An oily water lift station is a pump station that moves oily water from a lower elevation to a higher elevation in a hydrocarbon facility. The lift station is constructed below ground level to allow collection of various streams of liquids from different locations by gravity. The liquids are separated inside the lift station and pumped out of the lift station for further processing. The depth of the lift station below ground level varies depending on the design of the facility served, but it can be as deep as 12 m. An oily water lift station typically has two chambers, an inlet chamber and a pump chamber, separated by a concrete wall to enhance separation of oil from water. Two sets of vertical pumps are typically used to pump the oil and water separately.
Under normal conditions, liquid level transmitters monitor the liquid level inside the lift station and activate the vertical pumps to reduce the liquid level when the liquid level is above a predetermined level without any interference from plant personnel. Occasionally, human intervention in the form of manually vacuuming the lift station with external vacuum tankers may be required. This may be due to the pumps failing to operate or accumulated water in the lift station that exceeds the pumping capacity of the pumps or routine maintenance of the lift station. The lift station typically has an access hole that is covered by a set of heavy weight steel cover plates. During occasions when human intervention is required, the access hole will have to be open to the surface. Since the lift station is considered to be a vertical confined space, safety protocol requires specially trained Operations personnel for the intervention if the lift station contains liquid.
Several operational risks are associated with human intervention in an oily water lift station. There is a risk of fire due to the fact that oily water lift stations can contain a large amount of flammable liquids and gases, which can ignite if exposed to an ignition source. In such cases, the risk may be mitigated by purging the lift station with nitrogen. While the access hole of the lift station is open, e.g., during or after maintenance work, the risk of falling into the lift station through the access hole is high. Since the lift station can be quite deep, e.g., more than 10 m deep, falling inside a dry lift station can be fatal. The atmosphere inside an oily water lift station is typically not suitable for breathing since the air volume can contain a substantial amount of hydrocarbon gases and/or hydrogen sulfide, which is a fatal gas if inhaled. In addition, oily water lift stations are designed to maintain a certain level of liquid inside the inlet chamber, e.g., around 3 m deep. This can cause drowning if someone falls inside the lift station. In such cases, intervention to rescue the person inside the lift station can only be made by certified Fire Protection personnel with special gear.
In a first summary example, a safety apparatus includes a safety fabric that in use is positioned in an access opening of a subsurface chamber. The safety fabric includes a mesh having a plurality of mesh openings and a band formed around a perimeter of the mesh. The safety apparatus includes at least one safety indicator attached to the band by at least one strap. The at least one safety indicator is positioned outside of the access opening by extension of the at least one strap when the safety fabric is positioned in the access opening.
The safety apparatus may include at least one vacuum port formed in the mesh. The at least one vacuum port may include a hole and a reinforced pad formed around a perimeter of the hole. The safety apparatus may include two vacuum ports formed at opposite ends of the mesh. Each of the two vacuum ports may include a hole and a reinforced pad formed around a perimeter of the hole. The mesh may be made of a plurality of straps that are crisscrossed to form the mesh openings. The plurality of straps of the mesh and the at least one strap of the at least one safety indicator may be made of a synthetic fabric material. The synthetic fabric material may be a nylon material or a polyester material. The safety fabric may have a safety color. The at least one strap may have a safety color. The safety indicator may include a case carrying a warning label. The safety indicator may include at least one of a light source and an RFID tag. Eyelets may be formed in and along the band formed around a perimeter of the mesh. The eyelets may engage hooks on a surface in the access opening when the safety fabric is positioned in the access opening.
In a second summary example, a lift station includes an enclosure having a first subsurface chamber, a second subsurface chamber, and an access opening. The first subsurface chamber receives a liquid stream from a flowline, the second subsurface chamber is fluidly connected to the first subsurface chamber, and the access opening is connected to the first subsurface chamber. The lift station includes at least one pump having a suction end fluidly connected to the second subsurface chamber and operable to pump liquid out of the second subsurface chamber. The lift station includes a safety fabric removably positioned in the access opening. The safety fabric includes a mesh having a plurality of mesh openings and a band formed around a perimeter of the mesh. The lift station includes at least one safety indicator attached to the band by at least one strap. The at least one safety indicator is positioned outside of the enclosure by extension of the strap outside of the access opening. The lift station incudes at least one removable cover plate mounted over the access opening.
