Enhanced oil recovery (EOR) by the injection of viscous polymer solutions takes place with certain difficulties due to the potential for mechanical degradation of the polymer.
The polymers used, in particular polyacrylamides, undergo molecular weight degradation when subjected to a shear force. This degradation increases with increasing molecular weight and decreasing polymer concentration.
From the 1970s to the 1980s, after the first oil crisis, EOR was developed in the United States with the use of low molecular weight polymers (around 10 million Daltons).
In the 1990s, significant research was carried out into increasing the molecular weights in order to obtain higher viscosities with a low dosage. Today, in this application, the molecular weights are greater than 20 million with high sensitivity to mechanical degradation in that they are injected at a low concentration of 50 to 2,000 ppm.
An oil field comprises between 10 and several thousand secondary recovery water injection wells, the primary recovery method being autogenous oil production.
When a polymer solution is to be injected into a field where water is injected, a concentrated stock solution is first prepared, usually having 0.5 to 2% of a high molecular weight polymer.
This solution is then distributed at 50-2000 parts per million to be injected by various methods.
Usually, within an oil field, a single water injection pump supplies several wells. But because of the heterogeneity of the fields, injection pressures differ from one well to another. For this reason a pressure control or regulating valve at the wellhead is installed (called a choke valve). The polymer solution cannot pass through this choke without degradation, which increases as the pressure falls, in a disproportionate manner from a ΔP of about 20 to 30 bars.
These various types of choke do not allow for the necessary pressure reduction in a polymer solution, without degradation, which becomes almost exponential with increasing pressure.
To remedy this degradation problem, mechanical equipment has been used:
In the 1980s, Marathon filed two patents that are interesting in principle but not very adaptable to current field conditions:
An oil company currently requires:
Today, there are fields using more than 50,000 ppm of NaCl:
These are conditions which did not exist in the 1980s and it would be illusory today to use a needle valve or an in-line piston and needle valve as described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,553,594.
To compensate for the problems of the prior art, the Assignee has developed a system based upon multiple gate or needle valves each separated by straight lengths of tube.
The object of the invention is therefore a pressure regulating device for the injection of an aqueous polymer solution into an oil well, said device consisting of a series of straight tubes each with a pressure gauge, each tube being separated by a valve.
The device is characterized in that the valves are gate valves and/or needle valves.
Intermediate pressure gauges are used to distribute the pressure reductions in order to obtain minimum degradation. Obviously, this degradation will depend upon the flow rate and it will therefore be necessary to calculate the diameters in order not to exceed the degradation limiting speed as a function of the composition of the solution.
The length of the straight tubes can be very small, preferably between 10 and 50 centimeters.
In practice the straight tubes and valves are made of stainless steels, in particular austenitic-ferritic steels called “superduplex” or surface-hardened austenitic steels (vacuum nitriding, Kolsterising) having high mechanical strength and high corrosion resistance. The use of “superduplex” high strength austenitic-ferritic steels leads to a reduction in the erosion caused by vortex cavitation.
When the pressure device of the invention contains gate valves, the straight tubes connected to the valves have a diameter that is larger than the passageway of the valve, thus allowing for the vortex effect.
When the pressure device of the invention contains needle valves, the vortex effect is minimal. The valves alone allow the injection pressure to be regulated.
The conditions for each oil well are highly variable:
Tests are absolutely necessary to determine the diameter, the number of straight tubes and the length of the device. To avoid degradation with a high pressure drop (50 bar), the device consists for example of 6 straight vortex effect lengths of tube and 5 gate valves, thus leading to minimal degradation of the polymer.
In practice, the number of valves is between 3 and 20, preferably from 5 to 15.
The object of the invention is also a method for reducing the injection pressure of an aqueous polymer solution as a function of well pressure by implementing the previously described device within an enhanced oil recovery method.
More specifically, the method according to the invention comprises the following steps:
Upon injection the device can be adjusted to the required pressure with ease, either manually or by means of a PLC, thus giving the necessary injection value.
The method produces a viscosity degradation of less than 10%, preferably less than 5%.
The pressure regulating device according to the invention is preferably positioned downstream of the collector (manifold).
A person skilled in the art may make adjustments to the device and to the method for each individual case. A person skilled in the art may thus combine the various options described above in order to achieve the desired result. In particular, the reduction in degradation can be obtained by increasing the number of valves for the same flow rate, at the same time reducing the valve pressure drop.
The invention and resulting benefits will become clear from the following examples supported by the attached figures.
On a platform with injection into 4 wells, the water pump pressure is 160 bars. The well pressures are 130, 125, 120, 110 bars.
Laboratory tests with injected brine have identified a polymer (FLOPAM®, Na acrylamide/acrylate copolymers with a molecular weight of 20 million) concentration of 800 ppm for a final viscosity of 21 cps and an oil viscosity of 20 cps. The well injection flow rate is 19 m3/h.
Four pressure reducers are constructed consisting of 6 straight rectilinear tubes with a length of 30 cm and an internal diameter of 20 mm separated by 14 mm gate valves.
These reducers are installed on the 4 wells and the ΔP is adjusted by section using pressure gauges as follows:
The injection pressure is then finally adjusted by slightly modifying these values.
Samples are taken at the wellhead using a standard API RP63 section 6.4 sampling device. The following degradation levels are measured:
That is perfectly acceptable.
Upon injection each device can be adjusted to the required pressure with ease, either manually or by means of a PLC, thus giving the necessary injection value.
On the same wells, a pressure reducer comprised of 5 half-inch diameter needle valves is installed. After adjusting the pressure, the following levels of degradation are measured:
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
15 63188 | Dec 2015 | FR | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3477467 | Sewell | Nov 1969 | A |
4510993 | Luetzelschwab | Apr 1985 | A |
4553594 | Luetzelschwab | Nov 1985 | A |
4782847 | Luetzelschwab | Nov 1988 | A |
8607869 | Soucy | Dec 2013 | B2 |
20120292029 | Soucy | Nov 2012 | A1 |
20150041143 | Remy | Feb 2015 | A1 |
20160168954 | Pich | Jun 2016 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
2920032 | Apr 2016 | CA |
201418763 | Dec 2014 | GB |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20160168954 A1 | Jun 2016 | US |