WO2002035054A1 - Method and apparatus for in-situ production well testing - Google Patents

Method and apparatus for in-situ production well testing Download PDF

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Publication number
WO2002035054A1
WO2002035054A1 PCT/US2000/041593 US0041593W WO0235054A1 WO 2002035054 A1 WO2002035054 A1 WO 2002035054A1 US 0041593 W US0041593 W US 0041593W WO 0235054 A1 WO0235054 A1 WO 0235054A1
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
tool
packer
fluid
sleeve
valve
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/US2000/041593
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Jeffery D. Baird
Original Assignee
Halliburton Energy Services, 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
Application filed by Halliburton Energy Services, Inc filed Critical Halliburton Energy Services, Inc
Priority to PCT/US2000/041593 priority Critical patent/WO2002035054A1/en
Priority to GB0309469A priority patent/GB2387404B/en
Priority to AU2001229184A priority patent/AU2001229184A1/en
Priority to US09/937,054 priority patent/US6530428B1/en
Publication of WO2002035054A1 publication Critical patent/WO2002035054A1/en
Priority to NO20031796A priority patent/NO324878B1/en

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Classifications

    • 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
    • E21B23/02Apparatus for displacing, setting, locking, releasing, or removing tools, packers or the like in the boreholes or wells for locking the tools or the like in landing nipples or in recesses between adjacent sections of tubing
    • 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
    • E21B49/00Testing the nature of borehole walls; Formation testing; Methods or apparatus for obtaining samples of soil or well fluids, specially adapted to earth drilling or wells
    • E21B49/08Obtaining fluid samples or testing fluids, in boreholes or wells
    • E21B49/081Obtaining fluid samples or testing fluids, in boreholes or wells with down-hole means for trapping a fluid sample
    • E21B49/083Samplers adapted to be lowered into or retrieved from a landing nipple, e.g. for testing a well without removing the drill string
    • 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
    • E21B33/00Sealing or packing boreholes or wells
    • E21B33/10Sealing or packing boreholes or wells in the borehole
    • E21B33/12Packers; Plugs
    • E21B33/124Units with longitudinally-spaced plugs for isolating the intermediate space
    • E21B33/1243Units with longitudinally-spaced plugs for isolating the intermediate space with inflatable sleeves
    • 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
    • E21B49/00Testing the nature of borehole walls; Formation testing; Methods or apparatus for obtaining samples of soil or well fluids, specially adapted to earth drilling or wells
    • E21B49/008Testing the nature of borehole walls; Formation testing; Methods or apparatus for obtaining samples of soil or well fluids, specially adapted to earth drilling or wells by injection test; by analysing pressure variations in an injection or production test, e.g. for estimating the skin factor

Abstract

An apparatus for in situ borehole testing having a drill string with drill pipe (17A) and drill bit (203). An upper sleeve (234A) and lower sleeve (234B) are telescopically couple together. A valve seat (336) is located in an interior passage and closes the interior passage when a valve member (330) is seated in the valve seat. A plurality of separate inflatable packers (211) are coupled to the lower sleeve (234B) and activated when the valve member is seated in the valve seat. A latching collet (219) having teeth positively interlocks with spline teeth (231A) affixed to the inner wall of the upper sleeve (234A). A hydraulic valve assembly (300) is attached to the lower sleeve and is activated by fluid in one of a plurality of separate fluid chambers (265 A, B, C) which communicate with and inflate the separate packers (211 A, B, C).

