Abstract:
A method for making a cable includes creating a curvature in a conduit; pumping one or more fibers into the conduit; and securing at least one of the one or more fibers to a shortest pathway within the conduit and cable.

Description:
BACKGROUND 
     Real time casing imaging (RTCI) is known in the hydrocarbon recovery arts and comprises an optic fiber with fiber bragg gratings (FBG) disposed within a conduit. The conduit is commonly composed of a metallic material and may be a control line. The fiber is fixed within the conduit using a hardenable material such as epoxy to promote the transfer of strain in the conduit to the fiber, where that strain can be measured. Traditionally, the fiber is pumped into the conduit with a pumping fluid or with the epoxy itself. Pumping is done while the conduit is straight to reduce the pumping pressures necessary to move the fiber to an end of the conduit opposite the end thereof used for entry of the fiber. The completed conduit is then bent into a shape conducive to the imaging task it is meant to discharge. Alternately the fiber can be installed inside a polymer and encased within tubing during the tubing manufacturing process. While these systems work well enough to have been accepted by the art, they are not entirely reliable. The art would therefore well receive improvements. 
     SUMMARY 
     A cable includes a conduit; and one or more fibers disposed within the conduit in a consistent position therein. 
     A tubular having a cable in operable communication therewith and wherein the cable is positioned relative to the tubular to cause a fiber disposed therein to be located at a greatest distance from the tubular in a radially inward direction from the tubular to create a smallest bend radius for the fiber. 
     A method for making a cable includes creating a curvature in a conduit; pumping one or more fibers into the conduit; and securing at least one of the one or more fibers to a shortest pathway within the conduit. 
    
    
     
       BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS 
       Referring now to the drawings wherein like elements are numbered alike in the several Figures: 
         FIG. 1  is a schematic cross-sectional view of a tubular having a cable disposed thereat in accordance with the disclosure hereof; 
         FIG. 2  is a perspective illustration of a cable in a helix within a tubular; and 
         FIG. 3  is a cross-sectional representation of a cable having a plurality of hardenable material layers therein. 
     
    
    
