The invention relates to a method for the in situ extraction of bitumen or very heavy oil from oil sand deposits close to the surface, thermal energy being introduced into the deposit to reduce the viscosity of the bitumen or very heavy oil, with at least one extraction pipe being used to extract the liquefied bitumen or very heavy oil and at least one pipe being used to introduce thermal energy, the two pipes being routed parallel to one another. The invention also relates to an associated apparatus for implementing the method, with at least one injection pipe for introducing energy into the deposit and at least one extraction pipe for extracting oil from the deposit, both pipes running horizontally in the deposit.
During the in situ breaking down of bitumen from oil sand by means of steam and horizontal bore holes by means of the SAGD (Steam Assisted Gravity Drainage) method, large quantities of water vapor are required to heat the bitumen. Steam at a temperature of 250° C. with a quality of 0.95, i.e. almost superheated, is typically used. Although this steam has a high energy content, very large quantities of water accumulate and are extracted with the oil back to the surface and have to be processed there with significant outlay.
When using steam, the use of horizontal injection pipes longer than 1000 m is no longer practical due to the resulting pressure loss, which is known to be a function of the pipe length.
A SAGD method for extracting very heavy oil is known from U.S. Pat. No. 6,257,334 B1, in which, in addition to a so-called well pair consisting of pipes one on top of the other, further elements are also present, which are intended to improve the heating of the region. Also a facility for the electrical heating of certain regions is known from WO 03/054351 A1, with which a field is generated between two electrodes, heating the region in between them.
A method for the heavy oil deposit is also known from US 2006/015166 A1, in which a tool with electrodes is provided for the three-phase resistive heating of the deposit to reduce the viscosity of the heavy oil.
On this basis the object of the invention is to propose a method which does not use steam with its pressure loss and to create an associated apparatus.
The object in respect of the method is achieved by the measures of the claims and in respect of the apparatus by the features of the claims. Developments of the method and the associated apparatus are set out in the respectively dependent claims.
The subject matter of the invention is a method, wherein water is injected into the reservoir instead of steam and is only evaporated in the reservoir by means of electrical heating. Electrical, i.e. resistive, heating and/or electromagnetic, i.e. inductive, heating can be used for this purpose.
The inventive feature of inductive heating in particular means that electromagnetic dissipation occurs where electrical conductivity is high. Resistive heating is also suitable. The heating rate can advantageously be regulated by measuring the pressure and/or temperature in particular in the environment of the well pair or at other points. It is thus possible to ensure that certain pressure and temperature threshold values are not exceeded in the process.
With the invention therefore water is evaporated in situ by electrical heating.
One particular advantage of the invention is that it avoids the need for expensive water processing installations, as are used with the known SAGD method to eliminate oil residues from the water, for desalination and evaporation purposes. Also expensive consumables for water processing—such as filters, ion exchangers, etc.—are superfluous.
The low pressure loss with water compared with water vapor means that the in situ breaking down of bitumen can be carried out with much longer pipes than before (>1000 in). The energy costs for heating and evaporating the water can of course not be avoided and are instead incurred in the power plant. The fact that electric current can be transmitted over quite long distances means that power plants of large unit size can be used. The higher energy costs of electric current compared with steam (factor 2) can in some instances be offset by the above-mentioned savings.
Instead of converting the process totally from steam to water injection it is also possible in the context of the invention to switch to a lower steam quality or smaller steam quantity or preheated water, simply providing the missing energy electrically. This reduces the capital costs of the boiler.
A further advantage of the inventive method finally is that salts can be added to the water to increase conductivity, ensuring efficient heating.
Further details and advantages of the invention will emerge from the description of figures of exemplary embodiments which follows based on the drawing in conjunction with the subclaims, in which drawing:
In
With the prior art therefore a circuit is largely present in the process sequence with the cited units.
With the associated apparatus there is no longer a need for a steam generation installation and the water desalination installation connected upstream of it in
Simplified method implementation results with the new installation. The electrical energy is advantageously taken from a power plant and a converter is used in the unit 12 to provide the electrical power in suitable form, in particular as high-frequency current. The high-frequency current is passed to current conductors in the reservoir, for example the electrode 106 or 107, and serves there to generate heat. Inductive heating of the reservoir in particular is realized here. Resistive heating can also take place in some instances.
The advantage of such a procedure is that only water has to be routed in the injection pipe 101. The water is evaporated in situ, i.e. in the horizontally running region around the injection pipe 101, by means of the electromagnetic effect, with the steam being produced in the horizontal region around the pipe 101. The energy of the steam thus produced is emitted to the reservoir, so that an oil sand/water mixture builds up in the extraction pipe 102. This is extracted to the ground surface by way of the extraction pipe 102—in some instances with an additional pump—with an oil separation installation again being provided. The remaining water is processed in the water processing unit and then fed back into the circuit.
The procedure shown in
The further
With the described arrangement according to
In FIG. 5—based on the diagram according to FIG. 3—a well pair consisting of an injection pipe 101 and extraction pipe 102 is present. Two electrodes 105 and 106 are also disposed in proximity to the well pair. It is expedient to align these two electrodes at a distance d1 from the line of the well pair on both sides and to select the height between the injection pipe 101 and the extraction pipe 102.
Configuring the horizontal pipes 105 and 106 as electrodes allows inductive energization by electrical connection at the ends of the additional electrode and the injection pipe. The reservoir width w here is for example 100m, the distance from one well pair to the next well pair is typically also around 100 m, with broad limits being set and a range between 50 and 200 m appearing suitable. The horizontal distance of the pipes 105 and 106 from the plane of the well pair is between 0.5 m and around w/2 here.
Specifically 1 again shows the oil reservoir, which is repeated a number of times on both sides of the sectional diagram. The horizontal pipe pair, i.e. the well pair, again consists of the injection pipe 101 and production pipe 102. The horizontal pipe 107 is also present, being configured as an electrode.
The selected diagram shows a repeating arrangement, in which a further electrode 107′ is again present. Inductive energization is thus possible in so far as the ends of the two corresponding electrode pipes are connected electrically.
The arrangement according to
The electrodes have to be located at the lower end of the steam chamber to be established, i.e. at the lower end of the reservoir. The existing well pipes can preferably serve as electrodes there. Energization of the reservoir and thus heating should preferably take place inductively. Resistive heating of the reservoir is also possible but overheating of the electrodes must then be borne in mind.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2007 040 607.1 | Aug 2007 | DE | national |
This application is the US National Stage of International Application No. PCT/EP2008/060851, filed Aug. 19, 2008 and claims the benefit thereof. The International Application claims the benefits of German application No. 10 2007 040 607.1 DE filed Aug. 27, 2007. All of the applications are incorporated by reference herein in their entirety.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP08/60851 | 8/19/2008 | WO | 00 | 2/23/2010 |