WO2011119198A1 - Manifold string for selectively controlling flowing fluid streams of varying velocities in wells from a single main bore - Google Patents
Manifold string for selectively controlling flowing fluid streams of varying velocities in wells from a single main bore Download PDFInfo
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- WO2011119198A1 WO2011119198A1 PCT/US2011/000377 US2011000377W WO2011119198A1 WO 2011119198 A1 WO2011119198 A1 WO 2011119198A1 US 2011000377 W US2011000377 W US 2011000377W WO 2011119198 A1 WO2011119198 A1 WO 2011119198A1
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- passageway
- fluid
- manifold
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- flow
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Classifications
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- 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
- E21B34/00—Valve arrangements for boreholes or wells
- E21B34/02—Valve arrangements for boreholes or wells in well heads
-
- 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
- E21B17/00—Drilling rods or pipes; Flexible drill strings; Kellies; Drill collars; Sucker rods; Cables; Casings; Tubings
- E21B17/18—Pipes provided with plural fluid passages
-
- 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
- E21B43/00—Methods or apparatus for obtaining oil, gas, water, soluble or meltable materials or a slurry of minerals from wells
- E21B43/12—Methods or apparatus for controlling the flow of the obtained fluid to or in wells
-
- 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
- E21B43/00—Methods or apparatus for obtaining oil, gas, water, soluble or meltable materials or a slurry of minerals from wells
- E21B43/14—Obtaining from a multiple-zone well
-
- 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
- E21B43/00—Methods or apparatus for obtaining oil, gas, water, soluble or meltable materials or a slurry of minerals from wells
- E21B43/34—Arrangements for separating materials produced by the well
- E21B43/35—Arrangements for separating materials produced by the well specially adapted for separating solids
-
- 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
- E21B43/00—Methods or apparatus for obtaining oil, gas, water, soluble or meltable materials or a slurry of minerals from wells
- E21B43/34—Arrangements for separating materials produced by the well
- E21B43/38—Arrangements for separating materials produced by the well in the well
Definitions
- Hydrocarbons are produced from subterranean regions and reservoirs that also contain water and other related fluids.
- the volume of water and other well fluids can substantially exceed the relative volume of hydrocarbons, which are being produced from the wells, such that the hydrocarbon production rates can be reduced or limited by the volume of water and other fluids handled by the well fluids production systems.
- the separation of hydrocarbons from water and other well fluids has occurred at the surface, for hydrocarbon production.
- downhole well fluids production systems have been used which include the use of electric powered centrifugal separators or permeable filtering systems and/or hydraulic or mechanical separators for separating the hydrocarbons, being produced, from other fluids downhole.
- Embodiments of the present invention can selectively control simultaneous fluid streams of varying velocities by using flow controlling members.
- the flow controlling members can be selectively placed between conduits of a plurality of concentric conduit string members or, alternatively, placed through the innermost passageway members and engaged to one or more receptacle members of a subterranean disposed manifold string, using at least one manifold crossover member with a radial passageway fluidly communicating between concentric passageway members and one or more downward extending conduits.
- the manifold string can be usable for fluid injection into, and/or fluid extraction from, one or more wells, vertically and/or laterally disposed within the subterranean strata regions, through a single main bore and wellhead, thus minimizing space requirements, rig movements and/or surface facilities.
- the fluid mixtures can be selectively injected into, or extracted from a single main wellbore to dispose of waste fluid or oily water without surface processing, or to pressure drive a hydrocarbon reservoir with a water flood or water sweep directly from a deeper higher pressure subterranean water source.
- the fluid mixtures can be selectively injected into, or extracted from, a single main wellbore to feed a geothermal heat source from another subterranean well, under a junction of wells while producing steam, or recycling water condensation during steam production.
- the fluid mixtures can be selectively injected into, or extracted from, a single main wellbore to selectively extract gravity-segregated, underground stored fluids at two different salt cavern depths, to dissolve salt with water at the lower end of a cavern while using the upper end for storage operations, or to separate hydrocarbon flow streams produced from a sandstone reservoir while solution mining a cavern with produced water in an overburden salt deposit.
- Embodiments of the present invention can further include systems, apparatus and methods usable to operate a large variety of well types for urging substantially hydrocarbon and/or substantially water injection or production.
- products produced or injected include subterranean liquid hydrocarbons, gaseous hydrocarbons, subterranean steam, subterranean salt saturated fluid, bored subterranean strata debris fluid mixtures, and fluids usable in well construction or stimulation, such as proppant fracs from, or to, vertically or laterally separated conduit entry or exit orifices.
- the conduits, having entry or exit orifices for use in urging injection and or production operations can extend to subterranean regions from a single main bore, positioned below a single wellhead.
- the systems and methods for urging substantially hydrocarbon and/or substantially water injection or production operations can be used during, for example, well or underground storage cavern construction, and/or during production from a reservoir, underground cavern, and/or solution-mined salt dissolution region.
- the application across a diverse set of well types and uses provides economics of scale for standardizing member systems, methods and apparatus, which can be configurable in various arrangements, e.g., for widespread off-the-shelf deployment.
- the present invention can provide member systems, methods and apparatus for controlling fluid mixtures containing solids.
- fluid mixtures can include proppants for fracturing shale gas, low permeability reservoirs, or gravel packs located in unconsolidated reservoirs.
- Conventional, off-the-shelf solids placement technologies use a two flow streams approach, that does not effectively address the impermeable geologic properties of shale using apparatuses designed for sandstone reservoirs or the ability to remove solids from the wellbore after screen out occurs.
- Embodiments of the present invention can further use fluid rotatable apparatuses placeable with a cable, such as boring, cutting and pumping devices. These devices are usable to establish flow control within a well, during construction, intervention, operation and/or abandonment of various well types, using cable engagable downhole assemblies that can be selectively placeable, suspendable and/or retrievable within and from manifold string members, via a cable using a wireline rig.
- Embodiments of the present invention can provide a fluid-pump, flow controlling member, that can be usable within hydrocarbon, water and/or underground storage wells with an electric or fluid motor.
- the motor can be driven from the injection of a water stream or the expansion of a higher velocity fluid stream, such as an expanding gas stream or fluid from a deeper, higher pressure formation that can be usable to pump a lower velocity fluid stream, further urging it from or into the well.
- Flow controlling members can selectively control one or more manifold crossover members to provide fluid stream velocity changes, which can be usable to selectively emulate a velocity string, jet pump and/or a venturi arrangement during production, injection and/or downhole processing.
- Embodiments of the present invention can also provide a means of selectively separating a fluid mixture flow stream into a plurality of substantially gaseous, liquid and/or water flow streams of varying velocities and the associated extraction or injection stream.
- the separation of the flow streams can be selectively reconfigurable with a cable using a wireline rig or other rig and can be usable during or over the life of the one or more substantially hydrocarbon and/or substantially water wells, operating through a single main bore and wellhead.
- Manifold string members can be used to control flow through member passageways and spaces located between conduit string members across one or more subterranean regions, by using, for example, the spaces within the passageways through subterranean strata and/or cavern walls for subterranean processing of production and/or injection before or after passing through the wellhead, to reduce surface processing facility needs.
- Embodiments of the present invention are also usable during subterranean separation of a first substantially gaseous fluid stream and second substantially liquid fluid stream from a producing fluid stream, to selectively control the gas lifting of the second fluid stream.
- This subterranean separation and selective control can be accomplished by controlling the injection of at least a portion of the first flow stream into the second flow stream, before either stream exits the wellhead or valve tree at the upper end of the single main bore, to selectively optimize the extraction process and the resulting produced flow stream.
- selective control of the flow streams enables thermal insulation of a flow stream by, for example, using waste water produced from hot fluids, such as hydrocarbon separation or steam condensation during electrical generation processes, which can be injected through a passageway of a single main bore axially downward to insulate product being extracted axially upward from the cooling effects of the strata and/or ocean.
- waste water produced from hot fluids such as hydrocarbon separation or steam condensation during electrical generation processes
- Another example includes using cooler wastewater injection through a concentric passageway member to insulate equipment from a high temperature production caused from a deep hydrocarbon or geothermal source.
- Other examples include the thermal insulation of flow controlling members, such as the final cemented casing shoe of a gas storage salt cavern during simultaneous underground gas storage extraction and solution mining operations.
- injection and/or production operations can be usable to aid, for example: placing water feed stock using steam expansion or recycling steam condensation in a geothermal well; using waste fluid injection to drive submersible pumps lifting produced fluids; using expanding gas from production or a subterranean separation process to drive a turbine used to pump liquids from a well; expanding gas from underground storage caverns to drive a turbine pumping water into a pressurized storage space for maintaining cavern pressure and/or solution mining (with subsequent injection of compressed gas reversing the pump to aid the pumping of brine from an underground storage space); or using a deep water source to drive a turbine or positive displacement motor and/or pump to produce a depleted hydrocarbon reservoir, after which the deeper high pressure is naturally injected into a weaker shallow formation for disposal.
- thermal affects of these systems and methods can include retaining the heat of injected fluids during salt dissolution for improving salt saturation levels of brine removed, reducing condensation during steam production with the use of an insulating warm wastewater injection stream as geothermal reservoir feed stock to reduce the water recycle time, or insulating hydrocarbon production streams by using the heat of injected waste water to increase heat retention and flow assurance in cold ocean and arctic environments.
- the present invention relates, generally, to systems, apparatus and methods usable to selectively perform operations within a passageway, formed through subterranean strata, of one or more wells operating from a single main bore, for the controlled construction and operation of injection and/or production wells of a substantially hydrocarbon or substantially water nature.
- the injection or production wells can include hydrocarbon, geothermal, water production, waste disposal, underground storage and/or solution mining wells.
- the systems, methods and apparatus can be adapted to provide member embodiments, that can be arranged and configured in any combination or orientation to form a manifold string, usable to selectively control simultaneously flowing fluid streams of varying velocities.
- the selective control of the fluid streams can be usable to urge subterranean fluid mixtures, including liquids, gases and/or solids, within member passageways and to from one or more vertically and/or laterally separated subterranean regions of one or more substantially hydrocarbon and/or substantially water wells, which can extend downward from a single main bore and wellhead.
- embodiments of the present invention can include a set of adaptable systems, methods and apparatus members usable to form any configuration of one or more substantially hydrocarbon and/or substantially water subterranean wells, which can be operable for production, injection and/or underground storage through a single main bore and which use flow controlling members located within a plurality of passageways to selectively control simultaneously flowing fluid mixture streams of varying velocities, between a wellhead and the vertically and/or laterally separated subterranean regions.
- Adaptable systems, methods and apparatus can include members with managed pressure conduit assemblies (49 of Figs. 100-105), which can be usable to place other members within the subterranean strata, including for example chamber junction (43 of Fig. 97) members that can be usable with bore selector (47 of Fig. 90) members and flow diverting string members.
- Managed pressure conduit assemblies (49 of Figs. 100-105) with slurry passageway tools (58), functioning as manifold crossovers with radial passageways selectively controlling simultaneously flowing fluid streams, can be similar to manifold strings until the internal components are removed.
- Preferred embodiments of the present invention provide a set of methods and apparatus usable to form a manifold string (49, 70 and/or 76 of Figures 1-2, 6-7, 22-35, 42-45, 49-50, 68, 51-53, 59, 62-67, 67 A, 82-87, 100-116 and 119-123) for urging a fluid mixture (38 of Fig. 1) of liquid, gases, and/or solids within one or more subterranean wells, extending axially downward from a single main bore (6) and wellhead (7 of Fig. 1), by using simultaneously flowing fluid streams (31-37 of Figs.
- Embodiments can further include providing a plurality of concentric conduit strings (2, 2A, 2B, 2C, 50, 51, 71, 78), that can be located between the wellhead, at the upper end of the subterranean well, and at least one manifold crossover member and member embodiments (23 of Figures 6-35, 42-44, 49-50, 55-57, 59, 62-67, 67 A, 68-74, 82-87, 106-109, 112, 102, 104, 106-109, 117 and 119- 123), with at least one radial passageway (75 of Fig.
- Manifold string members can selectively control a plurality of simultaneously flowing fluid streams (31-38), between the wellhead and at least one proximal region of a passageway through subterranean strata, by using flow controlling members (61) engaged between conduits of string members or placed through the innermost passageway (25) member or innermost passageway connector (26) member of a manifold crossover (23).
- the flow controlling members (61) can be engaged between conduits of member strings or engaged to at least one receptacle (45, 45A, 45B) member of the manifold string or crossover (23, 58) controlling the separate simultaneously flowing fluid streams of varying velocity in the same or contradictory flow orientations, which can be communicated through passageway members to urge the fluid mixture (38) of liquids, gases, and/or solids to or from at least one proximal region of one or more passageways through subterranean strata (52), to or from other proximal regions, to or from the single main bore (6) and wellhead (7), or combinations thereof.
- a manifold string comprising a set of members or a member in another manifold string, can be configurable, using any combination of component or flow controlling members (61), and usable to control a flow stream orientation into (31) and/or out of (34) a subterranean well.
- separate simultaneous flow streams of varying velocities can be selectively controlled and can be usable to urge a fluid mix (38), such as hydrocarbons, water, waste fluids, cement, proppants, salts or other gases, liquids or solids used for forming or operating substantially hydrocarbon and/or substantially water wells through a wellhead or valve tree, that is engaged to a wellhead, during production or injection.
- a fluid mix such as hydrocarbons, water, waste fluids, cement, proppants, salts or other gases, liquids or solids used for forming or operating substantially hydrocarbon and/or substantially water wells through a wellhead or valve tree, that is engaged to a wellhead, during production or injection.
- Any axial orientation (31, 34) or contradictory passageway orientation (32, 33, 35, 37) for a plurality of flow streams (31, 34, 38) and/or flow stream velocities can be usable in the systems, methods and apparatus of the present invention.
- Embodiments are combinable with conventional flow controlling members (61), which can include, for example, a: wellhead (7), valve tree (10, 10A), casing shoe (16), chamber junction crossover (21), straddle (22), manifold crossover (23), plug (25A), chamber junction (43), chamber junction manifold (43A), bore selector (47, 47 A), slurry passageway tool (58), pressure activated valve (63), surface valve (64), seal stack (66), motor and fluid pump (69), subsurface valve (74), choke (77), one-way valve (84), venturi or jet pump (85), connectors (96) and seals (97).
- the fluid mixture (38) is substantially hydrocarbon fluid or substantially water fluid.
- mixtures which are substantially water can include: a mixture of proppant and water used for fracture stimulation, water and cement used for well construction, water steam produced from a geothermal well, water and waste substances injected into a disposal well, and/or a saline solution of water and salt during solution mining of a cavern.
- mixtures that are substantially hydrocarbon include: produced hydrocarbon liquid and gases and/or a mixture of two gravity segregated hydrocarbon liquids in a storage cavern accessible through a well (for example 70P and 70M of Figure 1).
- any combination of liquid, gas and/or solids may flow in fluid streams that can be controlled with flow controlling members, such as, a surface valve tree (10, 10A) engaged to the upper end of the wellhead (7) with other flow controlling members (61).
- Other flow controlling members can include a fluid motor and fluid pump (69), engaged to a receptacle (45) within a manifold string (49, 70, 76), to selectively communicate fluid mixtures within the innermost passageway (25, 26, 53) members and/or annular or concentric passageway (24, 24A, 24B, 54, 55) members, which are formed by the plurality of conduit strings (2, 2A, 2B, 2C, 39, 50, 51, 71, 78), and the passageway through subterranean strata (52), above and below a manifold crossover (23) member with at least one radial passageway member (75).
- Embodiments of the manifold crossover (23) members can include flow mixing devices.