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION 
     Referring to  FIG. 1 , it will be appreciated that a cable  10  is illustrated as disposed at an inside surface  12  of a tubular  14  and another cable  16  is disposed at an outside surface  18  of the tubular  14 . These are alternative locations for the cable or they may both be used as desired. For purposes of discussion, the cable  10  at the inside surface will be addressed more specifically. Cable  10  comprises a conduit  20  that may be constructed of any material having properties consistent with the intended use of the cable in a downhole environment. One such material is metal and thus hydraulic control line can be used. Within the conduit  20  is illustrated a fiber  22  (one or more could be used). The fiber selected for the cable is to be one that is sensitive to strain such that strain may be measured thereon from a remote location. In one embodiment, the fiber will be a fiber with one or more fiber bragg gratings (FBG). The fiber  22  is to be relatively rigidly retained in place within the conduit  20  by a hardenable material to ensure that the fiber will “see” any strain that is placed upon the conduit  20  by the environment or other well equipment. 
     In one iteration, the hardenable material is initially flowable such that it can be pumped into the conduit  20  after installation of the fiber. While it is also possible to actually pump the fiber  22  with the hardenable material, it is less efficient for the overall process due to the volume of material needed to pump the fiber and the higher cost of the hardenable material. In the pumping process, a substantial amount of the hardenable material would be wasted flowing out the other end of the conduit  20 . 
     The conduit  20  is caused to have a curvature prior to installation of the fiber  22 , which curvature may be a simple or complex curve providing that it continues in a general direction such that a clearly definable shortest path can be observed therein. In one embodiment, the curvature is a helix. This creates a condition between the conduit  20  and the fiber  22  that ensures that the fiber  22  is in a consistent position within the conduit  20  along the length of the cable  10 . Consistent positioning of the fiber  22  within the conduit  20  is caused by the natural tendency of the fiber to take the shortest path, that path having been dictated by the curvature created in the conduit. Consistent positioning of the fiber overcomes reliability problems of the prior art thereby rendering the cable  10  disclosed herein superior to the prior art. 
     The shortest path through a helical conduit, for example, is the path with the smallest radius, therefore, an inside surface  24  of the conduit  20  having the smallest radius to a central axis  26  (see  FIG. 2 ) of the helix will define the shortest path for the fiber  22  extending through the conduit  20 . Because of the nature of an elongate fiber to take and remain in the position that is shortest from its origin point to its termination point, it is axiomatic that the fiber will locate itself in that position. This is a significant advantage over the prior art technique as related above because in the prior art technique, the fiber will necessarily wander through the conduit due to flow of the pumping fluid. Since no significant change in the length of the run is dictated by the conduit due to teachings that the conduit be straight for pumping fiber, it necessarily will be inconsistently located. This has been determined by the present inventor to be a significant source of error introduction into the system. Therefore, the removal of the wandering path of the fiber is of great benefit to the art. 
     In addition to the foregoing, it is further noted that the fiber in the helical configuration has no appreciable stress therein. This is because the FBG is put into compression on one side of the neutral axis of the fiber while it is put under tension on the other side of the neutral axis. The stresses cancel one another leaving the fiber in an optimum condition to sense externally induced strain. Another benefit to the positioning of the fiber in the shortest path is that the bend radius of the fiber is necessarily smaller. This causes the fiber to be more sensitive to strain changes and therefore more specific. Because the bend radius does have a significant effect for sensitivity of the cable it will be appreciated that the fiber positioned at the inside surface  12  of tubular  14  will be more sensitive to strain than the cable  16  at the outside surface  18 . Due to the end radius effect, it is desirable, though not required, to place the cable  10  at the inside surface  12  of the tubular  14  that it is intended to measure. Because of the intended pathway of the fiber in the conduit, the fiber will necessarily be as far from the inside surface of the tubular  14  as possible consistent with each possible connection technique. More specifically, if the cable  10  is directly affixed to the tubular  14 , then the fiber is spaced from the tubular by the diameter of the conduit  20  minus one wall thickness thereof. A greater distance from the tubular can be created by adding a spacer (not shown) between the cable  10  and the inside surface  12  if desired. Beneficial effects from these constructions all are based upon the bend radius of the fiber and thus design considerations should take this into account. 
     While the fiber  22  is reliably located within the conduit  20  and is likely to stay in that position even without any affixation within the conduit, simply because for it to move to move would require that the fiber stretch, it is still desirable to affix the fiber  22  to the inside wall of the conduit  20 . This is done with a hardenable material  28  (see  FIG. 3 ) such as, but not limited to, a material containing epoxy. The material is pumped into the conduit  20  as noted above and allowed to harden. In the hardened state, all strain imparted to the conduit is transmitted to the fiber  22 . The hardenable material may completely fill the conduit, substantially completely fill the conduit, or may be configured as a tube itself. In the first and second iterations, the material is simply pumped though the conduit and allowed to harden when the conduit is full or substantially full. In the third noted iteration, however, the material is first pumped through the conduit  20  to coat the inside surface thereof and then the excess is pumped out of the fiber using a gas such as air. The coating is sufficient to affix the fiber  22  to the conduit  20  while creating another tubular structure within the conduit  20 . This can be repeated to add layers of fibers and “coating tubulars” stacked within conduit  20  (additional layer indicated with primes as  22 ′ and  28 ′), if desired, or alternatively, the open central tubular may be used as a control conduit, which may be filled with a communication fluid, for example, a hydraulic fluid. In such an embodiment, the control line may be employed for any use to which a prior art control line may be put. Too, the open inside of the hardenable material tubular may be used to house one or more non-affixed fibers that might be used for temperature sensing, for example. Temperature sensing fibers need not be affixed, as affixation does not affect specificity of the fibers for such purpose. In an embodiment with both a strain sensing fiber and a temperature sensing fiber, a temperature compensated strain measurement is possible for even greater accuracy in overall information obtained about the conditions within the well. 
     In embodiments where the conduit is particularly long, the friction of the hardenable material may be undesirably hard on the one or more fibers. More particularly, the friction may put an undue strain in the one or more fibers. In such case, it is beneficial to thin the hardenable material with a thinner. In the case of an epoxy containing hardenable material, the thinner may be acetone or Methyl Ethyl Ketone (MEK) for example. This reduces pumping pressures needed to move the material through the conduit  20  and reduces frictional stresses on the one or more fiber. The thinned epoxy is pumped through the conduit  20  as noted above and in embodiments where a coating is to be formed and the material is to be cored to create a tubular, the gas pumped through after the hardenable material functions to open the inside of the hardenable material tubular and to help evaporate the thinner (acetone, MEK, etc.). 
     In another embodiment, the one or more fibers are metalized in known ways so that the fiber itself is wettable by a solder. The fiber may then be affixed by heating the conduit to above the melting temperature of the solder and flowing solder into the conduit. Subsequent cooling of the conduit solidifies the solder thus permanently affixing the one or more fibers to the conduit. 
     While preferred embodiments have been shown and described, modifications and substitutions may be made thereto without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. Accordingly, it is to be understood that the present invention has been described by way of illustrations and not limitation.