[0001] 1. Field of the Invention
[0002] The present invention relates to the earthboring arts. More particularly, the invention relates to methods and devices for severing drill pipe, casing and other massive tubular structures by the remote detonation of an explosive cutting charge.
[0003] 2. Description of Related Art
[0004] Deep well earthboring for gas, crude petroleum, minerals and even water or steam requires tubes of massive size and wall thickness. Tubular drill strings may be suspended into a borehole that penetrates the earth's crust several miles beneath the drilling platform at the earth's surface. To further complicate matters, the borehole may be turned to a more horizontal course to follow a stratification plane.
[0005] The operational circumstances of such industrial enterprise occasionally presents a driller with a catastrophe that requires him to sever his pipe string at a point deep within the wellbore. For example, a great length of wellbore sidewall may collapse against the drill string causing it to wedge tightly in the well bore. The drill string cannot be pulled from the well bore and in many cases, cannot even be rotated. A typical response for salvaging the borehole investment is to sever the drill string above the obstruction, withdraw the freed drill string above the obstruction and return with a “fishing” tool to free and remove the wedged portion of drill string.
[0006] When an operational event such as a “stuck” drill string occurs, the driller may use wireline suspended instrumentation that is lowered within the central, drill pipe flow bore to locate and measure the depth position of the obstruction. This information may be used to thereafter position an explosive severing tool within the drill pipe flow bore.
[0007] Typically, an explosive drill pipe severing tool comprises a significant quantity, 800 to 1,500 grams for example, of high order explosive such as RDX, HMX or HNS. The explosive powder is compacted into high density “pellets” of about 22.7 to about 38 grams each. The pellet density is compacted to about 1.6 to about 1.65 gms/cm
[0008] In one form, the pellets are compacted at a production facility into a cylindrical shape for serial, juxtaposed loading at the jobsite as a column in a cylindrical barrel of a tool cartridge. Due to weight variations within an acceptable range of tolerance between individual pellets, the axial length of explosive pellets fluctuates within a known tolerance range. Furthermore, the diameter-to-axial length ratio of the pellets is such that allows some pellets to wedge in the tool cartridge barrel when loaded. For this reason, a go-no-go type of plug gauge is used by the prior art at the end of a barrel to verify the number of pellets in the tool barrel. In the frequent event that the tool must be disarmed, the pellets may also wedge in the barrel upon removal. A non-sparking depth-rod is inserted down the tool barrel to verify removal of all pellets.
[0009] Extreme well depth is often accompanied by extreme hydrostatic pressure. Hence, the drill string severing operation may need to be executed at 10,000 to 20,000 psi. Such high hydrostatic pressures tend to attenuate and suppress the pressure of an explosive pulse to such degree as to prevent separation.
[0010] One prior effort by the industry to enhance the pipe severing pressure pulse and overcome high hydrostatic pressure suppression has been to detonate the explosive pellet column at both ends simultaneously. Theoretically, simultaneous detonations at opposite ends of the pellet column will provide a shock front from one end colliding with the shock front from the opposite end within the pellet column at the center of the column length. On collision, the pressure is multiplied, at the point of collision, by about 4 to 5 times the normal pressure cited above. To achieve this result, however, the detonation process, particularly the simultaneous firing of the detonators, must be timed precisily in order to assure collision within the explosive column at the center.
[0011] Such precise timing is typically provided by means of mild detonating fuse and special boosters. However, if fuse length is not accurate or problems exist in the booster/detonator connections, the collision may not be realized at all and the device will operate as a “non-colliding” tool with substantially reduced severing pressures.
[0012] The reliability of state-of-the-art severing tools is further compromised by complex assembly and arming procedures required at the well site. With those designs, regulations require that explosive components (detonator, pellets, etc.) must be shipped separately from the tool body. Complete assembly must then take place at the well site under often unfavorable working conditions.
[0013] Finally, the electric detonators utilized by state-of-the-art severing tools are not as safe from the electric stray currents and RF energy points of view, further complicating the safety procedures that must be observed at the well site.
[0014] The pipe severing tool of the present invention comprises an outer housing that is a thin wall metallic tube of such outside diameter that is compatible with the drill pipe flow bore diameter intended for use. The upper end of the housing tube is sealed with a threaded plug having insulated electrical connectors along an axial aperture. The housing upper end plug is externally prepared to receive the intended suspension string such as an electrically conductive wireline bail or a continuous tubing connecting sub.
[0015] The lower end of the outer housing tube is closed with a tubular assembly that includes a stab fit nose plug. The nose plug assembly includes a relatively short length of heavy wall tube extending axially out from an internal bore plug. The bore plug penetrates the barrel of the housing tube end whereas the tubular portion of the nose plug extends from the lower end of the housing tube. The bore plug is perimeter sealed by high pressure O-rings and secured by a plurality of set screws around the outside diameter of the outer housing tube.
