Not applicable.
Embodiments of the invention relate generally to systems and methods for storing oil. More particularly, embodiments of the invention relate to a cellular spar and associated method for storing oil received from a production unit located on a multi-column floating offshore platform.
Conventionally, oil produced on a multi-column floating (MCF) offshore platform must be stored on site or offloaded to an awaiting tanker. On site storage is typically limited. Consequently, offloading to a tanker occurs at regular intervals to prevent interruption to production operations on the platform. Due to changing weather conditions at the platform, maintaining a regular offloading schedule via the use of tankers is not always possible.
Accordingly, there remains a need for an oil storage system independent from that provided by the MCF offshore platform.
A floating oil storage system, or cellular spar, and associated methods for storing oil are disclosed. Some methods for storing oil include transferring oil to a floating storage system having a storage cell with an oil compartment and a seawater compartment disposed below the oil compartment, delivering the oil into the oil compartment, whereby the oil compartment expands; and contracting the seawater compartment as the oil compartment expands, whereby seawater is discharged from the seawater compartment.
In some embodiments, the floating oil storage system includes a storage cell, a floating member disposed within the storage cell, whereby the storage cell is divided into a first compartment and a second compartment disposed below the first compartment, a pump operable to deliver oil under pressure into the first compartment, whereby the first compartment expands and the second compartment contracts expelling seawater from the second compartment, and a suction tank operable to receive oil expelled from the first compartment under hydrostatic pressure of seawater in the second compartment, whereby the first compartment contracts and the second compartment expands receiving seawater.
In some embodiments, the floating oil storage system includes a plurality of storage cells, each storage cell having a first compartment and a second compartment disposed below the first compartment, a first pump operable to deliver oil under pressure into the first compartment of one or more of the storage cells, whereby the first compartment expands and the second compartment contracts expelling seawater from the second compartment, a suction tank operable to receive oil expelled from the first compartment of one or more of the storage cells under hydrostatic pressure of seawater in the second compartment, whereby the first compartment contracts and the second compartment expands receiving seawater, and a second pump operable to deliver oil in the suction tank from the floating oil storage system.
Thus, the embodiments of the invention comprise a combination of features and advantages that enable substantial enhancement of couplings. These and various other characteristics and advantages of the invention will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art upon reading the following detailed description of the preferred embodiments of the invention and by referring to the accompanying drawings.
For a detailed description of the preferred embodiments of the invention, reference will now be made to the accompanying drawings in which:
Various embodiments of the invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings, wherein like reference numerals are used for like parts throughout the several views. The drawings in the figures are not necessarily to scale. Certain features of the invention may be shown exaggerated in scale or in somewhat schematic form, and some details of conventional elements may not be shown in the interest of clarity and conciseness.
Also, in the following discussion and in the claims, the terms “including” and “comprising” are used in an open-ended fashion, and thus should be interpreted to mean “including, but not limited to . . . .” Further, the term “couple” or “couples” is intended to mean either an indirect or direct connection. Thus, if a first device couples to a second device, that connection may be through a direct connection, or through an indirect connection via other devices and connections.
The invention is susceptible to embodiments of different forms. There are shown in the drawings, and herein will be described in detail, specific embodiments of the invention with the understanding that the disclosure is to be considered an exemplification of the principles of the invention and is not intended to limit the invention to that illustrated and described herein. It is to be fully recognized that the different teachings of the embodiments discussed below may be employed separately or in any suitable combination to produce desired results.
Referring now to
Transfer line 110 and/or offloading transfer line 280 may be temporarily installed when needed to transfer oil and subsequently removed, or permanently installed. Further, transfer line 110 and/or offloading transfer line 280 may be suspended between offshore structure 105 and floating oil storage system 100 and partially submerged, substantially as shown, or floated at sea level 195. Alternatively, transfer line 110 may extend from offshore structure 105 downward to the sea floor 125, across the sea floor 125 to below storage system 100, and upward to storage system 100. Offloading transfer line 280 may be similarly installed in the sea floor 125.
Turning now to
Each storage cell 130 has an interior volume 150 separated into three compartments, an upper compartment 153, a middle compartment 155 for storing oil 157, and a lower compartment 160 for receiving seawater 162. Upper compartment 153 is empty and provides buoyancy for cellular spar 100. Upper compartment 153 has a fixed or constant interior volume 167, whereas middle and lower compartments 155, 160 have variable interior volumes 165, 170, respectively, depending upon the quantity of oil 157 stored in compartment 155. During operation, compartments 155, 160 preferably remain full of oil 157 and seawater 162, respectively. In such circumstances, the sum of volume 165 of oil 157 in compartment 155 and volume 170 of seawater 162 in adjacent compartment 160 is constant and approximately equal to volume 150 of storage cell 130 less volume 167 of upper compartment 153.
Storage cell 130 further includes a floating member 175 disposed therein. Floating member 175 is a barrier between oil 157 and seawater 162 contained in storage cell 130. As such, floating member 175 prevents significant mixing of oil 157 contained in middle compartment 155 and seawater 162 within lower compartment 160. Further, floating member 175 displaces within storage cell 130 as the quantity of oil 157 in cell 130 changes, and thus helps define compartments 155, 160. In some embodiments, floating member 175 is a diaphragm, bladder, inflatable bag, or other similar device.