Description

METHOD AND APPARATUS FOR IN-SITU PRODUCTION WELL TESTING
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION The present invention relates to conducting production tests of wells penetrating earth
formations, such as oil and gas wells. More particularly, the present invention provides an
improved method and apparatus for testing wells without the need to withdraw the drill stem
from the borehole. International patent application number PCT/US98/22379 teaches and discloses methods and apparatuses for testing wells while leaving the drill stem in the borehole. This
application is incorporated herein by reference for all purposes. Significant advances have been made in the present invention to provide a system for
shutting in the well so that tests can be made. Such improvements relate to the structural use
of the activation mechanism for inflating downhole packers including an improved collet/spline configuration to more positively hold and release the packer mandrel; a
simplified hydraulic fluid reservoir and feed system to the packers; the utilization of a plurality of packers having varying pressure capabilities; an improved packer attachment
assembly; and an improved hydraulic float valve coordinated with the packer hydraulic
system. SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION The testing drill collar of the present invention may be positioned between the drill bit
and the drill collar assembly. The inflatable packer assembly may be dressed to accommodate environments that arise in different geological areas. This may be obtained by
selecting a packer design of short element combination, short and long combination, or only one long element. Packer material and designs depend on area, depth, and bottom hole
temperature. The tool is locked in the drill position until deployed by an activating tool via
slickline, electric line, or by pumping the activating tool down. Once activated, the lower
portion of the drill collar scopes downward. The length of travel is controlled by the amount of pressure applied against the activating tool and consequentially the pressure is delivered to
a piston which compresses clean compressible fluid from the reservoir into the packer
elements. The packers have separate fluid reservoirs but inflate simultaneously. It should be
understood that the fluid utilized in no way limits the present invention. A better packer seat is achieved due to the downward movement while inflating. Once desired pressure is achieved this pressure is locked in and maintained by a locking ratchet design that cannot
release until 1/4 round right hand torque is delivered with downward travel of the drill string.
This deflates the elements and receives the lower drill collar and latches back in the drill position when very little weight is put on the drill bit. If elected, reverse circulation may be achieved during this procedure.
The drill mode consists of the upper collar receiving the lower collar scoped in.
Torque is delivered from the upper collar to the lower collar by a rugged spline section. The spline area is sealed and operates in gear oil, therefore, assuring a clean environment to
maximize the life span of the splines and the contact area for weigh transfer. Weight is delivered from the upper collar at the top of the lower collar. During testing, a multi-flow and multi-shut-in apparatus and method delivers
formation pressures, temperatures, and fluid or gas properties to the surface, therefore allowing the test to be engineered efficiently, according to real time data.
BPJEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRA WINGS Fig. 1 is a longitudinal cross-sectional view of a production well.
Figs. 2-7 are schematic views of a well borehole showing the various stages in the
operation of the testing tool of the present invention, in accordance with a preferred embodiment in order to conduct a drill stem test. Fig. 2 shows drilling operations with the testing tool in place in the borehole with right hand torque.
Fig. 3 shows partial or total purging of drilling fluid from the inside of the drill stem
in preparation for a drill stem test and rotation of tool one-quarter turn left. Fig. 4 shows lowering the activating tool in preparation of setting the testing tool.
Fig. 5 shows shutting in the formation by inflation of the packer while maintaining
left hand torque.
Fig. 6 shows the formation producing up into the drill stem after a portion or all
surface pressure is bled off. Fig. 7 shows deflating the packer after right hand torque. Figs. 8-17 and 8A-17A are longitudinal cross-sectional views of the testing tool.
Fig. 8 is the upper portion of the deactivated tool. Fig. 8A is the upper portion of the activated tool. Fig. 9 is the upper spring portion of the deactivated tool. Fig. 9A is the collet portion of the activated tool.
Fig. 10 is the upper inner collar coupling portion of the deactivated tool.
Fig. 10A is the compressed spring portion of the activated tool.
Fig. 1 1 is the upper piston and upper hydraulic reservoir of the deactivated tool. Fig. 1 1 A is the upper collar coupling and upper piston portions of the activated tool. Fig. 12 is the intermediate piston and the intermediate hydraulic reservoir of the deactivated tool.
Fig. 12A is the intermediate piston and intermediate hydraulic reservoir portions of
the activated tool. Fig. 13 is the lower intermediate piston and lower hydraulic reservoir portions of the deactivated tool.
Fig. 13A is the lower intermediate piston and lower hydraulic reservoir portions of the activated tool.
Fig. 14 is the upper packer portion of the deactivated tool. Fig. 14A is the upper packer portion of the activated tool. Fig. 15 is the intermediate packer portion of the deactivated tool.
Fig. 15A is the intermediate packer portion of the activated tool.
Fig. 16 is the lower packer and upper float valve portion of the deactivated tool.
Fig. 16A is the lower packer portion of the activated tool. Fig. 17 is the hydraulic float valve portion of the deactivated tool.
Fig. 17Λ is the hydraulic float valve portion o the activated tool. Fig. 18 is a transverse cross-sectional view of the deactivated testing tool taken
through line A-A of Fig. 9. Fig. 18A is a transverse cross-sectional view of the activated testing tool taken
through line B-B of Fig. 9A. DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFER-RED EMBODIMENT
The present invention utilizes an activating tool during a drill stem test. The
activating tool may be lowered inside of the drill stem by way of a wireline or pumped down
