Hydraulic fracturing (also hydrofracturing, hydrofracking, fracking or fraccing), is a well-stimulation technique in which rock is fractured by a hydraulically pressurized liquid made of water, sand, and chemicals. Some hydraulic fractures form naturally—certain veins or dikes are examples. A high-pressure fluid (usually chemicals and sand suspended in water) is injected into a wellbore to create cracks in the deep-rock formations through which natural gas, petroleum, and brine will flow more freely. When the hydraulic pressure is removed from the well, small grains of hydraulic fracturing proppants (either sand or aluminum oxide) hold the fractures open. Traditionally, the fracking fluid (including proppants) is delivered to the well with powerful and expensive reciprocating plunger pumps. The pressure required to fracture these formations ranges can exceed 15,000 psi.
High pressure pump failures are the number one operational challenge faced by the industry. The challenges faced include the following:
1. High pump maintenance costs
2. Sporadic and excessive downtime (pump failures)
3. High levels of redundancy (mitigate pump failures)
These challenges are all due to the pumping of abrasive and highly viscous frac fluids. It is the equivalent of adding sand to your car's engine. The best way to improve the above problems is to avoid sending the fracking fluid through the high pressure plunger pumps. Plunger pumps that pump or move clean and ph neutral fluids last longer, are more economical to operate, and require less maintenance.
Industry professionals are currently evaluating different methods of delivering the fracking fluid to the well (borehole) at the required pressures with newly developed or modified devices other than traditional reciprocating plunger pumps.
If these new technologies are able to move the fracking fluid with new and more robust equipment, the industry will experience a paradigm shift. The primary benefits will be reduced maintenance costs, decreased pump redundancy, and lower capital expenditures. Any new technologies must improve the total cost of owning and operating the equipment that transports the fracking fluid and proppants at high pressure into the well. These new technologies must be in-expensive to manufacture, easy to service, and economical to maintain with affordable spare parts (wear items).
Two new ideas concerning the delivery of the fracking fluid into the well without sending the fracking fluid through the high pressure plunger pump are being explored. Both of these potential solutions rely upon new machines that are conceived from fluid transfer equipment originally developed for low pressure and highly filtered fluid applications such as reverse osmosis desalination. One approach is to use a modified rotating pressure exchanger energy recovery unit and the other is a reciprocating dual work exchange energy recovery unit. Again, both of these new ideas/new pumping machines are based on experience gained in handling very clean filtered water at low pressure (rarely exceeds 1200 psi), and with pH values not far from neutral.
This invention is applicable to many different industries. Of the numerous industries being evaluated, it appears that the fracking industry may benefit the most at this time. For this reason, this description will reference a reciprocating dual work exchange unit to help explain a practical application of subject invention.
In designing and constructing a reciprocating dual work exchanger for handling high pressure and abrasive fluids such as fracking fluid, complex challenges arise. Of several challenges, two of the biggest are working with high pressure and abrasive fluids including but not limited to water, sand, aluminum balls, acid and corrosion inhibitors.
Also of significance, is the fact that the reciprocating dual work exchanger's total cost of ownership (purchase price of an asset plus the costs of operation) must be more favorable than the current methods. This invention makes the design, production, operation, and ownership of a fracking work exchanger and other products economically feasable.
The invention is based upon a pipe, tube, or pressure vessel located within another pressure containing vessel such as a pipe, tube or other similar form. The cavity between the inner wall of the outer vessel and the outer wall of the inner vessel is pressurized. In this way, the inner vessel or pipe can be much lighter and less expensive because the inner pipe is no longer required to withstand the required working pressure of the inner pipe alone. This invention relies upon the creation of a pressure field to support the demand placed on the internal pipe or pressure vessel. For example, if a pipe that is expected to wear-out frequently, must safely operate at 10,000 psi, this invention makes it possible to construct an outer vessel rated to 10,000 psi, place an internal pipe of vessel rated for only 5,000 psi and charge the space between the two up to 5,000 or 6,000 psi, thus reaching the desired 10,000 psi. This allows the inner pipe to absorb all wear and to be constructed of cheaper and lighter material. The expensive outer vessel does not see any wear. The inner tube or vessel is mounted in a way to allow of easy and quick replacement.
To design a reciprocating work exchanger pumping machine, the diameter of the barrel, the length of the barrel, and the speed at which the plunger/piston will travel must be established. These three factors define the capacity (or how much fluid the pumping machine can move) of the work exchanger. The capacity is expressed in terms of a volume unit per time unit such as liters per minute (Ipm) or gallons per minute (gpm).
Next, consideration must be given to what fluid is being pumped so that a suitable piston seal material can be selected. In the case of very abrasive fracking fluid a good choice for a piston seal would be high-intensity acrylonitrile butadiene rubber or NBR. The reciprocating plunger needs to seal tightly against the walls of the work exchanger just as the piston in our syringe must seal against the walls of the syringe barrel or the fluid can not be moved. Depending on the type of seal being used, the maximum speed of the reciprocating plunger (expressed in distance unit per time unit) will be defined. For example, if the seal is made of rubber and the speed is very high, the rubber will overheat and fail prematurely.
The length of the barrel is a design criteria established initially by the desired overall size of the work exchanger. For fracking applications, a length of ten feet is a good place to start. With this dimension, a finished work exchanger solution can be easily transported on a trailer from jobsite to jobsite.
Other objects and advantages of the present invention will become apparent to those skilled in the art upon a review of the following detailed description of the preferred embodiments and the accompanying drawings.
Referring now to
The piston (9) is moved in one direction by pumping fluid into check valve 32. When fluid is pumped into the special high-pressure flange (1), the piston (9) moves in an opposite direction forcing the fluid out of the inner cavity and through the exit check valve (30).
Referring now to
Referring now to
Through use of this invention, the high-pressure wear resistant cylinder (10) utilizes the high-pressure field (7) for strength, and the method of installing, implementing, and manufacturing the reciprocating dual work exchanger for abrasive and corrosive application, such as fracking, becomes economically viable.
The above detailed description of the present invention is given for explanatory purposes. It will be apparent to those skilled in the art that numerous changes and modifications can be made without departing from the scope of the invention. Accordingly, the whole of the foregoing description is to be construed in an illustrative and not a limitative sense, the scope of the invention being defined solely by the appended claims.
The present patent application is based upon and claims the benefit of provisional patent application No. 62/106,668, filed on Jan. 22, 2015
Number | Date | Country | |
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62106668 | Jan 2015 | US |