To increase the structural capacity of cell 130, storage cell 130 further includes stiffeners 180 disposed over the inner and outer surfaces 185, 190 of storage cell 130. For simplicity, stiffeners 180 are shown on a single cell 130 in
To receive and store oil from offshore structure 105, spar 100 further includes a fill pump 200, a fill manifold 205, and a fill piping system 210. Fill pump 200 and fill manifold 205 are supported on platform 140. Fill piping system 210 delivers pressurized oil from pump 200 through fill manifold 205 to one or more storage cells 130, and includes a pipe branch 215 coupled between fill manifold 205 and an oil inlet port 220 to each storage cell 130. Fill pump 200 is coupled to subsea transfer line 110 (
During operation of fill pump 200, oil received from offshore structure 105 via subsea transfer line 110 is pressurized and delivered through fill manifold 205 to one or more storage cells 130. As oil is delivered into the one or more storage cells 130, volume 165 of middle compartment 155 of each affected cell 130 expands to receive the pressurized oil, displacing floating member 175 downward against seawater 162 in lower compartment 160. The oil must be pressurized by pump 200 prior to delivery into storage cells 130 because oil is lighter, or has a lower density, than seawater. Thus, the oil must be pushed into each storage cell 130.
In some embodiments, spar 100 further includes a measurement system 225 located at the bottom of each storage cell 130 and an emergency shutoff valve 230 coupled to piping branch 215 of each storage cell 130. For each storage cell 130, measurement system 225 measures the distance to floating member 175. The distance between measurement system 225 and floating member 175 indicates the relative sizes of volumes 165, 170. In the event that the relative sizes of volumes 165, 170 show the storage cell 130 is full of oil 157, meaning compartments 155, 160 are full of oil 157, emergency shutoff valve 230 is closed to prevent overfilling of the storage cell 130.
Spar 100 further includes a water manifold 245 and a separator 250 supported on platform 140, a seawater vent line 255, and a seawater discharge piping system 295. Seawater discharge piping system 295 delivers seawater 162 stored in each cell 130 through manifold 245 to separator 250, and includes a seawater discharge line 235 coupled to a seawater outlet port 240 located at the base of each cell 130. As previously described, when oil is delivered into the one or more storage cells 130, volume 165 of middle compartment 155 of each affected cell 130 expands to receive the pressurized oil, displacing floating member 175 downward against seawater 162 in lower compartment 160. Consequently, volume 170 of compartment 160 grows smaller or contracts, causing seawater 162 contained in the affected cell(s) 130 to be pushed from compartment 160 through its respective outlet port 240 and water discharge line 235 toward manifold 245. Manifold 245 is operable to simultaneously receive seawater 162 from one or more storage cells 130. Seawater received by manifold 245 is delivered into separator 250, where it is conditioned prior to overboard dumping via vent line 255.
To offload oil stored in cells 130, spar 100 further includes a oil suction tank 260 containing one or more oil discharge pumps 265, an oil discharge manifold 270, an oil discharge piping system 275, and oil offloading transfer line 280. In this embodiment, discharge manifold 270 and suction tank 260 are supported on platform 140. Alternatively, suction tank 260 may be disposed within one cell 130, for example, the central cell 130. Discharge piping system 275 delivers oil contained storage cells 130 through discharge manifold 270 to suction tank 260, and includes a piping branch 285 coupled between an oil outlet port 290 in each storage cell 130 and discharge manifold 270. Discharge manifold 270 is operable to simultaneously deliver oil from one or more storage cells 130 to suction tank 260. Discharge pumps 265 convey oil received by suction tank 250 through offloading transfer line 280 to an offsite location, such as tanker 115 (
During operation of discharge pumps 265, oil 157 is delivered by discharge piping system 275 from one or more storage cells 130 to suction tank 260. For each affected cell 130, backpressure provided by the hydrostatic pressure of seawater 162 in compartment 155 enables delivery of the stored oil 157 to suction tank 260 without the assistance of a pump(s). As oil 157 is depleted from the affected cell(s) 130, volume 165 of compartment 155 is reduced. Due to hydrostatic pressure, seawater is simultaneously drawn into the adjacent compartment 160 through a seawater inlet port 295 disposed in each storage cell 130 below sea level 195. This enables continued delivery of stored oil 157 from compartment(s) 155.
In the above-described embodiment, lower compartment 160 of each cell 130 is enclosed. Seawater 162 that has entered each cell 130 through inlet port 295 may be returned to sea only after conditioning in separator 250. In some circumstances, conditioning of seawater 162 prior to venting the seawater 162 overboard may not be desirable or necessary.
As shown in
Embodiments of a floating oil storage system, or cellular spar, have been described. In either embodiment, oil may be received from an oil-producing offshore structure, such as but not limited to a MCF platform, and stored in one or more storage cells 130 of the cellular spar. Subsequently, the stored oil may be offloaded from the cellular spar to an awaiting tanker. Furthermore, stored oil may be offloaded from one or more storage cells at the same time oil is transferred from the offshore structure and stored in one or more of the remaining storage cells. Hydrostatic pressure of seawater adjacent to and disposed below the stored oil within each storage cell enables offloading of the stored oil without the assistance of a pump.
While preferred embodiments have been shown and described, modifications thereof can be made by one skilled in the art without departing from the scope or teachings herein. The embodiments described herein are exemplary only and are not limiting. Many variations and modifications of the systems are possible and are within the scope of the invention. For example, the relative dimensions of various parts, the materials from which the various parts are made, and other parameters can be varied. Accordingly, the scope of protection is not limited to the embodiments described herein, but is only limited by the claims that follow, the scope of which shall include all equivalents of the subject matter of the claims.
This application claims benefit of U.S. provisional application Ser. No. 61/093,198 filed on Aug. 29, 2008, and entitled “Floating Oil Storage System,” which is hereby incorporated herein by reference in its entirety for all purposes.
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100545828 | Jan 2006 | KR |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20100051624 A1 | Mar 2010 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61093198 | Aug 2008 | US |