The at least one strap may be pinned to a wall of the enclosure by the at least one removable cover plate. The lift station may include at least one vacuum port formed in the mesh. The at least one vacuum port may include a hole and a reinforced pad formed around a perimeter of the hole. A plurality of removable cover plates may be mounted over the access opening. The at least one removable cover plate may include an indication of a location of the at least one vacuum port. The mesh may be made of a plurality of strap that are crisscrossed to form the mesh openings. Each of the safety fabric and the at least one strap may have a safety color. The safety indicator may include a case and at least one of a warning label, a light source, and an RFID tag carried by the case. The lift station may include a plurality of hooks attached to a wall of the access opening and a plurality of eyelets formed in and along the band. The plurality of eyelets may releasably engage the plurality of hooks to removably position the safety fabric in the access opening.
In a third summary example, a method of cleaning a lift station includes detecting at least one safety indicator coupled to a safety fabric disposed in an access opening of the lift station from outside of the lift station. At least one cover plate mounted over the access opening is removed to reveal the safety fabric. A hose of a vacuum tanker is inserted through a vacuum port formed in a mesh of the safety fabric into a subsurface chamber of the lift station. The vacuum tanker is operated to clean the subsurface chamber.
The foregoing general description and the following detailed description are exemplary of the invention and are intended to provide an overview or framework for understanding the nature of the invention as it is claimed. The accompanying drawings are included to provide further understanding of the invention and are incorporated in and constitute a part of the specification. The drawings illustrate various embodiments of the invention and together with the description serve to explain the principles and operation of the invention.
The following is a description of the figures in the accompanying drawings. In the drawings, identical reference numbers identify similar elements or acts. The sizes and relative positions of elements in the drawings are not necessarily drawn to scale. For example, the shapes of various elements and angles are not necessarily drawn to scale, and some of these elements may be arbitrarily enlarged and positioned to improve drawing legibility. Further, the particular shapes of the elements as drawn are not necessarily intended to convey any information regarding the actual shape of the particular elements and have been solely selected for ease of recognition in the drawing.
In the following detailed description, certain specific details are set forth in order to provide a thorough understanding of various disclosed implementations and embodiments. However, one skilled in the relevant art will recognize that implementations and embodiments may be practiced without one or more of these specific details, or with other methods, components, materials, and so forth. In other instances, related well known features or processes have not been shown or described in detail to avoid unnecessarily obscuring the implementations and embodiments. For the sake of continuity, and in the interest of conciseness, same or similar reference characters may be used for same or similar objects in multiple figures.
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An upper portion of vertical wall 215 includes an opening 230 that is fluidly connected to chambers 220, 225. A bottom edge 231 of opening 230 is set at a predetermined height above a bottom surface 221 of inlet chamber 220. As an example, this height may be at least 3 m. When the liquid level in inlet chamber 220 is above bottom edge 231, liquid will overflow from inlet chamber 220 into pump chamber 225 through opening 230. Liquid stream is delivered into inlet chamber 220 through a flowline 235 that extends from the outside of lift station 200 into inlet chamber 220. The outlet end 236 of flowline 235 is directed towards bottom surface 221 of inlet chamber 220. As inlet chamber 220 fills with the liquid stream, separation of the liquid stream will occur, with the heavier liquid, e.g., water, and solids settling at the bottom of inlet chamber 220 and the lighter liquid, e.g., oil, floating on top of the heavier liquid. Pumps 240, 245 are installed on top wall 207, with suction pipes 241, 246 of the pumps extending into pump chamber 225. Pumps 240, 245 may be activated when liquid rises above a predetermined level inside chamber 225. There are level transmitters located inside chamber 225. These level transmitters measure the liquid level inside chamber 225 and trigger operation of pumps 240, 245. Pump 240 may be a deluge pump and may be used to pump water out of the lift station, and pump 245 may be a gravity sewer pump and may be used to pump oil out of the lift station.
The detailed description along with the summary and abstract are not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the embodiments to the precise forms described. Although specific embodiments, implementations, and examples are described herein for illustrative purposes, various equivalent modifications can be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the disclosure, as will be recognized by those skilled in the relevant art.
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