from the surface to seat in a nipple. The nipple is in the drill stem near the formation of interest. When the activating tool seats in the nipple, the formation becomes shut-in. The activating tool can be released from the nipple to allow the formation to produce fluid up into
the drill stem. Once released, the activating tool can be retrieved to the surface or reset for
additional testing.
Thus, the activating tool acts as a valve inside of the drill stem. The activating tool can be used with a conventional drill stem testing tool, which tool requires the removal of the drill bit from the borehole, or the activating tool can be used with an unconventional testing
tool that is lowered into the borehole with the drill bit.
The use of the activating tool 21 with an improved testing tool 201 is described below
with reference to Figs. 8-18 and 8A-18A. In addition to the activating tool, other valves can be used with the testing tool of Figs. 8-18 and 8A-18 A, which provide real time test data and utilize electronic testing equipment.
The testing tool 201 can be used in drilling operations to prevent blow outs and to control thief zones through the utilization of deadman or drop probes. The activating tool 21 is preferably used to conduct a drill stem test. The activating tool can also be used in
conjunction with the testing tool 201 to control blow outs and thief zones. In controlling blow outs and thief zones, the activating tool and the testing tool 201
are used in conjunction with the circulating sub 202, well known in the art, shown in Figs. 2-
7. A thorough description of the operation of an activating tool 21 is detailed in International Publication WO99/22114, published May 6, 1999, and is incorporated herein by
reference for all purposes.
From time to time it is desirable to test the production of a producing well. During such a production test the well is shut-in and the formation pressure is allowed to increase.
The increase in pressure provides useful informiJion en the product.. .. x abilities of the well.
In Fig. 1 , there is shown a view of a producing well 161. The well 161 extends in the
formation of interest 15. Production equipment is in place. This equipment includes casing 163. The casing is perforated 165 at the formation 15. A packer 167 isolates the formation
15. The nipple 23 A is located above the packer 167. Located above the nipple 23 A is a standard seating nipple 169 found in many producing wells. A string of tubing 171 extends
from the standard nipple 169 to the surface 13. A well head 173 and other equipment is also provided. The nipple 23 A is installed downhole when the well is completed or when the
tubing string is pulled. During drilling operations, an activating tool 21 may be inserted into the well via a lubricator 175. A wireline 53 is used to raise and lower the activating tool 21 for a drill stem
test or pumped down for blow out control.
The activating tool 21 can be used to shut-in the production well and acquire pressure
data. The activating tool 21 is lowered down inside the tubing on a wireline 53. It seats
inside of the nipple 23 A, as discussed hereinbelow. Once the activating tool is seated, the well is shut-in from a downhole location. Formation pressure is allowed to build, which
build up is recorded by the activating tool instrumentation.
The well need only be shut-in for a relatively short time (for example, 24 hours)
compared to conventional production well testing. Because the well is shut-in from a downhole location close to the formation, the entire column of tubing 171 need not be pressurized by the formation pressure, as with conventional testing. Therefore, use of the
activating tool in a production well test saves time. After the well has been shut-in for a suitable period of time, the activating tool is
released from the nipple 23 A, as discussed hereinbefore. The activating tool is then retrieved
to the surface, for analysis of the data.
With the exception of the seals, which are made of rubber, the nipple and the activating tool are made of metal. Figs. 2-7 show the sequence of operation for a drill stem test. In Fig. 2, the borehole
1 1 is being drilled. The drill bit 203 is in place on the bottom of the borehole and the drill stem 17A is being rotated. Drilling proceeds in accordance with conventional techniques. For example, weight is applied to the drill stem at the surface 13, and drilling fluid 205 is circulated down through the drill stem 17A, out through jets or orifices in the drill bit 203 and up by way of the annulus 207, where the drilling fluid returns to the surface 13.
Beginning at the bottom and working towards the surface, the drill stem or drill string
17A is made up of th drill bit 203, its associated float sub 209, the testing tool 201, a circulating sub 202, drill collars 35, and drill pipe 17A. The testing tool 201 is preferably located immediately above the drill bit 203 and its sub 209, although the testing tool can be
located higher up the drill stem. The testing tool 201 is thus part of the drill stem 17 A. As the drill stem is rotated, so
too is the testing tool. The testing tool 201 transmits the rotational force needed to rotate the drill bit for drilling. In addition, weight applied to the bit during drilling is also transmitted
through the testing tool 201. When the borehole penetrates a formation 15 of interest, the decision is made to
conduct a drill stem test. In Figs. 3-5, the borehole 1 1 is readied for the test. In Fig. 3, the
drill stem 17A is left hand torqued one-quarter turn (counterclockwise) to align the latching
collet 219 and is then picked up a determined distance in order to position the packer above the zone at a suitable place for a good packer seat. Next, because the drill stem is lull of
drilling fluid, the drill stem may be purged by pumping in compressed gas 10 (or lighter
fluid) from the surface. For example, compressed nitrogen gas can be used. As the
compressed gas traverses down inside of the drill stem 17A, the drilling fluid is pushed out of the bottom of the drill stem. The drilling fluid flows up to the surface via the annulus 207. In
this manner, the inside of the drill pipe stem may be partially or totally purged of drilling fluid. With the testing tool 201 still suspended above the formation 15, as shown in Fig. 4,
the testing tool is set. The testing tool is set by lowering the activating tool 21 on a wireline
53 down inside of the drill stem 17A. The inside of the testing tool 201 contains an
accommodating nipple 23A for receiving the activating tool. The activating tool 21 engages the nipple 23A. The inside of the drill stem 17A is now closed by the activating tool 21. The
pressure exerted by compression inside of the drill stem causes the nipple 23 A to slide
