Ahmed, Shehab (2007-05). Compact harsh environment energy conversion systems. Doctoral Dissertation. Thesis uri icon

abstract

  • The quest for energy is leading the industry into drilling deeper wells. Typically, a
    temperature gradient of 1?C/150 ft can be expected, with bottom hole temperatures
    reaching beyond 200?C in many areas of the world. Moreover, the increased recovery
    benefits and cost reductions possible with the use of horizontal and multilateral wells has
    triggered a need for higher power energy conversion systems in bottom hole assemblies,
    such as rotary steerable tools and downhole tractors. The concepts developed
    throughout this work address some of these new needs.
    This research investigated improvements, novel solutions and considerations that
    will lead to significant advantages in terms of reliability, extended temperature
    operation, increased power capability and reduced size and cost of compact harsh
    environment energy conversion systems. Improvements to both the electromechanical
    subsystem and the power electronic subsystem are introduced.
    Air gap viscous losses were shown to a have a significant effect on the optimal
    design of submersible PM (permanent magnet) machines, and a design procedure to account for this loss component in the design was developed. The application of a dual
    winding exterior rotor PM machine in a downhole environment enabled a significant
    increase in the application's torque capability, provided protection against generator
    winding over voltage, and reduced parts count. Comprehensive switching device
    qualification, testing, and simulation lead to a simple failure mitigation technique for the
    operation of the most suitable devices at elevated temperature. A flying capacitor
    multilevel inverter was then successfully constructed and temperature tested. A novel
    motor drive concept suited for elevated temperature oil filled environment applications
    concluded the research.

publication date

  • May 2007