WO2011131504A1 - Method and device for sealing a well by means of a core plug, plug for implementing the method, and extractor tool designed to remove it - Google Patents

Method and device for sealing a well by means of a core plug, plug for implementing the method, and extractor tool designed to remove it Download PDF

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Publication number
WO2011131504A1
WO2011131504A1 PCT/EP2011/055616 EP2011055616W WO2011131504A1 WO 2011131504 A1 WO2011131504 A1 WO 2011131504A1 EP 2011055616 W EP2011055616 W EP 2011055616W WO 2011131504 A1 WO2011131504 A1 WO 2011131504A1
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WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
plug
well
mouth
wall
mandrel
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/EP2011/055616
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Jean-Louis Saltel
Original Assignee
Saltel Industries
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 Saltel Industries filed Critical Saltel Industries
Priority to US13/642,700 priority Critical patent/US9322241B2/en
Publication of WO2011131504A1 publication Critical patent/WO2011131504A1/en

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Classifications

    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E21EARTH OR ROCK DRILLING; MINING
    • E21BEARTH OR ROCK DRILLING; OBTAINING OIL, GAS, WATER, SOLUBLE OR MELTABLE MATERIALS OR A SLURRY OF MINERALS FROM WELLS
    • E21B33/00Sealing or packing boreholes or wells
    • E21B33/10Sealing or packing boreholes or wells in the borehole
    • E21B33/12Packers; Plugs
    • E21B33/1204Packers; Plugs permanent; drillable
    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E21EARTH OR ROCK DRILLING; MINING
    • E21BEARTH OR ROCK DRILLING; OBTAINING OIL, GAS, WATER, SOLUBLE OR MELTABLE MATERIALS OR A SLURRY OF MINERALS FROM WELLS
    • E21B33/00Sealing or packing boreholes or wells
    • E21B33/10Sealing or packing boreholes or wells in the borehole
    • E21B33/13Methods or devices for cementing, for plugging holes, crevices or the like
    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E21EARTH OR ROCK DRILLING; MINING
    • E21BEARTH OR ROCK DRILLING; OBTAINING OIL, GAS, WATER, SOLUBLE OR MELTABLE MATERIALS OR A SLURRY OF MINERALS FROM WELLS
    • E21B33/00Sealing or packing boreholes or wells
    • E21B33/10Sealing or packing boreholes or wells in the borehole
    • E21B33/12Packers; Plugs
    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E21EARTH OR ROCK DRILLING; MINING
    • E21BEARTH OR ROCK DRILLING; OBTAINING OIL, GAS, WATER, SOLUBLE OR MELTABLE MATERIALS OR A SLURRY OF MINERALS FROM WELLS
    • E21B33/00Sealing or packing boreholes or wells
    • E21B33/10Sealing or packing boreholes or wells in the borehole
    • E21B33/12Packers; Plugs
    • E21B33/1208Packers; Plugs characterised by the construction of the sealing or packing means
    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E21EARTH OR ROCK DRILLING; MINING
    • E21BEARTH OR ROCK DRILLING; OBTAINING OIL, GAS, WATER, SOLUBLE OR MELTABLE MATERIALS OR A SLURRY OF MINERALS FROM WELLS
    • E21B33/00Sealing or packing boreholes or wells
    • E21B33/10Sealing or packing boreholes or wells in the borehole
    • E21B33/13Methods or devices for cementing, for plugging holes, crevices or the like
    • E21B33/134Bridging plugs

Definitions

  • the present invention concerns a method and a device for sealing a well by means of a core plug.
  • well conventionally means, in the present description and the claims that follow, a well providing water or hydrocarbons (especially petroleum or natural gas) whether drilled with rough walls or lined with a casing, as well as a pipeline used to transport fluid .
  • the well is vertical and straight .
  • the well can be curved, sinuous, oblique or even horizontal.
  • the objective of the invention is to seal the well at a given depth zone, for example to abandon it (at the end of production) or to isolate the lower area from the rest of the well.
  • This seal must be liquid tight.
  • the tool membrane after positioning and radial expansion, the tool membrane must remain firmly and tightly pressed against the well wall. For example, if it is an inflatable bladder, a sufficient inflation pressure must be permanently maintained in the well to prevent the packer from returning to its initial shape.
  • the principle on which the present invention is based consists of using a metal plug, of stainless steel, for example, this plug comprising a tubular wall part (generally annular sleeve) , whose diameter is slightly smaller than that of the well, and a bottom wall part (transverse, or approximately transverse with regard to the sleeve axis) of one piece with this tubular wall .
  • a metal plug of stainless steel, for example, this plug comprising a tubular wall part (generally annular sleeve) , whose diameter is slightly smaller than that of the well, and a bottom wall part (transverse, or approximately transverse with regard to the sleeve axis) of one piece with this tubular wall .
  • the plug has an open end, called "mouth”.
  • the plug is introduced into it axially, with its bottom wall turned down, and it is positioned in the well at the desired depth.
  • the plug is inflated by injecting a liquid at high pressure so that the tubular wall part of the plug is expanded radially beyond its elastic limit, coming to press firmly and tightly against the well wall by a crimping effect.
  • the bottom wall part then serves as a partition between the lower parts and the upper parts of the well.
  • This method is inexpensive and easy to implement.
  • the device of the invention comprises an apparatus that allows lowering, properly positioning and inflating the plug by means of a high-pressure liquid, and that can be removed after the plug has been positioned and expanded.
  • a high-pressure liquid hydroforming
  • the sealing system that is described therein comprises a plug 11a of ductile metal that has a tubular wall that can be radially expanded beyond its elastic limit, against the well wall, as well as a bottom wall that can then seal the well.
  • the plug is deformed by means of an explosive charge 12 that is positioned inside the plug to be expanded, and not by introduction of a high-pressure liquid inside this plug. While a hydraulic pressure is effectively produced inside the plug, this results from exploding the charge, which generates a pressure in the liquid column (of mud in this case) present in the well, as is explained on page 3, left column, lines 27-38 of document US 2, 214, 226.
  • the invention aims to improve the technique according to the prior art by better controlling the deformation of the plug.
  • the invention therefore concerns, in a first aspect, a method for sealing a well by means of a plug of ductile metal, which comprises a tubular wall part whose diameter is slightly smaller than that of the well, and a bottom wall part connected to this tubular wall part, said plug having an open end forming a mouth turned up and its bottom wall part turned down, and it is positioned in the well at the desired depth, after which the plug is inflated by injecting a high-pressure liquid into it via its mouth so that its tubular wall part expands radially beyond its elastic limit and comes to press firmly and tightly against the wall of the well by a crimping effect, while its bottom wall part serves as a sealing partition, forming a tight barrier between the lower and upper parts of the well that it separates.
