WO1996003566A2 - Improvements in or relating to drilling with gas liquid swirl generator hydrocyclone separation combustion thermal jet spallation - Google Patents
Improvements in or relating to drilling with gas liquid swirl generator hydrocyclone separation combustion thermal jet spallation Download PDFInfo
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- WO1996003566A2 WO1996003566A2 PCT/GB1995/001709 GB9501709W WO9603566A2 WO 1996003566 A2 WO1996003566 A2 WO 1996003566A2 GB 9501709 W GB9501709 W GB 9501709W WO 9603566 A2 WO9603566 A2 WO 9603566A2
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- water
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- spallation
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Classifications
-
- E—FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
- E21—EARTH OR ROCK DRILLING; MINING
- E21B—EARTH OR ROCK DRILLING; OBTAINING OIL, GAS, WATER, SOLUBLE OR MELTABLE MATERIALS OR A SLURRY OF MINERALS FROM WELLS
- E21B7/00—Special methods or apparatus for drilling
- E21B7/14—Drilling by use of heat, e.g. flame drilling
Definitions
- the present invention relates to linear drilling technology by a non mechanical cutting drilling system that requires no rotation of the drill string or a rotary drilling mud motor.
- the invention consists of an orientation unit, trajectory control unit, controlled by fluid pulse telemetry or electrical control, to the hydraulic system together with a high speed rotary centrifuge, or cyclone or stationary vortex, swirl generator & hydrocyclone, gas liquid separator and penetrator head or combination of the same for (Multi-component) two stage separation down hole with combustion jet chambers for single or multi (Thermal) jet spallation drilling, without any mechanical drilling action between the penetrator drilling head and the well bore interface allows for true linear drilling. Allowing for ultra-fast drilling rates in soft to ultra-hard formations, even in high temperature wells which in turn allow for considerable cost savings.
- Hydraulic erosion and flame jet spallation of earth formations is a technology that has been reported in numerous technical and patent publications.
- the erosion takes place by employing various failure mechanisms of the surface induced by action of the liquid jet or flame jet.
- the type of failure mechanisms that have been reported include:
- Thermal spallation drilling is a process with great potential for reducing the costs of drilling holes and mining shafts and tunnels in very hard and ductile rocks. Industry has used a similar process to this to drill blast holes for emplacing explosives and to quarry granite. The drilling industry used the best tungsten-carbide insert tricone bits and a conventional rotary drilling system to drill a 9-5/8-in-diameter hole in solid granite. Maximum drilling rates of 12 ft/hr were obtained.
- BEC has developed a hand-held spallation burner to cut slots in granite.
- the tool has been used for 50 years and is now standard equipment for quarrying granite throughout the world.
- This burner which resembles a small jet engine with its jet pointed downward, is the forerunner of the flame jet burner used to make the 1 , 100 ft hole at Conway, New Hampshire. It uses no. 2 fuel oil, which is burned with compressed air and ignited by a spark plug.
- the system used water to cool the burner and the exhaust gases. These gases along with the steam produced from the cooling water, blow the spalls from the hole.
- the aspect of the invention will be described which allows spallation of all types of rocks by thermal (jet) spallation rock structures have varying plastic deformation hardness and ductility and are subject to a wide range of spalling temperatures.
- the wide range of thermal combustion gas/steam temperatures obtainable with my invention of atomising the water with the kerosine for a better burn rate, produces a super-critical gas/steam thermal spallation jet that allows, temperatures of between 400°C to 1,800°C (2,300°C with coiled tubing) and the swirling (cyclone effect) of the spalling gases, on the rock face this allows spallation, without melting the rock.
- the method used combustion jet spallation to penetrate into rock, ultra fast through the surface, injection of water, fuel and compressed air, together at prescribed amounts from the surface.
- Tests have shown that a pressurised flow of water through the drill string can transport the required amounts of fuel, air as a multiphase mixture to support combustion capable of thermally spalling rock at ultra fast rates will also prevent combustion within the drill string, on its way to the vortex separation system by the dual action of centrifugal and vortex swirls, where the centripetal forces inside the vortex chambers two stage separation of the concentrated fuel and compressed air recombination that permits oxidation whose exothermic heat of combustion will produce a mixture of super critical water nitrogen and carbon dioxide for expansion as a subsonic jet.
- the stationary system uses a swirl generator and hydrocyclone separation unit whereby the water is injected into the fuel to increase combustion.
- the water droplets atomise the fuel, allowing for a better burn within the combustion chamber, this allows combustion chamber temperatures from 400°C to 1,800°C by surface control of the fuel water concentration.
- the combustion jet chambers' air and fuel are exothermal, that produces an ultra-high velocity (supersonic) or (subsonic) super-critical thermal jet, by pressure adjustment across the nozzle to a level beyond the critical ratio that induces thermal high energy, reaction stress at the rock interface, this causes disintegration particles, spallation and the small chips and fragments of the rock, that are formed will be removed by velocity from the well bore by the exiting combustion gases/low density steam, with the use of circulation water flow exiting through the annulus allowing sufficient kinetic energy to overcome pressure losses and will provide the required lifting force to remove the spalls.
- Rock failure can also be by fluid side peripheral pulse/jets water hammer effect along with spallation these events are repeated and instabilities are amplified alternating loads (absolute formation stress) and heat transfer processes up to 1,800°C and over combustion flame jet chamber pressure equals normal hydrostatic plus 500 psi, temperature at 1,800°C at 50,000 foot depth and 18,000 Hst (W/m2K) see Fig 41 allowing high destructive erosive rock spallation.
- the cooling water exits the co-axial orifice jets to control gases spalling the well bore diameter.
- Kerosene allows a second stage separation from the water phase down hole storage of fuel and compressed air if required allows injection from the surface of much higher concentrations and re-concentrated fuel/water content of up to 30% still allows exothermic combustion with compressed air.
- More typically encountered rocks such as limestone and shale, which are found in oil and gas well drilling "soft" rocks by producing a periodically heated surface from 400°C upwards, lower temperature limestone is spalled at rapid rates. Fluid flow and heat transfer process are important in drilling and quarrying for penetration rate and borehole geometry. Operating variables such as flame (thermal) temperature, jet velocity, stand off distance and the thermo-physical properties of the rock.
- my invention uses compressed air and kerosine which is injected into the water (drilling fluid) and transported as bubbles in the water phase, to be separated out in two phases by power fluidics vortex, gas liquid swirl generator and a hydrocyclone fluid separation system.
- the recombination of the separated compressed air and concentrated kerosine/water allows the water droplets to atomise the fuel allowing for a better burn within the combustion chamber, this will then permit oxidisation within the combustion jet chamber where the exothermic heat of combustion will produce a mixture of hot super critical water/steam, nitrogen and carbon dioxide which is expanded as a subsonic jet.
- This jet flow produces stagnation heat fluxes of up to 20Mw/tm2.
- the heat fluxes are so high that the post combustion injection of water will allow lower temperature thermal jets between 400°C and 1 ,800°C which will spall all types of rock.
- the system can then be used for high strength to low brittle rock with ductile transformation temperatures. With the use of supercritical hot dense fluid flowing past the rock surface to be spalled, this will produce a superior spalling action.
- Heat flux determines the onset temperature of spallation and the subsequent penetration rates. Spalling a wide range of rocks is obtainable by producing a lower temperature flame with a very high gas velocity.
- thermal combustion spallation drilling in oil and gas 'veils, with drill pipe or coiled tubing drilling unit, for under balanced drilling produces low density products of combustion nitrogen and (CO2) carbon dioxide and super-critical steam, the inert, non- reactive nature of the gaseous nitrogen and CO2 is such that it will not support combustion. Because of this there is no risk of downhole fires or explosions.
- Other major advantages that cuts drilling time to the minimum is due to the fast rates of penetration, drilling any size of bole, with coiled tubing or drill pipe.
- Medium and short radius well bores are developed with ease, due to the trajectory directional control units flexibility in spallation drillings.
- the well bore size compared to the spallation head size allows continuous high or low angle build rates resulting in reduced frictional drag, producing a cautionary curve, allowing smooth inclination, no doglegs or key seating.
- the limit to the rate of penetration will be in tile handling of the drill string, the ideal use would be coiled tubing, with less tripping time, making this the preferred drilling process. With multi tubing string, it would enable a gas lift removal of the cooled combustion products and rock spalls within the drill tubing annulus which creates lift velocity.
- the drilling combustion head of the penetrator drilling assembly can be rotated by an orientation unit, fig 18, above the trajectory control unit as shown in fig 14 of Patent Application PCT/GB 94/00515 and others with a modification by removal of output thrust shaft item 5 and modification to output thrust shaft item 27 and bottom stabiliser sleeve and bearing housing retaining sub by the fitment of the epitrochoidal tri-rotor motor or turbine to drive the centrifuge/multi-vortex penetrator jet unit.
- This system allows ultra fast/deep drilling with either drill pipe or coiled tubing to depths of 50,000 feet or deeper, the size of the well bores will be controlled by the size of the penetrator drilling head, with no problems of stuck pipe or drill string drag within the well bore.
- an ignition spark plug
- Worldrill's patented new true linear drilling process is a new rock drilling technology that uses thermal combustion-jet spallation and super-critical water erosion/heat flux to penetrate rock.
- the thermal-jet induces thermal stress at the rock face. Spallation occurs, and the small rock chips that form are blown out of the well by the exiting combustion gases.
- Tests emphasise that rock-failure and communication mechanisms during drilling, is due to fluid hydraulic erosion and heat transfer process that affect rock mechanical behaviour in thermal spallation applications.
- With a self-guided trajectory control system that will help optimise this true linear drilling process.
- For ultra deep drilling by the use of hydrodynamic forces, for fluid separation, power fluidics is based on the physics of centrifugal force, free vortex action in an enclosed space.
- Mud motors etc.
- a down hole hydraulic caliper, tractor unit or stabilisers are used to support the burner head to control hole wander.
- the cutting of slots in the formation by the rotating drill string which is known as key- holing will not be a problem.
- the diameter of the hole can be varied by merely changing the advance rate of the burner.
- the lateral burners remove any ledges formed by water inflow into the borehole by under-reaming.
- any well bore restriction caused by a shoulder forming (ledge) will produce an increase in the gas pressure change is then relayed to the pressure sensors on the water outlet valve control to ease the flow of well bore, this enables effective control of well bore diameter.
- non-return valves and the length of period over which the supply of drilling fluids is disrupted has important implications downhole.
- time taken to attach a new length is around 2 min.
- the time to re-pressurise the pipe will be dependent on operating pressures/flows, the position of the first check valve and the capacity of the surface compressor but is reported to be in the order of seconds rather than minutes from air drilling experience.
- the total delay between stopping and starting drilling might be about 3 min.
- fluids within the drill string below the top non-return valve will initially be at least 28 bar (500 psi) above the downhole pressure (representing the flame jet generating over-pressure) so flows of drilling fluids will continue, due to expansion of the gas phase, until pressures within and without the drill head come into equilibrium. This flow will be adequate to sustain a "pilot" flame over the change over period, particularly if the discharges are carefully regulated.
- buoyant separation of the gas and liquid phases to become the dominant process so that ant flow down the drill string would have a relatively high liquid fraction.
- the nature of the multi-component flow approaching the drill head can probably best be characterised by its variability. Even under steady state drilling conditions, the volume flow rates of gas and the narrowness of the drill pipe involved dictate a slugging flow regime and with the regular interruptions to the flow when the new pipework is added, increasing dissociation between the phases can be expected. In addition, at the high drilling rates possible for spallation techniques, the time between pipe renewals is soon surpassed by the transit time for drilling fluids between the top and bottom of the hole (may be by depths of only 1000m) after which all fluids reaching the downhole separators will have been through at least one period when the pumps were switched off.
