GB2383418A - Non-invasive detector for wells - Google Patents

Non-invasive detector for wells Download PDF

Info

Publication number
GB2383418A
GB2383418A GB0130549A GB0130549A GB2383418A GB 2383418 A GB2383418 A GB 2383418A GB 0130549 A GB0130549 A GB 0130549A GB 0130549 A GB0130549 A GB 0130549A GB 2383418 A GB2383418 A GB 2383418A
Authority
GB
United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
integrator
fed
detector circuitry
level setting
comparator
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Granted
Application number
GB0130549A
Other versions
GB0130549D0 (en
GB2383418B (en
Inventor
Antoni Miszewski
Simon Duckett
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Antech Ltd
Original Assignee
Antech Ltd
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Antech Ltd filed Critical Antech Ltd
Priority to GB0130549A priority Critical patent/GB2383418B/en
Publication of GB0130549D0 publication Critical patent/GB0130549D0/en
Priority to US10/321,824 priority patent/US6762601B2/en
Publication of GB2383418A publication Critical patent/GB2383418A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of GB2383418B publication Critical patent/GB2383418B/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01VGEOPHYSICS; GRAVITATIONAL MEASUREMENTS; DETECTING MASSES OR OBJECTS; TAGS
    • G01V3/00Electric or magnetic prospecting or detecting; Measuring magnetic field characteristics of the earth, e.g. declination, deviation
    • G01V3/08Electric or magnetic prospecting or detecting; Measuring magnetic field characteristics of the earth, e.g. declination, deviation operating with magnetic or electric fields produced or modified by objects or geological structures or by detecting devices
    • G01V3/081Electric or magnetic prospecting or detecting; Measuring magnetic field characteristics of the earth, e.g. declination, deviation operating with magnetic or electric fields produced or modified by objects or geological structures or by detecting devices the magnetic field is produced by the objects or geological structures
    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E21EARTH DRILLING; MINING
    • E21BEARTH DRILLING, e.g. DEEP DRILLING; OBTAINING OIL, GAS, WATER, SOLUBLE OR MELTABLE MATERIALS OR A SLURRY OF MINERALS FROM WELLS
    • E21B47/00Survey of boreholes or wells
    • E21B47/09Locating or determining the position of objects in boreholes or wells, e.g. the position of an extending arm; Identifying the free or blocked portions of pipes
    • E21B47/092Locating or determining the position of objects in boreholes or wells, e.g. the position of an extending arm; Identifying the free or blocked portions of pipes by detecting magnetic anomalies

Abstract

Detector circuitry for detecting magnetic field disturbances resulting from the movement of equipment 17 through a pipe 10 of magnetic material, the detector circuitry comprising a difference circuit 24 fed with the outputs of two longitudinally spaced sensor means 13,15 via respective DC blocking means 22,23, a saturating difference amplifier 30 feeding an integrator 33 and fed with the outputs of the difference circuit and the integrator, and indicating means 50,51 fed from the integrator. The detector circuitry may also including level setting means 40 and a comparator 44 fed with the outputs of the integrator and the level setting means and feeding the indicating means. A second comparator 43 may be connected in parallel with the first comparator and fed with the inverse of the output of the level setting means and the output of the integrator.

