Method for increasing subsea accumulator volume
09885221 ยท 2018-02-06
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F04B9/08
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
E21B23/0419
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
International classification
E21B29/08
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
E21B34/14
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
E21B43/12
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
E21B33/06
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
Abstract
In a subsea system where subsea devices are operated using a pressurized fluid from one or more accumulators, the method of providing flow of pressurized fluid to operate a device which is greater than the flow from an accumulator providing the flow, comprising discharging the accumulator to drive one or more motors, driving one or more pumps by the one or more motors, the one or more pumps having a larger displacement than the one or more motors such that the one or more pump outputs a greater volume of fluid than the motor consumes, and delivering the output of the one or more pumps to operated the subsea device.
Claims
1. A method for a subsea blow out preventer stack having an accumulator and a shear ram for drilling oil and gas wells utilizing pressurized fluid as a power supply to activate said shear ram, comprising: providing said subsea blow out preventer stack having said accumulator in communication with one or more motors and said one or more motors in communication with one or more pumps and said one or more pumps in communication with said shear ram, storing in said accumulator said pressurized fluid at a first pressure and at a first volume, using said first pressure and said first volume from said accumulator to generate a second larger volume than said first volume at a second pressure lower than said first pressure via said motor and said one or more pumps, and thereby increasing the volume available to activate said shear ram while maintaining said second pressure at a level high enough to activate said shear ram.
2. The method of claim 1 further comprising using said first pressure and at said first volume to drive one or more motors to drive one or more pumps to generate said second pressure and said second volume.
3. The method of claim 2, further comprising said one or more pumps have variable displacement.
4. The method of claim 3, further comprising said variable displacement of said one or more pumps is a function of the inverse of an output pressure of said one or more pumps.
5. The method of claim 2, further comprising said one or more of said one or more motors is variable displacement.
6. The method of claim 5, further comprising said variable displacement of said one or more motors is an inverse function of an output pressure of said one or more motors.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
(13) Referring now to
(14) Below the drilling riser 22 is a flex joint 30, lower marine riser package 32, lower blowout preventer stack 34 and wellhead 36 landed on the seafloor 38.
(15) Below the wellhead 36, it can be seen that a hole was drilled for a first casing string 40, that first casing string 40 was landed and cemented in place, a hole drilled through the first string for a second string, the second string 42 cemented in place, and a hole is being drilled for a third casing string by drill bit 44 on drill string 46.
(16) The lower Blowout Preventer stack 34 generally comprises a lower hydraulic connector for connecting to the subsea wellhead system 36, usually 4 or 5 ram style Blowout Preventers, an annular preventer, and an upper mandrel for connection by the connector on the lower marine riser package 32, which are not individually shown but are well known in the art.
(17) Below outside fluid line 26 is a choke and kill (C&K) connector 50 and a pipe 52 which is generally illustrative of a choke or kill line. Pipe 52 goes down to valves 54 and 56 which provide flow to or from the central bore of the blowout preventer stack as may be appropriate from time to time. Typically a kill line will enter the bore of the Blowout Preventers below the lowest ram and has the general function of pumping heavy fluid to the well to overburden the pressure in the bore or to kill the pressure. The general implication of this is that the heavier mud cannot be circulated into the well bore, but rather must be forced into the formations. A choke line will typically enter the well bore above the lowest ram and is generally intended to allow circulation in order to circulate heavier mud into the well to regain pressure control of the well. Normal circulation is down the drill string 46, through the drill bit 44.
(18) In normal drilling circulation the mud pumps 60 take drilling mud 62 from tank 64. The drilling mud will be pumped up a standpipe 66 and down the upper end 68 of the drill string 46. It will be pumped down the drill string 46, out the drill bit 44, and return up the annular area 70 between the outside of the drill string 46 and the bore of the hole being drilled, up the bore of the casing 42, through the subsea wellhead system 36, the lower blowout preventer stack 34, the lower marine riser package 32, up the drilling riser 22, out a bell nipple 72 and back into the mud tank 64.
(19) During situations in which an abnormally high pressure from the formation has entered the well bore, the thin walled central pipe 24 is typically not able to withstand the pressures involved. Rather than making the wall thickness of the relatively large bore drilling riser thick enough to withstand the pressure, the flow is diverted to a choke line or outside fluid line 26. It is more economic to have a relatively thick wall in a small pipe to withstand the higher pressures than to have the proportionately thick wall in the larger riser pipe.
(20) When higher pressures are to be contained, one of the annular or ram Blowout Preventers are closed around the drill pipe and the flow coming up the annular area around the drill pipe is diverted out through choke valve 54 into the pipe 52. The flow passes up through C&K connector 50, up pipe 26 which is attached to the outer diameter of the central pipe 24, through choking means illustrated at 74, and back into the mud tanks 64.
(21) On the opposite side of the drilling riser 22 is shown a cable or hose 28 coming across a sheave 80 from a reel 82 on the vessel 84. The cable or hose 28 is shown characteristically entering the top of the lower marine riser package. These cables typically carry hydraulic, electrical, multiplex electrical, or fiber optic signals. Typically there are at least two of these systems for redundancy, which are characteristically painted yellow and blue. As the cables or hoses 28 enter the top of the lower marine riser package 32, they typically enter the top of a control pod to deliver their supply or signals. Hydraulic supply is delivered to a series of accumulators located on the lower marine riser package 32 or the lower Blowout Preventer stack 34 to store hydraulic fluid under pressure until needed.
(22) Referring now to
(23) Ram type blowout preventer 104 has pistons 110 and 112 which move rams 114 and 116 into central bore 118. Fluid flow into line 120 will move the pistons and rams forward to seal off bore 118 with return flow going out line 124. Fluid flow into line 124 will move the pistons and rams out off bore 118 with return flow going out line 120.
(24) Control pod 130 receives electric and communication signals from the surface along line 132 and receives hydraulic supply from line 134, and exhausts hydraulic fluid to sea along line 136. Accumulator 140 receives pressurized hydraulic supply from the surface along line 142 and supplies the control pod 130 when appropriate. Electro-hydraulic valve 138 receives hydraulic supply from accumulator 140 and directs the hydraulic supply to open or close the rams of blowout preventer 104
(25) Referring now to
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(34) Referring back to
(35) The same benefit can be obtained if the motor is the variable displacement device and the pumps are fixed displacement. The volume output of the pumps is generally inversely proportionate to the required pressure to operate the device to be operated.
(36) The previous examples have shown how to increase the flow volume from an accumulator to an operated device. Alternately, the flow to the device can be decreased in order to achieve a higher pressure.
(37) The particular embodiments disclosed above are illustrative only, as the invention may be modified and practiced in different but equivalent manners apparent to those skilled in the art having the benefit of the teachings herein. Furthermore, no limitations are intended to the details of construction or design herein shown, other than as described in the claims below. It is therefore evident that the particular embodiments disclosed above may be altered or modified and all such variations are considered within the scope and spirit of the invention. Accordingly, the protection sought herein is as set forth in the claims below.