- the first separator should have a capacity comparable with the pipe volume between non-return valves so that it could function as a slug catcher as well as removing the gas. This would then provide a much more stable flow for the second stage kerosine-water separator which could then be a conventional L/L hydrocyclone.
- the discharged liquid flow should possess a steady concentration and dispersion of oil in water for optimal performance of the following hydrocyclone. Achieving this end is helped by the relatively high downflow velocity of the liquid in the bottom of the 1st stage separator (-0.1 3nl 5) which should carry with it all oil drops below - 2mm for a 300m hole and below - 0.7mm for a 6100m hole. Drops above these sizes would have a higher upward settling velocity. Difficulties in sustaining oil entrainment might be overcome by adding static mixing elements to the lower part of the separator or by using surfactants to increase dispersivity.
- the large volume of the G/L separator also provides scope for its use as an air accumulator when drilling is disrupted (see Fig 51).
- Segregation of the water and kerosine components is likely to be very rapid and a level control device and water drain are required to keep the interface away from the oil take-off. Any air reaching this unit is likely to be due to dissolved gas break out in the hydrocyclone and would get carried through with the kerosine. The amounts of air involved would be small, especially at depth. Presuming operation can proceed as described in Section 4, only a relatively small volume is required for the accumulator ( ⁇ 25 litres) making the whole L/L treatment section around 5m in length. Subject to tests. Larger accumulators can be accommodated.
- the suggested system should provide a relatively liquid-free air stream: a kerosine discharge with up to ⁇ 15% free gas (shallow borehole depths) but ⁇ 1 % water contamination: and a water stream with perhaps half these gas levels and 1 - 2% kerosine (v/v concentrations at local conditions).
- expansion volumes would be equal with double these residual amount for the respective 300 and 610Cm depths. If the drill head flow (both air and liquid components) could be controlled to be, say, a tenth that at the drilling condition, this might be sustained for potentially 15 min for the shallow hole and 30 min for the deeper one. This may well be a conservative assessment as it assumes that the back pressure outside the drill head remains constant when, in practice, it will fall to some degree as the substantially reduced flow rate of fluids needs a much lower pressure gradient to get back to the surface.
- Any downhole multi-component separation system must be able to cope with the consequences of the regular interruption of the supply of fluids during drilling pipe extension, in particular considerable segregation between the gas and liquid phases in the drill pipe.
- a separation system is suggested incorporating a high volume G/L separator, which can also function as slug catcher and air accumulator, followed by a L/L hydrocyclone.
- the down hole motor or turbine as shown in fig 1 produces rapid rotation of the centrifuge or vortex, cyclone chamber when used, fig 7, increase the swirling action of the liquid into a high velocity jet stream, fig 2, so entering the tangential port, fig 8 or 9 item 2, of the vortex nozzles involute section, to form an ultra high velocity cyclone, fig 8 or 9 item 11, increasing in velocity at each stage of the vortex, the liquid combined with the shape of the vortex chamber, fig 8 or 9, water outlets and de-oiler/air combustion jet tubes, fig 8 or 9 item 13, generates a vortex in the cyclone chamber, the heavy water migrates to the wail of the vortex nozzles as the lighter air or oil separates fig 8 or 9 item 7 to form an ultra-high velocity central core that separates out inside the central tubes fig 8 or 9 item 13.
- the high velocity water jets also produces pulse jets fig 9 item 8 forces eroding the rock interface simultaneously while acting as a cooling liquid fig 8 or 9 item 10 inside and outside of the centrifuge and vortex jet nozzles and water cooling drilling control by co-axial jet outlets.
- the tangential velocity profile in the cyclone is shown in fig 12.
- the combustion chamber heads can be single or multiple, the nozzle jets can be of various sizes for varying degrees with combustion spallation with the larger sizes within the centre section for maximum spallation/erosion or single all internal areas inside the combustion chambers and pulse jets chambers (if used) are treated by ion implantation or ion diamond like carbon process with ceramic or PDC lined pulse jet chambers if required to minimise splash back erosion of spallation particles exiting the wellbore.
- This system of centrifuge/multi vortex penetrator or single fixed head penetrator drilling by combustion jet spallation will drill any diameter of hole at a very fast rate of penetration depending on the size of drilling head used and the amount of vortex chambers jet nozzles used with the centrifuge or vortex, the vortex chambers are designed also to allow for pulsing of the fluid leaving the vortex orifice.
- Various sizes of vortex chambers and combustion jet chambers can be used for increased velocity through the jet nozzles for high rates of spallation penetration. Water can also be injected back into the combustion chamber ahead of the fuel and oxidant increasing the kinetic energy.
- Compressed air can be injected back into the cooling water ports to the injected combustion chamber water jets, also air injection within the pulse jet nozzle port system, allowing jets of moist air to increase kinetic energy from the thermal spallation jets and pulse jets.
- the combustion chamber exothermal jet air fuel system can also be positioned back from the water exit orifice to allow for greater combustion jet flame, water impingement increasing kinetic energy down hole separate air or mixture fuel, storage can be placed in any placed in any position within the drill string separation ideally only fuel storage accumulator will need to be used.
- Heat flux just prior to spallation is the determining factor of the heat transfer which produces an extremely hot dense super critical fluid flowing past the rock surface to be spalled will perform the same as a flame does in jet spallation by combining the two.
- the storage capacity of the fuel phase allows the transport of fuel in much higher concentrations low density hydrocarbons (kerosine) ideally P4 or P5.
- the system is ideal for onshore and offshore drilling.
- the most critical problems associated with the mechanical cutting and erosive cutting jet stream, for drilling, boring and the like is stress corrosion or thermal degradation failure of the materials used as the cutting means such material failure limits the ability of the operator to transfer high mechanical energy to mechanical cutters and the erosive problems of splash back by the fluid, water, hammer or cavitation on the fluid as it leaves the jet nozzle on to the rock interface in the well bore the splash back causes a very fast rate of erosion and failure problems and drill string components sticking within the well bore.
- the present invention pertains to the high velocity mixed water or drilling fluid, fuel, air, liquid mixture comprising the steps of forming a high velocity, swirling liquid jet by providing multi-vortex separation chamber (replaceable) fixed units or within a centrifuge casing the tangential ports within the vortex chamber to allow the liquid to swirl.
- the swirling liquid allows the air and oily stream to separate in stages and enter into the central tangential ports in the central exit orifice tube while the water within the vortex is forced to the outer wall of the chambers for cooling the combustion jet nozzle chamber and by post combustion injection of water allows submerged flame jets cooling water on to the rock side walls, and by cooling the combustion gases to stop spalling by the co-axial water jets to control well bore diameter drilling control by combustion chamber pressure and temperature allowing spallation communication control with the rock interface by combustion jet gases.
- Means are then provided for injecting high pressure air/fuel/water into the combustion nozzle allowing the fluid into the vortex nozzle chambers for creating a high velocity flow therein.
- the fuel and water two phase stream is atomised allowing for a better burn within the vortex chamber then discharged through the nozzles with the air into the combustion chamber for exothermic combustion.
- the swirl in the vortex separation system may by formed by tangential or involuted injection or by a stator configuration which induces the liquid to swirl and by the use of high speed liquid flow introduced tangentially into a swirl generating chamber having a central located flow exit tube of reduced diameter which forms an exiting nozzle from which emerges an air or fuel component ultra high speed spinning vortex jet and the hydrodynamic interaction of the air or fuel component centrifuge vortex flow regimes within the separation system.
- coiled tubing with one or two internally fitted small diameter flow line to transport the compressed air and fuel, or either one, if only one tube is used along with abrasives if required allowing either the air or fuel to be mixed with the water for separation within the centrifuge spallation drilling system, a special tubing adapter plate with flow ports to the centrifuge or combustion vortex injectors, to replace flow plate, fig 7 item 6, with bearing and seal assembly, to allow rotation within the spallation drilling head around the stationary tubing adapter plate, or hollow tri-rotor drive shaft, fig 1 item 30, through the spline section and adapter plate with single or double tubing connector unions fitted below pin connector, fig 1 item 21, with flow port for water mixture, for driving the centrifuge motor and cooling allowing high pressures to be used.
- Thermal spallation drilling systems use an axially symmetric, downward-facing thermal jet. A different system would result if the same mass flow of high temperature gas super critical water was injected through an annular nozzle whose diameter is approximately the size of the desired hole (see fig. 49).
- the reversed flow process would be applied by enclosing all the utility umbilicals (water, compressed air, fuel and electrical control cable) in the multi coiled tubing ⁇ see fig. 44) or by manufacturing the swirl generators hydrocyclone separator system within the annulus of the twin drill pipe as shown in Fig. 49 which is a large diameter dual wall drill pipe.
- Such a construction would allow the continuous insertion of each drill pipe stand with storage and vortex separation system.
- the terminus of the velocity central vent tube would allow separation of the utilities from the waste products, which would exit into a separation system at the surface.
- the various portions of the flame jet issuing from the nozzle are supersonic jet velocity of the flame itself "shock diamonds" are characteristics of the situation where unbalanced gas pressures exit.
- the gas pressure high combustion chamber jet nozzle pressure
- the jet expands as it passes into the atmosphere, but due to lower sound velocity as compared to jet velocity the jet, combustion pressure and atmospheric pressure do not immediately balance shock patterns result and the jet surface itself alternately expands and contracts the mechanism by which the higher velocity flame jets and two phase water pulse jets if used) are capable of water hammer erosion cooling the heat flux allows faster penetration, drilling faster and producing a smaller diameter controlled bore hole is by increased combustion pressure and chamber pressure and the use of water.
- Exothermic heat of combustion will produce a mixture of hot super critical steam nitrogen and carbon dioxide for expansion as a subsonic jet.
- the jet flow at turbulent Reynolds number of three to four million will produce stagnation heat fluxes of 10 to 20 MW/ ⁇ .2.
- the returning water flow exiting through the well bore carries enough kinetic energy to overcome any pressure loss and provide sufficient lifting force to return the spalls.
- Adjustment to hydraulic pressure can be made to intensify any pressure drop across the exit jet nozzles at a level beyond the critical ratio of (2.0) producing a supersonic combustion flame jet.
- Heat fluxes are very high so post combustion water injection will produce lower flame jet temperatures the swirling jets of various temperatures and velocities as required by surface control, allowing spallation of low brittle and ductile rock with transformation temperatures.
- the modified nozzle design allows for increased speed of exothermic energy of combustion, by the mixing the kerosine, air and water into a central triple vortex jet, the mixture stream, inside the manifold, the stream under pressure is surround by vortex jets of compressed air of up to 3,000 cfm at 500 psi plus hydrostatic pressure that generating bubble in the mixture flowing through the central vortex nozzle by swirling the liquid mixture at high pressure so that the gas is presented with a greater surface area.
- the compressed air is fired at high speed into the rotating vortex action kerosine/water mixture the smaller the bubbles the greater the surface area available for absorption.
- the shock action prior to discharging the hot super-critical gas products of combustion from the vortex swirl type air discharge chamber that produces a swirling mechanism prior to the velocity of the hot products of combustions low density that exits the combustion nozzle, the swirling hot products of combustion, impinge on the exit orifice that produces a unbalanced high and low pressure velocity flow, producing a pulsing action within the hot products of combustion.
- the control of water injected into the fuel flow determines the onset temperature of the hot products of combustion that produces high velocity drilling rates with the use of atomising the water in with the kerosine fuel that produces a super ⁇ critical jet flow.
- the full amount of water to cool the well bore may not be required on the more ductile rocks.
- the water used to cool the well bore will controlled with a valve, in the injection manifold.
