Ball valves

5865246
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Inventors

Brown, Irvine Cardno

Application #

659648

Filed

Jun-6-1996

Published

Feb-2-1999

Current US Class

166/321
166/95.1

International Classes

E21B 034/06

Field of Search

166/324 166/321 166/319 166/95.1 166/323 166/264

Assignee

Petroleum Engineering Services Limited (Dyce, GB)

Examiners

Tsay; Frank S.

Attorney, Agent or Firm

Thelen Reid & Priest LLP

US Patent References

4105075   Test valve having a...
4116272   Subsea test tree for...
4125165   Annulus pressure c...
4197879   Lubricator valve a...
4320804   Subsea test tree
4880060   Valve control system
4934871   Offshore well suppo...
5050680   Environmental prot...
5535826   Well-head structures

Referenced by:

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Citation

Cite This Patent

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Abstract
There is disclosed a ball valve (5) particularly for use in oil/gas wells. Known valves suffer from a number of problems, e.g such as high actuating forces and seat failure due to applied load across the ball being transferred through the seat. The present invention provides a ball valve (5) comprising a body (75) having a cylindrical bore containing a ball (10) and means for rotably mounting the ball (10) within the body (75) about a fixed axis, further comprising actuation means (15, 40, 45, 50) for controlling rotation of the ball (10), wherein in use to cause the ball (10) to rotate the actuation means (15, 40, 45, 50) is caused to move along a direction substantially parallel to an axis of the bore of the body (75).
 
Claims
We claim:

1. A ball valve comprising:

a body having a cylindrical bore;

at least one bearing provided in the body;

a ball contained in the bore, the ball having a fixed axis of rotation and providing at least one journal extending along the axis of rotation of the ball and being located in a respective bearing, for rotatably mounting the ball within the body about the fixed axis; and

actuation means for controlling rotation of the ball, said actuation means in use being movable along a direction substantially parallel to an axis of the bore of the body to cause the ball to rotate.

2. The ball valve claimed in claim 1, wherein the fixed axis is substantially perpendicular to the axis of the bore of the body.



Description
1. Field of the Invention

This invention relates to ball valves, and in particular, though not exclusively, to ball valves used in oil/gas wells for the recovery of subterranean oil and gas reserves.

2. Description of the Related Art

Ball valves are used throughout the oil and gas industry, primarily to control the flow of fluid within pipes, and derive their name from the use of a spherical gate, hereafter referred to as a ball, to open and close the valve port. Existing ball valves suffer from a number of drawbacks, especially with regard to their use in space restrictive applications and their use between zones of differing pressure, eg to isolate sections of a tubing conduit.

When ball valves are closed and the ball subjected to differential pressure, the resulting forces created must be transmitted from the ball into the supporting structure. These forces, which are proportional to the retained differential pressure, are transmitted through normal forces between contacting surfaces of the ball and other components. These co-operating surfaces must slide relative to one another in order for the ball to move from closed to open position. Frictional forces opposing this motion result from and are proportional to the described normal forces and differential pressure. For any specific valve design, the required actuating force to move the ball increases as a result of differential pressure. High actuation forces are troublesome especially in space restrictive applications where the activation force available may be severely constrained. To overcome this problem, various methods have been used to reduce or eliminate the normal forces by reducing or eliminating the differential pressure during actuation or alternatively to reduce the magnitude of the frictional forces independently of the normal forces. Reducing the differential pressure by applying pressure to the low pressure side of the valve in order to reduce frictional forces is not desirable in that a both fluid media and a method of creating the applied pressure must be supplied which may involve great expense. Also, one may not have knowledge of the pressure required to eliminate the differential pressure. Valve designs which seek to automatically reduce the differential pressure at the time of actuation "self equalising valves" do so by creating an opening to permit fluid to flow from the high pressure to low pressure side. Self equalising valves suffer from being generally more complex and more prone to failure than valves without this feature. It is not always practical to implement self equalising valve designs as the upstream and downstream fluid reservoirs may react in a manner to cause a differential pressure to be sustained long after the creation of the equalising opening. For these and other reasons, non self equalising valve designs are preferred in many applications. Reducing the frictional forces by presenting a bearing material at the ball to support interface can be effective. Ball valve designs in which the sealing surface of the ball is also the surface which transmits the normal forces "seat supported valves" do not lend themselves to effective friction reduction nor to the transmission of high normal loads due to the conflicting nature of requirements for sealing at this surface. Ball valve designs in which the normal load bearing surfaces are presented along the fixed rotation axis of the ball in conjunction with a journal arrangement are desirable in that effective bearings are most easily incorporated in this position.
 
  Disclosed is an improved ball valve structure and a well safety valve utilizing the improved ball valve. The improved valve includes a metal seat member...  A bore-hole pump for pumping a highly viscous fluid, into which is fed a solvent which has a low viscosity and which is miscible with the fluid. A shutoff...