downwardly and then causes a packer 21 1 (or more than one packer) to inflate (Fig. 5)
against the walls of the borehole 11. In the present preferred embodiment more than one
packer is utilized. The ability to use one or more packers of differing characteristics is a unique feature of the present invention as will be discussed below. The packer inflates as it
extends and wipes the borehole wall. This helps provide a clean area to seal off the
formation. Once inflated, the packer 211 packs off the annulus 207 above the formation 15. The
formation is now shut-in by the inflated packer 211 and also by the activating tool-nipple arrangement 21, 23A, which forms a seal inside of the drill stem. In Fig. 5, the formation
fluid or gas 62 is shown as an arrow. The flow of fluid or gas inside of the drill stem is
stopped by the activating tool and nipple. The test then enters an initial flow period. To enter the flow period, the valve inside
of the testing tool is opened, namely by manipulating the activating tool 21. Fluid or gas 62 from the formation flows through the testing tool up into the drill stem 17A. After desired
flow and initial shut-in periods, the activating tool 21 is released from the nipple and retrieved to the surface 13. The activating tool can be used to retrieve a fluid sample as well as contain instrumentation to record pressure, temperature, and other parameters, such as
gradients, to determine what kind of fluid is in the drill pipe. When the activating tool reaches the surface, the sample and recorded information can be inspected. Currently, fluid
properties and pressure information may be analyzed in real time by the use of electronic test
equipment. The well can undergo repeated shut-in and flow periods (Figs. 5 and 6, respectively)
by seating and releasing the activating tool 21. Some surface manipulation of pressure above the activating tool may be necessary to assist in seating the activating tool. Once inflated, the packer remains inflated, independently of the activating tool activity.
After the drill stem test has been completed, the testing tool 201 is reconfigured for drilling. The drill stem 17A is rotated slowly to the right (very little travel is needed to free
the collett teeth 242) and then eased to the bottom of the borehole (Fig. 7). The rotation and lowering of the drill stem allows the lower portion of the drill stem 17A to retract and the hydraulic fluid to reenter the reservoirs thereby allowing the packer 211 to deflate. As the
packer is deflated, the borehole undergoes reverse circulation by surface control. When the packer is released from the borehole, the annulus drilling fluid will flow into the drill stem,
thus displacing the formation fluids or gas to the surface where they may be contained. After weight is applied to the bit, the testing tool 201 , and the remainder of the drill stem 17A, are
again ready for drilling (see Fig. 2).
The testing tool 201 of Figs. 8- 18 and 8A-18A will now be described in detail. The
testing tool 201 includes an upper testing collar 213 and an inner assembly 15. The upper testing collar 213 is generally tubular, having an upper end 217 and a lower end 219 (Fig.
JO- 13). The upper testing collar 213 forms a housing for the inner assembly 215. The upper end 217 (Fig. 8) is coupled to a drill collar (not shown). The lower end 219 (Fig. 13) is located
adjacent to the packer section.
The upper testing collar has an interior cavity 221 that extends from the upper end
217 to the lower end 219. The interior cavity 221 has a number of characteristics, which will be described beginning near the upper end 217 and proceeding toward the lower end 219. Near the upper end of the interior cavity 221 is an abutment shoulder 223 (see Fig. 8 A) which
extends radially inward. The top side 223 A of the shoulder slopes inwardly, but the bottom
side 223B is perpendicular to the longitudinal axis L of the tool 201. Below the shoulder 223 is a restriction c-ring groove 224. Further, below the c-ring groove 224 is an upper shoulder
226. Sliding sleeve sealing o-rings 100 are just above the stop shoulder 226 and fit into o- ring notches 101 (Fig. 8). A short distance away (Fig. 9), the interior cavity 221 narrows slightly in its inside diameter forming a small circumferential beveled shoulder 227 to
cooperate with teeth 242 of collet 219. The interior cavity 221 extends lower and gradually tapers to a wider diameter to accept a number of splines 231 having teeth 231 A. The top of which is where drilling weight is transferred. (See Figs. 9, 9A, 18 and 18 A.) The splines 231 extend longitudinally along the inside of the upper testing collar 213 and project
inwardly toward the longitudinal axis L of the tool. In the preferred embodiment, there are
four splines 231, spaced 90° apart around the circumference of the inner cavity (see Figs. 18 and 18A). However, there can be more or fewer splines. The splines 231 are separated from
each other by channels 232. Channels 232 are release grooves for the collett teeth 231 A to free-travel in. The lower end of the splines 231 form a shoulder 233. Fig. 18 is a cross-sectional view of the deactivated testing tool taken through line A-A
of Fig. 9. This shows the tool in the drilling position. The upper testing collar 213 has splines 231 at 90° with channels 232 between each spline section. Cooperating mandrel
spline sections 259 are shown in contact with upper testing collar splines 231 along intersections I,, I2, 13, and I4. Drilling torque is transferred along these intersection. By rotating the upper testing collar 213, one-quarter turn left (counterclockwise), the
tool is ready to be activated for testing. Fig. 18 A shows this slight rotation. The rotation allows the collet teeth 242 (Fig. 8) to rotate into alignment with the spline teeth 231 A.
Below the splines, the interior cavity 221 continues toward the lower end 219,
wherein a piston 239A is encountered (see Fig. 1 1). The piston head 240A, which is ring
shaped, is perpendicular to the longitudinal axis of the tool and projects inwardly. Below the piston 239A, the interior cavity 221 continues to the lower end 219 of the upper collar. The
lower end 219 is closed.
The inner assembly 215 includes an upper sliding sleeve 234A, a nipple 23 A, one or more pistons 239A-239C, a spline mandrel 236, a lower sliding sleeve 234B, a packer mandrel 237, and one or more packers 21 1A-21 I C. The upper sliding sleeve 234A slides in interior cavity 221 as will be discussed below.
At the topmost end 218 of sleeve 234 A is a circumferential groove 103 which retains restriction c-ring 104 (Fig. 8). The lower end 220 of upper sleeve 234A is attached to nipple