Description

238341 8
Non-Invasive Detectors for Wells 5 The present invention relates to noninvasive detectors for detecting the presence of pieces of equipment through the walls of pipes, particularly steel pipes, typically pipes that are used in oil wells and the like. More specifically, it relates to the circuitry of such detectors.
lo In the oil industry, it is common to retain moving equipment inside a pressure vessel. An example is a downhole instrument which is retrieved from a well through a riser. The problem is that the pressure vessel forming the top of the riser is usually made of steel, and this stops the operator of the equipment from seeing what is going on because he cannot see through steel. Accordingly, some Is sort of sensor is required, so that the equipment operator can detect what is going on inside the pressure vessel without having to open it. This has safety benefits because it may prevent an accident and it has operational benefits because it may allow the operator to position equipment more accurately.
so Various sensing devices have been proposed. The traditional sensing device is a sensing coil which encircles the riser, and detects magnets attached to equipment which may be passing up or down the well. As an alternative to sensing coils, other sensing devices can be used. Thus US 5 323 856 (Halliburton) suggests a variety of detectors, such as the use of Hall effect, fibre as optic, or Faraday effect detectors.
US 3 843 923 (Stewart & Stevenson) is a more detailed example of the use of Hall effect devices. To detect the movement of a pipe joint through a pipe, a locator comprises a ring magnet with a pair of detector rings mounted one on each so side (ie one above the ring magnet and one below it). Each detector ring comprises a set of four Hall effect devices mounted around the pipe. The Hall
effect devices of a set have their outputs summed, and the sums of the two sets are differenced. Further, our own earlier GB patent application no. 01.22431.0 (filed 17 5 September 2001) describes the use of two pairs of Hall effect devices, one pair being located opposite each other on the riser and the other pair being similarly located opposite each other and longitudinally below the first pair. This patent application notes that with sufficient sensitivity, devices can be detected passing through the well even though they do not have magnets attached to or incorporated lo in them, provided that they use magnetizable material and their passage produces a sufficient change in the ambient magnetic field (ie the held due to drilling rig
steelwork, the earth's field, etc).
The general object of the present invention is to provide improved detector circuitry suitable for use with oil well pipes and risers.
According to the invention, there is provided detector circuitry for detecting magnetic field disturbances resulting from the movement of equipment through a
pipe of magnetic material, the detector circuitry comprising a difference circuit fed no with the outputs of two longitudinally spaced sensor means via respective DC blocking means, a saturating difference amplifier feeding an integrator and fed with the outputs of the difference circuit and the integrator, and indicating means fed from the integrator.
25 It may also be desirable for the sensor electronics to incorporate a threshold level setting. This can be used as a comparator signal to give a warning when a change in signal level is detected. Also, by having a threshold level that can be adjusted, it is possible to avoid detections that may result from sensor or system noise. A second comparator may be connected in parallel with the first and fed lo with inverse or reversed inputs, so that signals of both polarities can be detected.
The indicating means may include matching means.
Detector circuitry embodying the invention will now be described, by way of example, with reference to the drawing, which is a block diagram of the circuitry. Referring to the drawing, a well head riser lO has attached to it two sensor assemblies 11 and 12 which are spaced apart vertically as shown. Sensor assembly 11 has a sensor 13; sensor assembly 12 has a sensors 15. Each sensor is preferably a Hall effect, having a pair of outputs across which the output signal lo appears. The outputs of each sensors are fed to respective difference amplifiers 20 and 21 as shown.
Generally, the equipment to be detected will be mounted on a continuous tubing 17 passing through the pipe or riser 10, and this tubing will have an effect 15 on the sensors. In particular, if the tubing moves from side to side in the pipe, so that its distance from the sensors varies, that will induce a signal from the sensors.
The use of two sensors spaced longitudinally along the pipe results in similar signals from both sensors. As discussed below, the signals from the two sensor assemblies are differenced; this effectively cancels out such signals, so that the so system is insensitive to transverse oscillations of the tubing.
If desired, each sensor assembly 11 and 12 can include a plurality of sensors, such as two sensors 13 and 14 in sensor assembly 11 and two sensors 15 and 16 in sensor assembly 12. The sensors in each sensor assembly are equally as spaced around the assembly. This is desirable if the diameter of the pipe is large relative to the diameter of the tubing 17, so that transverse movement of the tubing can produce large variations in signal level. With the use of a plurality of sensors in each assembly, movement of the tubing away from one sensor will bring it nearer to the opposite sensor. The outputs of the sensors are summed, producing so a more consistent signal level from any equipment attached to the tubing.
The two summing amplifiers 20 and 21 feed respective DC blocking circuits (capacitors) 22 and 23, which in turn feed a difference amplifier 24, the output of which is further amplified by an amplifier 25. The capacitors 22and 23 act as high pass filters, removing the effects of static signals and long-term slow 5 drift.
The amplifier 24 feeds a comparator 30 which feeds an integrator circuit 33 comprising an amplifier 31 with a capacitor 32 connected across it as shown. The output of the integrator 33 is fed back to the other input of the difference amplifier lo 30. This feedback results in the long-term output of the integrator matching the steady-state output of amplifier 24, so producing a neutral or zero output from the amplifier 30. Any longterm offset of the amplifier 24 is thus automatically compensated for.
If equipment producing a magnetic field change passes the sensor
assemblies, the output of amplifier 24 will change significantly. This will drive the output of amplifier 30 to its limit. The integrator 33 will ramp up for as long as the output of amplifier 24 lasts. The integrator thus effectively measures the length of the signal produced by the equipment in the pipe. Short pulses, so resulting from noise, etc will effectively be ignored.
The integrator 33 feeds a switch 41 which is also fed with an adjustable reference level from a level setting circuit 40. A meter 42 can be connected, by means of the switch, to either the output of the integrator 33 or the level setting 25 circuit 40 to allow the level set by the level setting circuit 40 and the output of the integrator 33 to be measured.
The integrator circuit 33 also feeds a difference amplifier 43 which is also fed with the output of an adjustable level setting circuit 40. Amplifier 43 feeds : o (via an OR gate 46) an audio alarm 50 and a visual LED alarm 51, which both
operate when the output of amplifier 43 goes positive, ie when the output of the integrator 33 exceeds the level set by the level setting circuit 40.
The OR gate 46 also feeds a relay latching circuit. A relay coil 52, fed by s the OR gate, controls a relay contact 53, which, when it closes, holds the relay on.
The audio and visual alarms are therefore latched on. A switch 54 can be opened by the operator to release the relay latch.
A second difference amplifier 44 is also fed, in the reverse senses, with the lo output of integrator circuit 33 and the output of the level setting circuit 40 via an inverter 45. The amplifiers 43 and 44 both feed an OR gate 46. The circuitry is therefore sensitive to both positive and negative signals from the sensors 13 and 15. A negative signal drives the integrator negatively, and if the signal is long enough, the integrator output will operate the alarms via the difference amplifier i5 44.
As an alternative, the outputs of the difference amplifiers 43 and 44 can be processed to detect signals of opposite polarity occurring with an appropriate time interval between them. This technique will detect the passage of equipment past no the two sensor assemblies in succession, which will occur if the tubing 17 is being withdrawn from the well at a suitable speed, carrying the equipment with it.
The present arrangement of sensors allows the signals from the sensors (eg as 13 and 15) that are longitudinally spaced along the pipe to be subtracted from each other in the signal processing. This serves to enhance the response that is detected as the equipment passes inside the pipe. Further, in larger pipe systems, the signals detected by the different sensors with the equipment in a different radial position in the riser 10 may vary significantly. The use of a plurality of so sensors in each sensor assembly allows the signals from all the sensors at the same
l level around the outer pipe (eg sensors 13 and 14) to be added together to compensate for this effect.
The present detector circuit thus detects, with high efficiency, the magnetic s field changes that occur when equipment moves inside the pressure vessel. In
some cases it may be possible to put a magnetic marker of the enclosed equipment. In other cases, detection may have to be achieved using the residual magnetic field of the enclosed equipment. The technique can tolerate significant
background magnetic fields that can occur on large metal structures such as oil
o rigs.