- flow mixing devices can include a venturi (85) or jet pump, a sliding side door (125) or gas lift valve, a chamber junction crossover (21), a chamber junction manifold (43A), a junction of wells (51A), a slurry passageway apparatus (58), and/or manifold crossover embodiments (23A to 23Z) with at least one radial passageway (75), that can be usable through conduit string members (2, 2A, 2B, 2C, 39, 50, 51, 71, 78) to fluidly communicate between member passageways, and which can be combinable with additional apparatuses, for engaging or communicating with the passageway through subterranean strata (52), other manifold crossover members, chamber junctions (43), and/or one or more junctions of wells (51 A) to form fluid communication passageway members (24, 24A, 24B, 25, 26, 53, 54, 55, 75) of a manifold string (49
- embodiments (70M and 70P of Figure 1, 70N of Figure 2, 70A of Figures 6-7, 70G of Figures 31-35, 70J of Figures 22-25, 70K of Figures 26-29, 70B of Figure 42, 70L of Figure 43, 70C of Figures 44-45, 70D of Figures 49-50, 70E of Figure 68 and 70F of Figures 100-105, 70G of Figures 119-120, 70H of Figures 121-122) are usable in applications accessing vertically separated and/or laterally separated subterranean regions from a single vertical or deviated passageway through subterranean strata (52).
- One or more preferred manifold strings (70) and/or conduit string members are combinable below a wellhead, single main bore, and/or junction of wells (51 A).
- Other preferred manifold string (76 of Figures 51-53, 59, 62-67, 67 A, 82-87, 106-116 and 123) embodiments (76A of Figure 51, 76B of Figure 52, 76C of Figure 53, 76K of Figure 59, 76J of Figures 62-66, 76D of Figure 67, 76E of Figure 67 A, 76F of Figure 82, 76H of Figures 83-87 and 76G of Figures 106- 116, 76L of Figure 123) are usable to access subterranean regions of greater vertical and/or lateral separation, relative to a single passageway through subterranean strata (52), or to selectively provide fluid communication between two or more vertically and/or laterally separated proximal regions (IT, 1U, IV, 1W and
- 23L of Figures 62-66, 23F of Figure 67, 23M of Figures 67A and 68, 23R of Figure 82, and 23T of Figures 83-87) are formed by adapting chamber junctions (21, 43) with at least one radial passageway (75) to communication fluid within passageway members, which can be formed between conduit string members (2, 2A, 2B, 2C. 39, 50, 51, 71, 78) and the passageway through subterranean strata (52).
- Managed pressure conduit assemblies can be usable as a manifold string embodiment (70F of Figures 100-105) for subsequent placement of other manifold string members.
- the managed pressure conduit assembly (49), innermost concentric conduit string (50) and concentric string (51) located above the slurry passageway apparatus (58) functioning as a manifold crossover (23U) and fluidly communicating through radial-extending passageways (75) with conduit strings (39) extending downward can be used to form a junction of wells further usable by other manifold strings (70, 76) engaged with the innermost conduit strings (39) and concentric conduit strings (2A) once the installation manifold crossover (23U) with radial passageway (75) is removed for engagement of the other manifold string conduits extending downward from a wellhead (7) and/or valve tree (10, 10A).
- the fluid mixtures (38) for example foam cement, reservoir cleanup fluids, proppant fracture fluids, or fresh water for salt dissolution
- the innermost concentric conduit string (50) and other conduit strings (39, 51) are engageable with an adapted chamber junction crossover (21 of Figures 43-44, 117-123) member, which controls separate simultaneously flowing streams of varying velocity with bore selector (47, 47A) members.
- Various managed pressure conduit assembly (49) with one or more slurry passageway apparatuses (58), functioning as a manifold crossovers (23), are combinable with various other member apparatus and can become manifold string members once engaged with the wellhead (7) and/or valve tree (10, 10A), and the well formation phase ends.
- Any fluid mixture (38) of liquid, gas and/or solids, that is capable of being transported through simultaneously flowing fluid streams within subterranean conduits at various velocities, can be usable within passageway members of a manifold string.
- subterranean fluid mixtures (38), produced fluids, and injected waste fluid mixtures (38), can pass through the upper end of a wellhead (7) and flow through a manifold string (70, 76) in the same, or contrary, directional orientation.
- orientations can include axially upward (34) flow for production and axially downward (31) flow for processing or injected disposal through concentric passageways (24, 24 A, 25, 26) and/or through (32, 33, 35, 37) a radial passageway (75) at varying velocities.
- Row controlling members can control flow through the innermost passageway (25), innermost passageway connector (26), and/or at least one concentric passageway (24, 24A, 24B) for urging the fluid mixture (38) from, or to, a proximal region of one or more subterranean wells, through a single main bore (6).
- Manifold crossovers (23, 58) can have at least one radial passageway (75) to divert at least a portion of a fluid stream directly (32), or indirectly (35) through another integral or commingled stream passageway, to the innermost passageway (25, 26, 53).
- the manifold crossovers can have at least one radial passageway (75) to divert at least a portion of the fluid stream directly (33), or indirectly (37) through another integral or commingled passageway, to at least one concentric passageway (24, 24A, 24B, 54, 55), while blocking all or allowing a portion of a flow stream to continue axially upward (34) and/or downward (31), dependent on the use and the fluid mixture being urged, for example simultaneous injection of a water flood and production from the water flooded reservoir.
- Fluid streams flowing toward (32, 35) the innermost passageway (25, 26, 53) may originate directly (32) from another first passageway (24, 24A, 24B, 25, 26, 53, 54, 55) or indirectly (35) from a first passageway through a secondary integral passageway.
- the secondary integral passageway can comprise, for example, a manifold crossover (23 Y of Figure 14-16 and 22-29) that comprises a divided concentric passageway, or a manifold crossover (23Z of Figures 117 and 118-123) that comprises an exit bore conduit (39) radial passageway (75) through the concentric passageway (24) of a chamber junction crossover (21), or a commingled chamber of a chamber junction and or a series of manifold crossovers (23), which are oriented to commingle passageway (24, 24A, 24B, 25, 26, 53, 54) members and/or the first annular passageway (55) located between a manifold string (49, 70, 76) and the passageway through subterranean strata (52), wherein flow passes through at least one radial passageway (75) of a manifold crossover (21, 23, 58).
- a manifold crossover 23 Y of Figure 14-16 and 22-29
- a manifold crossover 23Z of Figures
- first annular passageway (55) or the first annular passageway (55), may originate directly (33) from a first passageway (24, 24A, 24B, 25, 26, 53, 54, 55), or indirectly (37) from a first passageway through another secondary integral passageway or a commingled passageway (24, 24A, 24B, 25, 26, 53, 54, 55).
- the velocities of continuous, blocked and/or diverted fluid streams can be selectively controlled with flow controlling members (61), which can be placed between conduits of conduit strings (2, 2A, 2B, 50, 51), for example a valve (74), or within at least one receptacle (45, 45A).
- the flow controlling members can be placed within a receptacle by, for example: placement of straddles (22) within a manifold crossover (23) to form velocity strings or to block a radial passageway; placement of gas lift valves (23G of Figures 49-50) in crossovers or side pocket mandrels to form gas lifted strings; placement of a valve tree (10, 10A) and/or one way (84) or pressure activated valves (32W of Figures 49-50) at the wellhead (7) or within crossovers to control larger effective diameter passageway strings usable for separation of liquids and gases; casing shoes (16) to block the first annular passageway (55) from injection (31) of a waste slurry into a strata fracture (18); and/or fluid (69 of Figures 26-38 and 42-45) or electric (69 of Figures 39, 42 and 44) motors and fluid pumps (69) that can be placeable through the innermost passageway of a manifold string.
- the fluid from a first flow stream (31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 36A, 37) can be usable to drive a fluid turbine motor and/or positive displacement fluid motor to rotate a shaft, thus driving an associated fluid impellor pump and/or positive displacement pump to urge a second flow stream.
- members can be usable with a substantially water fluid mixture, that is injected axially downwards (31), while another fluid travels axially upwards (34); with examples including production during: wastewater disposal, water floods, feed water injection to subterranean steam generation, fracture propagation stimulation, brine displacement to underground storage and/or water for dissolution during solution mining.
- 49-50, 76 of Figure 123) members can be usable with substantially liquid fluid streams that are communicated axially upward and/or downward through a passageway member, while a substantially gas fluid stream is communicated axially upward through other passageway members.
- Exemplary uses include: gas lift with or without subterranean gas-liquid separation or simultaneous geothermal steam production with water injection and/or recycling of condensed steam during production.
- Various preferred embodiments can be usable with electrical, pressure activated, pulse or acoustically activated subterranean disposed flow controlling members (63, 84, 85), wherein a valve tree is usable to selectively control surface production (34), or injection (31), while passing electrical or acoustic signals through its body or annular passageways to remotely operate flow controlling members and/or for remotely activating pressure sensitive devices with pressure pulses associated with opening and closing valves of the valve tree, to selectively control at least one passageway member.
- manifold string 70 of Figures 6-7, 22-35, 44-45 and 49-50 members that can be usable, for example, to separate or commingle flow streams and effectively reduce the diameter of the stream for forming a velocity string of selectable length, that can be usable to increase velocity and associated pressure in a venturi arrangement to, for example, increase production in a hydrocarbon well by using the fluid mixture's bubble point or to operate a venturi (85) or jet pump flow controlling member.
- Still other preferred manifold string embodiment (70B of Figures 42-43 and 70D of Figures 49-50) members can be usable, for example, in subterranean fluid processing for reducing the pressure affecting at least one flow stream with a flow controlling member (61), or the valve tree (10, 10A), to form a higher velocity flow stream.
- a substantially gaseous fluid mixture comprising a higher velocity flow stream
- a substantially liquid fluid mixture comprising a lower velocity flow stream, to create a separation of liquids, gases, or combinations thereof, in hydrocarbon or geothermal wells.
- manifold string 70B of Figures 42-43 and 70D of
- Figures 49-50) members for example, can form gas lift arrangements, for a hydrocarbon fluid mixtures of multi-phase flow, from subterranean processing which then forms a higher velocity substantially gaseous flow stream and a lower velocity substantially liquid flow stream.
- a portion of the higher velocity substantially gaseous flow stream can be injected into a lower velocity substantially liquid flow stream, through one or more gas lift valve flow controlling members engaged in one or more receptacles (45, 45A) at selectively controllable depths and pressures, to further urge the lower velocity fluid mixture of subterranean fluids from a subterranean reservoir than would otherwise be possible with uncontrolled multi-phase flow.
- waste water from hydrocarbon or steam processing, can be injected axially downward (31) through a valve tree (10A) and into the subterranean strata through fractures, wherein energy from injection of the waste water is used to, for example, operate preferred fluid driven motor and pump (69 of Figures 26-29, 31-37and 44-45) member embodiments.
- a hydrocarbon gas or a steam fluid stream can, for example, be communicated axially upward at a higher velocity, within a manifold string (70, 76), from a reservoir space or gas storage cavern, wherein the energy of the higher velocity of fluid gas expansion can be used to operate the fluid driven motor and pump (69 of Figures 26-29, 31-37and 44-45) to aid the injection of fluids or to aid the extraction of lower velocity substantially liquid fluid mixtures.
- the manifold string members (76L of Figure 123) can be usable, for example, to connect a plurality of laterally and/or vertically separated proximal subterranean regions, prior to or after passing through a single main bore and wellhead to, for example, provide a plurality of wells from a single main bore to increase the number of proppant fracture stimulations in, for example, a shale gas deposit.
- Embodiments of the present invention can use any combination of conduit string
- (2, 2A, 2B, 39, 50, 51) members which can extend downward through a single main bore (6) from a wellhead (7), with a main bore first conduit (71) member, comprising an inner conduit string (2, 39, 50) with an innermost passageway (25, 53), and at least a main bore second conduit (78) comprising at least another conduit string (2A, 2B, 2C, 39, 51).
- the other conduit string (2A, 2B, 2C, 39, 51) can be surrounded by a first annular passageway (55) with one or more intermediate annular passageways or concentric conduit passageways (24, 24A, 24B, 54) located between the innermost (25, 53) and first annular passageway (55), within a passageway through subterranean strata (52).
- Concentric conduit members forming the concentric passageway members or other conduits with passageways can be connected to a manifold crossover (23) member, with at least one radial-extending or radial passageway (75) member, and an innermost passageway connector (26).
- the innermost passageway connector (26) can communicate between passageways above (24, 24A, 24B, 25, 53, 54) and below (24, 24A, 24B, 25, 53, 54), formed by at least one conduit string (2, 2A, 2B, 39, 50, 51) member extending axially downward from the manifold crossover (23) and formable from a: chamber junction (43), a chamber junction manifold (43A), a junction of wells (51 A), a slurry passageway apparatus (58), and/or a combination of manifold crossover members (23 and 23A-23Z) combinable with flow controlling member(s) (61), which can be usable in combination for urging a fluid mixture (38) within a subterranean well by using simultaneously flowing fluid streams (31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 36A, 37) of various velocities, to and/or from a wellhead (7).
- Embodiments of a manifold string can include a combination of member apparatuses, taken from a set of flow controlling members and configured and arranged for selectively controlling one or more fluid streams of varying velocities.
- Functions of the various manifold string embodiments can include selective control of one or more fluid streams of varying velocities for the construction or production of fluid mixtures of liquids, gases and/or solids, which can be injected into (31, 36), or removed from (34, 36A), one of the following: one or more proximal regions of a subterranean passageway (52) comprising a strata bore (17) and/or lined bores (3, 14, 15, 19), a storage space within underground cavern walls (1A), pore spaces of a subterranean formation or reservoir, fracture spaces of a subterranean formation or reservoir, or a member passageway and/or processing spaces within a manifold string member or containing annulus.
- the flow of fluid mixtures (38) through a radial passageway (75) of a manifold crossover (23), between concentric conduit strings (2, 2A, 2B, 2C, 50, 51) and at least one conduit string (2, 2A, 2B, 2C, 39, 50, 51), can be controlled with at least one flow controlling member (61) placed between the conduits of said string members.
- the flow controlling member (61) can be placed through the innermost passageway members (25, 26, 53) communicating directly to (32) said innermost passageway members from another passageway member (24, 24A, 24B, 25, 26, 53, 54, 55), or indirectly (35) from a first concentric passageway through another secondary concentric passageway.
- the flow controlling members (61) can be placed through the innermost passageway members (25, 26, 53) communicating directly to (33) a concentric passageway (24, 24A, 54, 55) from a first passageway member, or indirectly (37) from a secondary passageway member through a first passageway member.
- the concentric passageways can be formed within and between concentric conduit string members (2, 2A, 2B, 2C, 39, 50, 51) and/or between the manifold string and the passageway through subterranean strata (52).
- the fluid communication can be controlled by the arrangement of the string, manifold crossover (23) and flow controlling (61) members, which can be configurable from a set of various members for various configurations of one or more substantially hydrocarbon or substantially water wells formed from a single main bore (6) and single wellhead (7) or valve tree (10, 10A), that is engaged to the wellhead.
- Figures 1, 2 and 3 depict conventional hydrocarbon/water, solution mining/underground storage wells and a wireline rig, respectively, with a reconfigured arrangement forming an embodiment of the present invention shown under Figure 1.
- Figures 4, 5 and 5A depict prior art diagrams of hydrocarbon pressure flow rate, bubble point, and sandface pressure versus mass rate functions, respectively.
- Figures 6 to 7 illustrate an embodiment of a manifold string arranged to selectively vary the length of an internal velocity string.
- Figures 8 to 19 and 20 to 21, depict various embodiments of a manifold crossover and adapted chamber junction usable with manifold crossovers, respectively.
- Figures 22 to 25 show the manifold crossover members of Figures 10 to 13 or 14-16 with a blocking flow controlling member installed within an internal receptacle.
- Figures 26 to 29 illustrate an embodiment of a fluid motor and pump flow controlling member engaged within the manifold crossover of Figures 10 to 16.
- Figures 30 to 35 depict the fluid motor and pump flow controlling member of Figures 36 to 37 disposed within an embodiment of a manifold crossover.
- Figures 36 to 37 show an embodiment of a fluid motor and pump flow controlling member.
- Figures 38 to 39 illustrate alternative motor and pump member arrangements usable in an embodiment of a fluid motor and pump flow controlling member.
- Figures 40, 41 and 47-48 depict a conventional waste disposal well, hydrocarbon separation and gas lift arrangements, respectively.
- Figures 42 to 46 and 49 to 53 depict various embodiments within a manifold string member set.
- Figures 55 to 57 illustrate embodiments of a manifold crossover with radial passageways usable to convert the chamber junction of Figure 58 to the manifold string of Figure 59.