- Abrasive particles may be added to the liquid mixture to aid the abrasive (erosion) cutting, where required to be separated out by the vortex, cyclone or centrifuge method within the invention, for erosion, cutting, spailing of the soils, sedimentary, igneous or metamorphic formations.
- the invention also uses the cooling water to control the bore hole size, as shown in fig, 45, item 3. The size of the bore hole is not achieved until the combustion spallation head has progressed well down the bore hole, when spailing rock formations the bore hole widens upwards from the bottom, reaching maximum size, size is controlled by the water injection which will cause its impingement against the bore hole wall rock surface terminating further erosion, cutting spalling action of the hot flame gases.
- the water quench outlets fig. 45 item 3 can be set at any angle so terminating erosion, cutting and spailing action, allowing the bore hole size to be only slightly larger that the penetrator drilling head, the controlled use of water within the combustion jet nozzles allow for decreased nozzle sizes to be used with smaller combustion jets, allowing for favourable results using much higher chamber pressures.
- the combustion jet chamber allowing the use of higher air pressures up to, 3.000 s.c.f.m. at 500 p.s.i.g. plus hydrostatic pressure or more, with higher combustion jet velocity.
- Nozzles with co-axial water outlets can be placed in the outer penetrator drilling head ports to control bore hole size and axial water pulse/jets outlet nozzle jets for maximum erosive action.
- Abrasive drilling can be used either alone or in conjunction with combustion jet spallation to add significantly to erosion action of the particles with increased kinetic energy and well bore control.
- Increasing linear drilling speed Allowing more effective penetration rates to be maintained in deep sedimentary and igneous, metamorphic formations in the range of hundreds of metres per hour from the largest RD down to h n RD well bore size. It is notable that while the volume of material removed in the latter cases is actually less the action is far more effective in terms if linear drilling speed.
- the novel method of well bore diameter drilling control is with the use of a circular water housing, as shown in fig. 28, item 20, provided with a ring of water jets fig. 28, item 22 with feed from the bottom vortex swirl outlet downwards, to impinge the jets of water against the rock face terminating further erosion/spalling of the hot flame gases to gauge the well bore.
- the unique and novel method in fig. 27 and 28 shows the combuster chamber nozzle fig. 27 and 28.
- item 6 combusts fuel and an oxidiser in an enclosed chamber fig. 27 and 28 item 2 and 3, to produce an intensified supersonic flame jet fig. 27 and 28 item 4 through nozzle orifice fig. 27 and 28, item 5 the flame spalls the rock to form the bore hole.
- the flame jets or jet impinges against the bottom of the bore hole, penetrating, erosion, spalling is very fast as additional heat is added by the hot gases passing upwards through the well bore.
- the spalling of the well bore is controlled by the high velocity cooling water fig.
- a further technique for producing, controlled bore hole diameter is the use of adding solid particles to the flame jet, by the surface injection of abrasive particles such as hard sand to provide a novel and rapid cutting action through vortex separation flame jet produce a controlled well bore diameter with increased rates of penetration due to the control of the gases spalling/eroding the hole faster.
- abrasive particles such as hard sand
- jet nozzle intensified chamber pressure about 500 p.s.i.g plus hydrostatic pressure allowing for tangential velocity increases, radially outwards from the centre of the well bore, with air supply of up to 3,000 s.c.f.m. allowing ultra fast drilling speeds.
- the spalls can be blown from holes as large as 2 l ⁇ inches in diameter, and holes can be formed up to 5'A ft in diameter with a 6 inch diameter burner and combustion air flows of above than 1 ,000 scfm. This is because the cavity formation by spallation should be equal to the drilling programme for deep, small diameter holes. Cavity formation as shown in Fig. 48 with the seals around the drill pipe and the exhaust pipe. The disposal of waste is an increasingly important problem world wide. Deep storage velocity gasses in the exhaust pipe were removed at a faster rate. The size of the particles that are formed by spallation is a function of the rate at which heat is transferred to the rock surface. The higher the heat transfer rate, the smaller the spalls that are produced.
- the gases cool before they reach the cavity walls and also the thermal flux due to radiative transport from the gases to the cavity walls decreases. These two factors reduce the rate of heat transfer to the rock and cause the formation of latter spalls.
- the exit velocity of the exhaust gases decreases as the hole diameter increases, thus reducing the ability of the gases to lift the spalls from the hole.
- the larger spalls and the lower gas velocities contribute to make the removal of the spalls more difficult.
- (B) emplace an exhaust pipe from the surface to the bottom of the hole and force the gases to exit the hole through this pipe by sealing all other exits at the surface.
- the exhaust gases will have a much higher velocity and will be capable of lifting larger spalls to the surface.
- the two or more granite caverns could hold 6 billion scf of working gas this would take less than one year to construct in comparison to salt domes, to engineer, procedure the required equipment, and construct and de-water after leaching 7.0 million BBL.
- salt cavern to store 6 billion scf of working gas would take V years, most salt dome's are 200ft in diameter and 80ft deep.
- the logistics to supply and inject 1.3 billion gallons of water and disposing of same amount of brine must be made, a major problem.
- One advantage for deep or shallow caverns is the amount of adequate roof thickness for stability and integrity when under gas or fluid pressure.
- Spallation can provide a system that can improve advance rates and reduce costs of tunnelling in hard rock.
- the conceptual system shown in Fig. 46 describes a method which could be developed to provide rapid mining of tunnels. By a horizontal coiled tubing injector head. There would be work required in developing and testing such a system, but because of the present high costs of tunnelling the feasibility of a spallation tunnelling is very economic and fast.
- a storage system or accumulator as described in the trajectory control unit, can also be used as a drilling back up system for pressure storage of fuel (kerosine) for continuous drilling when adding new stands of drill pipe to the drill string
- the accumulator is provided with a non-return valves fitted within the central tube, or drill pipes or through the accumulator.
- the accumulator is fitted with a constant rate spring loaded piston or pressurised air piston controlled be electrical valves from the surface, or alternative weight set (over pull) piston with a central tube piston rod.
- the accumulator comprises a piston under pressure within the cylinder, the mixture charges the accumulator piston by the two way servo electrical control valve fitted into the body of the accumulator, by over pressure from the surface rig pumps.
- This pressure back up drilling system is for continuous water, air, fuel mixture pressure to or from the vortex, cyclone centrifuge and/or motor controlled by the two way control valve, allowing the accumulator back up system to maintain line pressure every time the pumps are stopped.
- the accumulator storage would be sufficient to provide a back up pressure system when drilling, by the use of surface and down hole sensor controls.
- an electromagnetic motor or electrical motor and with appropriate modifications and seals the use of centrifugal or vane type motor for temperatures up to 550°C.
- a gas or bladder type accumulator can be used.
- Electrical servo control units can also be used to control the trajectory and orientation control units in place of pressure controls. These are also included within the invention. Trajectory Control Spallation Drilling Unit Summary of the Second Aspect of the invention
- the epitrochoid tri-rotor motor is classed as a rotary motor of positive displacement. Its action is one of rotation not reciprocation.
- the motor is made up of a motor housing with its inside machined out to an epitrochoid shaped working chamber with a periphery inlet and outlet port on either side of the two lobed epitrochoid volume chamber.
- the volume can be altered by movement of the tri-rotor in a continuous, circular, movement with the continuous rotation together with eccentric bottom crank guide giving the motor perfect balance and a smooth operation, with twin motors, the motor is driven by the drilling fluid mixture of water, oil and compressed air.
- the tri-rotor is shaped lake a slightly round sided equilateral triangle which has an orbital rotation inside the chamber.
- the geometric shapes of the rotor and housing are derived from a group of curves generically called trochoids which are found by revolving one circle around another, and plotting the path of a point either on the circumference, or an extension of the radius of the revolving circle.
- the housing of the pump is shaped like a two lobed epitrochoid.
- the rotor has two concentric chambers either side and fitted to the bottom of the top chamber is a shaft with outer facing gear teeth fixed to the centre of the chamber, it is rotated by larger female drive head with inward facing gear teeth and fitted centrally to the pump epitrochoid chamber but concentric to the tri-rotor centre chamber, as the drive head turns concentric to the orbital, eccentric, rotation of the tri-rotor.
- the size of the drive head with female gear teeth that drives the fixed male gear teeth shaft in the top of the tri-rotor chamber determines the basic geometry of the motor. When this ratio is large, the sweep volume in the chambers is comparatively small and the drive head, female gear, must be small. This limits the size of the fixed male gear shaft in the top tri-rotor chamber.
- the tri-rotor rotates in an orbital path, fluid is forced in through the two inlet motor ports with a large sweep volume it generates a high discharge pressure out through the pump outlet ports that diffuses the liquid providing a more controlled flow and a more efficient conversion of velocity head into pressure head.
- the head is generated by the lifting action of the tri-rotor and the inner chambers into the centrifuge for separation of the oil and compressed air from the water. Speeds over 300 rpm will cause centrifuging, depending on the surface pump injection pressures to drive the down hole motor in the centrifuge.
- the unit has four main parts: from left to right of the full assembly drawing these are the metering valve and its housing; the rotary actuator, the motor, the swivel sub assembly and the spallation centrifuge vortex jet drilling head.
- the metering valve is controlled by pressure pulses from the surface. It is shown in the "pulsed" position. Clean water, oil and air from the rig pumps is passing along the central bore pipe and into the metering chamber (the larger of the two). When the chamber is fall, as shown, the motor will have through a defined angle.
- the rotary actuator comprises a large area piston under drilling fluid pressure and a rotary shaft controlling the swivel sub assembly pressure, clean water and air to the rotary actuator.
- the stroke is sufficient to provide 24 metering pulses.
- the drilling fluid flow is down a central tube through the piston.
- the motor shown is an epitrochoidal type and two inlet (entry) ports end is directly fed from the swivel sub assembly drilling fluid flow through the motor tri-rotor which moves eccentrically.
- the driveshaft end of the motor is connected to the spallation drilling head to the swivel sub.
- a disc shown at “D” is solidly connected to the rotor and seals the rotary actuator end. It has a key shown in the (vertical position) connecting to a central floating disc. This has a vertical key way on its left side and a horizontal one on the right side. This latter is engaged by a key on the disc shown at "E” winch also carries the bearings. This disc rotates on centre connected to a specifically shaped eccentric cam.
- This cam shown at "F” engages two forks on the swivel sub, which can pivot through a small angle in a ball joint assembly.
- the drilling fluid passes through the assembly as shown, all in the cross anti-rotation plate fitted through the forks on the swivel sub stops any rotational movement, fig 37.
- the purpose of the trajectory control unit briefly stated is to control the direction of drilling from the surface.
- the design proposes to achieve this by three main elements: a swivel sub joint with zero to 3° directional movement, an actuator to produce that movement, and a valve to control the actuator by pressure pulses injected into the drilling fluid line at the surface. It is important subsidiary aspect of the design that a through bore or flow ports be incorporated for the drilling fluid, to the spallation drilling head, electrical control of the hydraulic actuator by valves in a closed hydraulic sealed system can be used.
- the means of applying pressure to power the actuator may either direct drilling fluid pressure, or some form of accumulator, because the actuator working pressure can be chosen instead of using whatever drilling fluid pressure is available because the actuator pressure is then a constant proportion of drilling fluid pressure. Obviously in either case the number of actuations possible before tripping to recharge the accumulator must be acceptable.
- the valve meters the flow out of the motor, but it can conveniently be positioned at the upstream end of the assembly, it is designed to actuate within a "window" of drilling fluid pressure. For instance, it normal pressure was 1,000 psi, the valve could be arranged to actuate, once the pressure reached 1.200 psi. After actuation, the pressure would have to fall back to below say 1,100 psi before another actuation was possible.
