Swivel seal assembly

6007105
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Inventors

Dietle, Lannie
Kalsi, Manmohan S.

Application #

018261

Filed

Feb-4-1998

Published

Dec-28-1999

Current US Class

277/559
285/276
285/281
285/330
285/351
285/900
285/94
285/98

International Classes

F16L 007/00

Field of Search

285/281 285/276 285/98 285/351 285/94 285/330 285/900 277/423 277/559

Assignee

Kalsi Engineering, Inc. (Sugar Land, TX)

Examiners

Arola; Dave W.

Attorney, Agent or Firm

Jackson; James L. Mayor, Day, Caldwell & Keeton L.L.P.

US Patent References

4449738   Rotary fluid coupling
4754780   Pressure balanced...
5052720   Swivel joint for hig...

Referenced by:

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Citation

Cite This Patent

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Abstract
A swivel seal assembly is defined for providing sealed high pressure fluid communication between relatively rotatable generally coaxial conduits where dynamic runout and static misalignment may occur to one conduit relative to the other. A generally tubular washpipe is mounted in pivotally articulating relation to one conduit, and a generally tubular seal housing is telescoped over the washpipe and mounted in pivotally articulating relation to the other conduit. High pressure, staged rotary seals are supported by the seal housing and maintain bearing and sealing engagement with the washpipe so that the seal housing and washpipe articulate in unison in response to said static misalignment and dynamic runout, thereby virtually eliminating relative lateral motion between the seal housing and washpipe and minimizing rotary seal extrusion damage. The seal housing and washpipe are hydraulic force balanced regardless of the pressure to which they are subjected, and thus are not subject to pressure induced loads which might otherwise interfere with articulation.
 
Claims
We claim:

1. A pressure balanced rotary seal assembly for conducting a fluid having a fluid pressure between the first and second conduits of a swivel apparatus having a frame supporting the first and second conduits in relatively rotatable axially spaced relation, comprising:

(a) a washpipe of elongate, generally tubular form, having a first washpipe end for facing the first conduit and a second washpipe end for facing the second conduit, said washpipe defining an external generally cylindrical sealing surface;

(b) a seal housing of generally tubular form having a first housing end having a housing flexible seal for establishing a housing flexible sealing interface with the first conduit and thereby defining a first seal housing pressure responsive area and having a second housing end for facing the second conduit and being disposed about said first washpipe end, said seal housing supporting at least one rotary seal in rotatable sealing engagement with said external generally cylindrical sealing surface and defining a second seal housing pressure responsive area substantially equal and opposed to said first seal housing pressure responsive area such that opposed pressure induced hydraulic forces acting axially and oppositely on said seal housing are substantially balanced and thus said seal housing being readily pivotally articulatable about said housing flexible sealing interface and also defining a first washpipe pressure responsive area substantially equal to said first and second seal housing pressure responsive areas; and



Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

1. Field of the Invention

This invention relates generally to swivel assemblies which are intended to conduct a pressurized fluid such as a liquid or gas between a first conduit and a second conduit which is approximately coaxial with the first conduit and has relative rotation with respect to the first conduit, and which may have dynamic runout relative to the first conduit and may have static offset relative to the first conduit. More particularly, the present invention is directed to a swivel assembly incorporating a unique sealing mechanism which accomplishes hydrodynamic lubricant pumping activity and permits the swivel mechanism to control the flow of high pressure abrasive fluids and to maintain efficient lubrication at the various sealing interfaces thereof and to thus significantly enhance the service life of the swivel mechanism.

2. Description of the Prior Art

Conventional drilling rig swivels use a stack of redundant rotary seals which are typically of a reinforced elastcmeric chevron type. These seals run against the relatively rotating hardened surface coating of a washpipe. In most designs the washpipe is stationary, and the seals and their housing rotate. The stack of seals is exposed to the high pressure drilling fluid on one side, and to atmospheric pressure on the other. The stack of seals provides redundancy, but since only one seal at a time is exposed to the high pressure differential between the drilling fluid and atmosphere, the pressure capacity of the unit is limited to that of the weakest link, which is the rotary seal. The high differential pressure causes the seal adjacent to the high pressure to grab tightly against the rotating washpipe, and the high interfacial contact pressure causes a high degree of wear on the washpipe and the seal. The high differential pressure and dynamic runout of the application, and the relatively large clearances required to accommodate the dynamic runout, also cause extrusion damage to the seal which contributes significantly to it's ultimate failure. the Once the first seal fails, the next one in the stack is exposed to the high pressure drilling fluid, and so on until all seals have been consumed by the severe operating conditions. Because of the trend toward higher pressure in oilfield drilling (in some cases 7,500 psi or more), the pressure capacity and service life of conventional swivels is in many instances no longer satisfactory. The majority of drilling swivel failures in the field are the direct result of rotary seal failure, and the non-drilling time required to repair the swivel inflates overall drilling costs.