- Figures 58 to 59 depict a chamber junction and a manifold string member embodiment, respectively, formed by adapting the chamber junction of Figure 58 with the manifold crossover member of Figures 55 to 57.
- Figures 60 to 61 and Figures 62 to 66 show a chamber junction and manifold string member embodiment adapted from said chamber junction, respectively, and usable for simultaneous injection and production.
- Figures 67, 67A and 68 illustrate various valve flow controlling member and crossover member arrangement embodiments, used in various manifold string members, usable with still other members of the set of manifold string members.
- Figures 69 to 75 depict various embodiments of manifold crossover members usable with adapted chamber junctions to form manifold string members.
- Figures 76 to 80 show an adapted chamber junction member usable with the manifold crossover member of Figures 73 to 75.
- Figure 81 illustrates a conduit member usable between the manifold crossover of
- Figure 82 depicts an embodiment of a manifold string member, formed by combining the member parts of Figures 73 to 81, usable with other members to form the embodiment of Figures 106-116.
- Figures 83 to 87 show an embodiment of a manifold member, of a chamber junction manifold crossover, adapted to form lower fnctional flow stream member passageways with a blocking and diversional flow controlling member engaged within an associated receptacle.
- Figures 88 to 89 and Figure 90 illustrate chamber junction and bore selector members, respectively, usable with embodiments of the present invention.
- Figure 91, Figure 92, Figure 93, Figure 93A and Figure 94 depict prior art valve, packer, plug, straddle and nipple flow controlling members, respectively.
- Figures 95 to 96 show a bore selector member usable with adapted chamber junction embodiments of the present invention.
- Figures 97 to 99 and 100 to 105 show an adapted chamber junction and manifold string member embodiment, respectively formed from a managed pressure conduit string assembly.
- Figures 106 to 116 illustrate an embodiment of a junction of wells manifold string for a plurality of wells from a single main bore.
- Figures 117, 118 and 119 to 122 illustrate a chamber junction crossover, bore selector and various manifold string member embodiments, respectively, usable for accessing different concentric passageways from the innermost passageway.
- FIG. 1 to 5 various conventional well configurations and fluid dynamic methodical functions for substantially hydrocarbons and/or substantially water fluid mixtures that can be injected into or produced from a reservoir, are depicted.
- the fluid mixtures also can be injected into or produced from underground storage or salt dissolution spaces using conventional single flow systems in addition to simultaneously flowing fluid streams and various well configurations.
- Figures 1 and 2 depict an elevation diagrammatic cross section view of a conventional subterranean well, that can be usable for hydrocarbon/water/storage and solution mining wells, respectively.
- the Figures illustrate conventional flow control devices in addition to presenting flow controlling members of a manifold string member set, comprising a wellhead (7) and valve tree (10) with surface valves (64) engaged to casings (3, 14, 15) that extend through a bore through strata (17) and, together, comprise a passageway through subterranean strata (52).
- a manifold string embodiment (70M of Figure 1) can be formed by adapting the conventional well depicted at the top of Figure 1 and is illustrated with a process diagram at the bottom of Figure 1.
- Manifold string embodiments (70P of Figure 1 and 70N of Figure 2) can be formed by adapting the conventional wells of Figures 1 and Figure 2 with the addition of a flow controlling member (21 of Figures 117-122).
- a similar completion (2, 40, 61, 10) to Figure 1 is commonly used after the solution mining (1) configuration of Figure 2 is removed for underground storage within the walls of a salt cavern (1A).
- Embodiments of the present invention can be combined with conventional apparatus.
- a valve tree (10A of Figure 2), jet pump (85) and concentric conduit (2A or 3), that is suited for simultaneously flowing fluid mixtures (38) and circulating water with a pump (116), are usable to form the member embodiment (70M) of Figure 1 or the member embodiment (70N) of Figure 2, along with the addition of a chamber junction manifold crossover (21) embodiment to the well.
- Figure 1 shows the subterranean valve (74) and packer (40) flow controlling members (61) controlling the adjacent concentric passageways (24, 54) with a sliding side door (123) or a jet pump (85) controlling communication between the passageways (24, 54) and the casing shoes (16).
- the sealed annular spaces can be monitored with annuli gauges (13) to confirm well pressure integrity, between a fluid mixture (38) entering or exiting the tubing at the well's lower end and exiting (34) or being injected (31) into the valve tree (10) at the well upper end.
- the concentric passageways (54) are not generally designed for continuous flow of production or injected fluids, except in special instances, such as the using of a sliding side door (123) to change annulus fluids, the supply of jet pump (85) water, or in instances later described in Figures 40-41 and 47-48.
- the conventional jet pump reconfiguration of the Figure 1 well uses the annulus between the tubing (2) and the final cemented casing (3) to provide water for a venturi (85) (referred to as a jet pump), that is placed within the tubing.
- a venturi 85)
- the utility of this approach may be limited as, water combined with the produced fluid mixture (38) stream and must later be removed.
- the depicted embodiments (70M, 70P) form separate flow stream velocities in singular flow stream applications, such as velocity strings of selectively controllable length, and/or forms a plurality of separate flow streams, for example in jet pump applications and downhole processing.
- Embodiments of the present invention include, jet pump applications that form separate simultaneously flowing fluid streams of varying velocity to urge production.
- the manifold string member (70M) embodiment depicted at the bottom of Figure 1, is formed using the final cemented casing (3) and valve tree (10) of Figure 1, or the valve tree (10A) of Figure 2 and associated wellhead (7), for inclusion of a concentric string (2A) between the tubing (2) and the final cemented casing (3).
- This forms a circulation pathway between the concentric string member (2A), or final cemented casing member (3) and the inner string (2) member, to form a pumped (116) closed system with a high-velocity, continuously-circulated, flow stream connected, via a venturi (85), to the tubing (2).
- a portion of the production is sucked from the tubing (2) to create a vacuum venturi effect for removing hydrostatic pressure from a first produced fluid mixture flow stream to further urge its production (34), while urging a second flow stream produced with pumped (116) water and separated at a circulating system tank.
- the circulating tank separates the portion of second flow stream produced fluid mixture into a liquid stream (119), that is taken from between the water contact (117) and the liquid contact (118).
- a gas stream (120) can be taken from the circulation tank upper end.
- the circulating fluid may be reused or replaced, with the circulated liquid typically being treated water, other mixtures of liquids, gases and/or solids as applicable.
- embodiments of the present invention can include vacuuming the hydrocarbon portion of the production with a device, such as the venturi, so that later separation of the fluids within the circulating tank will be generally small, as will be the impact of limited water handling facilities.
- a manifold string member (70N) embodiment having one or more manifold crossovers (for example 21 of Figures 117-122), can be usable to selectively control simultaneously flowing fluid streams, between the innermost and concentric passageways, by placing straddles and plugs to isolate and divert fluid through one or more radial passageways without cutting or removing conduit strings with a large hoisting capacity rig.
- a completion (2, 40, 74 and 10 of Figure 1) can be installed to form an underground storage well through the final cemented casing (3), once the dual string (2 and 2A) arrangement used to enlarge the space within the cavern walls (dashed lines 1A of Figures 1 and 2) using a salt dissolution process, is removed.
- This salt dissolution process includes the use of a leaching valve tree (10A) to inject (31) water for producing (34) a substantially water brine, that comprises liquid water and solid salt dissolved within a fluid mixture (38), to enlarge the space within the cavern walls (1A), formed in the_salt deposits (5) that are disposed within the subterranean regions.
- a member embodiment manifold string (70N) with free hanging conduit string members (2, 2A), that are engaged with chamber junction crossovers (21) can be usable to prevent the need to remove the outer leaching string for adjustment of solution mining operations.
- a valve tree (10A) with associated wellhead (7), that can support concentric conduit string members (2, 2A), together with a chamber junction manifold crossover (21), can be usable to access different specific gravity products stored in a cavern and naturally separated by gravity where the manifold string (70P of Figure 1) with a production packer (40 of Figure 1) and subsurface valve (74 of Figure 1) replaces the conventional solution mining configuration or manifold string (70N).
- FIG. 3 a conventional wireline rig (4A) is shown, that can be usable to selectively place flow controlling members, for reconfiguring a manifold string member arrangement, or to physically reconfigure a manifold string member using rotary cable tools.
- the rotary cable tools can be conveyed, for example, through a valve tree (10) and wellhead (7) for placement within the innermost passageway or innermost passageway connector of a manifold string.
- Figure 3 shows closable surface valves (64) engageable to a blow out preventer (9) and lubricator (8), that can be separated to place flow controlling members within the lubricator.
- valves can be opened while a wire or cable (11), that is passing through a pressure containing stuffing box or grease injector head at the upper end of the lubricator provides pressure containment, with flow controlling apparatuses lowered or hoisted (12) with a winching apparatus for placement within the passageways through subterranean strata (52 of Figures 1-2).
- Any form of rig (4) comprising, for example, a coiled tubing unit or drilling rig, using continuous or jointed conduit-in-conduit operations, are usable to convey flow-controlling members within a manifold string.
- a managed pressure conduit assembly (49 of Figures 100- 105) functions as a manifold string member, placed through a drilling rig blow out preventer, that can be used to control the first annular passageway (55 of Figures 1-2), until the manifold string may be engaged to the wellhead (7), for controlling the annular passageways (24, 24A of Figures 1-2), with a surface valve (64) tree installed later for controlling inner passageways and engagement with a slickline rig (4A).
- a fluid mixture referred to as drilling mud, can pass through a drilling rig riser to a bell nipple where circulated drilling mud returns after passing through the string and drilling rig blow out preventer.
- a drilling rig diverter may perform a similar fluid control function as a stuff box, should the drilling mud fail to contain subterranean pressures.
- a drilling rig (4) can be usable to place a manifold string or flow controlling device by using a drawworks to hoist (12) a cable (11), passing through the crown block of a derrick for placement within the passageway through subterranean strata (52).
- the manifold string can be used to selectively control a fluid mixture of drilling mud, cement and proppant fracture liquids and solids or other construction fluid mixtures, that are simultaneously flowing through an innermost passageway and concentric passageway.
- Embodiments of the present invention provide at least one direct crossover through a radial passageway, between the innermost passageway (25) and one of concentric passageways (24, 24A, 54), with or without first passing through an adjacent concentric passageway (24, 24A, 54) or the first annular passageway (55), wherein a flow controlling member selectively affects fluid communication through the radial passageway using, for example, a valve tree (10A) or standpipe manifold to affect fluid velocity and associated pressure within one or more of the passageways (24, 25).
- a flow controlling member selectively affects fluid communication through the radial passageway using, for example, a valve tree (10A) or standpipe manifold to affect fluid velocity and associated pressure within one or more of the passageways (24, 25).
- This selective control of the velocities and associated pressures within the passageways can be used to, for example, construct a well and/or provide production simulation similar to a velocity string or subterranean processing, for the purpose of separating hydrocarbon gas so that such gas may be used to gas lift one or more the remaining passageways of a substantially liquid flow stream at selected depths and pressures, thus further enhancing production.
- Figure 4 shows a chart depicting exemplary relationships present within a prior art velocity string, explanatory of a flowing bottom hole pressure versus a flow rate method function chart for hydrocarbon flow.
- the bottom hole pressure increases upward along the vertical axis of the chart, and flow rate increases to the right along the horizontal axis of the chart.
- the pressure function (Fl, F2, F3) of flow rate versus flowing bottom- hole pressure decreases from Fl to F3 as the reservoir pressure depletes.
- the diameter of a production string (2 of Figures 1) affects the velocity and the associated frictional resistance and pressure, determining where the minimum unaided flow rate (PI, P4) occurs, which can be compared to the critical flow rate (P2, P3), that is associated with the bubble point of gas within the hydrocarbon fluid mixture, described by functions F4 and F5.
- Manifold string members usable within the scope of the present disclosure can provide a means to follow the flow rates from FR1 to FR2 with a large diameter string, followed by wireline rig (4A of Figure 3) intervention to selectively place flow controlling members to adjust the effective diameter of the producing string at the flow rate FR5, by diverting all or a portion of production through one or more manifold crossovers.
- wireline rig 4A of Figure 3
- the velocity string function between F5 and F4 may be followed to produce hydrocarbons at a higher rate without the need to remove the producing string.
- FIG. 5 an example of a hydrocarbon liquid, gas phase explanatory pressure versus temperature functional chart is shown.
- the chart shows pressure increasing upward along the vertical axis and temperature increasing to the right along the horizontal axis.
- the chart of Figure 5 includes a bubble point curve 1 function of a more liquid fluid mixture (F6) and a bubble point curve 2 for a more gaseous fluid mixture (F7) intersecting a vertical line of constant temperature at point C.
- the bubble point curve 1 function (F6) shows that outside the bubble curve envelope, above the critical point, an all liquid fluid mixture exists and below the critical point, outside the bubble curve envelope, an all gas fluid mixture exists. However, within the bubble curve a liquid and gas fluid mixture exists.
- Functions F8, F9 and F10 show 25 percent, 50 percent and 75 percent liquid fluid mixtures, respectively.
- the all liquid subterranean hydrocarbon fluid mixture transitions from liquid to a mixture of liquid and gas at point A2. If it was possible to maintain temperature during extraction through the cooler subterranean strata above a reservoir, the percentage of liquid would decrease to 75% at point B on function F10.
- the fluid mixture may, for example, separate to 75% liquid at point S2 pressure and temperature. If the temperature drop, as a result of production, can be minimized to point SI of a higher pressure, using the process of subterranean separation that uses the heat of the subterranean strata, a higher flow rate can achieved for the same 75% liquid fluid mixture. For the more gaseous fluid mixture function bubble point curve 2, the increase in pressure from S4 to S3 is more pronounced, thus, resulting in relatively higher flow rates when subterranean fluid separation is used to retain temperature.
- the ability of the present embodiments to more selectively control flowing velocities, pressures and temperatures within the manifold string is usable to better manage flow rates over the life of a well, and includes better control of thermal factors affecting flow assurance when performing subterranean fluid processing.
- a manifold string member usable to provide subterranean separation, can also be usable to control simultaneously flowing fluid streams by gas lifting a substantially liquid flow stream with a selectively controlled and substantially gaseous flow stream, using gas lift valves between the two flow streams to further aid production using subterranean processing.
- FIG. 5A an example of a prior art hydrocarbon sandface pressure versus mass rate function chart is shown.
- the Figure shows increasing pressure upward on the vertical axis and increasing mass rate to the right on the horizontal axis.
- Fl l represents the bubble point function with function F12, extending from point P5, representing the decrease in pressure exerted on the sandface of a reservoir by opening a valve tree and flowing at rate measured by the mass of the flowing mixture.
- the flowing function F13 represents a theoretical example of hydrocarbon capable of stable flow at pressure and flow rate point P6, which becomes unstable at the pressure and flow rate point P7. Thereafter, the Figure shows that stable flow cannot be achieved until reaching pressure and flow rate point P8.
- Prior art production methods typically focus on combinations of apparatus for single flow streams and relatively static configurations for subterranean separation, ignoring the dynamic nature of a subterranean fluid mixture flow stream of varying velocities, pressures and temperatures over the life of a well, because safety and/or economic factors typically prevent changing a production string once it is installed.
- manifold string can be usable to selectively control flow streams over the life of a well with flow controlling members, that are placed between the conduits of concentric strings and/or through the innermost passageway, accounting for theoretical production or injection functions for substantially water or substantially hydrocarbon wells, such as those described in Figures 4 and 5.
- manifold strings usable with flow controlling devices placed between the conduits of the concentric strings and/or through the innermost passageway provide practicing artisans accessibility, through the innermost passageway, to place and/or remove further flow controlling members, that can selectively control the reality of a non-linear production function, like that described in Figure 5A, over the life of a well, without incurring the same safety or economic impacts associated with replacement of a production string.
- Manifold string and crossover members usable for changing the effective diameter and, thus, the velocity for a given flow rate over the length of a manifold string is shown.
- Manifold string members with, for example, the concentric conduit crossovers (23) of Figures 8 -16 are engagable in series or in parallel above or below other manifold crossovers (23) of Figures 17-20.