- the same pressure telemetry control valve can also be used to control, fuel water mixture for controlling the heat flux from 500°C to 1,800°C within the spallation head, without the use of outside electrical armoured cable.
- the alternative method is to place the two stage vortex separation units, along with the storage and/or accumulator units, above the trajectory control unit and provide flow tubes from the vortex separation units for the fuel and air through the trajectory control unit's bore, allowing a single re-injection combustion spallation head to be fitted to the trajectory control unit for short, medium and long radius drilling control, as shown in fig. 38 for coiled tubing use, or any other combination within the drill string or type of connection.
- the erosive intensity of the high velocity liquid water pulse jet combined with the supersonic spalling action of the combustion flame jet enhances the erosive, spalling intensity, oscillating the velocity of the jet at a preferred strouhal number and impinging the pulsed jet against a solid surface to be eroded and spalled exiting the liquid so as to structure itself into discrete vortex rings, normal to the axial direction of the jet stream, such a liquid jet will pulse more violently due to the central supersonic flame jet increasing erosion harnessing the pressure differentials over radially spreading vortex as it impinged and passes over the formation boundary provides both axial and rotational forces acting to induce directional factors to improve erosive/spalling results.
- Thermal hydraulic behaviour in spallation drilling, erosion, water hammer or fluid transients can occur, causing severe damage, the primary cause is the occurrence of a two phase from single phase in the hot water or steam exiting the outer orifice around the combustion chamber.
- the multi stacked vortex/cyclone system is ideal for coping with air, fuel, water and/or abrasive particle mixtures, because the lighter of the mixture's make up gathers at the centre of the cyclone creating the pressure where it is cushioned by surrounding remaining fluid.
- Multi stacked vortex/cyclones swirl generators/hydrocyclone as described in the first aspect of the invention allows for air, fuel, water and/or abrasives to be separated by enhanced centripetal forces either by velocity flow or mechanically induced flow in stages, forces exceeding lOOOg inside hydrocyclones provide virtual instantaneous separation in seconds, the lighter of the mixture migrates to the low pressure core inside the separator tube, moving in the opposite direction from the main flow of clean water when multi stacking vortex/cyclones individual separation stages.
- the invention allows for four methods of controlling well bore diameter through the use of vortex/cyclone and/or centrifuge.
- This method is used to control well bore diameter by continual under reaming, to a size beyond the outside diameter of the spallation penetrator head either fixed or rotary. Allowing for true linear (vertically held) drilling, eliminating drag and friction forces on the drill string or coiled tubing (umbilical) allowing for larger well bores with a wide range of applications within the drilling industries, that are not possible with conventional rotary drilling, methods.
- One major advantage of coiled tubing drilling with spallation drilling heads is its ability to drill under pressure/under balanced.
- the invention allows for two phase injection and centrifugal, vortex/swirl generator, hydrocyclone and/or centrifuge separation to separate air from fuel and water, and the fuel from water, and or abrasive particles from water, by this method separate each of the constituents from the liquid to accommodate periodic injection of air or fuel to the combustion chamber control and air flow into the vortexing water swirl as shown in fig. 30, 31, 32, 33, 35 and 38.
- the method further uses a down hole metallic flexible armoured cable attached to the drill string by various means to allow for instrumentation and diagnostic control of air/fuel injection rates, spall lifting capacity by air/water injection, penetrator stand-off clearance, allowing fast penetration rates.
- the diagnostic measurements allows for flame temperature, combustion chamber pressure, well bore spallation area pressure and gas cooling temperature, velocity to control well bore diameter and trajectory, orientation control. Development of sensors for the smart drilling system to control drilling system to control drilling perimeters for detecting and measuring will be manufactured and used by those skilled in the art of diagnostic and control of down hole functions and measurements.
- coiled tubing titanium coiled tubing
- drill pipe as shown in fig. 29 consisting of outer coiled tubing to transport water, or can be used as spall return line in a dual string low-density combustion flame jet spallation system, with two internally fitted small diameter coiled tubings and an electrical conductor line for instrumentation and diagnostic control of super critical/supersonic and subsonic combustion thermal jet spallation and by the alternative use if water and/or with the small or internal lines.
- Sections of coiled tubing can be joined by umbilical connectors.
- Drilling to deep depths will require high density liquid water, as the heat flux determines the rate of penetration and temperature of spallation. Heat flux into the rock surface just prior to the spallation is the determining factor in this process of penetration rates and onset temperature of spallation, the heat transfer process.
- the very hot dense super critical fluid then flowing past the rock surface to be spalled will perform additional spallation in conjunction with the supersonic thermal jet spalling action. This thermal supercritical spalling action allows full rig floor control over the threshold temperature when the rock heats up, below this temperature the rock gets ductile and stops.
- abrasive particles or drilling muds can be used with the flame jet or water jet, the use of cooling water exiting the axial outer nozzle orifice, will produce high velocity liquid water erosion in conjunction with the exiting supersonic or subsonic combustion thermal jet whereby the erosive/spalling action of the hot super critical water vortex rings are super imposed onto the heat flux induced spallation action of the same jet the advantage of inducing acoustic coupling to transfer energy to the rock interface in an oscillatory mode, that will further enhance rock failure by increased spallation drilling rates.
- this drilling system spalling and eroding the well bore interface by the super critical thermal jet impinging on the rock surface ahead of the drilling penetrator head with little or no mechanical contact. This eliminates wear, under reams the well bore making this the ideal drilling tool for vertical and trajectory orientation control with this guidance system, that will not deviate from the pre-set trajectory, set from the surface.
- Continuous drilling is allowed by the use of the vortex cyclone separation system and pressure storage cylinders or accumulator can be assembled inside a tubular drilling assembly along with electronic instrumentation, sensors and control valves controlled by the use of an electrical conduit cable.
- the tubular drilling assembly will be provided with two box connections in the sub-assembly and the bottom sub-assembly will house the thermal jet nozzle assembly pack.
- Velocity head can be converted to pressure head also by a down hole pump or motor, allowing continuous drilling.
- Hydrodynamic forces power fluidics are based on the physics of centrifugal and free vortex action in an enclosed space for fluid separation.
- the vortex cyclone internal chamber is rotated by the velocity of the fuel-air water mixture, that is rotated by the centrifuge motor, allowing the mixture to enter through the co-axial inlet port in the vortex cyclone chamber top body by rotating the axially oriented impeller integral with the bottom axial peripheral ducts and central flow cone, all integral with the inner cyclone chamber.
- the inner cyclone chamber is supported by bearings and seals, top and bottom, within the fixed outer casing.
- peripheral ducts and central flow cone will be rotated by the epitrochoidal motor's bearing shaft assembly, with the flow into the inlet being axial.
- the epitrochoidal motor's bearing shaft assembly To prevent droplets breaking up by the non-rotation of the drill pipe or coiled tubing and motor design, stops any vortexing, swirling of the liquid prior to entering the fixed axial inlet ports above the centrifuge.
- the larger droplets in the liquid mixture which is rotated initially by the top impeller that separates out and gradually coalesce in axial ducts before moving along the central flow cone towards the axis of the cyclone rotation by the centrifuge causes the liquid mixture combined with the shape of the de-oiled water outlet to generate a vortex in the cyclone chamber, the tangential velocity profile in the cyclone, the centrifugal acceleration forces in the vortex are so high that even the finest droplets are forced in to combustion tube core of air/oil in the centre the core is sucked out from the end of the cyclone either axial or co-axially.
- a variable supersonic pure tone sound is produced at the spallation drilling head within the interface of the well bore.
- Seismic sensors are placed outwardly of the well head and detect the reflected seismic signals, generate by the down-ward travelling tone.
- a pure vibration tone with a frequency that is directly related to flow conditions. The frequency of the vibrational tone is approximately equal to the angular velocity of the flow as it nears the exit of the sound produced will vary directly with fluctuations in flow this can be used seismic measurement while drilling and electrical logging data generation in select cutting and spalling applications utilising the present invention.
- thermo jet spallation acoustic sounds are ideal for telemetry control acoustic can transmit data hundreds of times greater than mud- pulse methods and can be transmitted well over 30,000' for advanced drilling systems. Wave propagation and directional control of acoustic waves within the well bore of formation.
- Directional drilling systems used in oil and gas wells are primitive tele-operational systems.
- Directional sensors and formation evaluation tools operate autonomously just behind the drill bit, but all steering decisions and operations are remotely controlled from the drill rig. Telemetry of the data to the surface occurs via encoded pressure pulses superposed upon the mud flow. The data rate of mud-pulse telemetry is very low, allowing transmission of only simple navigational parameters. Technology development in the measurements while drilling service industry has stagnated because of this data rate limitation. The drilling industry has looked for alternatives to mud- pulse telemetry. Acoustic telemetry can transmit data more than 10,000' at data rates about 100 times greater than mud-pulse methods. Using a single repeater, data can be transmitted over 30,000' . Acoustic telemetry appears to be the key technology for meeting the telemetry needs of advanced drilling systems.
- Fig 25 shows an arrangement whereby the hot water phase supercritical outlets, item 1 , can be to the outside and the air, fuel mixture will be to the centre, item 2,jet.
- this type of centrifuge of vortex cyclone arrangement it is intended that all types of engineering designs are included with the patent for velocity on mechanical induced flow vortexing, cyclone and centrifuge use including coiled tubing usage within the patent. Gearing can also be used to drive more than one jet nozzle, vortex cyclone as shown in fig 18.
