The present invention is concerned with monitoring of elongate underwater members.
The invention is applicable to a range of elongate members deployed underwater including risers, pipelines, hoses, bundled products, cables (e.g. fibre optic or electric cables) umbilicals and so on. But consider the example of risers—tubular structures used in subsea extraction of hydrocarbons such as oil and gas to conduct the hydrocarbons from a wellhead on the seabed to a structure at the surface such as a floating rig. Risers suffer from a variety of factors which affect can cause damage and affect their working lifetime. The consequences of in-service failure of a riser could be severe and the cost of their replacement is large. Without some means of monitoring in-service performance of the riser, operators risk spending large sums replacing infrastructure based on what may be excessively conservative predictions of working lifetime.
Risers and other pipelines and cables can suffer a wide variety of internal and external loads during their working lifetime. One of the primary areas of interest in relation to risers is cumulative fatigue damage, where flexure can be induced by environmental or operational factors such as ocean currents. Another factor is vibration. Underwater members subject to flow (e.g. tidal flow) can suffer vortex induced vibration, in which the shedding of vortices from the downstream side of a member can lead to oscillation which can be amplified due to resonance effects. The product transported by a riser or pipeline may undergo changes that are of operational interest. Examples are changes of product temperature and/or pressure, which might be indicative of problematic formation of waxy deposits in a pipeline requiring intervention. Variations in density of the product conveyed may lead to slug induced vibration, where changes in mass distribution within a conduit initiate oscillatory behaviour.
The need for in-service monitoring is by no means limited to risers. There are numerous other types of elongate member that suffer from variable operational end environmental factors, in which context in-service sensing of such conditions is desirable.
For all of these and other reasons it is desirable to provide for in-service monitoring of factors relating to the performance of elongate underwater members.
Sensor devices for this general purpose are known in the art which comprise an arrangement of sensors and some form of clamp or band to secure the sensor arrangement to the riser. An example is WO2018/185338A1. This discloses a sensor system having a semi-cylindrical portion that seats upon the pipeline and is removably retained upon it using magnets. The device has a temperature sensor and is configured to transmit data through the water using electromagnetic signals. Another example is WO2018/167186A1, which discloses a monitoring system deployed upon a riser and having “nodes” which are attached to the riser through mechanical clamps.
The attachment of clamps and other structures to a riser or pipeline may in itself be burdensome. If it is carried out during deployment, it introduces additional complexity at that stage. If sensor devices are instead mounted on the elongate member subsea, after its deployment, this is likely to involve divers or remotely operated vehicles and is in itself a potentially expensive and troublesome process.
The present inventor has recognised that significant advantages can be obtained by providing for a sensor unit to be carried by ducting carried on the elongate member. Additionally or alternatively the sensor unit may be carried by a VIV suppression device.
Elongate members deployed underwater may be fitted with external ducting for a variety of reasons.
The ducting may serve to protect the member from damage, as for example where the member is deployed on the seabed and might otherwise be subject to abrasion or other physical damage. Cladding may contribute buoyancy to support a part of the weight in water of the elongate member, or it may in other cases provide ballasting for the member.
An example of a protective cladding is provided by GB2260590A. Here, a length of ducting is built up from multiple semi-tubular sections. Each section is banded to and faces toward a similarly formed section to form a full cylinder about the elongate member within. Longitudinally neighbouring sections are coupled together so that a duct of a chosen length can be formed from a chosen number of such sections. The ducting may be straightforwardly attached to the elongate member prior to or during its deployment. Alternatively cladding may be retro-fitted to elongate members already deployed in water.
Cladding may in particular be provided in order to mitigate the effects of a phenomenon known to those skilled in the art as vortex induced vibration (VIV), in which an elongate member exposed to a flow of water may suffer undesirable oscillation due to hydrodynamic effects. It is believed that shedding of vortices from the member on its downstream side can produce lateral forces on the elongate member, and that resonance effects these forces can themselves oscillate in direction. Resonance effects can contribute to the amplitude of the resultant vibration of the elongate member. Damage can be caused.
VIV may be mitigated by provision of some suitable shaped feature on the exterior of the elongate member. This may be provided in the form of a cladding about the elongate member. GB2335248A provides an example where a VIV protection cladding is once more formed from multiple cladding sections which are banded to one another about the elongate member and longitudinally juxtaposed and coupled to form a cladding of a chosen length. The cladding sections carry strakes which together form a helical pattern running along the length of the cladding. In GB2335248A there are three lines of these strakes to provide a formation akin to a triple start screw thread. The strakes may be sufficiently resilient to be deformed during deployment or other handling of the cladding, and to subsequently regain their shape.
Strakes are by no means the only features of shape that are capable of mitigating VIV. For examples of other possible forms of VIV suppression cladding, refer e.g. to WO02095278A, which discloses cladding having fluting or grooves for the purpose, and to GB2385648A, which discloses a VIV mitigation cladding having dimples. Numerous other formations are possible.