- This engagement can be used separately or in combination with, for example, an adapted chamber junction (43) of Figure 21, wherein various flow controlling members (61) of Figures 22- 37 can be engagable with one or more receptacles (45), and can be further combinable with other members of a manifold string member set in any combination or arrangement with matching passageway members, to selectively control a plurality of simultaneously flowing substantially hydrocarbon and/or substantially water fluid-mixture flow streams.
- Figures 6 and 7 depict elevation cross-section and process diagrammatic views, respectively, of a member (70A) embodiment of a manifold string (70), usable as a selectively variable length velocity string.
- the Figure illustrates the inner concentric string (2) and outer concentric string (2A) engaged to a wellhead (7) and valve tree (10).
- a series of manifold crossovers (23, 23A, 23B of Figs. 8-9, 23C of Fig. 10, and 23Y of Fig.
- valve 14 are usable to reduce the effective diameter forming a velocity string, as described in Figure 4, by diverting at least a portion of a flowing fluid mixture, that is flowing into (32, 35) the innermost passageway (25) or into (33, 37) the adjacent concentric passageway (24), to effect the frictional equivalent of a velocity diameter along the length of a flow stream, by selectively placing flow controlling members.
- the upper most manifold crossover (23A) can remove the concentric passageway member (24) from use to allow valve (74) to control production.
- Figure 7 shows a valve (74), such as a safety valve, operating with a control line (79) and a valve tree (10), to provide selective control of pressures in the well for controlled production from the well.
- the velocity string manifold crossover (23A) can be formed from the manifold crossover of Figures 8-9, wherein a portion of the concentric annular passageway (24) is permanently blocked to divert the entire fluid mixture stream (38) into the innermost passageway (25).
- the equivalent of a manifold crossover member (23A) can be formed by covering only the orifices (59 of Figure 13) below the receptacle (45 of Figure 13) in the manifold crossover member (23C of Figure 13).
- FIG 8 a plan view with line A-A, associated with Figure 9, of an embodiment (23B) of a manifold crossover member (23), wherein all of the innermost passageway (25) flow stream may be diverted through the radial passageway (75 of Fig. 9) to the concentric passageway member (24), if a blocking device is placed in the receptacle (45 of Fig. 9). However, only a portion of the concentric passageway (24) flow can be commingled with the innermost passageway, as through passageways are provided. These through passageway members are permanently blocked in the Figures 6-7 manifold crossover (23 A).
- a manifold crossover member (23B) of this configuration is usable, in a potentially inverted orientation to that shown in Figure 9, at the lower end of a hydrocarbon fluid separation member space, for allowing heavier fluids to travel to the passageway member of least frictional resistance and larger effective diameter, while lighter and more gaseous fluid streams are more able to expand and travel through the higher frictional passageway member, forming two separate simultaneously flowing fluid mixture streams of varying velocities.
- FIG 9 an elevation cross-section view along line A-A, showing the manifold crossover (23B) member of Figure 8 is depicted.
- the Figure illustrates, portions of the concentric passageway (24) that are blocked by the wall (75A, shown in Figs. 8 and 9) of the radial passageway (75), in fluid communication between the innermost passageway (25) and the concentric passageway (24), which is between the innermost string (2) and adjacent concentric string (2A) with ends (90) engagable to other conduits of a manifold string members.
- the crossover may be oriented as shown or rotated, wherein the radial passageway slopes downward and inward instead of upward and inward.
- Fluid mixtures may be injected (31) or produced (34) through any passageway
- a choke controls the orifices (59) of the radial passageway (75) to commingle only a portion of a flow stream (32, 33) through either passageway (24, 25), then other various flow arrangements, including for example separation and/or gas lift, can be facilitated selectively by installing a plurality of manifold crossovers (23B), then selectively placing straddles and chokes to define flow of the fluid mixture stream configurations.
- FIGS 10 and 12 plan views with lines B-B and C-C associated with Figures 11 and 13, respectively, of an embodiment (23C) of a manifold crossover member (23) are shown.
- the Figures illustrate a section line (B-B) through the concentric passageway (24) and another section line (C-C) through the radial passageway (75) wall (75A), contained between an inner concentric conduit (2) and outer concentric conduit (2A).
- An exemplary arrangement of an engaged flow controlling member includes using a straddle to block the orifices (59) above or below the receptacle (45) for blocking the concentric passageway (24) below or above the receptacle (45), respectively, while commingling the contrary concentric passageway (24) with the innermost passageway (25).
- engaged flow controlling members includes blocking orifices (59), both above and below the receptacle (45), with a straddle to block the concentric passageway (24) while allowing the innermost passageway (25) flow stream to flow through the bore of the straddle, or by placing a blocking flow controlling member, engaged to the receptacle (45) within the innermost passageway, to cross over flow streams between the innermost (25) and concentric (24) passageway members, as described in Figures 22-25.
- the manifold crossover (23C), of Figures 10-13 compliments the chamber junction crossover (21) member, of Figures 117 and 119-122, by providing the ability to block all or to divert part of a flow stream that can be communicated through the concentric passageway (24).
- the chamber junction crossover (21 of Figures 117 and 119-122) can only divert to the concentric passageway. Combining these two manifold crossover members (21 and 23C) in series provides the ability to selectively block both the innermost (25) and concentric (24) passageways or to divert one to the other.
- the manifold crossover (23C) of Figures 10-13 also compliments the manifold crossover (23 Y) of Figures 14-16, engaged axially above or axially below the depicted manifold crossover (23C) providing the ability to block all or to divert part of a flow stream communicated through the concentric passageway (24) to the innermost passageway (25).
- the manifold crossover (23Y of Figures 14-16) can be usable to block all or to divert part of a flow stream, communicated through the concentric passageway (24) to a different concentric passageway (24A) and/or the innermost passageway (25).
- FIG. 14 and 15 isometric and magnified views are shown with detail line D and within detail line D, respectively, and dashed lines show hidden surfaces in Figure 15, of a manifold crossover member (23) or slurry passageway (58) embodiment (23Y) that can be associated with Figure 16.
- the embodiments depicted in the Figures show a crossover similar to that of Figures 11 to 13, with a dashed line representing an additional concentric conduit (2B or 51) or the passageway through subterranean strata (52), with an additional concentric conduit passageway (24 A) if the additional conduit (2B or 51) is present, or with the first annular passageway (55) if the additional conduit (2B, 51) represented by the dashed line is not present.
- radial passageways (75) between passageway members (24, 24A, 25, 53, 54, 55) and the innermost passageway (25, 53) is similar to the chamber junction (21) manifold crossovers of Figures 117 and 119-122 or a slurry passageway apparatus (58), in that a radial passageway (75) passes through an adjacent concentric passageway (24, 54) to connect the innermost passageway (25, 53) directly to a non-adjacent concentric passageway (24A, 55).
- Figure 16 depicts an isometric view associated with the manifold crossover
- the remaining radial passageways (75) can be diverted, by an additional wall (82) to an orifice (59A of Figures 14-15) in the adjacent outer wall (2A of Figures 14-15), to form a direct passageway between the innermost passageway (25, 53) and the first annular passageway (55 of Figures 14-15), or an additional concentric passageway (24A, 54 of Figures 14-15) with the outer wall of the receptacle (45) protruding into, but not blocking, the concentric passageway (24, 54 of Figures 14-15).
- the Figures include two radial passageways (75), between the left innermost passageway connector (26), which can fluidly communicate with two orifices (59) of the manifold crossover (23D), engagable to the orifices (59B of Figure 20) of the concentric passageway (24 of Figure 20) located between the inner concentric conduit (2 of Figure 20) and an outer concentric conduit (2A of Figure 20).
- An example of an analogous arrangement is shown in Figure 82.
- Straddles may be placed across one or both of the radial passageways (75) to prevent radial flow.
- a plug may be placed within the left innermost passageway connector (26) to urge radial passageway flow.
- the orifices (59) can be engaged to the same concentric passageway (24 or 24A of Figures 15 and 20) or to different concentric passageways (24 and 24A of Figures 15 and 20) to allow simultaneous flow into (32, 35) the innermost passageway members (26 and 25 of Figures 19-21) or into (33, 37) a concentric passageway (24, 24A of Figures 15 and 20), for injection or production through either the innermost passageways or the concentric passageways.
- Figures 20 and 21 depict plan and isometric views of an adapted chamber junction (43), usable to form a manifold crossover member (23) when combined, for example, with the manifold crossover (23D) of Figures 17 to 19.
- the Figures depict an inner concentric string member (2) within an outer concentric string member (2 A), forming a chamber wall (41) and additional single main bore conduit (78) with orifices (59B) in the chamber junction bottom (42), for fluid communication of the concentric passageway (24).
- concentric conduits (2B shown as a dashed line) and other orifices (59C) can be added to fluidly communicate with one or more orifices (for example 59 of Figures 17-19) or concentric string members (for example 2, 2A and 2B of Figures 14 and 15) of a manifold crossover (23).
- FIGS. 22 and 24 plan views with lines B-B and C-C associated with Figure 23 and 25, respectively, of a manifold string member (70) embodiment (70J) are shown.
- the Figures depict the manifold string member (70) embodiment (70J) with a manifold crossover (23C of Figures 10- 13 or 23 Y of Figures 14-16) and a flow controlling member (61), shown, for example, as a blocking plug (25A) installed within a receptacle (45 of Figs. 23 and 25).
- the Figures illustrate the inner concentric string (2 of Figs. 23 and 25) and outer concentric string (2A of Figs. 23 and 25) forming a concentric passageway (24), that can be diverted by radial passageway walls (75A) to orifices in the innermost passageway member (25 of Figs. 23 and 25).
- Figures 23 and 25 depict elevation cross-section views along lines B-B and C-C of Figures 22 and 24, respectively.
- the Figures show a manifold string (70J), with a blocking or plug (25 A) flow controlling member (61) engaged to a receptacle (45) via mandrels connectors (89) located within the manifold crossover (23C) of Figures 22 and 24.
- the ends (90) of the manifold string (70J) are engagable with other manifold string members.
- the plug (25A) can be placed through the innermost passageway (25) with a wireline rig (4A of Figure 3) cable (11 of Figure 3) and engaged to a connector (68) for hoisting (12 of Figure 3) into, or out of, the passageway through subterranean strata (52 of Figures 1 and 2). After placing or removing the plug (25A), the cable engagement with the connector (68) may be disengaged.
- the innermost passageway (25) of the inner concentric string (2) can be blocked by the plug (25 A), forcing injection (31) or production (34) to cross from the innermost passageway (25) to (33) the concentric passageway (24) or from the adjacent concentric passageway to (32) the innermost passageway through the radial passageways (75).
- Crossing over flow streams, between the innermost passageway and a concentric passageway can be usable to, for example, form the preferred manifold crossover valve embodiment (23 F) of Figures 42 and 44-45.
- a subterranean valve (74 of Figures 42 and 44-45) can be placed on either end of the manifold crossover (23C) with a plug (25A) installed to provide selective control of each flow stream with the subterranean valves, while providing access through the innermost passageway (25) when the plug is removed.
- the subterranean valve can be controlled, independently, in applications were separate selective control is required or controlled together if, for example, the subterranean valve is a subsurface safety valve intended to fail safe shut.
- the crossover over of flow streams with a flow controlling member (61) comprising, for example, a choke or a pressure-controlled valve or one way valve installed within the receptacle (45) instead of the plug (25A), can provide a space within the passageways for varying the velocity of flow streams and the associated pressures at varying subterranean depths.
- the temperature of the strata can be factored in when selectively reconfiguring a subterranean processing space to, for example, separate fluids and/or gas lift a substantially liquid flow stream by allowing a portion of a crossed over gas stream under the flow controlling member to enter a substantially liquid crossed-over flow stream, without the need to use conventional side pocket mandrels and gas lift valves that, in practice, are often more difficult to access than a valve placed in a nipple profile receptacle, across the innermost passageway member.
- Figures 14-16 is used instead of the manifold crossover (23C) shown in Figures 22-25, flow can be selectively directed into (35) the innermost passageway (25) from a non-adjacent concentric passageway (24A or 55 of Figures 14 and 16), or selectively directed into (37) a non-adjacent concentric passageway (24A or 55 of Figures 14 and 16) through the innermost passageway (25).
- FIG. 26 to 39 apparatuses for performing rotary operations usable with other rotary cable apparatuses and methods within conduits of a manifold string (70 and 76 of Fig. 51) member over the life of a subterranean well, are shown.
- the Figures include a cable (11 of Figure 3) engagable downhole motor and/or pump assembly (69) flow control device (61), that can be placeable, suspendable and retrievable via a cable hoisted with a wireline rig (4A of Figure 3).
- the Figures further include an electric motor (111) or fluid motor, using, for example turbines, impellors or rotors and stators, with fluid inlets and outlets (59) associated with a radial passageway (75) located within a manifold crossover (23) for directing a first fluid mixture flow stream to act upon a fluid motor, that can be operable with differential fluid pressure or velocity of expanding or compressed gases for pumping a second fluid mixture flow stream.
- an electric motor 111
- fluid motor using, for example turbines, impellors or rotors and stators, with fluid inlets and outlets (59) associated with a radial passageway (75) located within a manifold crossover (23) for directing a first fluid mixture flow stream to act upon a fluid motor, that can be operable with differential fluid pressure or velocity of expanding or compressed gases for pumping a second fluid mixture flow stream.
- FIG. 26 and 28 plan views with lines B-B and C-C associated with Figure 27 and 29, respectively, are depicted and show an embodiment (70K) of a manifold string member (70) with a manifold crossover (23C of Figures 10-13, 23Y of Figures 14-16) and concentric conduits (2, 2A) about an embodiment (69 A) of a fluid motor and fluid pump (69 of Figs. 27 and 29) flow controlling member (61 of Figs. 27 and 29).
- the Figures illustrate an arrangement, usable to pump a fluid through a passageway, using the velocity and pressure of flowing fluids or gas expansion of a first flow stream to pump a second flow stream.
- Figures 27 and 29 depict elevation cross-section views along lines B-B and C-C of Figures 26 and 28, respectively.
- the Figures show the manifold string (70K) arrangement with a motor and a fluid pump (69A) flow controlling member (61), that is engaged to a receptacle (45) with an engaging connection (89) to the manifold crossover (23C or 23Y).
- the Figure illustrates the inner concentric string (2) and outer concentric string (2A) forming the concentric passageway (24) and innermost passageway (25), usable to place and operate the flow controlling member (61), using the engagement (68) and a wireline rig (4A of Figure 3) for placement.
- the ends (90) of the manifold string member can be engagable with other conduit members of the manifold string (70) arrangement to flow a first simultaneously flowing fluid mixture, which can be used for operating the fluid motor to pump a second simultaneously flowing fluid mixture of varying velocity.
- fluid injected (31) into (32 and 35) the innermost passageway (25), through a radial passageway (75) from a concentric passageway (24 and 24A of Figures 14-15, respectively) below the crossover (23C, 23 Y), can operate a rotatable turbine (112) that is engaged with a shaft connected to another turbine (112), which can be usable to pump produced (34) fluid into (32 and 35) the innermost passageway (25), through a radial passageway (75), from a concentric passageway (24 and 24A of Figures 14-15, respectively) above the crossover (23C, 23Y).
- fluid produced (34) through member passageways by natural expansion and/or subterranean pressure of a stored compressed gas or by gas entrained fluid to (33, 37) a concentric passageway (24A, 24) that flows through a radial passageway (75) from the innermost passageway (25) below the crossover (23C, 23 Y), can operate the rotatable turbine (112).
- the rotatable turbine (112) can turn an engaged shaft connected to another turbine (112) and can be usable to pump, for example, a substantially liquid produced (34) fluid from a subterranean separation process or, for example, a substantially water fluid mixture injected (31) into a proximal region of the passageway through subterranean strata.
- the substantially water fluid can be used for solution mining or disposal between the innermost passageway (25) and a concentric passageway (24, 24A) through the radial passageway members (75).
- FIG. 30 a plan view with line F-F associated with Figure 31 and detail line G associated with Figure 35 is shown.
- the Figure depicts a manifold string embodiment (70G) with an embodiment (69B) of a motor and a fluid pump (69 of Fig. 31) flow controlling member (61 of Fig. 35) placed within a manifold crossover member (23) embodiment (23E of Fig. 31).