- fig 1 shows a radial cross-section of a combustion jet spallation trajectory drilling system. Showing:- ITEM 1 Shows Box thread in drilling tool body
- ITEM 8 Shows Pressure Pulse Inlet to Valve Spool
- ITEM 11 Shows Connection Pin and Box Valve Body to Actuator Body
- ITEM 16 Shows Actuator Cam Shaft
- ITEM 17 Shows Actuator Base Body for
- ITEM 19 Shows Connection Pin and Box Actuator Body to Swivel Sub Body
- ITEM 21 Shows Pin Connection Swivel Sub to Twin Epitrochoidal Motor Body
- ITEM 23 Shows Epitrochoid Cylinder ITEM 24 Shows Pin and Box connection to Rotary Thrust Sub to Centrifuge Penetrator
- ITEM 27 Shows Penetrator Drilling Unit Head Body
- ITEM 28 Shows Pin and Box Connection for Retaining Vortex Nozzles and Flow Plate
- ITEM 33 Shows Seal Cup Bottom on Actuator Cam Shaft
- ITEM 36 Shows Cam on Actuator Shaft
- ITEM 40 Shows Flow Tube and Anti-Rotation Tube Through Piston for Trajectory
- ITEM 41 Shows Rotary Actuator Body
- ITEM 46 Shows Inlet Ports to Epitrochoid Motor
- ITEM 48 Shows Flow Ports (Drilling Fluid)
- ITEM 49 Shows Epitrochoid/Tri-rotor Motor Body
- ITEM 50 Shows Tri-rotor Seal in Epitrochoid Cylinder
- ITEM 51 Shows Outlet Ports from Epitrochoid Motor
- ITEM 52 Shows Drive Shaft Crank Tri-rotor ITEM 53 Shows 0 to 3 Deg Inclination in l A Deg Increments through Telemetry Pressure
- Pulse Control in the Trajectory Control Unit ITEM 54 Shows Recharging Valve ITEM 55 Shows Retaining Ring ITEM 56 Shows Seal for Anti-Rotation and flow Tube
- FIG 2 Shows Axial Cross Section of Epitrochoid/Tri-rotor Hydraulic Motor Pressure
- FIG 3 Shows Axial Cross Section of Section (A)
- FIG 4 Shows Axial Cross Section (B)
- FIG 5 Shows Axial Cross Section (F)
- FIG 6 Shows Axial Cross Section (G)
- FIG 7 Shows Radial Cross Section of a Penetrator Head Showing the Vortex
- ITEM 4 Shows Inlet to Centrifuge
- ITEM 8 Shows Vortex Jet Nozzle Burners
- ITEM 9 Shows Nozzle Tangential Inlets
- ITEM 10 Shows Upper Centrifuge Chamber
- ITEM 11 Shows Flow Ports
- FIG 16 Shows A Diagrammatic Drawing of a Combustion Centrifuge Vortex-Jet
- ITEM 1 Shows Drill String or Coiled Tubing
- ITEM 7 Shows Epitrochoid/Tri-rotor Hydraulic Motor and Bearing Assembly Drive
- FIG 14 Shows A Radial Cross Section of an Orientation Drilling Unit as shown in
- FIG 15 Shows A Radial Cross Section of a Dump Sub as Shown in Patent above
- FIG 13 Shows A Radial Cross Section of a Telemetry Control Valve as shown in
- FIG 8 Shows A Radial Cross Section of a Vortex chamber with Co-axially Removed
- ITEM 1 Shows Outer Wall for Water
- ITEM 3 Shows Water Outlet co-axial (or) axial
- ITEM 7 Shows Central Core Oil Tube
- ITEM 10 Shows Outer Wall for Water Cooling
- ITEM 11 Shows Helical Accelerating Flow Pattern
- ITEM 14 Shows Tube Inlet Fuel/ Air Stream
- FIG 9 Shows A Radial Cross Section of a Combustion Nozzle with Bottom Water
- ITEM 1 Shows Outer Wall for Water
- ITEM 3 Shows Peripheral Ducts (Inlet) Air or Fuel
- ITEM 9 Shows Air or Fuel Outlet
- ITEM 10 Shows Outer Wall for Water Cooling
- ITEM 14 Shows Retaining Section ITEM 15 Shows Conical Separator Oil or Air Inlet ITEM 16 Shows Vortex Orifice Shoulder ITEM 17 Shows Parallel Section
- FIG 10 Shows A Radial Cross Section and Diagrammatic Details for the Bottom
- ITEM 1 Shows Nozzle Jet Body
- ITEM 4 Shows Multi-Helical Pattern of Water Two Phase Pulse Jet
- ITEM 7 Shows Spalling and Water Hammer Area
- ITEM 8 Shows Spalling and Flow Separation
- ITEM 11 Shows Area of Spallation and Erosion
- ITEM 12 Shows Grain Structure in Formation Rock by Spallation
- FIG 12 Shows Tangential Velocity Profile in Cyclone
- FIG 11 Shows an axial cross section of a spallation head bottom showing
- ITEM 3 Shows Central spallation jet nozzle
- Fig. 17 shows graph for completed well costs for drilling with linear spallation technology compared to conventional methods in relation to depth of well bore.
- the present invention relates to a method of cyclone/vortexing with or without centrifuge chamber, showing a cyclone/vortex internal spinning chamber within a cyclone body allowing a vortex to be induced by either direct drive from the epitrochoidal motor through the drive shaft and bearing pack assembly or by velocity flow through the use of cyclone vortex combustion jet nozzle assemblies fitted either vertically or laterally within the centrifuge spallation drilling head fig. 18 shows a drive shaft driven cyclone vortex spallation jet unit showing:
- ITEM 1 Shows Inlet through drive shaft ITEM 2 Shows Drive shaft from motor ITEM 3 Shows Seals ITEM 4 Shows Bearing
- ITEM 5 Shows Top sub of housing to drive motor body or nozzle
- ITEM 6 Shows Impeller with vertical of lateral blades
- ITEM 7 Shows Flow Ducts
- ITEM 8 Shows Flow Cone
- ITEM 9 Shows Bottom section of vortex/cyclone housing or nozzle
- ITEM 10 Shows Vortex nozzle
- ITEM 11 Shows Inlet flow ports
- ITEM 13 Shows Inner cylindrical cyclone shell
- ITEM 14 Shows Air/oil outlet combustion tube
- ITEM 17 Shows Outer water wall
- ITEM 18 Shows Air or oil stream
- ITEM 19 Shows Water cyclone orifice
- ITEM 22 Shows Alternative coaxial outlet one or more
- ITEM 23 Shows Air or oil vortex jet outlet
- Fig. 19 shows a velocity driven impeller type top nozzle jet housing for cyclone; vortex body showing:
- ITEM 1 Shows Top nozzle jet body
- ITEM 7 Shows Impeller central shaft
- ITEM 9 Shows Peripheral velocity inlet port
- ITEM 10 Shows Inlet Chamber ITEM 11 Shows Flow cone ITEM 12 Shows Inner Cylindrical Cyclone Shell
- Fig. 20 shows a radical cross section of an alternative centrifuge spallation drilling head with flow ports through drive shaft to vortex/cyclone chamber jet nozzles showing spallation drilling head:
- ITEM 1 Shows Inlet port
- ITEM 2 Shows Spallation drilling head body
- ITEM 3 Shows Flow ports to each jet nozzle burner
- ITEM 4 Shows Combustion jet nozzle tube outlet
- ITEM 6 Shows Oil/air, water inlet to nozzles
- ITEM 7 Shows Water inlet orifice
- Fig. 21 shows axial cross section of spallation jet flow port inlets in head of Fig. 20.
- Fig. 22 and 23 shows a diagrammatic cross section of a spallation drilling system (A) creating a well bore (B) with spallation drilling head in the area (C) the spallation drilling head is constructed in accordance with the principles of the present invention to produce a supersonic jet spallation action generates a tone comprising of vibrational signals (D) that reflect off of horizons (E) (F) (G) each being respectively deeper in depth than the drilling head (C) the above vibrations or sound waves are then reflected off the horizons back to the surface (H) where sensors such as phones (K) with the data logged there from in Fig.
- A creating a well bore
- C the spallation drilling head is constructed in accordance with the principles of the present invention to produce a supersonic jet spallation action generates a tone comprising of vibrational signals (D) that reflect off of horizons (E) (F) (G) each being respectively deeper in depth than the drilling head (C) the above vibrations or sound waves are then reflected
- FIG. 23 shows a diagrammatic perspective view of the spallation drilling system (A) spalling a well bore (B) with the drilling system (A) spalling a well bore (B) with the spallation drilling head (C) positioned within the well bore.
- the spallation drill head (C) produces a very high tone comprised of vibrational signal (D) which bounce off horizon (L) back to the surface.
- the signals (J) are picked up by the geophones (K) and collected as data at recording station (M) this particular view shows an array of phones that can be set about a drilling operation that will provide for three dimensional perspective interpretation of sub ⁇ surface geological data based upon the signals generated and interpreted as seismic signals.
- these signal are generated during the spallation drilling operations to model the formation ahead of the spallation drilling head (C) this promotes safety through detecting horizons that are geo-pressured.
- the system also allows stratigraphic and structural definitions on a three dimensional perspective from the well bore itself providing significantly enhanced structural and well bore correlation.
- Fig. 26 shows a radial cross section of fig. 20 with the same central combustion flame jet nozzle and axial cavitation outer orifice and two outer co-axial water jet orifice ports for well bore diameter drilling control with axial spallation jet nozzles showing:-
- ITEM 10 Shows Axial spallation nozzle orifice
- Fig. 27 shows a radial cross-section of a combustion flame jet nozzle with single or multi vortex intensifier combustion chamber to expand the mixture to supersonic velocity in each of the combustion chambers by chamber reduction and nozzle outlets by shock action of the discharging hot products of combustion producing a supersonic combustion flame jet to be directed against the rock surface, showing also an alternative top conical inlet.
- ITEM 3 Shows Reduction orifice to expansion intensifier chamber
- ITEM 5 Shows Spallation reduction nozzle orifice supersonic jet
- ITEM 7 Shows Inlet fuel ducts in place of item 1
- ITEM 8 Shows Retaining top thread and air inlet port
- ITEM 11 Shows Thermal rotary seal
- Fig. 28 shows a bottom diagrammatic, cross section of fig. 18 with bottom section of nozzle fig. 27 and water housing with jet outlets for well bore diameter drilling control, showing:-
- ITEM 3 Shows Vortex swirl cup chamber bottom and water outlet
- ITEM 4 Shows Combustion jet nozzle
- ITEM 5 Shows Jet nozzle exit orifice
- ITEM 20 Shows Fixed water housing
- Fig. 29 shows axial cross section of an umbilical coiled tubing:- ITEM 1 Shows Coiled tubing wall ITEM 2 Shows First internal small bore coiled tubing for compressed air ITEM 3 Shows Second internal small bore oiled tubing for abrasive particles or water and/or abrasives
- ITEM 4 Shows Bore of main coiled tubing for water fuel mixture or water combustion spall returns for low-density flame jet spallation
- Fig. 30 shows a longitudinal section of a multi-stacked vortex chamber two stage separation and vortex re-injection for super-critical water and flame jet spallation showing:- ITEM 1 Shows Outlet air
- ITEM 2 Shows Outlet water/fuel
- ITEM 3 Shows Inlet port water/fuel/air
- ITEM 4 Shows Electrical cable
- ITEM 5 Shows Storage cylinder fuel
- ITEM 7 Shows Air/water/fuel water droplet atomise control valves
- ITEM 8 Shows Combustion gas sensor for well bore diameter
- ITEM 12 Shows Co-axial water outlets
- ITEM 13 Shows Combustion chamber
- ITEM 14 Shows Fuel/air/water control valves
- ITEM 16 Shows Outlet to fuel cylinder
- Fig. 31 shows longitudinal section of a coiled tubing umbilical, vortex/cyclone with single stage air separation and re-injection system showing: ITEM 1 Shows Outlet port air
- ITEM 2 Shows Outlet port water
- ITEM 3 Shows Inlet port air/water
- ITEM 4 Shows Fuel line in
- ITEM 6 Shows Control valves water fuel/air/abrasives
- ITEM 8 Shows Combustion gas sensor
- ITEM 13 Shows Combustion chamber
- Fig. 32 shows same as above but with fuel first stage separation showing:
- ITEM 1 Shows Fuel outlet
- ITEM 3 Shows Inlet port fuel/water
- ITEM 4 Shows Air line inlet
- ITEM 7 Shows Electrical control cable
- ITEM 8 Shows Combustion gas sensor
- ITEM 12 Shows Co-axial outlets
- ITEM 13 Shows Combustion chamber
- Fig. 33 shows a longitudinal section of a multi-stacked vortex/cyclone system first stage air separation into an internal combustion and co-axial fuel inlet ducts with external cooling cyclone swirl for super critical water vortexing along with flame jet spallation showing: ITEM 1 Shows Outlet port air
- ITEM 4 Shows Fuel/water droplets inlet ducts
- ITEM 5 Shows Electrical cable
- ITEM 6 Shows Combustion gas sensor
- ITEM 12 Shows Inlet port air/fuel/water
- Fig. 34 shows a trajectory control drilling assembly unit as shown in fig. 1 without the epitrochoidal motor, rotary bearing assembly and centrifuge vortex head.
- ITEM 2 Shows Fixed vortex/cyclone multi-stacked separation system with and/or multiple axial and co-axial. Water outlets with axial spallation flame jets.
- Fig. 35 shows a longitudinal section as shown in fig. 33, but with built in back up fuel accumulator system showing: ITEM 1 Shows Air outlets from hydrocyclone
- ITEM 2 Shows Water outlets from hydrocyclone
- ITEM 3 Shows Inlet port water/fuel/air
- ITEM 5 Shows Storage cylinder accumulator
- ITEM 7 Shows Air water injection
- ITEM 8 Shows Combustion gas sensor for well bore diameter control
- ITEM 13 Shows Fuel/air combustion chamber (with optional water inlet)
- ITEM 14 Shows Fuel and air control valves
- ITEM 15 Shows Fuel outlets from hydrocyclones
- Fig. 36 shows a radial cross-section as shown in fig. 33 but without back up fuel system, but provided with water, air, fuel continuous drilling accumulator control system.