23 A at an upper sleeve collar portion 216A (Fig. 9). Upper sliding sleeve 234A guides and aligns the movement of the nipple 23 A.
Further, the restriction c-ring 104 cooperates with groove 224 to hold the nipple 23 A in a
proper location during deactivation of the tool 201. The outside diameter of the collar 216 A is greater than the outside diameter of the
upper sleeve section. The lower sliding sleeve 234B is provided with sealing 0-rings 267 at its lower end and has a circumferential lower sleeve collar 216B which fits over and attaches
to the lower end of nipple 23 A. Again, the outside diameter of lower sleeve collar 216B is
greater than the outside diameter of the lower sliding sleeve 234B.
The spline mandrel 236 fits circumferentially around nipple 23A. An upper shoulder 105 on the spline mandrel supports and retains collet 219 having teeth 242. Shoulder 105
also limit; the downward travel of the sleeve 220. A lower shoulder 106 extends inwardly around mandrel 236 and serves as an abutment for coil spring 255. The mandrel lower end
233 attaches to the packer mandrel 237 (Fig. 10). Turning to Figs. 8 and 9, it may be seen that when upper sliding sleeve 234A is in drilling position, collet 219 fits around upper sleeve collar 216A with teeth 242 urged into engagement with beveled shoulder 227. The collet teeth cannot move inwardly because
upper sleeve collar 216A restrains such movement. Further, splines 231 are in drilling
engagement with the splines 259 of the spline mandrel 236.
A chamber 251 is formed in the interior cavity 221 in the upper testing collar 213. The chamber, which extends from the shoulder 223 A near the top of tool 201 (Figs. 8 and
8A) to upwardly facing lower abutment shoulder 106 on the splines mandrel 236 containing the nipple 23 A. The nipple 23 A can slide up and down within the chamber 251. A helical coil spring 255 is located between the lower abutment shoulder 106 and the lower sliding sleeve collar 216B, wherein the nipple 23 A is biased upwardly. The cooperation between the collet 219 and the toothed splines 231 are important to
the positive locking feature of the present invention. When the tool 201 is in the drilling
position (shown in Figs. 8-18), the collet 219, the collet teeth 242, and the spline teeth 231 A
are not engaged and the drilling forces and torque are transmitted through the splines 231
and 259, as will be described below. However, once the drilling has ceased, the tool rotated
one-quarter turn counterclockwise, and the activating tool 21 seated in the nipple 23 A, the collet teeth 242 have been aligned with the spline teeth 231 A. As the collet 219 moves
-.'.ownwardly, the teeth 242 engage the spline teeth 231 A. The flat surface of the collet teeth
engage the flat surface of the spline teeth (see Fig. 9A). Thus, the spline mandrel 236 and the
nipple 23 A cannot move upwardly until the upper testing drill collar 213 is rotated clockwise a quarter of a turn to move the collet teeth 242 out of alignment with spline teeth 231 A and into channel 232.
Fig. 10 illustrates the coupling of the packer mandrel 237 with the inner spline
mandrel 236, thus as the inner spline mandrel moves up and down within the borehole during
the activation of the testing tool, the packer mandrel also moves up and down. The packer mandrel extends the length of the tool 201 from the spline mandrel 236 (Fig. 10) to the hydraulic float valve 300 assembly (Fig. 16).
There are a number of compartments 265A-265C formed in the annular region
between the packer mandrel 237 and the upper testing collar 213. These compartments form
separate annular reservoirs for holding compressible fluid used to inflate the packer elements and operate a hydraulic float valve situated downstream on the tool string. Fig. 1 1 shows
how the upper reservoir 265 A is bounded at its upper end by piston 239A and at its lower end
by connector sub 235 A which is fixed to the upper testing collar 213. The piston 239 A is
connected to the packer mandrel 237 and slides relative to the upper testing collar 236. The piston 239A is ring-shaped around the packer mandrel. The piston has seals 271 A around its
outer diameter and also around its inner diameter.
The connector sub 235A (Fig. 1 1) has seals 273A, such as 0-rings, around its inside
diameter to provide a seal against the packer mandrel 237. The packer mandrel 237 can slide
through the sub 235 A. Similarly, an intermediate reservoir 265B (Fig. 12) and a lower reservoir 265C (Fig.
13) are provided d wnstream on the tool 201. It should be understood that each reservoir has
associated pistons 239B and 239C, ring systems 271B and 271C, subs 235B and 235C with
seals 273B and 273 C, and independent oil feed conduits to each packer. Still further downstream on the packer mandrel are a series of packer elements
associated with each reservoir. Fig. 14 illustrates the first such packer 21 1A mounted to mandrel 237 by packer heads 275A and 277A. The upper head 275A is fixed to the packer
mandrel 237 while the lower head 277A is slidably coupled to the mandrel 237. The heads have seals around their inside diameters to seal between the heads and the mandrel. The
packer element is connected between the upper and lower heads. The packer may be made of
rubber such as a 70-90 durometer buna rubber or any other suitable material that is oil
resistant. There is an interior annular chamber 280A formed around the mandrel 237 which fills with hydraulic fluid from reservoir 265 A during activation of the testing tool 201. Fig. 14A
shows the packer 21 1 A inflated with fluid in chamber 280A. The injection of fluid is achieved by fluid passing through fluid conduit 281 A from the reservoir 265 A to chamber
280A during the compression of the fluid by the downward movement of the piston 239A as
will be described below. Similarly, an intermediate packer 21 1 B (Fig. 15) and a lower packer 21 1 C (Fig. 15)
are provided downstream on the mandrel 237. It should be understood that each packer has
associated upper 275B and 275C and lower 277B and 277C heads, interior chambers 280B and 280C, fluid conduits 28 IB and 28 IC.
One of the unique features of the packer system of the present invention is the ability
to provide packers with different pressure capabilities on one tool. Thus, as the well is drilled to deeper depths, it is possible to inflate the lowest packer to a higher pressure by
varying the construction of the bladder and the volume of the fluid injected by the same displacement of the piston.
A unique packer head locking 509 assembly is provided in the present invention as shown in Figs. 15 and 15 A. A packer header 510 is attached to the packer element 21 1 C and