  • a plug is used that is provided internally with an axial mandrel that connects its open end forming the mouth to its bottom wall, this mandrel being pierced with channels that allow the injection of high-pressure liquid inside the plug via the mouth and via these channels.
  • the plug is introduced and positioned in the well by means of a hollow rod that is provided with an axial channel and is connected tightly to the mouth, this rod being maneuvered from the head of the well, and the high-pressure liquid is injected inside said plug from the head of the well via said channel, to inflate and expand it;
  • the hollow rod is disconnected from the crimped plug and it is removed by axially traction;
  • a liquid curable cement is poured, forming a second barrier, over the crimped plug; - this cement is poured into the well from the well head via the channel of said hollow rod;
  • the liquid is kept at high pressure inside the crimped cap .
  • the invention concerns a metal core plug for sealing a well.
  • This core plug for sealing a well according to a method that consists of introducing this plug axially into the well, with its mouth turned up and its bottom wall part turned down, and positioning it in the well at the desired depth, after which the plug is inflated by injecting a high-pressure liquid via its mouth so that its tubular wall part expands radially beyond its elastic limit and comes to press firmly and tightly against the well wall by a crimping effect, while its bottom wall part serves as a sealing partition, forming a tight barrier between the lower parts and the upper parts of the well that it separates, this plug having the general shape of a bottle whose mouth corresponds to the bottleneck,
  • said axial mandrel is attached to the plug wall at its upper and lower ends so that it plays the role of a spacer that can impede the shortening of the plug along the axial direction during its radial expansion;
  • the axial mandrel is attached to the plug wall by its upper end only, while its lower end has a cylindrical bulge serving as the bottom wall for the plug, its lower portion sliding freely and tightly on said cylindrical bulge, or that said mandrel is attached to the plug wall by its lower end only, this end having a cylindrical bulge serving as the bottom wall for the plug, the upper part of the plug sliding freely and tightly along said mandrel, so as to be able to shorten naturally along the axial direction during its expansion in the radial direction;
  • tubular wall part is provided externally with at least one annular gasket of flexible and elastic material, that can be crushed to press intimately against the well wall after crimping, and/or metal pins that can at least partially penetrate into the well wall;
  • this base with hooking profile is made up of the upper part of the mandrel
  • said lower end part is provided with a small axial pushrod that can induce opening of the check valve when the tool is lowered axially into the well and that its lower end part comes to be supported against said base, so that the high-pressure liquid can escape the crimped plug.
  • a piston and cylinder suction system designed to automatically generate a vacuum inside the crimped plug under the effect of the axial traction exerted upward on the shaft, in view of extracting this plug.
  • the invention concerns a tool for extracting a core plug, after the plug has been crimped into a well, the upper part forming the mouth of the plug having a base with a hooking profile as indicated above.
  • This tool has a rod for axial handling whose lower end part is provided with a set of articulated hooks that can automatically grip said base when the tool is lowered axially into the well so that the crimped plug is then extracted from the well by upward axial traction.
  • This tool can be designed to allow the extraction of a plug whose mouth is provided with a check valve that can impede the escape of high-pressure liquid from the plug after crimping.
  • the lower end part of its handling rod is provided with a small axial pushrod that can induce opening of the check valve when the tool is lowered axially into the well and its lower end part comes to be supported against said base, so that high- pressure liquid can escape the crimped plug.
  • Such a tool is advantageously provided with a piston and cylinder suction system designed to automatically generate a vacuum inside the crimped plug under the effect of the axial traction exerted upward on the shaft, in view of extracting this plug.
  • the invention relates to a set made up of a core plug and its extraction tool such as described above .
  • FIG. 1 to 5 are axial schematic views illustrating the main implementation steps of the method according to the state of the art
  • FIG. 6 shows a core plug provided with annular gaskets
  • FIG. 7 and 8 show two variants of the plug provided with a central mandrel, according to the invention.
  • FIG. 9 shows the method applied to a plug provided with a check valve, which can keep it inflated after expansion
  • FIG. 10 and 11 show the structure and illustrate the functioning of a "fishing" tool used to extract such a plug.
  • the sealing plug is designated 1; we wish to position it in a well with "rough" wall B , of vertical axis Z - Z ' , at a depth H with regard to ground level A (where the well head is found) .
  • Plug 1 is roughly bottle-shaped, comprising a cylindrical bottleneck, or mouth, 10, a cylindrical body of greater diameter 12 and a flat bottom 14.
  • Bottleneck 10 is connected to body 12 by a tapering part 11, while body 12 is connected to bottom 14 by a rounded area 13.
  • the outer diameter of body 12 is slightly less than the diameter of well wall B .
  • plug 1 is in one piece, of stainless steel, with a wall thickness substantially thinner than its diameter.
  • the device for positioning plug 1 comprises a hollow cylindrical rod 2, pierced with a coaxial central channel 20.
  • the diameter of this rod is notably smaller than that of the diameter of well wall B.
  • Tubular rod 2 is, for example of the "CT” (coil tubing) type, meaning a very long rod unwound from a roll, or the "DP" (drill pipe) type, meaning a long rod formed by a series of rod sections screwed end to end.
  • CT coil tubing
  • DP drill pipe
  • HP high-pressure
  • Rod 2 also has a liquid circulation valve 3, which valve can be opened as needed to connect channel 20 and the inside of the well; this type of valve, which allows controlling the well during the descent, as well as the means for controlling the opening or closing, are well known in themselves.
  • valve 3 is open and arrows i symbolize the injection of sludge of appropriate density into the well via channel 20 during lowering F of rod 2.
  • System 4 can be designed to induce breakage of the connection by applying a traction force beyond a given threshold and/or by applying an overpressure.
  • This system does not prevent the communication (tight) of channel 20 with inner space E of plug 1.
  • rod 2 has been lowered to desired depth H, so that plug 1 is positioned with regard to the area to be sealed.
  • Valve 3 is shut.
  • This pressure P is chosen to be sufficiently high to induce inflation of plug 1 and radial expansion of its main cylindrical part, whose wall comes to press firmly against well wall B ( Figure 3) .
  • the material is deformed beyond its elastic limit.
  • connection system 4 of which one part 4a remains attached to the end of the rod and the other part 4b to the neck of the plug.
  • connection can also be broken by a system sensitive to overpressure (known in itself) .
  • Bottom 14' of plug 1' thus crimped then serves as sealing partition for the well, conforming to the objective sought, playing a barrier role between the parts of the well located above and below the plug.
  • the injection can be done immediately after the plug is crimped and the shaft disconnected, without having to remove it from the well.
  • the constituent metal of the plug is obviously chosen sufficiently ductile to be able to be deformed without breaking beyond its elastic limit under the conditions of use, while being sufficiently resistant to the mechanical and physicochemical stresses that it must undergo after positioning.