- ITEM 1 Shows Seals for vortex stacking units
- ITEM 3 Shows Electrical cable
- ITEM 5 Shows Compression Ring Fig. 37 shows a radial cross-section of a water, air, fuel accumulator ba ck up continuous drilling system showing :-
- ITEM 2 Shows Pin and box connections
- ITEM 4 Shows Pin and Box connections
- ITEM 5 Shows Stand by flow port
- ITEM 9 Shows Electronic servo 2-way control valve
- ITEM 12 Shows Accumulator cylinder
- ITEM 22 Shows Ball and seat
- ITEM 23 Shows Inlet port
- ITEM 24 Shows Armoured electrical cable
- Fig. 38 shows a radial cross-section of a coiled tubing, spallation drilling head showing a coiled tubing connector as described in our co-pending patent 9305449.2
- ITEM 1 Shows Coiled tubing
- ITEM 2a Shows Internal tubing air inlet
- ITEM 3 Shows Coiled tubing connection air line
- ITEM 4 Shows Electrical conduit cable an connection
- ITEM 5 Shows Air to water supply line
- ITEM 6 Shows Coiled tubing connection fuel line
- ITEM 8 Shows Pin and box threat top sub
- ITEM 10 Shows Spallation head body
- ITEM 11 Shows Fuel inlet cone nozzle
- ITEM 12 Shows Air tube nozzle
- ITEM 14 Shows Reducing section of cyclone
- ITEM 15 Shows Straight section -cyclone outlet water
- ITEM 16 Shows Air control valve to water vortex
- ITEM 17 Shows Water tangential inlet port
- ITEM 18 Shows Water cooling fed tube
- ITEM 19 Shows Combustion chamber
- ITEM 20 Shows Cooling water outlet jets to cool gas/spall
- ITEM 21 Shows Cooling water outer chamber
- ITEM 22 Shows Spallation flame jet outlet
- ITEM 24 Shows Sensor well bore diameter
- ITEM 25 Shows Sensor penetration stand off
- ITEM 26 Shows Coiled tubing flared end connector
- ITEM 27 Shows Flared end connector spallation head
- ITEM 30 Shows Coupling segment retaining bolts
- ITEM 31 Shows Top sub spallation head
- ITEM 32 Shows Combustion insert assembly
- Fig. 39 shows a radial cross-section of a combustion chamber vortex intensifier showing:
- ITEM 1 Shows Air inlet
- ITEM 2 Shows Fuel inlet
- ITEM 3 Shows Combustion chamber body
- ITEM 4 Shows Subsonic swirl and reducing chamber
- Fig. 40 shows a radial cross-section of a combustion chamber showing :-
- ITEM 1 Shows Inlet fuel port
- ITEM 2 Shows Inlet air port
- ITEM 3 Shows Combustion chamber body
- ITEM 4 Shows Combustion chamber
- Fig. 41 shows a graph of submerged combustion flame (thermal) jets.
- Fig. 42 shows diagrammatic drawing of a velocity string and burner head used in spallation drilling.
- ITEM 1 Shows Outer Annulus
- ITEM 2 Shows Central Flow
- ITEM 3 Shows Spallation Head
- Fig. 43 shows a radial cross section of a modified spallation combustion burner unit with water and concentrated fuel/ water nozzles and optional side combustion injection ports, with cooling water and well bore water control.
- ITEM 1 Shows Burner body made of round tubular sections (but not shown)
- ITEM 2 Shows Orifice water cooled nozzle
- ITEM 5 Shows Pulse (low density jet nozzles)
- ITEM 7 Shows Water, fuel, hydrocyclone separation system inlet
- ITEM 10 Shows Coiled tubing outer (water/kerosine mixture) passage
- ITEM 11 Shows Coiled tubing inner compressed air passage
- ITEM 12 Shows Fuel water atomising jet
- ITEM 14 Shows Pin and box thread connections for coiled tubing
- ITEM 15 Shows Spallation supercritical /flame orifice outlet
- Fig. 44 shows multi-coiled tubing types with electrical cable for spallation drilling.
- ITEM 1 Shows Outer wall (tubing)
- ITEM 2 Shows Inner wall (tubing)
- ITEM 3 Shows Electrical cable
- ITEM 4 Shows Central wall (tubing)
- ITEM 5 Shows Second wall (tubing)
- ITEM 6 Shows First wall (tubing)
- ITEM 7 Shows Inner tubing bore
- ITEM 10 Shows Third wall tubing
- Fig. 45 shows a diagrammatic drawing of a spallation drilling head and well bore spalling action.
- ITEM 3 Shows Vapour bubbles supercritical carries with the jet down to the bottom hole rock surface
- ITEM 4 Shows Area of pulse jet impingement to thermal spallation jet
- ITEM 5 Shows Low pressure zones with formation of vapour bubbles with flow separation on high press mud or water flow on exit path from pulse jet nozzle
- ITEM 6 Shows Erosion of formation by pulse jet (water hammer)
- Fig. 46 shows a diagrammatic drawing of a spallation coiled tubing drilling system also used for tunnelling in the horizontal position or micro-tunnelling.
- ITEM 1 Shows internal coiled tubing
- ITEM 3 Shows Outer coiled tubing
- ITEM 4 Shows Directional control spallation drilling head
- ITEM 5 Shows Thermal spallation jet
- ITEM 6 Shows Well bore bottom
- Fig. 47 shows a diagrammatic drawing of a well bore with spallation head showing spalling and spall gas returns with water cooling well bore size.
- Fig. 48 and 48a shows a diagrammatic drawing of storage caverns, cavity and shaft formation.
- ITEM 1 Shows First stage of shaft and cavity formation
- Fig. 49 shows a radial cross section of a velocity vent, annulus thermal jet spallation drilling burner head for rotary or stationary use, showing: ITEM 1 Shows Outer tubing or casing
- ITEM 2 Shows Inner returns reversal velocity vent tubing or casing
- ITEM 4 Shows Water/fuel lines (utilities)
- ITEM 5 Shows Water/fuel lines (utilities)
- ITEM 6 Shows Electrical control line
- ITEM 11 Shows Water cooling ports (inlet)
- ITEM 13 Shows Orifice jet cooling ports
- ITEM 14 Shows Annular thermal combustion nozzle
- ITEM 15 Shows Annular combustion chamber
- ITEM 17 Shows Spray injection (water) combustion
- ITEM 18 Shows Fuel/water/air unit combustion injector spray
- ITEM 21 Shows Gas, supercritical H2O flow
- ITEM 23 Shows Adapter block (tube expansion system)
- ITEM 24 Shows Combustion chamber body
- Fig. 50 shows a axial cross section of a modified combustion thermal jet spallation head with a gas liquid hydrocyclone separation system for ultra deep drilling, showing: - ITEM 1 Shows Nozzle with copper face and stellite port
- ITEM 2 Shows Water cooled nozzle ITEM 3 Shows Cooling water passages ITEM 4 Shows Air jets ITEM 5 Shows Fuel mixture jet ITEM 6 Shows Cooling water line ITEM 7 Shows Cooling water to well bore ITEM 8 Shows Air/fuel/water swirl generator separation system ITEM 9 Shows Tool joint coupling ITEM 10 Shows Armoured electrical cable ITEM 11 Shows Accumulator system ITEM 12 Shows Hydrocyclone ITEM 13 Shows Position for trajectory control units
- ITEM 14 Shows Gas liquid injection expansion manifold top section
- ITEM 17 Shows Atomised fuel/water/air droplets exothermal combustion
- ITEM 18 Shows Supersonic super-critical thermal spallation jet 400°C to 1,800°C a) Air/kerosine/water mixture b) Compressed air c) Kerosine ) Water e) Kerosine/water mixture
- ITEM 24 Shows Fuel passage to water atomiser unit
- ⁇ M 28 Shows Air (gas) take off - mesh/perforated tube
- ITEM 29 Shows Electrical cable to control valves and instruments
- Fig. 51 shows an ultra deep downhole gas, liquid swirl generator and hydrocyclone separator with accumulator for kerosine storage showing :-
- ITEM 1 Shows Separator body
- ITEM 2 Shows Inlet bore
- ITEM 3 Shows Kerosine, water, air mixture
- ITEM 5 Shows Internal air tube
- ITEM 13 Shows Fuel line outlet
- ITEM 15 Shows Water Drain from accumulator
- ITEM 16 Shows Fuel inlet to accumulator from hydrocyclone outlet
- ITEM 17 Shows Air tube feed line
- ITEM 18 Shows Water outlet from hydrocyclone
- ITEM 19 Shows Fuel (kerosine) tube feed line water
- Fig. 52 shows a axial cross section of a vortex jet section of the central manifold body for atomising the water and exothermic heat of combustion by air/kerosine (fuel) mixture showing :-
- ITEM 2 Shows Valve control inlet port compressed air
- ITEM 3 Shows Valve control inlet port kerosine ) fuel
- ITEM 4 Shows Valve control inlet port water
- ITEM 5 Shows Swirl chamber water
- ITEM 7 Shows Air jets for atomising water
- ITEM 9 Shows Atomised water jet ITEM 10 Shows Swirl chamber kerosine (fuel)
- ITEM 14 Shows Swirl chamber air
- ITEM 17 Shows Vortex swirl outlet to combustion chamber
- ITEM 18 Shows First stage air flow jets
- ITEM 19 Shows Second stage air flow jets (friction)
- ITEM 20 Shows First stage swirl chamber
- ITEM 21 Shows Second stage swirl chamber
- ITEM 22 Shows Third stage swirl chamber
- ITEM 23 Shows Air passage ports
- Fig. 53 shows a axial cross section of a ultra deep downhole gas, liquid external type swirl generator angle blades and hydrocyclone separator with accumulator for kerosine storage showing :-
- ITEM 1 Shows Separator body
- ITEM 2 Shows Inlet bore
- ITEM 3 Shows Kerosine, water, air mixture
- ITEM 4 Shows External swirl generator with curved stationary blades to swirl the liquid
- ITEM 5 Shows Internal air tube
- ITEM 6 Shows Mesh/Perforations in tube (Air take off)
- ITEM 13 Shows Fuel line outlet
- ITEM 15 Shows Water Drain from accumulator
- ITEM 16 Shows Fuel inlet to accumulator from hydrocyclone outlet
- ITEM 17 Shows Air tube feed line
- ITEM 18 Shows Water outlet from hydrocyclone
- ITEM 19 Shows Fuel (kerosine) tube feed line water
- ITEM 21 Shows Controlled centrifugal swirl of liquid (water-air-kerosine) or (drilling mud-air-kerosine)
- Fig. 54 shows axial cross section of a altemative layout for a hydrocyclone separation system for twin coiled tubing.
- JTEM 1 Shows Separator body
- ITEM 3 Shows Inner coiled tubing
- ITEM 11 Shows Water lines
- ITEM 12 Shows Air passage
- Low cost drilling fluid water, air, fuel (with abrasive particles if required)
- T Enables most well bores to be drilled with one or more penetrator spallation drilling heads U. Allows conventional or slim hole well bores to be drilling at minimal capital cost V. Allows for spallation drilling heads to be used as hole openers and under reamers W. No mechanical drill cutting (allows linear drilling and trajectory to be achieved) X. Ideal for creating caverns and chambers down hole Y. Ideal for producing oil shale (kerogen rock) production with caverns and micro tunnels at low capital cost
- the main method of enhancement to primary recovery is water-flood used as a natural drive within the oil reservoir. Used this way, it is more an enhancement to primary recovery than to a secondary recovery method. Steam is used for all types of oil recovery, more so for heavy oils. Steams injection (huff and puff) cyclic steam and steam drive method. The cost of producing generated steam at the surface is a very costly field production expense.
