penn State Research Foundation Composite cable assembly with neutral buoyancy
US9885848B2 (en) 2013-07-02 2018-02-06 The Penn State Research Foundation Composite cable assembly with neutral buoyancy
US9927263B2 (en) 2013-07-02 2018-03-27 The Penn State Research Foundation Intrusion detection system for an undersea environment

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CA2707041A1 (en) 2009-06-18
WO2009076058A1 (en) 2009-06-18
RU2010127368A (en) 2012-01-10
BRPI0820015A2 (en) 2015-05-19
US7570858B2 (en) 2009-08-04
US20090148110A1 (en) 2009-06-11
NO20100854L (en) 2010-06-30
AU2008335530A1 (en) 2009-06-18

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