is provided with seals 512 which urge against the packer mandrel 237. Internal threads 514
are provided on the header 510 to threadingly attach the header 510 to a keyed, non-rotating
locking head 520. Locking head 520 is attached to the mandrel 237 by key 522 in keyway
523 in the mandrel. This prevents the locking heads from rotating around the mandrel. To further retain the locking head, a four-section, quadrant locking ring 524 is inserted through opening 526 in locking head 520. Once the four sections of the ring 524 are in place a door
closure 528 is inserted into the opening 526. A lock bolt 530 is set through the door and into the locking head to retain the segmented locking ring in place. The locking ring 524 prevents
the locking head 520 from moving up or down the mandrel. The packer header 510 may then
be threadingly attached to the locking head 520. The fixation of the packer head locking assembly to the mandrel ensures that the top
end of the packer 532 does not move up, down, or rotate on the mandrel when inflated or
during drilling operation when the packer is deflated. Further, the lower end 534 of an upstream packer is restricted in downward movement when it abuts against a locking
assembly 509 immediately below it. Downstream of the last packer 211 C is a hydraulic float valve assembly 300 shown in
Figs. 16 and 17. The float valve assembly body 302 is threadingly attached to the packer
mandrel end threads 304 on the distal end of the mandrel. The body 302 is further retained to
the mandrel by retaining collar 306 (Fig. 16). A hydraulic fluid conduit 308 extends through the body 302 and is in fluid
communication with fluid conduit 28 IC. Thus when fluid pressure is increased by the movement of piston 239C as described above, fluid is forced through hydraulic fluid conduit
308 into fluid chamber 310, opening the poppet valve assembly 312 (as seen in Figs. 17A). The pressure necessary to control the opening of the poppet valve assembly 312 is
determined by the unique restriction c-ring 314. C-ring 314 is designed to collapse in a
specified pressure range based upon its material composition, the slope of the restriction shoulder, and thickness of the ring. As may be seen in Fig. 17, c-ring 314 has a leading tapered restriction shoulder 315 which urges against a collapsing collar 317. As pressure
increases in fluid chamber 310, abutment flange 316 presses against upstream side 318 of the
c-ring 314. When the specific pressure range is reached the ring 314 collapses inwardly into
groove 320 (as seen in Fig. 17A) and poppet valve assembly 312 slides downwardly. A
second restriction c-ring 322 releases from groove 324 and urges against shoulder 326
extending inwardly from the housing 302 keeping the valve open, even when hydraulic
pressure is released from chamber 310. From this description of the valve 312 operation, it may be seen that fluids from the downhole stem may be passed up the stem by the opening and closing of the hydraulic valve
assembly 312. The assembly includes the valve head 330, the valve stem 332, closure spring
' ' 334, valve seat 336, valve body collar 338, and valve lower inlet opening 340. Once a testing or sampling is taken, the drilling operators may close the hydraulic
valve by releasing the hydraulic pressure in the chamber 310 by rotating the upper testing collar 213 one-quarter turn clockwise, and lowering the drill stem on the borehole bottom.
The weight of the drill stem will exceed the collapse pressure of second restriction c-ring
322. The ring 322 will collapse back into position in groove 322 A and the entire valve body collar 338 will move upwardly to close the valve head 330 against valve seat 336.
Turning to Figs. 8A-18A, the operation of the testing tool 201 may be seen. To clarify the drawing the test activating tool 21 is not shown as seated in the nipple 23 A, but
one of ordinary skill in the art would understand the operation of the tool 201.
In Fig. 8A, it must be understood that the upper drilling collar 213 has been rotated one-quarter turn counterclockwise to align the collet teeth 242 with the spline teeth 231 A, the test activating tool 21 (not shown) has been seated in nipple 23 A, and nipple 23 A has been urged downwardly compressing spring 255. The upper sleeve collar portion 216A has moved
downwardly away from the collet teeth 242. Because of the resiliency of the collet 219, when the collar portion 216A is moved away from the upper end of the collet 219 and the collet is
urged downwardly applying tension to spring 255 against shoulder 106, the collet head 700
collapses inwardly and teeth 242 slide off tapered shoulder 227. The collet 219 continues
downwardly engaging the spline teeth 231 A. Spline mandrel 236 is urged downwardly (Figs. 9A and 10A). Packer mandrel 237 moves downwardly causing pistons 239A, 239B, and
239C to compress fluid in the associated reservoirs 265A, 265B, and 265C (see Figs. 11 A,
12 A, and 13 A). As the fluid is compressed, the separate packer elements 21 1 A, 21 IB, and
21 IC are inflated (Figs. 14 A, 15 A, and 16A) simultaneously, move downwardly along the
borehole wall and wipe the wall surface for positive engagement and sealing of the borehole. Compressed fluid from one of the reservoirs (in the present embodiment reservoir
265C via conduit 28 IC) opens the hydraulic float valve 312 to allow well fluids to enter the
drilling test tool 201 for sampling. To deactivate the drilling test tool the upper testing collar 213 is rotated one-quarter turn counterclockwise allowing the collet teeth 242 to disengage from the spline teeth 231 A. The spline mandrel 236 and the packer mandrel 237 are now urged upwardly by the
downward movement of the upper collar when the tool is placed in contact with the bottom
of the borehole. The spring 255 has a strength slightly greater than the collapse force
necessary to release restriction c-ring 104 from groove 224. The hydraulic float valve 312 may be closed by forcing the stem against the well bore bottom. Once the tool is deactivated, drilling can be commenced. The splines 231 and 259 are able to transmit torque forces to the drill bit at the distal end of the drilling stem. Although the invention has been described with reference to a specific embodiment,
this description is not meant to be construed in a limiting sense. On the contrary, various
modifications of the disclosed embodiments will become apparent to those skilled in the art
upon reference to the description of the invention. It is therefore contemplated that the
appended claims will cover such modifications, alternatives, and equivalents that fall within
the true spirit and scope of the invention.