  • the width of its bottom and/or its bottleneck may be different, in particular larger, than that of its cylindrical body, since they do not need to be deformed to seal the well.
  • the metal in question is easily machined, so that it is possible to eventually drill plug 1' if necessary (as well as cement C , if applicable) in order to re-connect the parts of the well located above and below the plug.
  • plug wall 12 is coated on the outside with a collection of gaskets 5 of a flexible and incompressible (or only slightly compressible) elastomer material.
  • these gaskets have a trapezoidal section and are glued at the periphery of wall 12.
  • gaskets are beneficial to accommodate surface irregularities of this wall, and also to compensate for the slight shrinkage (a reduction of diameter of around 0.1 mm in general) of wall 12 of the plug, a shrinkage that is unavoidable when the application of high pressure is stopped.
  • These gaskets can be O-rings housed in receiving grooves created in wall 12.
  • a mix of glued gaskets and O-rings is also possible .
  • metal pins T preferably cone- shaped and attached to wall 12, extend between two gaskets. They extend circumferentially around the wall and are advantageously equidistant angularly from one another. They are attached to the wall, for example by welding .
  • a form of embodiment can be considered in which gaskets and "crowns" of pins alternate.
  • internal pressure P which is implemented to induce the expansion of the plug, develops not only a radial component (desired) that allows expansion of annular part 12, but also an axial component (not desired) that acts downward on bottom wall 14.
  • bottom effect generates axial traction stresses in wall 12 in addition to circumferential traction stresses, which perceptibly limits the radial expansion capacity of the plug before breaking .
  • the amount of expansion measured on the plug diameter does not exceed around 10 to 20%.
  • plug 1A is provided with an inner cylindrical rod or mandrel, 6A, which crosses it axially from one side to the other.
  • the upper part - or base - 60 of the mandrel serves as the "bottleneck" for the mouth, by analogy with the embodiment of the plug, as a one-piece bottle, described previously.
  • References 11A, 12A, 13A, and 14A correspond respectively to references 11 to 14 of the embodiment of Figure 1.
  • mandrel 6A is attached by an annular weld 100 to the mouth of upper part 11A of the wall .
  • mandrel 6A fits into a central opening formed in bottom 14A and is attached to the side of this opening by an annular weld 101.
  • a channel 61 pierced axially in the mandrel emerges via radial piercings 62 in inner space E of the plug, which allows introducing the HP liquid to inflate it.
  • the mandrel - which serves as a spacer - absorbs the axial thrust developing on the plug wall, which limits the bottom effect, and allows obtaining a degree of expansion of around approximately 20 to 25%.
  • Reference l'A in the right half view designates the plug after expansion.
  • plug IB is also provided with an inner cylindrical rod or mandrel 6B, which crosses it axially from one side to the other.
  • Base 60 of the mandrel also serves here as the bottleneck of the plug .
  • References 11B, 12B, and 13B correspond, respectively, to references 11 to 13 of the preceding embodiment .
  • the plug bottom is embodied here by the lower part
  • the lower end part of the plug IB takes on the shape of a tubular sleeve 15 whose wall is provided on the inside with an annular gasket 150; this sleeve 15 is thus designed to slide axially and tightly on part 63 of the mandrel.
  • mandrel 6B is attached by an annular weld 100 to the mouth of upper part 11B of the wall of plug IB.
  • a channel 61 pierced axially in this mandrel emerges via radial piercings 62 in inner space E of the plug, which allows introducing the HP liquid to inflate it .
  • the radial expansion of the plug is not disrupted by axial stresses, taken up by the mandrel; its lower part can slide freely on mandrel bulge 63.
  • Radial expansion can therefore be done under optimal conditions, with natural axial shortening controlled by Poisson's coefficient, which allows obtaining a degree of expansion of around approximately 35 to 45%.
  • Reference l'B in the right half view designates the plug after expansion.
  • cylindrical parts 12A, respectively 12B, of the plugs are also advantageously provided with peripheral gaskets (as in Figure 6) .
  • mandrel head 60 is provided with a check valve that here is simply an axially mobile ball 7, normally held in its seat by a spring 70.
  • This valve holds the HP liquid trapped in inner space E of the plug, as long as this liquid pressure is greater than the external pressure.
  • wall 12A (or 12B) is in the unexpanded state closest to the mandrel, in order to prevent the sludge from being introduced into the plug.
  • cement is particularly advantageous since this material, when it has hardened, increases the resistance of the plug over time to the pressure to which it is subjected.
  • the cylindrical wall of plug 1 is provided with a series of annular gaskets such as described in reference to Figure 6.
  • Base 60 of the mandrel has a particular shape designed to facilitate fishing out the plug by means of an extractor tool, designated 8 in Figure 10.
  • This base is generally cylinder-shaped, with a beveled upper edge 600 and a tapered lower face 601 (downward concavity) .
  • the device for positioning the plug comprises - as already explained in reference to Figures 1 to 4 - a hollow cylindrical rod 2, pierced with a coaxial channel 20.
  • its lower end has a widened part 21 in the form of a sleeve, open toward the bottom, and able to be axially fitted onto base 60.
  • These two elements are joined to one another by breakable radial pins 40 (likely to break under a high shearing stress) .
  • cylindrical inner wall 210 of part 21 is provided with an O-ring 22 that is supported on the cylindrical wall of mandrel head 60.
  • flat bottom 211 of part 21 in the form of a sleeve rests against the upper face of base 60 as long as breakable pins 40 are not subjected to shearing.
  • an HP liquid is introduced into channel 20, which presses ball 7 back into its seat; the HP liquid penetrates into inner space E of the plug, inducing its radial expansion beyond the elastic limit of its wall, and correlatively, crimping it against the well wall (see right half view) .
  • gasket 22 prevents HP liquid leaks between sleeve 21 and mandrel head 60.
  • Crimped sealing plug 1' with its compressed gaskets 5' , then remains in place in the well while being subject to a high internal pressure, which guarantees an optimal hold.
  • Figures 10 and 11 show how a sealing plug thus positioned can eventually be fished out if necessary, in which only the upper part of mandrel 6 is shown for clarity .
  • a tool 8 comprising an axial rod 80 whose lower end bears a hollow cylindrical extension 81.
  • This tool also comprises an extractor component 9.
  • This component has a cylindrical rod 91 that bears, on the upper part, a widened cylindrical head 90, and on the lower part, a hollow part 92 in the shape of sleeve.
  • Lower part 92 like sleeve 21 described above, can be axially fixed onto head 60.
  • Head 90 is provided with an annular gasket 95 and is designed to slide axially in hollow extension 81, like a piston in the body of a hydraulic cylinder.