- the inner concentric string (2) and outer concentric string (2A) lower ends (90) are shown as engagable to other conduits within the passageway through subterranean strata (52 of Figures 42 and 44) to vertically separate subterranean proximal regions.
- This separation of the subterranean regions can be accomplished by using, for example a chamber junction crossover (21 of Figures 117 and 119-122) and/or laterally separated regions, using, for example, the chamber junction manifold crossover (23T of Figures 83-87) access through exit bore conduits (39 of Figures 83-87).
- This separation can be used when, for various reasons, it is desirable to keep simultaneously flowing fluid streams within the same passageway member, above and below the manifold crossover member (23E).
- FIG 32 a magnified view of the portion of the motor and fluid pump (69B) receptacle engagement (45 and 89), within detail line H of Figure 31, is shown.
- the Figure shows injection (31) and production (34) travelling through the radial passageway (75).
- Sealing (66) flow controlling members (61) are provided to contain the pressure of one fluid mixture stream from commingling with another.
- Figure 33 depicts a magnified view of the manifold crossover (23E).
- the Figure illustrates an innermost passageway, blocking, rotatable, shaft engagement member portion of the motor and fluid pump (69B) within detail line I of Figure 31.
- the Figure includes a rotary connector (72) engaged in a receptacle (45 A) member that is blocking (25A) the innermost passageway (25) to which a turbine (112) shaft (113 of Figure 37) is engaged, and wherein injected (31) or extracted (34) fluid mixture, flowing within the innermost passageway, engages and operates the rotatable turbine (112), or is pumpable by the turbine, if the fluid mixture passing the associated turbine at the other end of the shaft drives the assembly.
- Sealing members (66 and 66 of Figure 32) control the flow, within the innermost passageway, of the fluid mixture flowing (31, 34) above and below the plug (25A) and entering orifices (59) for flowing to the radial passageway (75) members on the right and left, to the engaging turbines (112 and 112 of Figure 31) at opposite ends of the shaft, within the innermost passageway (25).
- conduit string members are engagable to the ends (90), wherein a plurality of concentric conduits (2, 2A) or a single conduit (2) can be usable with a concentric conduit passageway or the first annular passageway, respectively, below the manifold crossover (23E).
- Figure 35 depicts a magnified view of the portion of the manifold string (70G) motor and fluid pump arrangement (69B) within detail line G of Figure 30. Dashed lines, showing hidden surfaces, illustrate the inner concentric string (2) and outer concentric string (2A) between which, the flow-controlling member (61) manifold crossover (23E) alternating upper and lower orifices (59), leading to radial passageways (75), urge injection (31) and/or production (34) through the manifold crossover (23E).
- the flow through the manifold crossover can be used for operating a flow controlling member (61), shown in the Figure, for example, to be a fluid motor and fluid pump (69B) operated by simultaneously flowing fluid streams of various velocities and/or associated pressures.
- FIG. 36 and 37 plan and elevation cross-section views with line J-J and along line J-J, respectively, of a flow controlling device (61), are depicted.
- the flow controlling device is shown comprising a motor and fluid pump (69) embodiment (69B), showing a rotatable fluid operatable apparatus (112) engaged with a shaft to the apparatus (112), which can be usable to pump a fluid, shown for example, as a fluid turbine arranged to drive and be driven at the ends of a shaft (113) within a housing (114) by passing fluid.
- the Figures include connectors (89), engagable to associated receptacles (45 of Figure 32), for anchoring the member flow controlling apparatus (61).
- blocking (25 A) and/or sealing (66) apparatus members can be usable for controlling fluid within and between the innermost passageway and concentric passageway through the radial passageway members.
- Any form of engagement or fluid operatable components for example a rotary connector (72) with seals (66) or bearings, races, slidable engagement components or mechanical features, such as a planetary gearing arrangements for differing upper and lower turbine or impeller rotational speeds, that is usable in a subterranean environment to operate the fluid operatable motor or pump, can be usable with the present invention.
- the apparatus can be selectively placeable within a manifold string receptacle (45 of Figure 32, 45A of Figure 33), using a cable connector (68) and cable rig (4A of Figure 3) or conduit connector and coiled tubing or drilling rig.
- the apparatus can be selectively placeable between conduits of conduit string members with such devices as a drawworks, during conventional installation.
- Other operatable component alternatives for example, can be formed when the innermost passageway member is fluidly communicated through the shaft with various other flow streams that can be communicated through various other concentric passageways and/or the first annular passageways, usable to operate the fluid motor and pump.
- Figures 38 and 39 depict elevation cross-section views of alternative motor and pump arrangements for various motor and fluid pump (69) embodiments (69C, 69D, respectively).
- the Figures depict: a rotor (109) and stator (108) arrangement (69C), that can be operatable with injection (31) or production (34) and usable to rotate a fluid pump comprising, for example, a turbine or a positive displacement rotor (109) and stator (108) pump, as shown in Figure 38.
- Figure 39 shows an electric motor (111) arrangement (69D), that can be usable with an electrical cable (110A) and fixed or sealed (66) wet connections (110), to operate any downhole fluid pump for producing (34) or injecting fluid, if the orientation is inverted. Fluid to either arrangement can be supplied by a manifold crossover through a radial passageway of a manifold string member.
- preferred manifold crossover (23) embodiments of the present invention provide systems and methods combinable in any configuration or orientation to selectively control separate flowing fluid streams of injection (31) and/or production (34) fluid mixtures (38) of liquid, gases and or solids.
- This selective control can be achieved at varying velocities and associated pressures, selectively communicated through radial passageways (75) and orifices (59), either directly (32) or indirectly (35) into the innermost passageway members (25, 26) from another concentric passageway (24, 24A, 24B, 25, 26, 54, 55) member, and/or directly (33) or indirectly (37) into a concentric passageway (24, 24A, 24B, 55) member from the innermost passageways (25, 26) or other concentric passageways (24, 24A, 24B, 55) with selectively placed flow controlling members (61 of Figures 1-123) and/or flow controlling member embodiments (69A, 69B, 69C, 69D).
- the flow controlling members can be engaged between the conduits of an inner concentric string (2) and/or outer concentric string (2A), or conveyed, placed and/or retrieved through the innermost passageways (25, 26) and engaged to a receptacle (45, 45A).
- the combined manifold string (70,76) embodiments can be usable to operate one or more substantially hydrocarbon and/or substantially water wells, from a single main bore and wellhead.
- FIG. 40 and 41 elevation diagrammatic cross section views of prior art subterranean production and waste water disposal simultaneous flow stream application and a surface hydrocarbon fluid separation process, respectively, that together with wells described in Figures 1-2 and Figures 47-48 depict conventional processes improvable, combinable and/or replaceable with preferred embodiments of the present invention.
- Figure 40 shows a valve tree (10) engaged to a wellhead (7) with an annulus valve (81) controlling injection (31) through an annular passageway, between the intermediate (15) and final cemented casing (3) and into a fracture (18) below the casing shoe (16), which prevents upward flow within the annulus space outside the intermediate casing.
- the Figure shows that pressure can propagate (28) to the point of fracture propagation (30), allowing waste fluids to be disposed of within a subterranean feature. Fractures (18) may be allowed to close with stoppage of injection (31).
- Waste solids may act as proppants, in a similar manner to the single stage shale gas fracture stimulation at the lower end of the production tubing (2), where proppants (generally sand sized particles), are injected to hold fractures open.
- This opening of the fractures can maintain, for example, fluid communication throughout the fractures (18) for gas production (34), from relatively impermeable shale formations otherwise incapable of significant production.
- Production flow (34) controlled by a subsurface valve (74) may occur at the same time as waste injection (31) into the upper fracture (18).
- dedicated conventional waste disposal well injection (31) can occur through the valve tree (10) controlled by a surface valve (64) and the tubing (2) to the lower fracture (18) point of propagation (30) for substantially water injection wells.
- Figure 41 shows an above ground level (121) surface hydrocarbon separator
- Figures 1-2, 6-7, 42-46, 49-53, 67-68 depict elevation diagrammatic cross section views of manifold string members (70, 76), wherein single well manifold string (70) arrangements are usable, individually, or in combination below a junction of wells (51A of Fig. 51).
- the combined manifold strings can be used to form a plurality of wells manifold string (76) members, which can be usable for subterranean processing and/or providing a plurality of fluid streams, wherein the combinable members are usable to replace one or more convention wells and/or supplement or replace conventional processing arrangements, for example those described in Figures 1-2, 40-41 and 47-48.
- members comprising, for example, conventional flow controlling members (61), that can be operatable with other set members, can be usable for urging, measuring and/or selectively controlling fluid mixtures of liquid, gas and/or solids, for one or more substantially hydrocarbon wells, substantially water wells, or combinations thereof, such as combined solution mining and storage wells.
- Such flow controlling members include: surface pumps (116), surface valves (64, 81), valve trees (10, 10A) and wellheads (7) that can be engagable to the upper end of a manifold string (70, 76) member and that are usable to control a single fluid mixture flow stream (31, 34) with a plurality of velocities and/or a plurality of fluid mixture flow streams (31, 34), with varying flow stream velocities.
- subterranean valves 63, 74, 84
- Additional flow controlling members include downhole gauges, velocity switches, pressure activation mechanisms, acoustic or fluid-pulse signals for passing a fluid, control lines (79) and/or other selective measurement, activation and/or control means, including one way devices, surface or subterranean chokes (77), venturi (85), jet pumps (85), plugs (25 A), casing shoes (16), packers (40), fracturing technologies, and/or, motor and fluid pumps (69).
- Figures 42 and 43 depict elevation cross-section and process control diagrammatic views, respectively, of an embodiments (70B, 70L, respectively) of subterranean flow-stream, separation, manifold string (70) members with a motor and fluid pump (69) flow controlling member (61), that can be used to pump separated liquids.
- the Figures show a manifold crossover embodiment (23F) flow controlling member (61) with a subsurface valve arrangement.
- the Figures include a fluid mixture (38), produced (34) through passageway members, that is separated into a plurality of simultaneous flowing fluid mixture streams controlled separately by a plurality of valves (74).
- subsurface fail safe shut safety valve (74) of Figure 91 operated with a control line (79) connected in series or independently to each valve, and whereby, for example, the arrangement may be formed by engaging valves to the upper and lower ends (90) of the manifold crossover (23C or 23Y) member of Figures 22- 25.
- a liquid interface (118) and/or water interface (117 of Figure 43) can result from the pressure applied to, or released from, the passageway member space by a flow controlling member (61), such as the valve tree (10A), and a substantially gaseous naturally expanding flow stream (120) can be extracted (34) through a conduit (2, 2A) for urging a substantially liquid flow stream (119).
- a flow controlling member such as the valve tree (10A
- a substantially gaseous naturally expanding flow stream (120) can be extracted (34) through a conduit (2, 2A) for urging a substantially liquid flow stream (119).
- the substantially liquid flow stream (119) can be urged by: natural subterranean pressure, a motor and fluid pump (69), a surface pump (116), an electrical submersible pump and/or other flow controlling members, through a conduit string (2, 2A, 2B) passageway or concentric passageway that can be formed between the conduit strings and/or the passageway through subterranean strata.
- the depicted single well manifold string (70L), or a plurality of similar wells, stemming from, for example, the manifold string member (70F) of Figures 100- 105, can be installable with a managed pressure conduit assembly (49) with inner (50) and outer (51) concentric conduit strings and slurry passageway fluid stream crossover tool (58) can be usable to, for example, provide larger conduit sizes than are generally practiced during well formation for subterranean separation purposes.
- the managed pressure arrangement becomes a manifold string (70, 76) with concentric strings (2, 2A, 2B, 2C) and manifold crossovers (21, 23) members to perform injection or production functions, usable to configure one or more wells to separate fluid mixture streams (70L) for individual or junctions of wells (51 A of Figures 51- 53) applications similar to the manifold string (76L) of Figure 123.
- Manifold strings (70L, 76L) of Figures 43 and 123, respectively, are usable for separation of a fluid mixture into a plurality of simultaneously flowing fluid mixture streams from a single well, from one or more vertically and/or laterally separated subterranean regions, or from caverns where large suitable salt deposits are usable for solution mining a separation space, that can be usable for wells or a transportation pipeline.
- Larger separation spaces are formable with a managed pressure string of the present inventor or may be formed by various other methods, such as using subterranean separation to solution mine cavern walls (1A) with produced water or as described in methods of the present inventor, or using abundant available water sources such as the ocean.
- the present invention can be usable to perform simultaneous production, solution mining, underground storage and/or separation of a plurality of fluid mixture streams, entering and/or leaving a subterranean space or proximal region accessed through a manifold string.
- FIGS 44 and 45 elevation cross-section and process control diagrammatic views, respectively, of an embodiment (70C) of subterranean manifold string member (70), with selectable internal velocity string manifold crossovers (23), fracture propagation chamber junction manifold crossovers (21) and motor and fluid pump (69) flow controlling members (61) are shown.
- the Figures illustrate an inner concentric string (2) and outer concentric string (2A) extending downward from a wellhead (7) and valve tree (10A).
- a chamber junction manifold crossover (21) can be usable to urge (28A) proppant into support fractures (18A), with, for example a shale gas or waste disposal well, through a perforated liner (19) that is cemented (20) within the strata bore (17) and engaged via a liner top packer to the final cemented casing (3), within which the manifold string (70C) is engaged with a packer (40).
- the manifold crossovers (23A) can be usable to reconfigure and form a velocity string to accelerate production velocity and to prevent water production from inhibiting, for example, associated hydrocarbon production.
- the arrangement also can be usable to access a first annular passageway (55) through the manifold string (70C of Figures 44-45), to, for example, provide waste injection disposal, wherein the manifold crossover (23) that is adjacent to the shallow strata fracture (18) can be formable from various manifold crossover members, for example a chamber junction (21) and manifold crossover arrangement (23C and 23Y of Figures 22-25).
- a plug (25A of Figures 22-25) can be usable to crossover fluid communication of the passageways (24, 25), with the chamber junction crossover (21) usable to access the first annular passageway (55) from the inner passageway (25), whereby production from the velocity string manifold crossover (23A) flows through the concentric passageway (24) and axially upward, while waste water below a water interface (117), from surface separation (115) of the production, can be pumped (116) and injected (31) through the valve tree (10A) and chamber junction crossover (21) axially downward to operate a fluid motor and pump (69) urging production axially upward.
- the manifold string (70B, 70L, 70C) arrangements of Figures 43-45 describe various possible arrangements for subterranean separation and subsequent waste disposal.
- a substantially liquid flow stream (119) can be further processed and pumped (116) for disposal into an annulus shown as a dashed line in Figure 42.
- the flow stream (119) can be pumped through an annulus valve (81), within the annulus between the intermediate (15) and final cemented casing (3), that can be controlled by a casing shoe (16) for resisting fluid flow into an outer annulus, and injected (31) through the valve tree (10A), as shown in Figure 44.
- the waste water can be disposed by pressure communicating (28) to the point of fracture propagation (30) within a subterranean strata feature.
- extracted subterranean pressurized fluids such as compressed gas, high pressure production or the injected waste fluid mixture (31 of Figure 44), can be usable to operate the fluid motors and fluid pumps (69).
- the manifold string (70L) arrangement of Figure 43 can be usable with a chamber junction manifold crossover (21) to selectively communicate with a subterranean hydrocarbon interface (118) that is separated from a subterranean water interface (117).
- One or more submersible pumps (69) operated by, for example, electricity, expanding compressed gas from the separation process, or injected fluids (31 of Figure 44), can be usable to assist selective removal of liquid hydrocarbon or water between the various interface layers. If motors and pumps are not desired, the gas stream may simply be closed in, to allow pressure to build within the well to u-tube the fluids through one or more passageway members.
- Manifold string (70C) of Figures 44 and 45 can be usable with a chamber junction manifold crossover (21) to selectively communicate fracture propagation fluid and proppants during well formation.
- the chamber junction manifold can be used for selective extraction from desired subterranean regions or water shut-off with, for example, gas expansion from a shale gas deposit usable to drive fluid motors and fluid pumps (69) for injecting waste fluids into the shallower strata feature shown.