Claims

CLAIMS:
1. An apparatus for use in a borehole with a drill string having a drill pipe and a drill bit, comprising: an upper sleeve and a lower sleeve telescopically coupled together, the upper and lower sleeves being structured and arranged to be connected in line with the
drill string above the drill bit, with the lower sleeve being closer to the drill bit
than is the upper sleeve, the upper and lower sleeves having an interior
passage therethrough, the upper and lower sleeves rotating together in unison; a valve seat located in the interior passage and coupled to the lower sleeve, the valve
seat being structured and arranged to accept a V Λ J oe b-; which, when seated in the valve seat, closes the interior passage;
a plurality of separate fluid chambers located between the upper and lower sleeves,
the fluid chambers having lower end walls that are connected to the upper sleeve and having upper end walls that are connected to the lower sleeve, the lower end walls, the upper end walls, and the upper and lower sleeves sealing
the fluid chamber from the interior passage, the fluid chambers having fluid therein; and
a plurality of separate inflatable packers coupled to the lower sleeve, the packers having packer chambers therein, the packer chambers being in communication
with respective fluid chambers.
2. The apparatus of claim 1 further comprising a latching collet having engagement teeth for positive interlocking connection to spline teeth affixed to the inner wall of said upper sleeve.
3. The application of claim 2 further comprising a valve assembly attached to the lower
sleeve, said assembly further comprising: a valve body having an interior valve passage in communication with the interior
sleeve passage;
a valve seat and valve member disposed in the valve passage; and a valve fluid chamber in the valve body, the valve fluid chamber in fluid
communication with one of the plurality of separate fluid chambers.
PCT/US2000/041593 2000-10-26 2000-10-26 Method and apparatus for in-situ production well testing WO2002035054A1 (en)