  • Extractor component 9 is pierced with a central axial channel 900. However, at its base, it has a small rod 93 (called pushrod) , coaxial with channel 900, and which extends toward the bottom over a certain length inside hollow part 92 in the shape of a sleeve.
  • pushrod small rod 93
  • This small rod 93 is surrounded by several axial piercings 901 (for example four piercings distributed at 90°) which connects channel 900 and the inside of sleeve 92.
  • sleeve 92 At its base, sleeve 92 is provided with a set of hooks 94 in the form of fishhooks, for example four hooks distributed at 90°.
  • each of these is articulated around a horizontal axis 904 so as to pivot toward the outside along a predetermined angular course, as shown by arrows a.
  • each hook is pulled by an elastic return - spring or the like - (not shown) tending to pull it back toward the inside, in its rest position illustrated in Figure 10.
  • hooks are designed to hold mandrel head 60 by the bottom, resting against its lower tapered face 601.
  • first tool 8 is lowered (Arrow F) , piston 90 normally resting against upper face 801 of the cavity of hollow extension 81.
  • hooks 94 When hooks 94 encounter bevel 600, they are forced to pivot toward the outside (arrow a) and thus to retract temporarily; then, when they are lowered beyond mandrel base 60, they pivot in the opposite direction by the effect of their return component (arrows b and dashed outline at the bottom of Figure 10), and thus automatically hook base 601 of the mandrel head.
  • head 90 of the extractor is found progressively further from upper face 801 of the cavity of hollow extension 81, which induces a vacuum (suction) in space 800 thus formed, like a syringe plunger aspirating a liquid.
  • This traction combined with the internal vacuum generated in the plug, allows the plug to be extracted relatively easily.
  • Axial length of the plug Between 1 m and 2 m;
  • Diameter of the well Between 15 cm and 50 cm;
  • Outer diameter of the plug Between 12 cm and 45 cm;
  • Thickness of the plug wall (cylindrical part) : Between 0.5 cm and 2.5 cm;
  • Pressure of the HP liquid used to inflate the plug 400 bars, or 400 x 10 5 Pa.

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Abstract

A method for sealing a well by means of a plug of ductile metal, which comprises a tubular wall part whose diameter is slightly smaller than that of the well, and a bottom wall part connected to this tubular wall part, said plug having an open end forming a mouth, method according to which the plug is introduced axially into the well, with its mouth turned up and its bottom wall part turned down, and it is positioned in the well at the desired depth, after which the plug is inflated by injecting a high- pressure liquid into it via its mouth so that its tubular wall part expands radially beyond its elastic limit and comes to press firmly and tightly against wall (B) of the well by a crimping effect, while its bottom wall part serves as a sealing partition, forming a tight barrier between the lower and upper parts of the well that it separates. The plug is provided on the inside with an axial mandrel that connects its open end forming the mouth to its bottom wall (63), this mandrel being pierced with channels (61-62) that allow the injection of high-pressure liquid inside the plug via the mouth and via these channels (61-62).

Description

METHOD AND DEVICE FOR SEALING A WELL BY MEANS OF A CORE PLUG, PLUG FOR IMPLEMENTING THE METHOD, AND EXTRACTOR TOOL DESIGNED TO REMOVE IT
The present invention concerns a method and a device for sealing a well by means of a core plug.
It also concerns a core plug usable for implementing the method, as well as an extractor tool designed to remove the plug.
The term "well" conventionally means, in the present description and the claims that follow, a well providing water or hydrocarbons (especially petroleum or natural gas) whether drilled with rough walls or lined with a casing, as well as a pipeline used to transport fluid .
In the following, the well is vertical and straight .
Conventionally, we speak of "depth" to designate the distance the separates the area to be sealed from the well entry.
However, it goes without saying that the well can be curved, sinuous, oblique or even horizontal.
The objective of the invention is to seal the well at a given depth zone, for example to abandon it (at the end of production) or to isolate the lower area from the rest of the well.
This seal must be liquid tight.
The usual technique to do this is to use a tool with an elastically deformable membrane, for example, inflatable, a tool commonly designated by the English word "packer" in the petroleum field.
One difficulty of this technique is that after positioning and radial expansion, the tool membrane must remain firmly and tightly pressed against the well wall. For example, if it is an inflatable bladder, a sufficient inflation pressure must be permanently maintained in the well to prevent the packer from returning to its initial shape.
In the long term, it can pose a problem of pressure leak and/or loss of elasticity (due to aging, heat and/or corrosion) .
Furthermore, a packer is relatively expensive.
The principle on which the present invention is based consists of using a metal plug, of stainless steel, for example, this plug comprising a tubular wall part (generally annular sleeve) , whose diameter is slightly smaller than that of the well, and a bottom wall part (transverse, or approximately transverse with regard to the sleeve axis) of one piece with this tubular wall .
The plug has an open end, called "mouth".
To seal a well, the plug is introduced into it axially, with its bottom wall turned down, and it is positioned in the well at the desired depth.
Then the plug is inflated by injecting a liquid at high pressure so that the tubular wall part of the plug is expanded radially beyond its elastic limit, coming to press firmly and tightly against the well wall by a crimping effect.
The bottom wall part then serves as a partition between the lower parts and the upper parts of the well.
Because the deformation of the tubular wall of the plug is permanent, the plug remains in place after removal of the high-pressure liquid and the risk of eventual loosening is practically eliminated.
This method is inexpensive and easy to implement.
The device of the invention comprises an apparatus that allows lowering, properly positioning and inflating the plug by means of a high-pressure liquid, and that can be removed after the plug has been positioned and expanded. Note that forming a tubular metal sleeve beyond its elastic limit by use of a high-pressure liquid (hydroforming) is well known to line a portion of a well wall; however said sleeve is not connected to a bottom wall that can serve as a sealing partition.
In the state of the art, patent US 2,214,226 should also be mentioned (see Figure 4, in particular) .
The sealing system that is described therein comprises a plug 11a of ductile metal that has a tubular wall that can be radially expanded beyond its elastic limit, against the well wall, as well as a bottom wall that can then seal the well.
However, according to this known method, the plug is deformed by means of an explosive charge 12 that is positioned inside the plug to be expanded, and not by introduction of a high-pressure liquid inside this plug. While a hydraulic pressure is effectively produced inside the plug, this results from exploding the charge, which generates a pressure in the liquid column (of mud in this case) present in the well, as is explained on page 3, left column, lines 27-38 of document US 2, 214, 226.
The state of the art can also be illustrated by document US-2, 656, 891.
The invention aims to improve the technique according to the prior art by better controlling the deformation of the plug.
In fact, according to the prior art, we are dealing with a bottom effect, explained below in the description, which limits the radial expansion capacity of the plug before breaking.