- Figure 44 shows a manifold valve crossover (23F) that can be adapted for use with a chamber junction and further manifold crossover (23) for selective control of fluid mixtures flow streams in the manifold string.
- Figures 47 and 48 depict elevation cross-section and process control diagrammatic views, respectively, of a prior art gas lift arrangement.
- the Figures show a wellhead (7) from which a fluid mixture (38) can be produced (34) through tubing (2) and a valve tree (10), wherein a substantially liquid fluid flow stream (119) can be lifted through the innermost concentric passageway (25) with the use of a substantially gas fluid stream (120).
- the lifting occurs by injecting the gas stream from the surface through an annulus valve (81) and into the concentric passageway (24), formed between the tubing (2) and casing (3) that is cemented (20) into the strata bore hole (17).
- a subterranean fail-safe safety valve (74) can be operated with a control line (79), valve tree (10), one way gas lift valves (84) and annulus valve (81) to be usable to selectively contain subterranean pressures in the well and to urge production (34), provided surface processing and/or gas is available for lifting production.
- Figures 49 and 50 depict elevation cross-section and process control diagrammatic views, respectively, of an embodiment (70D) of a subterranean manifold string member (70), usable to separate a fluid mixture of liquid and compressed gas into substantially liquid and substantially gas fluid streams, The separated streams can be usable to selectively re-inject and to gas lift the substantially liquid flow stream, particularly where surface processing and gas injection are uneconomical and/or impractical.
- the embodiments shown in Figures 49 and 50 can be used economically in remote subsea and marginal developments, that are lacking infrastructure.
- a fluid mixture (38) can be produced (34) through a conduit (2), engaged by a packer (40), to the passageway through subterranean strata (52), comprising the production casing (3) cemented (20) into the strata bore (17) and conductor casing (14).
- the fluid mixture (38) can reach a pressure activated valve (63) that controls the radial passageway of a manifold crossover (23W) embodiment, usable with a one-way valve and venturi (85) manifold crossover (23H) embodiment to vacuum liquid from the gas lift separation space.
- Pressures within the concentric passageway (24) can be selectively controlled by a choke valve (77), located on the valve tree (10A), against a separated substantially gas fluid stream (120), that can be all or partially diverted through gas lift valve (84) manifold crossover (23G) embodiments to aid the lifting of a substantially liquid fluid stream (119) taken from the concentric passageway (24), below the liquid level (118) and through the venturi (85) manifold crossover (23H).
- a choke valve (77) located on the valve tree (10A) against a separated substantially gas fluid stream (120), that can be all or partially diverted through gas lift valve (84) manifold crossover (23G) embodiments to aid the lifting of a substantially liquid fluid stream (119) taken from the concentric passageway (24), below the liquid level (118) and through the venturi (85) manifold crossover (23H).
- FIGS. 51, 52 and 53 elevation diagrammatic views of various manifold string (76) plurality of wells embodiments (76A, 76B, 76C), usable with substantially hydrocarbon and substantially water wells, are shown as production/waste-fluid-injection, water-flood and solution mined/storage wells, respectively, using a junction of wells (51 A) with a plurality of wells extending downward from a single main bore (6) and wellhead (7).
- the plurality of wells may access subterranean injection features (103), relatively horizontal or folded (94) reservoirs (95), and salt deposits (5) disposed between subterranean formations (106).
- Manifold string (76A, 76B) member arrangements of hydrocarbon or geothermal wells, usable for water or produced water disposal and water floods, can inject water into a feature (103) or relatively horizontal water drive (104) reservoir, while producing from a folded (94), faulted, fractured and/or water driven reservoir using one or more of a plurality of wells to dispose of waste water and/or to increase reservoir pressure for production of hydrocarbons or steam from a geothermal reservoir.
- Manifold string (76C) member arrangements can be usable for solution mining and selective access of gravity separated hydrocarbon products within the space of cavern walls (1A) of a salt deposit (5), that is sealed at its upper end by the final cemented casing (3) and casing shoe (16).
- Solution mining of a cavern space may use ocean, waste or produced water from various other embodiments.
- Substantially hydrocarbon fluid mixtures of liquids, gases, and/or solids from wells or pipelines can be separated, stored and/or selectively accessed within a cavern space with the use of manifold crossovers selectively flowing different fluid mixtures from between specific gravity separated fluid levels (105), using, for example, a chamber junction manifold crossovers (21).
- Substantially water fluids sinking to the lower level (104) are usable to simultaneously displace storage, increase cavern pressure and/or solution mine the space.
- Figures 54 and 58 are adaptable with the manifold crossover (23J) of Figures 55-57 to form the manifold string (76K) of Figure 59, to complete the subsea well of Figure 54.
- Figure 54 depicts an elevation cross-section view of a subsea wellhead (7), positioned above the sea floor (122), that can be usable with manifold strings (70A, 70B, 70C) of Figures 51-53 and the adapted chamber junction manifold crossover of Figure 59.
- the Figure shows subsea connectors (107), a wellhead (7) and a single main bore (6), that is located within a strata formation (106) and which comprises a chamber junction (43) engaged to the wellhead, with exit bores extending to the well's lower end.
- the ends (90) of the exit bore conduits (39) can be engaged to a plurality of wells.
- FIG. 55 a plan above an elevation view is shown, with dashed lines showing hidden surfaces of a manifold crossover (23) embodiment (23J).
- the Figure depicts innermost passageway connectors (26), usable to connect the innermost passageway above and below the manifold crossover with the radial passageways (75), to fluidly communicate with orifices (59) that can be connected to a concentric passageway.
- receptacles (45) can be used to selectively control the innermost passageway and/or radial passageway with a flow controlling member, for example, with as a straddle (22 of Figure 93A) or plug (25A of Figure 93) placed through the innermost passageway and engaged with the receptacle.
- a plurality of concentric conduits (2A, 2B, 2C of Figure 55 and 59) can be usable to form a plurality of concentric conduit passageways for connection to one or more of the orifices (59), from a radial passageway (75).
- Figures 56 and 57 depict an isometric view with line K and a magnified view within line K, respectively, showing a cut-out section of the manifold crossover (23 J) of Figure 55.
- the Figures depict orifices (59) of the radial passageway (75) and receptacles (45), that can be usable for selective engagement of flow controlling members to control the flow of fluid mixture streams.
- each orifice can be configurable to individually access a different concentric passageway (24, 24A, 24B).
- Flow streams can flow into (32, 35) the innermost passageway, directly (32), from a first concentric passageway or, indirectly (35), from a first concentric passageway through another secondary concentric passageway.
- flow streams can flow into (33, 37) the concentric passageway through an orifice (59), either directly (33) or indirectly (37) from a first concentric passageway or from a first concentric passageway through a secondary concentric passageway.
- the orifices (59) can be connected to form fluid communication between the passageway members, and the orifices can be engagable to a plurality of concentric passageway members (25, 24, 24A, 24B, 55), within and between an innermost conduit (2) and a plurality of concentric conduit (2A, 2B, 2C) strings and the passageway through subterranean strata (52).
- FIG. 58 and 59 isometric views of a chamber junction manifold (43A) and manifold string embodiment (76K), respectively, are shown.
- the chamber junction manifold (43 A) comprises a chamber wall (41) with engaged (44) exit bore conduits (39), that can be controlled by valves (74) and seal stacks (66) that can be engagable to another chamber junction (43 of Figure 54).
- the chamber junction shown in Figures 58 and 59 includes a landing plate (67) and indexing key (65).
- the chamber junction manifold (43 A) can be adapted with a plurality of concentric strings (2, 2A, 2B, 2C) and a manifold crossover (23K) of Figure 59 for replacing the valve (74) arrangement of Figure 58.
- the manifold string (76K) shown in Figure 59 and formed by the adaptation, can be usable to selectively control a plurality of simultaneously flowing fluid streams, when placed, for example, in the subsea well of Figure 54.
- FIG. 60 to 66 illustrate another chamber junction manifold adaptation that uses a plurality of manifold string set members of the present invention.
- the chamber junction manifold (43 A) of Figures 60-61 is adaptable to form the manifold crossover (23L) embodiment of Figures 62-66, which can be used in combination with the manifold crossover (23X) embodiment to form a manifold string embodiment (76J), that can be usable to perform the same function with concentric conduits (2, 2A) of Figures 62-66 instead of parallel conduits (78 (also shown in Fig. 59) and 71 of Figures 60-61).
- Concentric conduits can be usable to improve flowing capacity within the passageway through subterranean strata for producing and injecting simultaneously flowing fluid mixture streams of various velocities, whereby a dual bore valve tree, necessary for the chamber junction manifold (43A) of Figures 60-61, can be replaced with a single bore valve tree, for the manifold string (76J) of Figures 62-66, for easier placement of flow controlling members within the innermost passageway, by, for example, removing the need for a plurality of wireline (4A of Figure 3) rig-ups, which are needed for dual bore valve trees.
- Figures 60 and 61 depict plan and isometric views, respectively, of a chamber junction manifold crossover (43 A) usable for simultaneous injection and production flow streams.
- the main bore first conduit (71) and main bore second conduit (78) are parallel and access segregated portions of the chamber with valves (74), below controlling exit bore conduits engagable, with seal stacks (66), to other chamber junctions (43 of Figure 54).
- the chamber junctions of the present inventor shown in Figures 60 and 61 allow, for example, the simultaneous production from two wells and injection into one well, similar to the manifold string (76B) of Figure 52.
- FIG. 62 and 63 plan and elevation views, respectively, with dashed lines showing hidden surfaces of a manifold string (76J) and chamber junction manifold (43A), with a manifold crossover embodiment (23X) for adapting a chamber junction (43), are shown.
- the Figures illustrate an inner concentric string (2) and outer concentric string (2A) which are equivalent in function to a main bore first conduit (71) and a main bore second conduit (78), respectively, wherein simultaneous fluid mixture flows into (32, 35) one of the three innermost passageway members (25, 26), either directly (32) or indirectly (35) from a concentric conduit passageway (2B, 2C of Figures 55 and 59), or into (33, 37) the concentric passageway (24) through the orifice (59), either directly (33) or indirectly (37), and then through concentric passageways (24, 24A, 24B, 55), when additional concentric conduits are present (2B, 2C of Figures 55 and 59) at the upper end (90A).
- a bore selector (47 of Figures 95-96) extension (48 of Figures 95-96) can be engagable with the chamber junction bottom receptacle (83), wherein the guiding surface (87) is completed across a single innermost passageway (25), blocking other innermost passageways to, for example, place a plug (25A of Figure 66) to divert flow into (33, 37) the concentric passageway (24) or into (32, 35) the lower left innermost passageway (25).
- Figure 64 depicts an isometric view of the manifold string (76K) and manifold crossover (23X) of Figure 62.
- Figure 64 shows the inner concentric string (2, 71) and outer concentric string (2A, 78), with dashed lines showing an optional additional concentric conduit (2B) end location (90A) and associated optional orifice (59A), which can be usable with other manifold crossovers (23Y of Figures 14-16, for example) that are engaged to the upper end (90).
- the engagement can provide fluid communication between the lower left innermost passageway (25 of Figure 62) to alternate passageway members using crossover members of the present invention.
- FIGs 65 and 66 plan and elevation cross-section views with and along line L-L, respectively, of the manifold string (76K) and manifold crossover (23X) of Figure 62 are shown.
- the Figures include a flow controlling member (61), that is shown, for example, as a plug (25 A), installed through the innermost passageway of the inner concentric string (2) using a bore selector.
- the outer concentric string (2A) is placed in fluid communication through the chamber junction manifold (43A) and radial passageway (75) of the manifold crossover (23X).
- a straddle (22 of Figure 93A) can be engaged to one or more of the receptacles (45) to cover the radial passageway and to selectively commingle fluid communication between all three innermost passageways (25) extending from the exit bore conduits (39) of the chamber junction (43).
- Various combinations of injection (31) and production (34) between the member passageways (25) can be usable to selectively control simultaneously flowing fluid mixture streams.
- Figures 67, 67A and 68 show elevation diagrammatic views of various valve
- Figure 67 includes a manifold valve crossover (23F) that can be adapted with a chamber junction and, further, a manifold crossover (23) with a plug (25A) and straddle (22) for forming the manifold string embodiment (76D) of Figure 67.
- Figure 67A includes a chamber junction (43) and manifold crossover (23), with a plug (25A) and straddle (22) located above selectively controlled valve flow controlling members (61) engaged between conduits of each exit bore string.
- 76E manifold string embodiment
- Figure 68 includes a manifold crossover (23M) embodiment with concentric conduits (2, 2A) at upper and lower ends, with intermediately selectively controlled valve flow controlling members (61) engaged to exit bore conduits (39), for forming the manifold string embodiment (70E) of Figure 68.
- 23M manifold crossover
- 76E are usable, for example, in hydrocarbon or geothermal wells where the unplanned release of flammable or superheated production is unacceptable, should other surface containment equipment fail to operate.
- FIG. 69 to 74 the Figures illustrate manifold crossover embodiments (23N, 23P) combinable as building blocks through integral construction, or as members with intermediate conduits and member passageways, to form a new manifold crossover (23Q) embodiment.
- the new embodiment (23Q) includes an increased number of selectively controllable reconfigurations, which is more than either of the crossovers, and further demonstrates that various combinations of members may form new embodiments of the present invention.
- FIG. 69 and 70 a plan view above an elevation view and an isometric view, respectively, of an embodiment of manifold crossover (23P) is shown, with dashed lines depicting hidden surfaces.
- the Figures illustrate flow orientations (32) through a radial passageway (75), between innermost passageway connectors (26). Blocking the orifices (59) with, for example, a straddle can prevent flow through the radial passageway or placement of, for example, a blocking plug, can divert flow through the radial passageway.
- Figures 71 and 72 depict a plan view above an elevation view and an isometric view, respectively, of an embodiment of manifold crossover (23N), with dashed lines depicting hidden surfaces, showing flow orientations (32, 33) through a radial passageway (75), between innermost passageway connectors (26) and orifices (59), that are engagable with a concentric passageway.
- Passageway members can be blocked, when covered by a straddle, and diverted through when a blocking member is selectively placed.
- Intermediate flow diverting apparatus using various flow controlling members, for example, fixed or variable chokes and pressure activated valves, can be usable to selectively control a portion of the flow through passageway members.
- FIG. 73 and 74 a plan view above an elevation view and an isometric view, respectively, of a manifold crossover (23Q) embodiment is shown.
- the embodiment (23Q) is formed by combining other manifold crossovers (23P, 23N of Figures 69-72), with cut-out and dashed lines depicting hidden surfaces.
- the Figures illustrate selectively configurable flow streams, that flow directly (32) to the innermost passageway or indirectly (35) through the upper right intermediate commingled innermost passageway (26) or, alternatively, directly (33) into the concentric passageway or indirectly (37) through lower innermost passageway connector (26) intermediate commingled passageway.
- Orifices (59) are shown that can be engagable to one or more concentric passageways, between two or more conduits, wherein flow controlling members are selectively placeable and/or configurable across orifices of the radial passageways or other member passageways to selectively affect flowing fluid streams, passing through the manifold crossover (23Q).
- Figure 75 depicts an isometric view of the manifold crossover of Figures 17 to
- FIG. 76 a plan view of an embodiment of an adapted chamber junction (43), with dashed lines showing hidden surfaces, is shown.
- the Figure illustrates the inner concentric string (2) communicating with innermost passageways (25) of the exit bore conduits (39) and outer concentric string (2A) for forming a concentric passageway (24), with orifices (59) engagable to a connecting conduit (93 of Figure 81), to form the manifold string (76F) of Figure 82.
- Figures 77 and 79 depict plan views, with lines M-M and N-N above cross section elevation views and along lines M-M and N-N, respectively.
- the embodiments shown in the Figures are associated with the manifold crossover of Figure 76, with detail line P of Figure 77 associated with Figure 78.
- Break lines, representing removed portions, show an adaptation of a chamber junction (43), usable with the flow controlling members of Figures 75 and 81 to form the manifold crossover (23R) of Figure 82.
- FIG. 78 and 80 a magnified view of the portion of the adapted chamber junction (43) within detail line P of Figure 77 and an isometric view, respectively, are shown.
