This invention relates to the method of providing a relative vacuum locally in front of a pipeline remediation pig to advance the pig further into the pipeline during a cleaning process.
Typically, when a blockage of a pipeline is to be remediated, it requires that a flow path be established to and from the area of the blockage. The pipeline itself will form one of the flow paths. The other must be in the form of some sort of tubular member placed within the pipeline. This tubular member is most often a steel string of coiled tubing, or thin walled pipe delivered to the entrance point of the pipeline on a reel.
As the coiled tubing will only go a short distance into the pipeline without forming a spiral column buckling preventing further progress, a cleaning pig with sealing cups to seal against the bore of the pipeline is attached to the end of the coiled tubing to pull the pipeline into the pipeline. The area inside the bore of the pipeline and outside the coiled tubing makes one of these flow paths and pumping into this area will drive the pig and therefore drag the coiled tubing out to the site of the blockage. While the cleaning pig is travelling out the pipeline, the fluids in front of the pig are forced back up the bore of the coiled tubing.
During the trip out and/or when the cleaning pig has arrived at the site of the blockage, drag can be induced on the coiled tubing at the entrance point to cause a pressure buildup across the sealing cups of the cleaning pig. At that point, the pressure differential across the sealing cups and therefore any jetting nozzles can be utilized to help remediate the blockage and/or buildup on the walls. The process uses the large annular area to flow out to the cleaning pig.
If you want to jet at 50 gallons per minute through a pipeline with a 5.761-inch internal bore using 1.25″ internal bore coiled tubing for 5000 feet, the flow loss out the annulus is less than 1 p.s.i., however the flow loss returning in the coiled tubing is about 1862 p.s.i. If you want to have 500 p.s.i. jetting pressure across the jet nozzles on the cleaning pig you must pump approximately 2362 p.s.i. The tension induced on the coiled tubing is 61,592 lbs. The resulting stress in the coiled tubing is 114,067 p.s.i., which will destroy the coiled tubing. The 2362 p.s.i. in the annulus will in some cases exceed the working pressure of the pipeline. To clean a 10,000-ft. pipeline, the pressures become even higher. The operation must make compromises on flow rates and pressures which are practical to use in the situation.
The combinations of relatively high pressures required to get effective jet cleaning, low working pressure of some pipelines, and the resulting high tensile forces on the coiled tubing can make this a difficult combination to negotiate. A method to achieve this jetting which does not over stress he coiled tubing or threaten to rupture some of the pipelines would be advantageous.
These restrictions have plagued the remediation industry for the past several decades and has caused substantial limitations to the cleaning which can be accomplished.
The objective of this invention is to provide a controlled forward movement to a cleaning pig which is pulling a coiled tubing string in a pipeline.
A second objective of this method is to provide a method of flowing to a cleaning pig through a coiled tubing string and take the annulus flow back up the annular outside of the coiled tubing string during a cleaning operation.
A third objective of this method is to allow the cleaning pig to be moved out to the cleaning location by pumping into the annular area between the internal bore of the coiled tubing and the outside diameter of the coiled tubing.
Another objective of this method is to use power fluid flow down the coiled tubing string to power a pump/motor combination to cause a relative vacuum in the front of the cleaning pig to urge the pig forward.
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Arrows 40-46 indicate the flow and direction of the flow within the pipelines. Cleaning pig 50 moves within the flow and is restrained from moving freely in the flow by coiled tubing or hose 52. Coiled tubing or hose 52 goes back to injector head 54 with blowout preventers 56 and storage reel 58. Blockage 60 is the target of the remediation and may be hydrates waxes or paraffins depending on the nature of the normal flow in the pipeline.
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The particular embodiments disclosed above are illustrative only, as the invention may be modified and practiced in different but equivalent manners apparent to those skilled in the art having the benefit of the teachings herein. Furthermore, no limitations are intended to the details of construction or design herein shown, other than as described in the claims below. It is therefore evident that the particular embodiments disclosed above may be altered or modified and all such variations are considered within the scope and spirit of the invention. Accordingly, the protection sought herein is as set forth in the claims below.