The invention therefore concerns, in a first aspect, a method for sealing a well by means of a plug of ductile metal, which comprises a tubular wall part whose diameter is slightly smaller than that of the well, and a bottom wall part connected to this tubular wall part, said plug having an open end forming a mouth turned up and its bottom wall part turned down, and it is positioned in the well at the desired depth, after which the plug is inflated by injecting a high-pressure liquid into it via its mouth so that its tubular wall part expands radially beyond its elastic limit and comes to press firmly and tightly against the wall of the well by a crimping effect, while its bottom wall part serves as a sealing partition, forming a tight barrier between the lower and upper parts of the well that it separates. and is characterized by the fact that a plug is used that is provided internally with an axial mandrel that connects its open end forming the mouth to its bottom wall, this mandrel being pierced with channels that allow the injection of high-pressure liquid inside the plug via the mouth and via these channels.
Furthermore, according to a certain number of additional non-limiting characteristics of this method:
- liquid and curable cement is used for the high-pressure liquid;
- the plug is introduced and positioned in the well by means of a hollow rod that is provided with an axial channel and is connected tightly to the mouth, this rod being maneuvered from the head of the well, and the high-pressure liquid is injected inside said plug from the head of the well via said channel, to inflate and expand it;
- after expansion and crimping of the plug against the well wall, the hollow rod is disconnected from the crimped plug and it is removed by axially traction;
- after expansion and crimping of the plug against the wall of the well, a liquid curable cement is poured, forming a second barrier, over the crimped plug; - this cement is poured into the well from the well head via the channel of said hollow rod;
- after positioning and inflating the cap, the liquid is kept at high pressure inside the crimped cap .
In a second aspect, the invention concerns a metal core plug for sealing a well.
This core plug for sealing a well according to a method that consists of introducing this plug axially into the well, with its mouth turned up and its bottom wall part turned down, and positioning it in the well at the desired depth, after which the plug is inflated by injecting a high-pressure liquid via its mouth so that its tubular wall part expands radially beyond its elastic limit and comes to press firmly and tightly against the well wall by a crimping effect, while its bottom wall part serves as a sealing partition, forming a tight barrier between the lower parts and the upper parts of the well that it separates, this plug having the general shape of a bottle whose mouth corresponds to the bottleneck,
characterized by the fact that it is provided internally with an axial mandrel that connects its open end forming the mouth to its bottom wall, this mandrel being pierced with channels that allow the injection of high-pressure liquid inside the plug via the mouth and via these channels;
According to some possible embodiments of the plug:
- said axial mandrel is attached to the plug wall at its upper and lower ends so that it plays the role of a spacer that can impede the shortening of the plug along the axial direction during its radial expansion;
- the axial mandrel is attached to the plug wall by its upper end only, while its lower end has a cylindrical bulge serving as the bottom wall for the plug, its lower portion sliding freely and tightly on said cylindrical bulge, or that said mandrel is attached to the plug wall by its lower end only, this end having a cylindrical bulge serving as the bottom wall for the plug, the upper part of the plug sliding freely and tightly along said mandrel, so as to be able to shorten naturally along the axial direction during its expansion in the radial direction;
its tubular wall part is provided externally with at least one annular gasket of flexible and elastic material, that can be crushed to press intimately against the well wall after crimping, and/or metal pins that can at least partially penetrate into the well wall;
its upper part forming a mouth has a base with a hooking profile that can allow extracting the crimped plug by means of a tool provided with suitable hooks;
this base with hooking profile is made up of the upper part of the mandrel;
its wall is stainless steel.
it has a rod for axial handling whose lower end part is provided with a set of articulated hooks that can automatically grip said base when the tool is lowered axially into the wells so that the crimped plug is then extracted from the well by axial traction upward;
said lower end part is provided with a small axial pushrod that can induce opening of the check valve when the tool is lowered axially into the well and that its lower end part comes to be supported against said base, so that the high-pressure liquid can escape the crimped plug.
it is provided with a piston and cylinder suction system designed to automatically generate a vacuum inside the crimped plug under the effect of the axial traction exerted upward on the shaft, in view of extracting this plug.
- it consists of a metal core plug and its extraction tool.
In a third aspect, the invention concerns a tool for extracting a core plug, after the plug has been crimped into a well, the upper part forming the mouth of the plug having a base with a hooking profile as indicated above.
This tool has a rod for axial handling whose lower end part is provided with a set of articulated hooks that can automatically grip said base when the tool is lowered axially into the well so that the crimped plug is then extracted from the well by upward axial traction.
This tool can be designed to allow the extraction of a plug whose mouth is provided with a check valve that can impede the escape of high-pressure liquid from the plug after crimping.
In this case, the lower end part of its handling rod is provided with a small axial pushrod that can induce opening of the check valve when the tool is lowered axially into the well and its lower end part comes to be supported against said base, so that high- pressure liquid can escape the crimped plug.
Such a tool is advantageously provided with a piston and cylinder suction system designed to automatically generate a vacuum inside the crimped plug under the effect of the axial traction exerted upward on the shaft, in view of extracting this plug.
Finally, the invention relates to a set made up of a core plug and its extraction tool such as described above .
Other characteristics and advantages of the invention will appear upon reading the following description of one preferred embodiment of the invention. This description is made in reference to the attached drawings in which:
- Figures 1 to 5 are axial schematic views illustrating the main implementation steps of the method according to the state of the art;
- Figure 6 shows a core plug provided with annular gaskets;
- Figures 7 and 8 show two variants of the plug provided with a central mandrel, according to the invention;
- Figure 9 shows the method applied to a plug provided with a check valve, which can keep it inflated after expansion;
- Figures 10 and 11 show the structure and illustrate the functioning of a "fishing" tool used to extract such a plug.
Note that in Figures 6, 7, 8 and 9, the left and right half views represent, respectively, the situation before and after the sealing plug is inflated.
In reference to Figures 1 and 2, the sealing plug is designated 1; we wish to position it in a well with "rough" wall B , of vertical axis Z - Z ' , at a depth H with regard to ground level A (where the well head is found) .
Plug 1 is roughly bottle-shaped, comprising a cylindrical bottleneck, or mouth, 10, a cylindrical body of greater diameter 12 and a flat bottom 14. Bottleneck 10 is connected to body 12 by a tapering part 11, while body 12 is connected to bottom 14 by a rounded area 13.
The outer diameter of body 12 is slightly less than the diameter of well wall B .
In the example illustrated, plug 1 is in one piece, of stainless steel, with a wall thickness substantially thinner than its diameter.
The device for positioning plug 1 comprises a hollow cylindrical rod 2, pierced with a coaxial central channel 20. The diameter of this rod is notably smaller than that of the diameter of well wall B.