- the Figures depict the inner concentric string (2) and outer concentric string (2A) members forming a concentric passageway (24), with orifices (59) engagable to the upper end (90 of Figure 81) of the connecting conduit (93 of Figure 81), and with the lower end (90 of Figure 81) engaged to the manifold crossover (23D of Fig. 75) orifices (59 of Figure 75), to form the manifold string (76F) of Figure 82.
- a receptacle (83) is shown in the chamber bottom (42) for the orientation and engagement of the bore selector (47 of Figure 95-96), which can be usable to communicate between the innermost passageways (25) above the chamber (41) and the innermost passageways of the exit bore conduits (39), to provide selectable control.
- FIG 81 an isometric view of a connecting conduit (93), usable between the kidney-shaped chamber junction orifices (59 of Figure 76) and small diameter orifices (59 of the Figure 75) of the manifold crossover (23D of Figure 75), is shown, which can be usable to form the manifold string (76F) of Figure 82.
- Figure 82 an isometric view of an embodiment (76F) of a manifold string (76) associated with Figures 106-116, is shown.
- the embodiment (76F) is assembled from the associated manifold crossover member parts of Figures 75, 80 and 81 with flow controlling members (74 and 91 of Figures 91 and 94, respectively).
- the Figure depicts a manifold crossover embodiment (23R) formed by the combination of members comprising a chamber junction, a nipple (91 of Fig. 94) or selected nipple receptacle (45 of Figure 94), connecting conduit (93 of Figure 81), and a manifold crossover (23D of Figure 75).
- fluid mixtures of liquid and/or gas may contain abrasive solids
- fluid mixtures flowing at varying velocities may erode paperwork functional variations of manifold crossovers with longer more gradual flow path deviations are needed for various applications, such as solution mining and high pressure hydrocarbon fluid mixtures with high velocities.
- More than two exit bores and/or more than one radial passageway blisters and/or segregated concentric passageways can be usable with two chamber junction manifold crossovers (23T) having exit bore ends engaged, similar to the crossover 23M of Figure 68, for concentric conduit applications.
- straddles, blocking plugs, and pressure controlled, acoustically controlled, fluid pulse controlled, and/or choking flow control devices can be placed within exit bore receptacles to selectively control member passageways.
- FIG 83 an isometric view of an embodiment of adapted chamber junction manifold crossover (23), associated with Figures 84 to 87, is shown.
- the Figure illustrates an inner concentric string (2), outer concentric string (2A) or second main bore conduit (78) with ends (90), that can be engagable to conduit strings of a single main bore above a chamber junction (43), for forming a manifold (43A) with the addition of receptacles and a radial passageway (75) blister, between the exit bore conduits (39) and the chamber junction bottom (42).
- Figures 84 and 86 depict plan views above elevation cross-sectional views with, and along, lines Q-Q and R-R, respectively, with break lines removing portions of the assembly associated with cross sections in Figures 85 and 87 isometric views, showing the manifold crossover (23T) of Figure 83.
- FIG. 1 illustrates the placement of a flow controlling member, shown as a cable (11 of Figure 3) placeable and retrievable blocking plug (25A), that can be placeable through the inner concentric string (2) innermost passageway (25) with a bore selector (47 of Figure 96), usable to complete the innermost passageway guiding surface (87) and excluding other exit bore plug flow controlling members engaged with a selected nipple profile receptacle (45) for blocking fluid communication within one exit bore conduit (39) innermost passageway (25).
- a flow controlling member shown as a cable (11 of Figure 3) placeable and retrievable blocking plug (25A), that can be placeable through the inner concentric string (2) innermost passageway (25) with a bore selector (47 of Figure 96), usable to complete the innermost passageway guiding surface (87) and excluding other exit bore plug flow controlling members engaged with a selected nipple profile receptacle (45) for blocking fluid communication within one exit bore conduit (39) innermost passageway (25).
- the concentric passageway (24) flow stream may communicate from below the plug, directly (32, 33), with the exit bore conduit passageway or, indirectly (35, 37), with various other manifold crossovers (21, 23) engagable to the upper end (90) of the chamber junction, through the radial passageway (75) blister.
- Commingled flow within the chamber junction manifold (43A), from both exit bores, can be operable by placing a straddle (22 if Figure 93A) across the orifice (59) of the radial passageway (75).
- Figures 85 and 87 show projected isometric views, with cross sections associated with Figures 84 and 86 and break lines of the manifold crossover (23T) of Figure 83.
- the Figures show isometric views from different orientation perspectives of the radial passageway (75) blister flow passageway member and the flow controlling member (61), shown as a blocking device (25A).
- Other flow controlling members such as a pressure activated oneway valve, can be usable to feed a substantially lighter, specific-gravity, fluid- stream, first well into a heavier flow-stream, second well to reduce hydrostatic pressure on the second well and, thus, increase flowing velocity.
- Chamber junction crossovers of similar construction, with radial passageway blisters (75) and discontinuous exit bore conduits with receptacles (24) can be usable to replace connecting conduits (93 of Figure 81) and manifold crossover (23D of Figure 75) or to replace the manifold crossover (23R of Figure 82) in the manifold string of Figures 88-116 when, for example, erosion or flow cutting of an assembly from flow streams of higher velocity is of concern.
- such concerns include during solution mining in substantially water wells, or proppant facture propagation operations in shale gas or low permeability sandstone reservoirs, in substantially hydrocarbon wells.
- FIG. 75-82 and 88-116 the Figures show member embodiments usable to construct and complete a well with a manifold string (76F) member, that can be usable within a chamber junction member (43 of Figure 88-89 adaptable into a managed pressure conduit assembly (49) manifold string 70F during installation) and various flow controlling members to form an adapted manifold string (76G of Figures 106-116) member.
- a manifold string (76F) member that can be usable within a chamber junction member (43 of Figure 88-89 adaptable into a managed pressure conduit assembly (49) manifold string 70F during installation) and various flow controlling members to form an adapted manifold string (76G of Figures 106-116) member.
- Figures 88 and 89 depict isometric and magnified views with and within detail line S, respectively, of a chamber junction (43), with dashed lines showing hidden surfaces.
- the embodiments shown in the Figures can be usable within a managed pressure string (49 of Figures 97-105) or as a member of a junction of wells (51 A of Figures 51-54 and 106-116).
- the Figures include a chamber (41), chamber bottom (42), and exit bores usable with a bore selector (47 of Figure 90).
- FIG 90 an isometric view of a bore selector (47), that can be usable with the chamber junction of Figure 88 and 89, is shown with dashed lines, illustrating hidden surfaces, depicting the guiding surface (87) for communicating fluids and the apparatus through its lower orifice (88), wherein a receptacle (45B) is usable to place, rotate and remove the bore selector (47).
- Figures 91, 92, 93, 93A and 94 show examples of valve, packer, plug, straddle and nipple prior art flow controlling members, which can be usable with the present invention, respectively.
- Figure 91 depicts a plan view, with section line T-T above an elevation view along section line T-T of a subterranean valve (74) of flapper (127) type, which comprises a flow controlling member (61).
- Figure 92 depicts an isometric view, with a quarter section removed and detail line U above the magnified portion within line U, of a production packer (40) flow- controlling member (61) with engaging connectors (60) and sealing engagement (97), that can be activated by pressure shearing pins (92).
- Figure 93 depicts an isometric view of a plug (25A) flow controlling member.
- Figure 93A depicts a plan view, with line AK-AK above an elevation cross section along line AK- AK, of a straddle (22) flow-controlling member (61), with sealing apparatus (97) and snap-in (96) engaging connectors (60).
- Figure 94 is a plan view, with section line V-V above an elevation cross section along line V-V, showing a nipple profile (91) flow-controlling member (61) with a receptacle (45) for engagement of various other flow controlling members.
- the upper and lower ends of the flow controlling members of Figures 91-94 can be engagable between conduits of concentric conduit strings of the present invention.
- Figures 95 and 96 depict an isometric view and a right adjacent to a front view, respectively, of a bore selector (47), with dashed lines illustrating hidden surfaces.
- the bore selectors shown Figures 95 and 96 include engagement receptacles (45B) and bore selector extensions (48), and the bore selectors can be usable with various adapted chamber junction crossover embodiments of the present invention for example, the embodiments shown in Figures 106 to 116.
- FIG 97 an isometric view with detail lines AE and AF associated with Figures 98 and 99, respectively, of an adapted chamber junction is shown.
- the chamber junction shown in Figure 97 can be usable to form a managed pressure conduit assembly (49 of Figures 100-105) and manifold string member embodiment (70F of Figures 100-105).
- the Figure includes dashed lines showing hidden surfaces.
- Figures 98 and 99 depict magnified views of a portion of the chamber junction
- the Figures illustrate a chamber junction (43 of Figures 88-89) adapted with whipstocks (124) extending from exit bore conduits (39), that can be usable to laterally separate bored strata passageways, forming innermost passageway connectors (26) of a manifold crossover (23), which can be usable for boring with a casing bit (125). Circulation of a fluid slurry can occur through bit orifices (59) during well construction.
- the chamber bottom (42) orifices (59) can be usable for engaging a radial passageway (75 of Figures 102 and 104) of a slurry passageway apparatus (58 of Figures 100-104), whereby the assembly member can be usable to form a manifold crossover (23U of Figures 102-104).
- Figure 100 shows a plan view with line AG- AG associated with Figure 101, of an adapted slurry passageway tool (58).
- the Figures includes the adapted chamber junction of Figure 97 forming a managed pressure conduit (49) member embodiment (70F) of a manifold string (70), which can be usable to form a plurality of well passageways through subterranean strata, usable to form further embodiments (for example 76G of Figures 106-116).
- Figure 101 depicts an elevation cross-section view along line AG- AG, associated with Figure 102 of the manifold string (70F) of Figure 100, with break lines indicating missing portions.
- the Figure shows an inner concentric string (50), outer concentric string (51), rotary connector (72) and slurry passageway apparatus (58) for placing and securing the member (70F) with, for example, simultaneously circulated, separate, cement and drilling slurry fluid- mixture flow streams of varying velocities, within the passageway through subterranean strata.
- Figure 101 with cross-sections at associated break lines of Figure 101, and with detail lines AH, AI and AJ associated with Figures 103, 104 and 105, respectively, of the manifold string (70F) of Figure 100.
- the Figure illustrates an adapted slurry passageway apparatus (58) usable as a manifold crossover member (23U) with a slip joint (126) flow controlling member used to facilitate spaceout of the concentric conduits of the assembly.
- Figures 103, 104 and 105 depict magnified views of the portion of manifold string (70F) of Figure 102, within detail lines AH, AI and AJ, respectively.
- the Figures show an innermost passageway (2, 53) within an inner concentric conduit (50), with an upper end rotary connector (72), engageable to a drill string, that can be engaged at its lower end to the slurry passageway tool (58) engaged with mandrels (89) to a receptacle (45) in the outer concentric conduit (2A, 51).
- Direct (32, 33) or indirect (35, 37) flow streams, between the innermost passageway (25, 53) and concentric passageway (24, 54), can be usable within the inner (2, 50) and outer (2A, 51) concentric conduits for selectively controlling flow streams.
- the slurry passageway member (58) can be placeable and removable from the chamber junction (43).
- Whipstocks (124) can be usable to laterally separate more than one passageway through subterranean strata from a single main bore (6 of Figures 51-54 and 106-116).
- the remaining portion of the managed pressure conduit assembly (49) can be usable as an outer member of a junction of wells (51 A of Figures 51-54 and 106-116).
- Figures 106-116 depict a manifold string (70) member embodiment (76G) comprising a manifold crossover (23R of Figure 82) member that can be engaged, with a packer (40 of Figure 92) member, to a chamber junction member (43 of Figures 88-89) forming a junction of wells ( 1 A) member.
- a manifold string (70) member embodiment (76G) comprising a manifold crossover (23R of Figure 82) member that can be engaged, with a packer (40 of Figure 92) member, to a chamber junction member (43 of Figures 88-89) forming a junction of wells ( 1 A) member.
- the Figures show the manifold crossover (23R) can be formed from a chamber junction manifold (43A) member that can be formed from a chamber junction (43 of Figure 80), with nipple (91 of Figure 94) members providing receptacles (45) engaged to the manifold crossover (23D of Figure 75) member, which can be engaged to valves (74 of Figure 91) usable to divert flow from one well of the junction of wells (51 A) through the radial passageway (75) of the manifold crossover (23D).
- nipple (91 of Figure 94) members providing receptacles (45) engaged to the manifold crossover (23D of Figure 75) member, which can be engaged to valves (74 of Figure 91) usable to divert flow from one well of the junction of wells (51 A) through the radial passageway (75) of the manifold crossover (23D).
- the left well flow stream can be diverted through a radial passageway (75) to the concentric passageway (24) by using a plug (25A of Figure 93) member, engageable to the receptacle (45) and conveyable through the innermost passageway (25), while the flow stream of the right well can be urged through the innermost passageway (25), with both wells controlled by subsurface safety valves (74), between conduits of the innermost string (2) members and production packers (40) in the annular spaces (24A) at the lower end of the well.
- a valve tree and/or wellhead can be usable when engaged to the upper ends (90) of the single main bore (6) from which the two wells extend axially downward, at the junction of wells (51), to laterally and/or vertically separated subterranean regions, thereby providing the pressure integrity of two conventional wells through the single wellhead and main bore.
- Figure 106 shows a plan view with line X-X associated with Figures 107 to 111, with detail line W associated with Figure 112, of a plurality of wells manifold string (76) embodiment (76G).
- Figures 107 to 111 show elevation cross-sectional views along line X-X of the manifold crossover of Figure 106, with Figures 108, 109, 110 and 111 having lines Y, Z, AA and AB, respectively, associated with Figures 113 to 116 magnified views.
- the Figures illustrate the combination of manifold string members (23R, 76F of Figure 82 and 43 of Figure 88-89) with various flow controlling members (61) forming a junction of wells (51), with upper ends (90) engageable to conduits of a single main bore and/or wellhead.
- concentric conduits (50, 51) and associated passageways (53, 54, 55) can become production and/or injection conduits (2 or 71, 2A or 78, 51) with associated passageways (24, 24A, 25, 55), respectively.
- the chained dashed line, between upper and lower ends, represents a continuation of the apparatus across Figures 107-111, and the close lateral proximity of the two wells below the junction of wells (51 A) is for illustration purposes, as wells below a junction of wells and single main bore have, generally, significant lateral separation to access both significantly vertically and laterally separated subterranean regions.
- FIG. 106 shows an inner concentric string (2), outer concentric string (2A), forming inner (25) and concentric (24) passageways with a chamber junction (43) about a chamber junction manifold (43A) for forming a junction of wells (51 A).
- Various flow controlling members can be placed through the innermost passageway (25) using a cable (11 of Figure 3) and wireline rig (4A of Figure 3), with a bore selector (47 of Figures 95-96) that can be engageable with the receptacle (83) to selectively block one innermost passageway and to communicate with the other to convey apparatus for placement within.
- the bore selector (47 of Figures 95-96) engageable with the receptacle (83) can be used to simultaneously flow fluid mixture streams into (32, 35) the innermost passageway, or to communicate fluid into (33, 37) the concentric passageway (24), dependent on the other engagable manifold crossover members used.
- FIG. 113 a magnified view of the portion of the manifold string (76G) within detail line Y of Figure 108, is shown.
- the Figure illustrates the manifold crossover (23D) with a radial passageway (75) and nipple profile receptacle (45) between exit bore conduits (39) and inner concentric conduit strings (2).
- Figure 114 depicts a magnified view of the portion of the manifold string (76G) within detail line Z of Figure 109.
- the Figure shows subterranean valve (74) flow controlling members (61), that can be usable for selectively controlling the innermost passageway (25).
- the Figure shows the subterranean valve (74) controlling members flapper (127) valve, with associated receptacles for isolating the flapper or setting other flow controlling members.
- FIG. 115 the Figure depicts a magnified view of the portion of the manifold string (76G) within detail line AA of Figure 110, showing inner concentric strings (2) passing through a chamber junction (43) bottom (42) with chamber walls (41) and associated exit bore conduits (39) functioning as a concentric conduit for a common concentric passageway (24).