Claims (6)

  1. Claims
    s 1 Detector circuitry for detecting magnetic field disturbances resulting from
    the movement of equipment through a pipe of magnetic material, the detector circuitry comprising a difference circuit fed with the outputs of two longitudinally spaced sensor means via respective DC blocking means, a saturating difference amplifier feeding an integrator and fed with the outputs of the difference circuit to and the integrator, and indicating means fed from the integrator.
  2. 2 Detector circuitry according to claim 1 including level setting means and a comparator fed with the outputs of the integrator and the level setting means and feeding the indicating means.
  3. 3 Detector circuitry according to either previous claim including a second comparator connected in parallel with the first comparator and fed with the inverse of the output of the level setting means and the output of the integrator.
    20
  4. 4 Detector circuitry according to any previous claim including latching circuitry fed from the comparator.
  5. 5 Detector circuitry according to either previous claim including meter means connectable to the level setting means and the integrator via switch means.
  6. 6 Detector circuitry substantially as herein described with reference to the drawing. 7 Any feature of novelty or combination thereof within the meaning of 30 Article 4H of the International Convention (Paris Convention).
GB0130549A 2001-12-20 2001-12-20 Non-invasive detectors for wells Expired - Lifetime GB2383418B (en)

Priority Applications (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB0130549A GB2383418B (en) 2001-12-20 2001-12-20 Non-invasive detectors for wells
US10/321,824 US6762601B2 (en) 2001-12-20 2002-12-17 Non-invasive detectors for wells

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB0130549A GB2383418B (en) 2001-12-20 2001-12-20 Non-invasive detectors for wells

Publications (3)

Publication Number Publication Date
GB0130549D0 GB0130549D0 (en) 2002-02-06
GB2383418A true GB2383418A (en) 2003-06-25
GB2383418B GB2383418B (en) 2005-09-14

Family

ID=9928085

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
GB0130549A Expired - Lifetime GB2383418B (en) 2001-12-20 2001-12-20 Non-invasive detectors for wells

Country Status (2)

Country Link
US (1) US6762601B2 (en)
GB (1) GB2383418B (en)