Tubular rod 2 is, for example of the "CT" (coil tubing) type, meaning a very long rod unwound from a roll, or the "DP" (drill pipe) type, meaning a long rod formed by a series of rod sections screwed end to end.
It serves two functions, i.e., holding the plug during its positioning, and serving as a conduit for the introduction of a high-pressure (HP) liquid into the plug to inflate it and crimp it inside the well.
Rod 2 also has a liquid circulation valve 3, which valve can be opened as needed to connect channel 20 and the inside of the well; this type of valve, which allows controlling the well during the descent, as well as the means for controlling the opening or closing, are well known in themselves.
In Figure 1, valve 3 is open and arrows i symbolize the injection of sludge of appropriate density into the well via channel 20 during lowering F of rod 2.
The lower end of this rod 2 is connected tightly to bottleneck 10 by means of a breakable connection system 4.
System 4 can be designed to induce breakage of the connection by applying a traction force beyond a given threshold and/or by applying an overpressure.
This system does not prevent the communication (tight) of channel 20 with inner space E of plug 1.
In Figure 2, rod 2 has been lowered to desired depth H, so that plug 1 is positioned with regard to the area to be sealed.
Valve 3 is shut.
Then a high-pressure liquid is introduced from well head A via channel 20 into space E, as shown by arrow j.
This pressure P is chosen to be sufficiently high to induce inflation of plug 1 and radial expansion of its main cylindrical part, whose wall comes to press firmly against well wall B (Figure 3) .
The material is deformed beyond its elastic limit.
In reference to Figure 4, the application of high- pressure liquid is stopped and rod 2 is pulled axially upwards (Arrow G) .
Since core plug 1' is found crimped permanently inside the well, this pulling breaks connection system 4, of which one part 4a remains attached to the end of the rod and the other part 4b to the neck of the plug.
As indicated above, the connection can also be broken by a system sensitive to overpressure (known in itself) .
Bottom 14' of plug 1' thus crimped then serves as sealing partition for the well, conforming to the objective sought, playing a barrier role between the parts of the well located above and below the plug.
In reference to Figure 5, it may be interesting in certain situations to consolidate this seal by means of a second barrier made up of a cement C that is injected over the plug.
It is a liquid cement, that is cured over time (at the end of a few hours or a few days in general) , of the type currently used in the field of drilled wells.
Advantageously, to inject this cement, the same rod
2 is used as was used to position the plug; the liquid cement passes via channel 20.
The injection can be done immediately after the plug is crimped and the shaft disconnected, without having to remove it from the well.
It is understood that this operating procedure is faster and less expensive than when a separate cement device is used.
The constituent metal of the plug is obviously chosen sufficiently ductile to be able to be deformed without breaking beyond its elastic limit under the conditions of use, while being sufficiently resistant to the mechanical and physicochemical stresses that it must undergo after positioning.
The width of its bottom and/or its bottleneck may be different, in particular larger, than that of its cylindrical body, since they do not need to be deformed to seal the well.
Advantageously, the metal in question is easily machined, so that it is possible to eventually drill plug 1' if necessary (as well as cement C , if applicable) in order to re-connect the parts of the well located above and below the plug.
In reference to Figure 6, plug wall 12 is coated on the outside with a collection of gaskets 5 of a flexible and incompressible (or only slightly compressible) elastomer material. In the example shown, these gaskets have a trapezoidal section and are glued at the periphery of wall 12.
When the plug is expanded (right part of the figure), these gaskets 5' are crushed and it is they that are supported against well wall B.
The presence of such gaskets is beneficial to accommodate surface irregularities of this wall, and also to compensate for the slight shrinkage (a reduction of diameter of around 0.1 mm in general) of wall 12 of the plug, a shrinkage that is unavoidable when the application of high pressure is stopped.
These gaskets can be O-rings housed in receiving grooves created in wall 12.
A mix of glued gaskets and O-rings is also possible .
A variant of embodiment is shown in the lower part of this Figure 6.
In fact, note that metal pins T, preferably cone- shaped and attached to wall 12, extend between two gaskets. They extend circumferentially around the wall and are advantageously equidistant angularly from one another. They are attached to the wall, for example by welding .
A form of embodiment can be considered in which gaskets and "crowns" of pins alternate.
The lower right part of Figure 6 shows that once the wall is deformed, pins T' penetrate at least partially into the material making up the well walls, which contributes to better anchorage of the plug.
Note that in the embodiment of the plug that has just been described, internal pressure P , which is implemented to induce the expansion of the plug, develops not only a radial component (desired) that allows expansion of annular part 12, but also an axial component (not desired) that acts downward on bottom wall 14.
This phenomenon, called "bottom effect" generates axial traction stresses in wall 12 in addition to circumferential traction stresses, which perceptibly limits the radial expansion capacity of the plug before breaking .
In practice, the amount of expansion measured on the plug diameter does not exceed around 10 to 20%.
The embodiments according to the invention, illustrated in Figures 7 and 8 aim to reduce or even eliminate this bottom effect problem.
In Figure 7, we see that plug 1A is provided with an inner cylindrical rod or mandrel, 6A, which crosses it axially from one side to the other. The upper part - or base - 60 of the mandrel serves as the "bottleneck" for the mouth, by analogy with the embodiment of the plug, as a one-piece bottle, described previously.
References 11A, 12A, 13A, and 14A correspond respectively to references 11 to 14 of the embodiment of Figure 1. In the upper part, mandrel 6A is attached by an annular weld 100 to the mouth of upper part 11A of the wall .
At the lower part, mandrel 6A fits into a central opening formed in bottom 14A and is attached to the side of this opening by an annular weld 101.
A channel 61 pierced axially in the mandrel emerges via radial piercings 62 in inner space E of the plug, which allows introducing the HP liquid to inflate it.
In this embodiment, the mandrel - which serves as a spacer - absorbs the axial thrust developing on the plug wall, which limits the bottom effect, and allows obtaining a degree of expansion of around approximately 20 to 25%.
Reference l'A in the right half view designates the plug after expansion.
In Figure 8, we see that plug IB is also provided with an inner cylindrical rod or mandrel 6B, which crosses it axially from one side to the other. Base 60 of the mandrel also serves here as the bottleneck of the plug .
References 11B, 12B, and 13B correspond, respectively, to references 11 to 13 of the preceding embodiment .
The plug bottom is embodied here by the lower part
63, in the form of a cylindrical bulge (of greater diameter) of mandrel 6B .
The lower end part of the plug IB takes on the shape of a tubular sleeve 15 whose wall is provided on the inside with an annular gasket 150; this sleeve 15 is thus designed to slide axially and tightly on part 63 of the mandrel.