Priority Applications (5)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
PCT/US2000/041593 WO2002035054A1 (en) 2000-10-26 2000-10-26 Method and apparatus for in-situ production well testing
GB0309469A GB2387404B (en) 2000-10-26 2000-10-26 Method and apparatus for in-situ production well testing
AU2001229184A AU2001229184A1 (en) 2000-10-26 2000-10-26 Method and apparatus for in-situ production well testing
US09/937,054 US6530428B1 (en) 2000-10-26 2000-10-26 Method and apparatus for in-situ production well testing
NO20031796A NO324878B1 (en) 2000-10-26 2003-04-22 Method and apparatus for in-situ production well testing

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
PCT/US2000/041593 WO2002035054A1 (en) 2000-10-26 2000-10-26 Method and apparatus for in-situ production well testing

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
WO2002035054A1 true WO2002035054A1 (en) 2002-05-02

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PCT/US2000/041593 WO2002035054A1 (en) 2000-10-26 2000-10-26 Method and apparatus for in-situ production well testing

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AU (1) AU2001229184A1 (en)
GB (1) GB2387404B (en)
NO (1) NO324878B1 (en)
WO (1) WO2002035054A1 (en)

Citations (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2978046A (en) * 1958-06-02 1961-04-04 Jersey Prod Res Co Off-bottom drill stem tester
US3327781A (en) * 1964-11-06 1967-06-27 Schlumberger Technology Corp Methods for performing operations in a well bore
US3850240A (en) * 1972-06-14 1974-11-26 Lynes Inc Tool for running on a drill string in a well bore
US4083401A (en) * 1977-05-27 1978-04-11 Gearhart-Owen Industries, Inc. Apparatus and methods for testing earth formations
US4345648A (en) * 1980-02-11 1982-08-24 Bj-Hughes, Inc. Inflatable packer system
US4424860A (en) * 1981-05-26 1984-01-10 Schlumberger Technology Corporation Deflate-equalizing valve apparatus for inflatable packer formation tester
US5799733A (en) * 1995-12-26 1998-09-01 Halliburton Energy Services, Inc. Early evaluation system with pump and method of servicing a well
WO1999022114A1 (en) * 1997-10-24 1999-05-06 Baird Jeffrey D Method and apparatus for shutting in a well while leaving drill stem in the borehole
US6092416A (en) * 1997-04-16 2000-07-25 Schlumberger Technology Corporation Downholed system and method for determining formation properties

Patent Citations (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2978046A (en) * 1958-06-02 1961-04-04 Jersey Prod Res Co Off-bottom drill stem tester
US3327781A (en) * 1964-11-06 1967-06-27 Schlumberger Technology Corp Methods for performing operations in a well bore
US3850240A (en) * 1972-06-14 1974-11-26 Lynes Inc Tool for running on a drill string in a well bore
US4083401A (en) * 1977-05-27 1978-04-11 Gearhart-Owen Industries, Inc. Apparatus and methods for testing earth formations
US4345648A (en) * 1980-02-11 1982-08-24 Bj-Hughes, Inc. Inflatable packer system
US4424860A (en) * 1981-05-26 1984-01-10 Schlumberger Technology Corporation Deflate-equalizing valve apparatus for inflatable packer formation tester
US5799733A (en) * 1995-12-26 1998-09-01 Halliburton Energy Services, Inc. Early evaluation system with pump and method of servicing a well
US6092416A (en) * 1997-04-16 2000-07-25 Schlumberger Technology Corporation Downholed system and method for determining formation properties
WO1999022114A1 (en) * 1997-10-24 1999-05-06 Baird Jeffrey D Method and apparatus for shutting in a well while leaving drill stem in the borehole

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
GB2387404A (en) 2003-10-15
NO20031796D0 (en) 2003-04-22
NO324878B1 (en) 2007-12-27
NO20031796L (en) 2003-06-24
AU2001229184A1 (en) 2002-05-06
GB2387404B (en) 2004-06-09

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