- the common concentric passageway can be usable for injection (31) and circulated returns (34), prior to setting of the packer (40 of Figure 116) and two innermost concentric passageways (25), also usable for injection (31) or production (34) to laterally and/or vertically separated subterranean regions.
- Figure 116 depicts a magnified view of the portion of the manifold string (76G) within detail line AB of Figure 111.
- the Figure shows exit bore conduits (39) engaged to the upper end of production packer (40) flow controlling members, which are shown engaged to concentric conduits (2A) with engagement devices (60) or gripping slips segments.
- the concentric passageway (24A) is shown blocked by the packer (40), and the innermost passageways (25) of the two wells extending from the chamber junction of wells (51 of Figure 107) can be separatable to vertically and/or laterally separated subterranean regions.
- FIG. 117 a plan view, with line AK-AK above an elevation view along line AK-AK, of a manifold crossover (23) is shown.
- the embodiment (23Z) of the manifold crossover (23) is shown comprising a chamber junction manifold crossover (21) member, depicting an adapted chamber junction (43) member with ends (90) engagable to other member conduit strings, comprising at least an outer (2A) and inner concentric conduit string (2) with an innermost bore (25) and upper end first receptacle (45) above a chamber junction bottom (42), that can be usable as an engageable second receptacle.
- the axial lower exit bore (39) can be isolated from the lateral sloping exit bore (39) by engaging a straddle or conduit across the first and second receptacles for sealing across the exit bore connection (44), to function as a bore selector for the axial aligned exit bore. Extending a straddle or sealing conduit from the first receptacle (45) to the third lower end receptacle (45) can separate the innermost (25) passageway from the concentric passageway (24), by sealing across the flow stream crossover orifices (59).
- a blocking flow-controlling member or bore selector can be engaged in the second receptacle (42) to cross flow streams from the innermost passageway, through the concentric passageway members (24, 24A), to the surrounding passageway member, which can include, for example, the first annular passageway.
- Flow below the blocking or bore selector can be diverable to the concentric passageway (24) through orifice crossover members, below the chamber junction crossover (21) bottom receptacle (42).
- the angular orientation of exit bores can be usable with high velocity or erosion prone fluid mixtures to prevent flow cutting of the manifold crossover (23Z).
- Figure 118 depicts a plan view, with line AQ-AQ above an elevation view along line AQ-AQ with break lines indicating removed portions, of an adapted bore selector (47 A) member embodiment, that can be usable in the manifold string members of Figures 119-122.
- the Figure illustrates a plurality of guiding surfaces (87) for an associated plurality of additional exit bore orifices (59 of Figures 119-122), usable to urge the bore selector within the innermost passageway using the pressure of a flowing fluid stream.
- An optional flow controlling member (61) shown, for example, as a one-way ball valve (84) can provide flow through the bore selector as it is pumped through the innermost passageway for alignment with an exit bore of the manifold string (70G of Figures 119-120).
- the adapted bore selector (47 A) member embodiments can be combinable with other flow controlling members (61), for example, engagements (60) for receptacles (45 of Figures 119-122), conduit straddles (22) for blocking chamber junction exit bore passageways and/or blocking orifices (59) between member passageways, internal one way valves (84), or an engagement receptacle (45B) for a cable, jointed conduit work strings or coiled tubing operational tooling.
- other flow controlling members for example, engagements (60) for receptacles (45 of Figures 119-122), conduit straddles (22) for blocking chamber junction exit bore passageways and/or blocking orifices (59) between member passageways, internal one way valves (84), or an engagement receptacle (45B) for a cable, jointed conduit work strings or coiled tubing operational tooling.
- the fluid circulated between the innermost passageway (25) and concentric passageway (24 of Figure 119-122) can be usable to aid movement of the bore selector member within the innermost passageway to, for example, perform one or more stage fracture propagation operations within a shale gas deposit.
- Bore selector member embodiments may be pumped through the innermost passageway to engage orifices within the innermost passageway.
- the pumped bore selector embodiments can be suspended, for example, from a cable (11 of Figure 3) and wireline rig (4A of Figure 3) or a jointed conduit work string or coiled tubing rig, wherein the lifting capacity of a supporting rig can be supplemented by the ability to selectively control circulation of the bore selector, with simultaneously flowing fluid streams of varying velocity to remove or to place a fluid mixture.
- fluid mixtures of liquids, gases and/or solids can be removed or placed during such operations as a proppant fracture operation for waste disposal, shale gas production, or the gravel packing of an unconsolidated reservoir.
- FIG. 119 and 120 a plan view, with line AP-AP above an elevation cross-sectional view along line AP-AP and an isometric view showing cross-sections along Figure 119 elevation view break lines, respectively, of a manifold string (70G) member embodiment is shown.
- the Figures show a bore selector (47A) member with an engagement profile (60), engaged within a receptacle (45) of a chamber junction manifold crossover (21) member, with three exit bore orifices (59) aligned with the bore selector of Figure 118.
- the Figures show an associated straddle that can be usable to crossover orifices, wherein fluid below the bore selector can be usable to circulate to (33) the concentric passageway (24), through the lowest manifold crossover (23) orifices, to aid placement of the bore selector, so that a fluid mixture of liquids, gases and/or solids can be communicated through the innermost passageway to (33) the first annular passageway, using the guiding surface (87) and exit bore conduit (39) forming a radial passageway (75) member.
- Placement of the bore selector within the innermost passageway for subsequent operations may occur, for example, using a wireline rig (4A of Figure 3) and a cable (11 of Figure 3) to selectively place the bore selector adjacent to exit bore conduits.
- Straddles (22) can be usable to cover orifices within the wall of the innermost conduit to form a circulated flow path within the manifold string passageway members (24, 25) for injection and or extraction, for example, when propagating (28B of Figure 123) subterranean fractures (18B of Figure 123) through injection of proppant, followed by extraction of screened out proppants and subsequent selective flow of production and or water shut-off.
- urging a bore selector into alignment with an exit bore of a chamber junction crossover (21) member of a manifold string (70G), with, for example, coiled tubing or jointed conduit work strings, aided by pumping between passageway members (24, 25) through orifices in the inner concentric conduit (2), can be usable to place a fluid mixture of liquids and solid proppants that can be pumped through the coiled tubing and exit bore to propagate factures.
- fluid injected through the concentric passageway (24) passing through the check valve can be usable to flow fluid through the bore selector (47 A) member, and into the innermost passageway member (25), to lift screened out proppants from the bottom up.
- Figures 121 and 122 depict a plan view, with line AN- AN above an elevation view along line AN-AN with dashed lines showing hidden surfaces, and an isometric view, showing cross-sections along break lines of the Figure 121 elevation view, respectively, of a manifold string (70H) embodiment, that can be usable for removing solids from the innermost passageway.
- a manifold string (70H) embodiment that can be usable for removing solids from the innermost passageway.
- the bore selector (47A) can be realigned with the orifices (59) in the innermost conduit (2) to provide a higher circulating flow rate between the passageway members (24, 25), while using a straddle wall (22) to block the exit bore conduit (39) radial passageway (75) initially used to place, for example, proppants.
- fluid circulation may be injected through the concentric passageway and returned through a bore selector oneway valve (84) to lift the proppants and to allow downward movement of the bore selector with, for example, coiled tubing, until aligning the guiding surface (87) of the bore selector (47 A) with the orifices (59) just below the radial passageway (75), to allow a larger volume of circulated fluid between member passageways (24, 25) to clear the proppant screened out.
- the bore selector (47 A) can be aligned with the next radial passageway and the process can be repeated.
- One possible arrangement is a bottom up-staged operation of circulating through coiled tubing, that can be engaged to the bore selector receptacles (45B of Figure 118), with a fluid that is injected down the concentric passageway (24), turning at the first open orifices in the innermost passageway (25) below the coiled tubing string sealing engagement with the bore selector receptacle (45B).
- Other possible arrangements include, for example, jointed tubing which can be used with pressure control at the surface, comprising, for example, a rotating head.
- FIG. 123 a diagrammatic elevation cross-sectional view of a manifold string (76L) embodiment, usable for a plurality of wells and well types, is shown.
- the Figure depicts a single conduit string member (51), on the right, placed with a managed pressure string to form a single injection and/or production concentric conduit (2) string member within the passageway through subterranean strata, engaged to a junction of wells (51 A) and further engagable to a manifold string (70) member with chamber junction crossovers (21), straddles (22) and plugs (25A) for forming the manifold string (76L) fluidly communicating between the subterranean proximal regions (below 1Y, 1W, IV, 1U, IT) and a wellhead (not shown), at the upper end of the single main bore (6).
- Concentric conduit string members (50, 51) can be installed with a managed pressure conduit assembly member, for becoming the inner (2) and (2A) outer concentric conduit
- Applicable well types can include substantially hydrocarbon and/or substantially water wells, for example, a right-hand produced hydrocarbon well can crossover to (33) the concentric passageway (24) of the left well, wherein produced (34) fluids are injected (31) downward in the left well to exit the end or enter a chamber junction crossover (21), with plugs (25 A) above and below for directing flow into the first annular space (55), contained by a cavern wall (1A) or a passageway through subterranean strata (52) of strata.
- the hydrocarbon fluid mixture can be separated into gas, liquid hydrocarbon, water and/or solids.
- the manifold string can be usable for production (34), taken through the concentric passageway (24) by an exit bore conduit from the first annular passageway (55) into (35) the innermost bore where it is produced upward.
- a substantially gas fluid mixture may be taken from the uppermost chamber junction manifold crossover (21), or varying specific gravity fluids of substantially gas or liquid hydrocarbon and/or water may be taken from other chamber junction manifold crossovers (21), between proximal regions (IT, 1U, IV, 1W, 1Y) through rearrangement of flow controlling device members (22, 25A).
- Still other applicable well types include, for example, substantially hydrocarbon wells where chamber junction manifold crossover members (21) can be usable to perform multi-stage fracture propagation operations to create fractures (18A) within proximal regions (IT, 1U, IV, 1W, 1Y), wherein pressures can be transmitted (28A) to the point of fracture propagation, and wherein proppants can be used to keep fractures open to flow, for example, gas from shale gas deposits or a fluid mixture from low permeability sandstone reservoirs, and whereby the right well may access other deposits, reservoirs or act as a disposal well for produced water.
- chamber junction manifold crossover members (21) can be usable to perform multi-stage fracture propagation operations to create fractures (18A) within proximal regions (IT, 1U, IV, 1W, 1Y), wherein pressures can be transmitted (28A) to the point of fracture propagation, and wherein proppants can be used to keep fractures open to flow, for example, gas from shale gas deposits or a
- Still other applicable well types include, for example, combinations of substantially hydrocarbon and substantially water wells producing high- temperature and pressure water from the right well or feeding water to a geothermal reservoir on the right well and producing steam, further directed to heat tar sands or cold viscous arctic reservoirs on the left side, which can be selectively accessed through chamber junction manifold crossover (21) members to place the heated water in one or more of the proximal regions (IT, 1U, IV, 1W, 1Y) to produce heated hydrocarbons from one or more of the remaining proximal regions.
- chamber junction manifold crossover (21) members to place the heated water in one or more of the proximal regions (IT, 1U, IV, 1W, 1Y) to produce heated hydrocarbons from one or more of the remaining proximal regions.
- Embodiments of the present invention provide a member set of combinable systems, apparatus and methods that enable any configuration or orientation of selectively controlled separate simultaneously flowing fluid mixture streams, of varying velocities, within one or more subterranean wells, that can extend from a single main bore and wellhead, to urge substantially hydrocarbon or substantially water fluid mixtures of liquids, gases, solids, or combinations thereof, to or from at least one proximal region, of at least one passageway through subterranean strata, to at least one more proximal region or to said wellhead, at the upper-end of said subterranean well, wherein fluid mixture flow streams may be injected or extracted.
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Abstract
Description
Claims
Priority Applications (18)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
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CA2794347A CA2794347C (en) | 2010-03-25 | 2011-03-01 | Manifold string for selectively controlling flowing fluid streams of varying velocities in wells from a single main bore |
BR112012025143A BR112012025143B1 (en) | 2008-12-19 | 2011-03-01 | barrel column to selectively control the speed of fluid flow currents in single main drilling wells and method of use |
MX2012011095A MX346017B (en) | 2010-03-25 | 2011-03-01 | Manifold string for selectively controlling flowing fluid streams of varying velocities in wells from a single main bore. |
AU2011229957A AU2011229957B2 (en) | 2010-03-25 | 2011-03-01 | Manifold string for selectively controlling flowing fluid streams of varying velocities in wells from a single main bore |
EP11759818.5A EP2550426B8 (en) | 2010-03-25 | 2011-03-01 | Manifold string for selectively controlling flowing fluid streams of varying velocities in wells from a single main bore |
US13/261,448 US9719311B2 (en) | 2009-06-23 | 2011-03-01 | Manifold string for selectivity controlling flowing fluid streams of varying velocities in wells from a single main bore |
RU2012145288/03A RU2556560C2 (en) | 2010-03-25 | 2011-03-01 | Pipe string system for selective regulation of fluid flows with variable speeds in wells forking from one common wellbore |
CN201180026054.XA CN103180544B (en) | 2010-03-25 | 2011-03-01 | Manifold string for selectively controlling different velocity flowing fluid streams in a well bore from a single main bore |
GB1104278.5A GB2479432B (en) | 2010-03-25 | 2011-03-15 | Manifold string for selectively controlling flowing fluid streams of varying velocities in wells from a single main bore |
GB1111482.4A GB2484166B (en) | 2010-07-05 | 2011-07-05 | Cable compatible rig-less operatable annuli engagable system for using and abandoning a subterranean well |
GB1121741.1A GB2486591B (en) | 2010-12-16 | 2011-12-16 | Rotary stick, slip and vibration reduction drilling stabilizes with hydrodynamic fluid bearings and homogenizers |
GB1121742.9A GB2487274B (en) | 2010-12-16 | 2011-12-16 | A space provision system using compression devices for the reallocation of resources to new technology, brownfield and greenfield developments |
GB1121743.7A GB2486592A (en) | 2010-12-16 | 2011-12-16 | Steering system for a down-hole shaft comprising a hydrodynamic bearing system |
GB1203649.7A GB2514075B (en) | 2011-03-01 | 2012-03-01 | High pressure large bore well conduit system |
US14/131,168 US9518443B2 (en) | 2009-07-06 | 2012-07-05 | Cable compatible rig-less operable annuli engagable system for using and abandoning a subterranean well |
US14/131,133 US9200504B2 (en) | 2010-07-05 | 2012-07-05 | Space provision system using compression devices for the reallocation of resourced to new technology, brownfield and greenfield developments |
PCT/US2012/000402 WO2013043217A2 (en) | 2010-06-22 | 2012-09-17 | Apparatus and method of concentric cement bonding operations before and after cementation |
US14/382,215 US9574404B2 (en) | 2011-03-01 | 2013-03-01 | High pressure large bore well conduit system |
Applications Claiming Priority (8)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
GBGB1004961.7 | 2010-03-25 | ||
GB1004961.7A GB2471354B (en) | 2009-06-23 | 2010-03-25 | Apparatus and methods for operating one or more solution mined storage wells through a single bore |
GBGB1010480.0 | 2010-06-22 | ||
GB1010480A GB2471385B (en) | 2009-06-23 | 2010-06-22 | Apparatus and methods for forming and using subterranean salt cavern |
GB1011290.2A GB2471760B (en) | 2009-07-06 | 2010-07-05 | Apparatus and methods for subterranean downhole cutting, displacement and sealing operations using cable conveyance. |
GBGB1011290.2 | 2010-07-05 | ||
GBGB1021787.5 | 2010-12-23 | ||
GB1021787.5A GB2475626B (en) | 2008-12-19 | 2010-12-23 | Managed pressure conduit systems and methods for boring and placing conduits within the subterranean strata |
Publications (1)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
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WO2011119198A1 true WO2011119198A1 (en) | 2011-09-29 |
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Family Applications (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
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PCT/US2011/000377 WO2011119198A1 (en) | 2008-12-19 | 2011-03-01 | Manifold string for selectively controlling flowing fluid streams of varying velocities in wells from a single main bore |
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Country | Link |
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CA (1) | CA2794346C (en) |
WO (1) | WO2011119198A1 (en) |
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