- HDR super heated water (super critical) with its high flow rates and minimum heat loss can be transported under high pressure far more efficiently through production casing, surface infrastructure, pipe lines and reinjection tubing, alternatively, there is direct injection from the HDR reservoir.
- Surface generated steam can produce up to 80 percent quality steam up to 95 percent quality steam but not in the same volume as HDR super heated water that can be converted to steam where it is most effective at the well head by alternating choke control to the injection wells, in the formation for thermal two phase flow vapour and oil production. This also allows the quality of the steam to be enhanced at a second stage within the formation by open choke control flow at the production well head.
- the invention method allows for entire gas or oil burning cost savings, for producing steam at the wellhead and also the associated water cleaning costs will also be a large cost saving.
- products of clean water and distilled water are also produced within the formation water over production, allowing for increased field profits.
- Silica dissolution at super-critical temperatures and critical pressure is separated out by hydrocyclones, prior to re-injection in to the petroleum formation and pH water levels from the HDR reservoir are never over eight (8), clay swelling is no longer a problem with low pH from the HDR reservoir as pH levels are normally about five (6) to seven (7), this stops destabilisation of the reservoir structure and migration of clay particles and stops bridging and plugging of the pore thoats.
- expandable clay minerals a concern, but problems of increased cleavage or slaking reactions of non-swelling clays occur as water becomes more alkaline, therefore, even in formations that contain only illite and kaolinite, a reduction in permeability can occur.
- Crude oil is a mixture of hydrocarbons, organic non-distillable components, inorganic components, heavy metals other minor constituents.
- the various methods of recovery from oil formation reservoirs range from carbon dioxide to steam at varying temperatures and pressures depending on the depths from which the crude is to be recovered. Generated steam is probably the most widely used method recovering oil.
- the HDR working fluid is pressurised water with 10% by weight CO2 (this is about 1/3 the amount of dissolved gas that could be carried into HDR reservoir with surface injection pressure of 3,000 psi), equivalent of 13,200 M 3 D flow rate.
- the stated method will allow up to 95% quality steam with a maximum volume expansion ratio and high enthalpy BTU's/#lb. This is achieved by the formation by alternating high pressure and low pressure cycles; a total gas or crude oil burning saving can be achieved by this method. The main reason is because no surface steam gene rating equipment need be used, which in turn will lead to a total water cleaning cost savings.
- the method works like a reverse huff-puff (cyclic steaming) using the super heated hot water to retain its heat under pressure as the driving fluid.
- the fluid with light hydrocarbon fractions in solutions will, together with the pressurised hot water in a closed-loop-system, increase the rate of petroleum recovery.
- the added advantage of this system is being able to use the high pressure injection pumps as the formation fracturing pumps.
- the super hot water high pressure fracturing of the oil formation can take place where the porosity and oil saturation can best be stimulated by hot water hydraulic pressure fracturing.
- the viscosity decreases rapidly with high temperature, which then makes the rock more permeable with a maximum volume expansion of the steam formation (internal energy) within the fractures.
- the fractures are opened by the hot water being alternated with high and low pressure pump controllers.
- the continuing fracturing acts as a driving force (specific volume) treatment for low permeability reservoirs. This will increase the fracture conductivity and allow a flow through the fractured rocks for an optimal completion. This can designed to maximise recovery within the oil formation.
- no further artificial lifting equipment down-hole pumps
- the pressure in some reservoirs will allow it to flow in some formation as shown in Figure 2.
- Controlling steam temperatures and quality within the formation is achieved by pressures within HDR steam producing wells, this allows for maximum fluid (water) temperature with full enthalpy control.
- the effect of this fluid (water) control is to control quartz dissolution, particularly as Si ⁇ 2 silica dissolution and related problems are most severs in cyclic operations where steam is injected and the well is produced.
- the dislodged sand will cause a sand control problem, which is usually two-fold: silica is being dislodged with calcite and dolomite: and clays are being released to move and decrease permeability.
- This method allows for the injection of super heated water/steam just below the formation fracture pressure for normal production, and high pressures for fracturing.
- the produced hot crude oil (geofluid) is pressured to the surface well head and separated.
- the returning geofluid is then used to produce electrical generated power before being reinjected back down the injection HDR well in the closed-loop system, or by the extraction of pressure energy prior to injection.
- the satellite well spacing from the central injector can be spaced further apart than the suggested 400 metres. This will depend on the length of the lateral extensions from the main well bore and the inclination of the well itself. These are side track extensions that are drilled in each of the production wells. This will force the fluid on a circuitous path. Most of the reservoir impedance and pressure drop occurs near the production wells, due to pressure dependence of the joint opening of the two or more lateral well bores. The problem will give good correlation with the joint openings and keep the joints open near the production wells.
- the main joint sets which form deep within HDR reservoirs are generally as near vertical as the minimum principle stresses are near horizontal at depth.
- the injection or production intervals, of HDR wells in these circumstances must be inclined at such an angle to provide good access to natural joints. This is possible with a triple or more well system with trilateral well bores to allow access to a greater natural joint system.
- the permeability of the HDR reservoir can also be increased by chemical leaching to allow for minimum impedance with the reservoir which allows for high water and CO2, nitrogen and other gas or agents flow. This is obtainable by the maximum use of flow through the tri-laterals, quad-laterals or any combination of radial or lateral well bores within the HDR reservoir from the fractures. With the increasing future use of electrical power for transportation, this will place additional strain on the increasing shortage of electrical generating capacity in the world. With (UCT) HDR geothermal electrical generating power developed and produced at break even costs of U.S. 1.00 Cents per Kwh.
- HDR geothermal resources are readily available compared to fossil fuels.
- HDR geothermal power plant could be located virtually anywhere world-wide.
- the major cost variable will be a function of the depth required at that location to reach the required HDR temperature.
- the deeper the wells the greater the cost of drilling, with spallation drilling technology this cost of deep drilling is no longer a major problem.
- High production (volume) rates are obtainable when transporting single phase fluids through HDR reservoir fractures, production casings and surface lines, in the super ⁇ critical temperature and critical pressure range, be expanded back at the well head to two phase flow, through chokes, producing a lower temperature and pressure for re- injection or surface use.
- the first step in the process of recovering the heat energy from this layer is to drill an injection well into the HDR formation which has very low permeability (e.g. granite) and sufficient temperature (preferably above 374 °C super-critical temperature and 3,204 psi critical pressure, the proposed depth for a HDR reservoir with a temperature of 450°C to 500°C. Allowing for heat loss, to surface temperatures of between 380°C to 430°C are obtainable for re-injection or direct electrical energy use).
- artificial fractures are created and held open in the rock formation using hydraulic stimulation techniques. Once the fracture system is created, two or more production wells with tri-laterals are drilled into the fracture zone so that they connect the fracture system to the surface.
- Water is then circulated under pressure from the surface into the injection well, through the fracture system where it collects heat energy from the hot rock formation, and then to the surface, where the heat energy is used.
- the cooled water is then re-injected into the injection well starting the cycle over again.
- the low permeability of the fractured reservoir prevents most of the water from being lost, creating a closed loop system of continuous circulation.
- Backup water reservoirs on the surface are used to supplement the injection well as necessary to keep the reservoir fully charged with fluid until the reservoir size has stabilised.
- the heat energy thus collected on the surface may be used directly to heat buildings or for industrial processes re-injected into hydrocarbon formations or to make electricity.
- the system for mining heat energy from Hot Dry Rock is pollution free, as compared to conventional power plants which create heat energy by burning fossil fuels.
- the Invention unique patented spallation drilling Technology which will substantially reduce the cost of drilling geothermal wells. Using high pressure super-critical thermal combustion jet spallation down hole, this new design will increase penetration rates in hard rock by several hundred percent. Prototype heads have been tested in the field and laboratories, with very promising results. Recent field tests proved the spallation head has the capability to spall rock when drilling ultra deep wells at rates of penetration far in excess of conventional drill bits, and also revealed the speeds obtained in spalling large caverns.
- the Invention Technology will meaningfully reduce the cost of drilling HDR geothermal oil and gas wells, Reducing drilling costs will enable the world-wide geographical market for HDR applications to expand to almost any location,
- the Invention Technology is in a unique position to be the leader in the development of a commercial HDR geothermal industry through spallation drilling technology. Steam, Hot Water, Water Assisted Gravity Drainage
- a similar system can also be used for lighter crudes of 26° API gravity and above without steam, or with hot water, hot water, hot water/CO2 or cold water drive for gravity drainage.
- the pressurised closed loop sweep, soak system is used for returning hot/water and light hydrocarbon fractions all in solution, back to the HDR injection wells the technology can be applied commercially world-wide with extremely high recovery rates, due to technology of the high rates of drilling velocities by The Invention spallation drilling system.
- This invention relates generally to recovering viscous petroleum from petroleum- containing formations.
- Throughout the world there are several major deposits of high- viscosity crude petroleum in oil sands not recoverable in their natural state through a well by ordinary production methods.
- the major concentration of such deposits are in Alaska 42 billion barrels and Utah, where approximately 30 billion barrels of in-place heavy oil or tar exists.
- California the estimate of in-place heavy oil or viscous crude is 40 billion barrels.
- the depths range from surface outcropping (from 100 feet to 2000 feet) with our UCT method depth is never a problem.
- Viscous petroleum may be recovered from viscous crude oil containing formations such as oil sand deposits in a process by a injection-production program in which first steam is injected and fluids are produced without restriction.
- the UCT process should be applied to a viscous crude oil formation in which adequate communications exist or in which a communication path is first established. Optimum results are obtained if the closed loop pressurisation of the steam injection program, and the benefits include substantially increased oil recovery efficiency at all values of steam pore volumes injected.
- the Cold Lake project uses the huff-and-puff single-well method of steam stimulation and has been producing about 100,000 barrels of viscous crude oil per day.
- the sand grains are tightly packed in the formation in tar sands deposits but are generally not consolidated.
- the API gravity of the bituminous petroleum ranges from about 5 to about 10 and the specific gravity at 60°F is from about 1.005 to about 1.028.
- the viscosity of bituminous crude oil found in tar sand deposits in the Alberta region is in the range of several million centipoise at formation temperature, which is usually about 40°F.
- the present invention is a method of assisting the recovery of viscous petroleum from a hydrocarbon containing formation and is particularly useful in those formations where communication between an injection position and recovery position is difficult to establish and maintain.
- a substantially vertical and horizontal passage such as a well or shaft and tunnel, is formed through the hydrocarbon-containing formation.
- a closed-loop flow path is provided from the earth's surface through a substantial portion of the formation penetrated by the two vertical and horizontal passage.
- a recovery path is formed for flowing crude oil out of the formation. This path will be located in the passage at the bottom thereof.
- the principal object of the present invention is to maximise recovery of viscous hydrocarbon from heavy oil and tar and having a large vertical and horizontal communication between injector position and a producer position to establish and maintain by utilising super ⁇ critical hot water and to physically separated out the silica from the water by hydrocyclones due to silica dissolution at super-critical temperature critical pressure. Allowing for substantially increased flow through pores within the reservoir or the super-critical water at critical pressure flowing through the twin velocity heated casings either by heated gravity flow or steam drive principles for flow paths through the formation to assist in establishing and maintaining communication for a drive fluid or thermal heat used to promote movement of the crude oil to the producer position.