In the upper part, mandrel 6B is attached by an annular weld 100 to the mouth of upper part 11B of the wall of plug IB. A channel 61 pierced axially in this mandrel emerges via radial piercings 62 in inner space E of the plug, which allows introducing the HP liquid to inflate it .
In this embodiment, the radial expansion of the plug is not disrupted by axial stresses, taken up by the mandrel; its lower part can slide freely on mandrel bulge 63.
Radial expansion can therefore be done under optimal conditions, with natural axial shortening controlled by Poisson's coefficient, which allows obtaining a degree of expansion of around approximately 35 to 45%.
Reference l'B in the right half view designates the plug after expansion.
It goes without saying that in the two embodiments of Figures 7 and 8, cylindrical parts 12A, respectively 12B, of the plugs are also advantageously provided with peripheral gaskets (as in Figure 6) .
In order to improve the hold of the plug inside the well after it is crimped, it may be useful to definitively maintain the internal pressure used to expand it.
This reduces the risk of eventual shrinkage and untimely loosening, and can facilitate eventual removal of the plug by fishing, if this proves necessary.
To this end, as shown in Figure 9, mandrel head 60 is provided with a check valve that here is simply an axially mobile ball 7, normally held in its seat by a spring 70. This valve holds the HP liquid trapped in inner space E of the plug, as long as this liquid pressure is greater than the external pressure.
As this liquid, it is possible to inject liquid cement at high pressure, which can be cured over time. In this case, wall 12A (or 12B) is in the unexpanded state closest to the mandrel, in order to prevent the sludge from being introduced into the plug.
The use of cement is particularly advantageous since this material, when it has hardened, increases the resistance of the plug over time to the pressure to which it is subjected.
The cylindrical wall of plug 1 is provided with a series of annular gaskets such as described in reference to Figure 6.
Base 60 of the mandrel has a particular shape designed to facilitate fishing out the plug by means of an extractor tool, designated 8 in Figure 10.
This base is generally cylinder-shaped, with a beveled upper edge 600 and a tapered lower face 601 (downward concavity) .
The device for positioning the plug comprises - as already explained in reference to Figures 1 to 4 - a hollow cylindrical rod 2, pierced with a coaxial channel 20.
Here, its lower end has a widened part 21 in the form of a sleeve, open toward the bottom, and able to be axially fitted onto base 60. These two elements are joined to one another by breakable radial pins 40 (likely to break under a high shearing stress) .
Moreover, cylindrical inner wall 210 of part 21 is provided with an O-ring 22 that is supported on the cylindrical wall of mandrel head 60.
The left part of Figure 9 permits understanding how rod 2 and the plug are lowered conjointly into well B (Arrow F) .
During this phase, flat bottom 211 of part 21 in the form of a sleeve rests against the upper face of base 60 as long as breakable pins 40 are not subjected to shearing.
When the desired depth is reached, an HP liquid is introduced into channel 20, which presses ball 7 back into its seat; the HP liquid penetrates into inner space E of the plug, inducing its radial expansion beyond the elastic limit of its wall, and correlatively, crimping it against the well wall (see right half view) .
During this process, the presence of gasket 22 prevents HP liquid leaks between sleeve 21 and mandrel head 60.
After the operation, pressure in channel 20 is no longer applied, so that ball valve 7 naturally closes under the effect of spring 70, which serves to prevent the escape of HP liquid and to hold a very high overpressure inside the plug.
Removal of rod 2, by upward axial traction G breaks pins 40, of which one half 40a remains connected to the rod, and the other 40b to the mandrel.
Crimped sealing plug 1', with its compressed gaskets 5' , then remains in place in the well while being subject to a high internal pressure, which guarantees an optimal hold.
Figures 10 and 11 show how a sealing plug thus positioned can eventually be fished out if necessary, in which only the upper part of mandrel 6 is shown for clarity .
For this, a tool 8 is used comprising an axial rod 80 whose lower end bears a hollow cylindrical extension 81.
This tool also comprises an extractor component 9. This component has a cylindrical rod 91 that bears, on the upper part, a widened cylindrical head 90, and on the lower part, a hollow part 92 in the shape of sleeve.
Lower part 92, like sleeve 21 described above, can be axially fixed onto head 60.
Head 90 is provided with an annular gasket 95 and is designed to slide axially in hollow extension 81, like a piston in the body of a hydraulic cylinder. Extractor component 9 is pierced with a central axial channel 900. However, at its base, it has a small rod 93 (called pushrod) , coaxial with channel 900, and which extends toward the bottom over a certain length inside hollow part 92 in the shape of a sleeve.
This small rod 93 is surrounded by several axial piercings 901 (for example four piercings distributed at 90°) which connects channel 900 and the inside of sleeve 92.
At its base, sleeve 92 is provided with a set of hooks 94 in the form of fishhooks, for example four hooks distributed at 90°.
Each of these is articulated around a horizontal axis 904 so as to pivot toward the outside along a predetermined angular course, as shown by arrows a. However, each hook is pulled by an elastic return - spring or the like - (not shown) tending to pull it back toward the inside, in its rest position illustrated in Figure 10.
These hooks are designed to hold mandrel head 60 by the bottom, resting against its lower tapered face 601.
In order to fish out the plug, first tool 8 is lowered (Arrow F) , piston 90 normally resting against upper face 801 of the cavity of hollow extension 81.
When hooks 94 encounter bevel 600, they are forced to pivot toward the outside (arrow a) and thus to retract temporarily; then, when they are lowered beyond mandrel base 60, they pivot in the opposite direction by the effect of their return component (arrows b and dashed outline at the bottom of Figure 10), and thus automatically hook base 601 of the mandrel head.
At the same time pushrod 93 has pushed back the ball of check valve 7, connecting channel 900 and channel 61, which itself communicates with inner space E of the inflated plug.
Then tool 8 is removed (Arrow G, Figure 11) . First, hollow extension 81 only slides upward vertically with regard to head 90, because extractor 9 remains fixed, being held by its hooks gripping mandrel 6 (and therefore the plug) .
After this relative movement, head 90 of the extractor is found progressively further from upper face 801 of the cavity of hollow extension 81, which induces a vacuum (suction) in space 800 thus formed, like a syringe plunger aspirating a liquid.
This vacuum is transmitted into the plug, aspirating the liquid found therein, which tends to deform the wall of the plug in the direction of a radial retraction toward the inside. At the end of course of head 90 in the cavity of hollow extension 81, the ascending movement of rod 80 is transmitted to extractor 9 so that hooks 94 positively pull mandrel 6 upward.
This traction, combined with the internal vacuum generated in the plug, allows the plug to be extracted relatively easily.