[0016] The tubular portion of the nose plug provides a closed chamber space for enclosing electrical conductors. The bore plug includes a tubular aperture along the nose plug axis that is a load rod alignment guide. Laterally of the load rod alignment guide is a socket for an exploding bridge wire (EBW) detonator or an exploding foil initiator (EFI).
[0017] Within the upper end of the outer housing barrel is an inner tubular housing for a electronic detonation cartridge having a relatively high discharge voltage, 5,000 v or more, for example. Below the inner tubular housing is a cylindrical, upper detonator housing. The upper detonator housing is resiliently separated from the lower end of the inner tubular housing by a suitable spring. The upper detonator housing includes a receptacle socket
[0018] Preferably, the severing tool structure is transported to a working location in a primed condition with upper and lower EBW detonators connected for firing but having no high explosive pellets placed between the EBW detonators. At the appropriate moment, the nose plug assembly is removed from the bottom end of the outer housing and a load rod therein removed. The upper distal end of the load rod includes a circumferential collar such as a snap ring. The opposite end of the load rod is visually marked to designate maximum and minimum quantities of explosive aligned along the load rod.
[0019] Explosive pellets for the invention are formed as solid cylinder sections having an axial aperture. The individual pellets are stacked along the load rod with the load rod penetrating the axial aperture. The upper distal end collar serves as a stop limit for the pellets which are serially aligned along the rod until the lower face of the lowermost pellet coincides with the max/min indicia marking. A restriction collar such as a resilient O-ring is placed around the loading rod and tightly against the bottom face of the lowermost explosive pellet.
[0020] The rod and pellet assembly are inserted into the outer housing barrel until the uppermost pellet face contiguously engages the upper detonator housing. The rod guide aperture in the nose plug is then assembled over the lower distal end of the load rod and the lower detonator brought into contiguous engagement with the lowermost pellet face. The assembly is then further compressed against the loading spring between the inner tubular housing and the upper detonator housing until abutment between the nose plug shoulder and the lower distal end of the outer housing tube.
[0021] In the event that the invention severing tool must be disarmed, all pellets may be removed from the housing barrel as a singular unit about the load rod. This is accomplished by removing the lower nose plug which exposes the lower end of the load rod. By grasping and pulling the load rod from the housing barrel, all pellets that are pinned along the load rod below the upper distal end collar are drawn out of the housing tube with the rod.
[0022] Relative to the drawings wherein like reference characters designate like or similar elements or steps through the several figures of the drawings:
[0023]
[0024]
[0025]
[0026]
[0027]
[0028] Referring to the
[0029] An inner housing tube
[0030] An exploding bridge wire (EBW) detonator comprises a small quantity of moderate to high order explosive that is detonated by the explosive vaporization of a metal filament or foil (EFI) due to a high voltage surge imposed upon the filament. A capacitive firing cartridge is basically an electrical capacitator discharge circuit that functions to to abruptly discharge with a high threshold voltage. Significantly, the EBW detonator or EFI is relatively insensitive to static or RF frequency voltages. Consequently, the capacitive firing circuit and EBW or EFI function cooperatively to provide a substantial safety advantage. An unusually high voltage surge is required to detonate the EBW detonator (or EFI) and the capacitive firing cartridge delivers the high voltage surge in a precisely controlled manner. The system is relatively impervious to static discharges, stray electrical fields and radio frequency emissions. Since the EBW and EFI detonation systems are, functionally, the same, hereafter and in the attached invention claims, reference to an EBW detonator is intended to include and encompass an EFI.
[0031] The lower end of the outer housing tube
[0032] Projecting from the exterior end of the plug base
[0033] Although the electrical connections of both EBW detonators
[0034] The significance of having a severing tool that requires no detonator connections at the well site for arming cannot be minimized. Severing tools are loaded with high explosive at the well site of use. Often, this is not an environment that contributes to the focused, intellectual concentration that the hazardous task requires. Exacerbating the physical discomfort is the emotional distraction arising from the apprehension of intimately manipulating a deadly quantity of highly explosive material. Hence, the well site arming procedure should be as simple and error-proof as possible. Complete elimination of all electrical connection steps is most desirable.
[0035] The load rod
[0036] A lower distal end portion
[0037] One of the synergistic advantages to the unitary rod loading system of the invention is use of lighter, axially shorter pellets, i.e. 22.7 gms. These lighter weight pellets enjoy a more favoraable shipping classification (UN 1.4S) than that imposed on heavier, 38 gm pellets (UN 1.4D). In a prior art severing tool, the lighter weight pellets would be avoided due to “cocking” in the tool barrel
[0038] With the explosive assembly in place, the lower end of the housing is closed by placement of the nose plug
[0039] Presently applied Explosive Safety Recommendations require the severing tool
[0040] On those occasions when the severing tool must be disarmed without discharge, it is only necessary to remove the nose plug
[0041] Numerous modifications and variations may be made of the structures and methods described and illustrated herein without departing from the scope and spirit of the the invention disclosed. Accordingly, it should be understood that the embodiments described and illustrated herein are only representative of the invention and are not to be considered as limitations upon the invention as hereafter claimed.