- Optimum results are attained with the use of two or more wells, and it is usually preferable to arrange the wells in some pattern as is well known in the art of oil recovery, such as a five spot pattern in which an injection well is surrounded with four production wells, or in line drive arrangement in which a series of aligned production wells are utilised, for the purpose of improving horizontal sweep efficiency.
- the formation possesses sufficient initial or naturally occurring permeability that steam and other fluids may be injected into the formation at a satisfactory rate and pass therethrough to spaced apart wells without danger of causing plugging by high pH levels and silica or other flow-obstructing phenomena occurring, the process to be described more fully hereinafter below may be applied without any prior treatment of the formation.
- velocity return twin casing used in extended reach horizontal wells is made possible by spallation drilling to thermally mobilise the bank of immobile bitumen that has cooled sufficiently to become immobile, subsequent treatment is precluded since steam or other fluids which would be capable of mobilising the bitumen cannot be injected through the plugged portion of the formation to contact the occluding materials, and so that portion of the formation may be subjected to further oil recovery operations.
- the step of developing well-to- well communications by The Invention twin thermal velocity tubes is an exceedingly important one in this or any other process involving injection of heated fluids such as steam into low permeability tar sands deposits for heating the formation.
- the horizontal position of the communication channel can be controlled, such as in the instance of expanding a fractured zone into the communication path between wells, it is preferable that the communication path be located in the lower portion of the formation, at the bottom near the production well bores for fluid flow paths into the slotted liners.
- the communication path is established by the injection of steam into the twin casings.
- the maximum pressure and temperature at which steam is to be injected fracture of the overburden above the formation would occur since the injection pressure is relevant only to casing burst strength capability.
- Super-critical superheated steam and critical pressure is used in the process of my invention.
- the preferred steam quality from 852% to about 952%.
- the oil recovery process is continued with repetitive cycles comprising heating, by thermal twin casings or steam drive pressurisation production followed with greatly reduced steam injection rates.
- the oil recovery efficiency begins to increase as is detected by a reduction in the oil/water ratio of produced fluids.
- the method of directionally drilling twin large bore horizontal wells by spallation drilling for the injection and production of heavy crude oil or oil sands (bitumen) using the upper injection well, to install a heat pipe exchanger (casing) with a inner concentric velocity tube.
- the outer tube is used to transport the injected super-critical steam/water under pressure, and returning back through the inner velocity tube, to the well head and surface pipe work back down the HDR injection well, in a closed loop system.
- the upper heat pipe transfers its pressurised recycled heat to the oil formation, the heat is absorbed, by the formation, through the heat given off by the heat exchanger casing, this allows the total heat energy from the supercritical steam/water to be transferred to the oil formation to thermally mobilising the crude oil, tar sands bitumen in the formation, allowing the hot crude oil to flow into the lower production casing with slotted liners, along its entire horizontal section, the well bore casing then dips down from the horizontal into the bedrock gravity collection and tunnels to be pressured to the surface, with no sand production, the returning super high temperature, steam/water, still under pressure is then used to produce generated electrical power via a heat exchanger system at the surface to produce the maximum amount of electrical power for field use leaving the bulk of remaining generated electricity to be sold to the local electrical utility company. Making this extremely economical and environmentally sound.
- Fig 14' shows a 5.6 km well based on a temperature gradient of 75° /km depth with hypothetical pressure profile through a supercritical reservoir.
- Fig 15' shows super critical temperature in relation to depth at 66°C and casing/tubing, well head flow temperature at surface.
- Fig 16' shows super critical temperature in relation to depth at 50° C, 75 °C and 100°C and casing/tubing, well head flow temperature at surface.
- Fig 17' shows temperature and specific gravity at supercritical temperatures.
- Fig 18' shows submerged combustion flame jets in relation to depth of well bore.
- Figure 2' shows a diagrammatic view of a HDR geothermal reservoir and petroleum formation with a typical example of injection and production well bores.
- the Invention UCT makes possible increased high recovery rates for medium and heavy oil (bitumen), to revive complex and heterogeneous formations, with super-critical steam from a HDR geothermal reservoir, for re-injection into a hydrocarbon formation showing a typical example of injection and production well bores.
- the surface plant layout is shown where super-critical water at critical pressure is brought to the surface and converted to steam at the well head by choke control, prior to re-injection back into the hydrocarbon formation, producing up to 95% high quality steam for two phase flow, enhanced oil recovery (EOR). This ensures maximum production, profit return and environmental control.
- EOR enhanced oil recovery
- Spallation Drilling system now makes it possible to drill ultra deep wells into crystalline rocks "Onshore & Offshore” for the production of super-critical steam for EOR, electrical power generation, cavity formation and micro tunnelling. Spallation drilling is a true linear drilling system with surface trajectory control, for directional drilling.
- HDR production wells (item 4) can be side tracked from the vertical by horizontally drilled lateral wells prior to being completed with down-hole packers.
- the packers are set in the vertical section above the petroleum formation to replace the injector wells (item 5) which are normally used to inject steam from the surface.
- the production liners are completed with polished bore receptacles with chokes fitted to the down-hole production liners as shown in the diagram Figure 2' and Figure 1 *.
- Fig. 3' shows two or more hard rock storage caverns for gas or fluid with interconnecting horizontal micro tunnel, showing injection and withdrawal well heads and pipelines showing:
- Item 1 Shows well bores and casing (A). Item 2. Shows well bores and casing (B). Item 3. Shows hard rock storage caverns (A). Item 4. Shows hard rock storage caverns (B). Item 5. Shows well heads.
- Item 6. Shows main supply injection and withdrawal pipeline.
- Item 7. Shows horizontal connecting micro tunnel.
- Item 8. Shows gas compressors.
- Item 9. Shows gas heaters.
- Item 10. Shows gas Dehydrator.
- Item 11. Shows pressure reduction valve.
- Item 12. Shows pipe line injection & withdrawal loop.
- Figure 4* shows a cross section of the diagrammatic drawing Fig. 11' which shows.
- Item 1 Shows steam injector well bores or 1A twin velocity thermal casings.
- Item 2 Shows oil production well bores.
- Item 3 Shows gravity draining by steam injection or thermal heating.
- Item 4. Shows horizontal/directional well bores for gravity drainage to horizontal tunnel.
- Item 5 Shows horizontal interconnecting well bore large tunnel.
- Item 6. Shows production bore shaft.
- Item 7. Shows multi-production casings.
- Item 8. Shows oil sands formation.
- Item 10 Shows limestone bedrock.
- Item 12. Shows closed loop pipeline to HDR re-injection.
- Item 13 Shows export pipe line.
- Item 14 Shows produced oil.
- Item 15. Shows basement crystalline rock.
- Figure 5' shows cross section of well bore and tunnel, cavity patterns for gravity drainage storage system flow pattern with full explanation details of injection & production cycles.
- Item 1 Shows injector wells.
- Item 4. Shows shaft (bores).
- Figure 6' and 6'a shows a radial cross sections of a duel-vortex intensifiers cavitation shear/pulse nozzle pack, for multi-jet spallation head further shown are: Item 1. Shows top vortex swirl chamber.
- Item 3 Shows accelerating helical flow reducing section.
- Item 4. Shows expanding vortex shear chamber intensifier.
- Item 5 Shows vortex accelerator cone section.
- Item 7. Shows accelerating inlet reducing section.
- Item 8. Shows inlet port.
- Item 9. Shows expanding vortex shear chamber intensifier.
- Item 10 Shows nozzle body.
- Figure 7', 8', 9', 10, 12' and 13' graphs and tables showing relationship between steam quality and geofluid expansion pressure for sub-critical and super-critical at critical pressure.
- Figure 11 ' shows a diagrammatic view of a method with spallation drilling using shaft tunnels and twin directional well bores to mobilise oil sands bitumen, heavy oil and other crudes by gravity drainage showing:
- Item 1 Shows overburden.
- Item 2. Shows oil sands formation.
- Item 4. Shows crystalline (granite rock).
- Item 5 Shows vertical bore shaft.
- Item 6 Shows horizontal bore (cavities) tunnels for gravity oil collection.
- Item 7 Shows steam injection well bore with slotted liners.
- Item 8. Shows lower horizontal production well bore with slotted liners.
- Item 9. Shows vertical well bore with two or more horizontal side track wells.
- Item 10. Shows thermal packer system.
- Item 11. Shows steam injector well heads.
- Item 12. Shows HDR producer well heads.
- Item 13 Shows HDR cold water injector well bore.
- Item 14 Shows HDR injector well bore.
- Item 15 Shows HDR tri-lateral producer wellbores.
- Item 16 Shows HDR fractured reservoir.
- Item 17. Shows gravity drainage production well bore.
- Item 18 Shows pipe line from HDR producers to steam injector well heads.
- Item 19 Shows closed loop water/gas return line.
- Item 20 Shows make up water line.
- Item 21 Shows production high temperature separator/production pump house.
- Item 22 Shows export (Bitumen/crude oil) line.
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- Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
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Abstract
Description
Claims
Priority Applications (1)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
AU29868/95A AU2986895A (en) | 1994-07-26 | 1995-07-19 | Improvements in or relating to drilling with gas liquid swirl generator hydrocyclone separation combustion thermal jet spallation |
Applications Claiming Priority (16)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
GB9415001A GB9415001D0 (en) | 1994-05-27 | 1994-07-26 | Improvements in or relating to drilling with centrifuge/vortex combustion jet spallation |
GB9415001.8 | 1994-07-26 | ||
GB9415003A GB9415003D0 (en) | 1994-05-27 | 1994-07-26 | Ultradeep thermal convection alternating steam/super hot water pressure drive |
GB9415003.4 | 1994-07-26 | ||
GB9415577.7 | 1994-08-02 | ||
GB9415577A GB9415577D0 (en) | 1994-08-02 | 1994-08-02 | Combustion jet spallation drilling |
GB9416668A GB9416668D0 (en) | 1994-08-02 | 1994-08-17 | Improvements in or relating to drilling with centrifuge/vortex combustion jet spallation |
GB9416668.3 | 1994-08-17 | ||
GB9416738.4 | 1994-08-18 | ||
GB9416738A GB9416738D0 (en) | 1994-08-02 | 1994-08-18 | Ultradeep thermal convection alternating steam/super hot water pressure drive |
GB9417100A GB9417100D0 (en) | 1994-08-24 | 1994-08-24 | Improvements in or relating to drilling with centrifuge/vortex combustions jet spallation |
GB9417100.6 | 1994-08-24 | ||
GB9417436A GB9417436D0 (en) | 1994-08-30 | 1994-08-30 | Improvements in or relating to drilling with centrifuge/vortex combustion jet spallation |
GB9417436.4 | 1994-08-30 | ||
GB9422900A GB9422900D0 (en) | 1994-08-02 | 1994-11-14 | Improvements in or relating to drilling with centrifuge/vortex combustion jet spallation |
GB9422900.2 | 1994-11-14 |
Publications (2)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
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WO1996003566A2 true WO1996003566A2 (en) | 1996-02-08 |
WO1996003566A3 WO1996003566A3 (en) | 1996-05-09 |
Family
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Family Applications (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/GB1995/001709 WO1996003566A2 (en) | 1994-07-26 | 1995-07-19 | Improvements in or relating to drilling with gas liquid swirl generator hydrocyclone separation combustion thermal jet spallation |
Country Status (2)
Country | Link |
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AU (1) | AU2986895A (en) |
WO (1) | WO1996003566A2 (en) |
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- 1995-07-19 AU AU29868/95A patent/AU2986895A/en not_active Abandoned
- 1995-07-19 WO PCT/GB1995/001709 patent/WO1996003566A2/en active Application Filing
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Also Published As
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AU2986895A (en) | 1996-02-22 |
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