Families Citing this family (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DK2458138T3 (en) * 2010-11-24 2019-01-21 Welltec As BOREHOLE SYSTEM WITH A WIRELESS DEVICE
US9416649B2 (en) * 2014-01-17 2016-08-16 General Electric Company Method and system for determination of pipe location in blowout preventers
US10294777B2 (en) 2015-07-27 2019-05-21 Cudd Pressure Control, Inc. Steering tool system
CN106093131A (en) * 2016-06-16 2016-11-09 太原理工大学 A kind of paste filling pipe plugging monitoring device and method
US11169294B2 (en) * 2019-08-16 2021-11-09 Phoenix America, Inc. Narrow window magnetic proximity sensor

Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB1602065A (en) * 1978-05-16 1981-11-04 Monitoring Systems Inc Method and apparatus for counting pipe joints
US4472680A (en) * 1982-01-29 1984-09-18 Dresser Industries, Inc. Circuit for processing electrical signals generated by a casing collar indicator instrument
US4859941A (en) * 1987-03-18 1989-08-22 Sprague Electric Company Proximity selectro with integral magnet, pole-piece plate and pair of magnetic transducers
GB2306657A (en) * 1995-10-18 1997-05-07 Tuijl Bert Van Wellhead tool detector

Family Cites Families (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3525040A (en) * 1967-10-23 1970-08-18 Data Measurements Corp Statistical voltmeter for analyzing signal amplitude distribution
US3644825A (en) * 1969-12-31 1972-02-22 Texas Instruments Inc Magnetic detection system for detecting movement of an object utilizing signals derived from two orthogonal pickup coils
US3843922A (en) * 1972-07-05 1974-10-22 Q Bit Corp Television preamplifier power source
US3863235A (en) * 1973-02-20 1975-01-28 Rockwell International Corp Phase sensitive position pickoff device
US4308497A (en) * 1977-07-08 1981-12-29 Texscan Corporation Peak level detector
US6084403A (en) * 1997-03-31 2000-07-04 Cedar Bluff Group Corporation Slim-hole collar locator and casing inspection tool with high-strength pressure housing

Patent Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB1602065A (en) * 1978-05-16 1981-11-04 Monitoring Systems Inc Method and apparatus for counting pipe joints
US4472680A (en) * 1982-01-29 1984-09-18 Dresser Industries, Inc. Circuit for processing electrical signals generated by a casing collar indicator instrument
US4859941A (en) * 1987-03-18 1989-08-22 Sprague Electric Company Proximity selectro with integral magnet, pole-piece plate and pair of magnetic transducers
GB2306657A (en) * 1995-10-18 1997-05-07 Tuijl Bert Van Wellhead tool detector

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
GB0130549D0 (en) 2002-02-06
US6762601B2 (en) 2004-07-13
US20030117133A1 (en) 2003-06-26
GB2383418B (en) 2005-09-14

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US6768299B2 (en) Downhole magnetic-field based feature detector
US20030052670A1 (en) Non-invasive detectors for wells
CA2425565C (en) Magnetic sensor system useful for detecting tool joints in a downhold tubing string
CA2369213C (en) Casing joint locator methods and apparatus
US6084403A (en) Slim-hole collar locator and casing inspection tool with high-strength pressure housing
US3843923A (en) Well pipe joint locator using a ring magnet and two sets of hall detectors surrounding the pipe
US7095223B2 (en) Method of locating an anomaly in a tubular member in a well
CA1287387C (en) Magnetic freepoint sensor utilizing spaced hall effect devices
NO940629L (en) System and method for detection in oil or gas wells
GB2100442A (en) Well casing detector system and method
US6762601B2 (en) Non-invasive detectors for wells
CA2234202A1 (en) Method and apparatus for detecting, locating and resolving buried pipelines, cased wells and other ferrous objects
DE59405838D1 (en) Devices and methods for recognizing metal objects
KR101670427B1 (en) High sensitive metal detecting apparatus with noise immunity
GB2306657A (en) Wellhead tool detector
US3007109A (en) Apparatus for detecting casing joints
GB2405213A (en) Downhole magnetic field based feature detector
US6597177B1 (en) Through casing resistivity measurement in permanently installed downhole production environment
ATE87115T1 (en) DEVICE FOR DETECTING A MAGNETIC MEDIUM.
JPS62190412A (en) Horizontal position measuring instrument for underground drilling machine
JPS6423512A (en) Protective device of superconducting apparatus
SU924356A1 (en) Method for detecting flaws in casing pipes
WO2019045229A1 (en) Metallic foreign substance detection apparatus
JPS62250358A (en) Information communicator between inside and outside of pipeline
NL7805649A (en) Pipe joint locator, counter and displacement calculator - has several sensors which develop signals passed to logical network and has plus and minus counters with numeric read=out display

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
PE20 Patent expired after termination of 20 years

Expiry date: 20211219