Several possible dimensional values are given below, simply by way of indication:
Axial length of the plug: Between 1 m and 2 m;
Diameter of the well: Between 15 cm and 50 cm;
Outer diameter of the plug: Between 12 cm and 45 cm;
Thickness of the plug wall (cylindrical part) : Between 0.5 cm and 2.5 cm;
Pressure of the HP liquid used to inflate the plug: 400 bars, or 400 x 105 Pa.

Claims

1. Method for sealing a well by means of a plug (1) of ductile metal, which comprises a tubular wall part (12) whose diameter is slightly smaller than that of the well, and a bottom wall part (14) connected to this tubular wall part (12), said plug
(1) having an open end forming a mouth (10), method according to which plug (1) is introduced axially into the well, with its mouth (10) turned up and its bottom wall part (14) turned down, and it is positioned in the well at desired depth (H) , after which plug (1) is inflated by injecting a high- pressure liquid into it via its mouth (10) so that its tubular wall part (12) expands radially beyond its elastic limit and comes to press firmly and tightly against wall (B) of the well by a crimping effect, while its bottom wall part (14) serves as a sealing partition, forming a tight barrier between the lower and upper parts of the well that it separates, characterized by the fact that a plug is used that is provided internally with an axial mandrel (6) that connects its open end forming mouth (10) to its bottom wall (14; 63), this mandrel (6A) being pierced with channels (61-62) that allow injecting the high-pressure liquid inside the plug via mouth (10) and via channels (61-62) .
2. Method according to claim 1, characterized by the fact that liquid curable cement is used for the high-pressure liquid;
3. Method according to claim 1 or 2, characterized in that plug (1) is introduced and positioned in the well by means of a hollow rod (2) that is provided with an axial channel (20) and is connected tightly to mouth (10), this rod (2) being maneuvered from head of the well (A) , and the high- pressure liquid is injected inside said plug (1) from head of the well (A) via said channel (20), to inflate and expand it.
4. Method according to claim 3, characterized in that after expanding and crimping plug (1) against the well wall (B) , hollow rod (2) is disconnected from crimped plug (1') and it is removed by axial traction (G) .
5. Method according to any one of claims 1 to 4, characterized in that after expansion and crimping of plug (1) against well wall (B) , a liquid curable cement (C) is poured, forming a second barrier, over crimped cap (1');
6. Method according to claims 4 and 5 taken in combination, characterized in that cement (C) is poured into the well from well head (A) via channel (20) of said hollow rod (2) .
7. Method according to any one of claims 1 to 6, characterized in that after positioning and inflating plug (1), the high-pressure liquid is held inside crimped plug (1' ) ·
8. Metal core plug for sealing a well according to a method that consists of introducing this plug (1) axially into the well, with its mouth (10) turned up and its bottom wall part (14) turned down, and positioning it in the well at the desired depth (H) , after which plug (1) is inflated by injecting via its mouth (10) a high-pressure liquid so that its tubular wall part (12) expands radially beyond its elastic limit and comes to press firmly and tightly against well wall (B) by a crimping effect, while its bottom wall part (14) serves as a sealing partition, forming a tight barrier between the lower parts and the upper parts of the well that it separates, this plug having the general shape of a bottle whose mouth (10) corresponds to the bottleneck, characterized by the fact that it has an axial mandrel (6) inside that connects its open end forming mouth (10) to its bottom wall (14; 63), this mandrel (6A) being pierced with channels (61-62) that allow the injection of high-pressure liquid inside the plug via mouth (10) and via these channels (61-62) .
9. Metal core plug according to claim 8, characterized by the fact that axial mandrel (6A) is attached to the plug wall at its upper and lower ends so that it plays the role of a spacer that can impede the shortening of plug (1A) along the axial direction during its radial expansion;
10. Metal core plug according to claim 8, characterized by the fact that axial mandrel (6B) is attached to the plug wall by its upper end only, while its lower end has a cylindrical bulge (63) serving as the bottom wall for plug (IB), its lower part (15) sliding freely and tightly on said cylindrical bulge (63), or that said axial mandrel (6B) is attached to the plug wall by its lower end only, this end having a cylindrical bulge (63) serving as the bottom wall for plug (IB), the upper part of the plug sliding freely and tightly along said mandrel, so as to be able to shorten naturally along the axial direction during its expansion in the radial direction.
11. Metal core plug according to any one of claims 8 to 10, characterized by the fact that tubular wall part (12) is provided externally with at least one annular gasket of flexible and elastic material, that can be crushed to press intimately against the well wall (B) after crimping, and/or with metal pins (T) that can at least partially penetrate into the well wall;
12. Metal core plug according to any one of claims 8 to 11, characterized by the fact that its upper part forming a mouth has a base (60) with a hooking profile that allows extracting crimped plug (1') by means of a tool provided with suitable hooks.
13. Metal core plug according to claims 8 and 12, taken in combination, characterized by the fact that said base (60) with a hooking profile is made up of the upper part of mandrel (6) .
14. Metal core plug according to any one of claims 8 to 13, characterized by the fact that its wall is stainless steel.
15. Tool for extracting a core plug conforming to claim 12 or claim 13, which is crimped in a well, characterized by the fact that it comprises a handling rod (80) whose lower end part (9) is provided with a set of articulated hooks (94) that automatically grasp said base (60) when tool (8) is axially lowered into the well, so that crimped plug
(1') can then be extracted by upward axial traction
(G) .
16. Tool according to claim 15, for extracting a plug whose mouth (10) is provided with a check valve (7-70) designed to prevent the escape of high- pressure liquid from the plug after crimping, characterized by the fact that said lower end part (9) is provided with a small axial pushrod (93) that can open check valve (7-70) when tool (8) is lowered axially into the well and that its lower end part (9) comes to rest against said base (60), so that the high-pressure liquid can then escape crimped plug d' ) .
17. Tool according to claim 16, characterized by the fact that it is provided with a suction piston (90) and cylinder (81) designed to automatically generate a vacuum inside crimped plug (1') under the effect of axial traction (G) exerted upwards on rod (80), in view of extracting this plug.
18. Set made up of a metal core plug according to one of claims 12 or 13 and its extraction tool according to one of claims 15 to 17.
PCT/EP2011/055616 2010-04-20 2011-04-11 Method and device for sealing a well by means of a core plug, plug for implementing the method, and extractor tool designed to remove it WO2011131504A1 (en)

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FR1052989A FR2958966B1 (en) 2010-04-20 2010-04-20 METHOD AND DEVICE FOR SEALING A WELL USING AN EXPANDABLE PLUG, PLUG FOR CARRYING OUT THE METHOD, AND EXTRACTOR TOOL FOR REMOVING IT
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FR2958966A1 (en) 2011-10-21
FR2958966B1 (en) 2016-02-12
US20130105158A1 (en) 2013-05-02
US9322241B2 (en) 2016-04-26

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