A variety of materials and constructional techniques may be used to form claddings for elongate members deployed underwater. Some of the prior art examples referred to above are moulded items. One suitable material is syntactic foam. Another form of construction is taught by GB2419649A. In this example a unitary component extends all the way around the elongate member. It comprises multiple part-cylindrical portions coupled along their axially extending edges through living hinges, so that the cladding section is able to be opened out to receive the elongate member and then closed about it. The cladding disclosed in GB2419649A is manufactured by vacuum forming.
In accordance with a first aspect of the present invention there is a cladding for an elongate member to be deployed underwater, the cladding comprising multiple cladding sections each being configured to receive the elongate member and each having proximal and distal ends configured to engage with longitudinally neighbouring cladding sections enabling a continuous length of the cladding to be constructed from multiple cladding sections, wherein at least one of the cladding sections is provided with a sensor module dock configured to receive and releasably mount a sensor module.
By providing a cladding section with a sensor module dock, the present invention provides for convenient and removable mounting of sensor modules without necessitating any additional complexity or time during deployment of either the cladding or the elongate member itself. A sensor module carried in the dock can be located in a known orientation with respect to the elongate member itself, making it straightforward for example to determine the orientation of the elongate member with respect to the earth's gravitational field or with respect to the earth's magnetic field. The sensor module carried in the dock can be arranged for straightforward retrieval and replacement using a remotely operated vehicle (ROV). Since a given elongate member often carries a cladding at multiple sites (which may be critical sites in terms of performance), or along a major part of its length, the invention can provide numerous sites along the length of the elongate member at which to mount sensor modules.
In a practical case, it is common for a cladding to be applied to an elongate member prior to or during its deployment at sea. In accordance with the present invention, the cladding section provided with the sensor module mounting dock may, in relation to the manner of its deployment, be treated very similarly or identically to any other cladding section, e.g. being simply banded on in sequence.
In accordance with a second aspect of the present invention there is a cladding section for use in a cladding, the cladding section being configured to receive and/or seat upon an elongate member to be deployed underwater and having proximal and distal ends each configured to couple to a neighbouring cladding section, the cladding section comprising a sensor module dock configured to receive and releasably mount a sensor module.
Specific embodiments of the present invention will now be described, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
By bending the living hinges 16, the cladding section 12 is placed in the closed configuration depicted in
In accordance with the present invention, the cladding 10 incorporates cladding sections 26 which are able to couple to longitudinally neighbouring cladding sections 12 and which incorporate a sensor module dock 28 to receive and mount a sensor module 30. In some embodiments every cladding section may incorporate a sensor module dock 28. But in the illustrated embodiments the cladding 10 is formed from a mixture of cladding sections 12 lacking a dock and cladding sections 26 having one.
In the embodiment depicted in
The
This and other forms of the sensor module dock 28 and the sensor module 30 are configured to make deployment and retrieval of the sensor module 30 straightforward using an effector of a remotely operated vehicle (ROV). In the
The embodiment depicted in
In the embodiment depicted in
In the embodiment depicted in
The sensor module dock may be formed by the same features used for mitigation of VIV, or by a variant thereof, and/or it may be aligned with those features.
In the
The sensor module dock need not enclose or embrace the sensor module 30 in all embodiments of the invention.
Although the sensor module dock may be integrally formed with the cladding section, it need not be so in all embodiments. Another possibility (not depicted) is that the sensor module dock may comprise some form of band or clamp secured around the cladding. For example, the cladding may have a circumferential groove or trough to receive a clamp carrying the sensor module dock. In this way, the sensor module dock is axially located by the cladding, and can be easily and quickly mounted to it during deployment.
The sensor module 30 is, in the illustrated embodiments, a self-contained and self-powered unit able to log sensor data and to output it through a suitable interface. It comprises a sealed pressure vessel seen in
This list is not exhaustive.
In certain embodiments the sensor module 30 is intended to be retrieved to enable its logged sensor data to be downloaded for analysis. This does not preclude the possibility that some analysis of the data will be carried out on-board the sensor module 30, which may be desirable e.g. for the sake of data compression.
A range of data interfaces may be used to enable transfer of data from the sensor module 30 to some external processing system. In shallow water applications wireless data exchange may be provided. The sensor modules 30 may be connected in the form of a wireless computer network. At greater depths this is not possible. A short range data interface may be provided, which may be optical, radio frequency, acoustic or some other form of short range communication, so that data can be retrieved during a visit by an ROV, submersible or diver without actual retrieval of the sensor module 30. In other embodiments the sensor module 30 is to be periodically retrieved enabling it to be interrogated. It may then be serviced, which will typically include replacement or re-charging of batteries, before being deployed subsea once more.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2002140.8 | Feb 2020 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/GB2021/050385 | 2/17/2021 | WO |