This application is the US National Stage of International Application No. PCT/EP2009/055297, filed Apr. 30, 2009 and claims the benefit thereof. The International Application claims the benefits of German application No. 10 2008 022 176.7 DE filed May 5, 2008. All of the applications are incorporated by reference herein in their entirety.
The invention relates to a method for “in-situ” conveying of bitumen or very heavy oil from oil sand deposits according to the preamble of the claims. Furthermore, the invention relates to an associated apparatus for implementing the method.
The German patent according to DE 10 2007 040 605 B4 with the title “Apparatus for “in-situ” conveying of bitumen or very heavy oil”, grants protection to an apparatus with which thermal energy is applied to the oil sand deposit, referred to as reservoir, in order to reduce the viscosity of the bitumen or very heavy oil such that at least one electrical/electromagnetic heater is provided and an extraction pipe is present for leading away the liquefied bitumen or very heavy oil, wherein at least two linearly extended conductors are routed in parallel in the horizontal alignment at the predetermined depth of the reservoir, with the ends of the conductors being electrically conductively connected inside or outside of the reservoir and together forming a conductor loop, which realizes a predetermined complex resistance and are connected outside of the reservoir to an external alternating current generator for electrical power, with the inductivity of the conductor loop being compensated section by section. The reservoir can therefore be heated inductively.
The conveying method forming the basis of the above patent originates from the known SAGD (Steam Assisted Gravity Drainage) method. The SAGD method starts by both pipes typically being heated by steam for three months, in order to liquefy the bitumen in the space between the pipes at least as quickly as possible. Steam is subsequently introduced into the reservoir through the upper pipe and the conveying through the lower pipe can begin.
With older, non pre-published German patent applications from the applicant (DE 10 2007 008 192.6 with the title “Apparatus and method for “in-situ” extraction of a substance containing hydrocarbon by reducing its viscosity from a subterranean deposit” and DE 10 2007 036 832.3 with the title “Apparatus for “in-situ” extraction of a substance containing hydrocarbon”), electrical/electromagnetic heating methods are already proposed for an “in-situ” conveying of bitumen and/or very heavy oil, in which an inductive heating of the reservoir in particular takes place.
“In-situ” extraction methods of bitumen from oil sands using steam and horizontal bore holes (SAGD) are used commercially. To this end, large quantities of water vapor are needed in order to heat up the bitumen and large quantities of water to be cleaned accumulate. Reference has already made in such cases to the possibility of the steam-free subterranean heating of the bitumen. Purely electrically-resistive bitumen heating for conveying purposes is likewise known.
Based on the afore-cited patent and the further prior art, it is the object of the invention to methodically improve the method and to create the associated apparatus.
The object is achieved in accordance with the invention by the measures of the claims. An associated apparatus forms the subject matter of the claims. Developments of the inventive method and the associated apparatus are specified in the dependent claims.
The subject matter of the invention is that a purely electromagnetic-inductive method for heating and conveying bitumen with particularly favorable arrangements of the inductors is proposed. It is essential here to position one of the inductors directly above the production pipe, in other words without any appreciable horizontal displacement. Nevertheless, a displacement when introducing the boreholes cannot be completely avoided. In each case the displacement should be smaller than 10 m, preferably smaller than 5 m, and this is considered to be insignificant in terms of the corresponding dimensions of the deposit.
This relates to the positioning of the inductors, which are decisive for a conveying method without steam, and to the electrical circuitry of the sub-conductors.
While, with the patent cited in the introduction, the electromagnetic heating process can be combined with a steam process (SAGD), the additional invention exclusively applies to the electromagnetic heating, which is subsequently referred to as EMGD (Electro-Magnetic Gravity Drainage) method. The EMGD method relates to the positioning of the inductors with individual sub-conductors, which are decisive for a conveying method without steam and to the electrical circuitry of the sub-conductors.
As a result of a number, especially three sub-conductors, being present, it is possible for instance to operate with single-phase alternating current at the start of the heating process, in order to heat the bitumen and/or very heavy oil in the vicinity of the production pipe as quickly as possible, in order then to switch to three-phase current and vice versa: The production can be maximized by means of a current feed which is suited to the heating system in each instance.
Further details and advantages of the invention result from the subsequent description of the Figures of exemplary embodiments with the aid of the drawing in connection with the claims, in which;
The same or similarly operating units are provided with the same or corresponding reference characters in the Figures. The figures are subsequently described together in groups.
An oil sand deposit 100, referred to as reservoir, is shown in
When realizing the SAGD method known from the prior art, in accordance with
Typical distances between the forward and return conductors 10, 20 are 10 to 60 m with an external diameter of the conductors of 10 to 50 cm (0.1 to 0.5 m).
An electrical two-wire line 10, 20 in
The main patent application shows that the simulated power loss density allocation decreases radially in a plane at right angles to the conductors, as is embodied with the opposing-phase current feed of the upper and lower conductor.
The labels selected for
0: section of an oil reservoir, is repeated a number of times towards both sides
1′: horizontal pipe pair (“well pair”), with injection pipe a and production pipe b, equivalent to the extraction pipe 102 in
A: 1st horizontal, parallel inductor
B: 2nd horizontal, parallel inductor
4: inductive current feed by electrical connection to the ends of the inductors (according to
w: reservoir width, distance from one well pair to the next (typically 50-200 m)
h: reservoir height, thickness of the geological oil layer (typically 20-60 m)
d1: horizontal distance from A to 1 is w/2
d2: vertical distance from A and B to a: 0.1 m to 0.9*h (typically 20 m-60 m).
An arrangement of the sub-conductor of the conductor loop directly above the production pipe, and essentially at a right angle above the production pipe, gives the particular advantage of the bitumen in the environment above the production pipe heating up over a comparatively short period of time and thus being at low viscosity. This means that production begins after a comparatively short period of time (e.g. 6 months), which coincides with a pressure relief of the reservoir. The pressure in a reservoir is typically limited and dependent on the thickness of the overburden, in order to prevent evaporated water from breaking through (e.g. 12 bar at a depth of 120 m, 40 bar at 400 m, . . . ). Since the pressure in the reservoir increases as a result of the electrical heating, the current distribution for heating purposes must take place in a pressure-controlled fashion. This again means that a higher heating output is only possible after production has started. The early conveying is enabled by the close arrangement of the inductors. A close attachment of two inductors operated in phase opposition, (180° phase displacement), which are contained in a conductor loop is not possible since the inductive heating output would then be significantly reduced and the necessary current distribution in the cable would be too great.
The associated electrical circuitry can be found in
In
The switching variants according to
In accordance with
Finally, an inductor can be used as a forward conductor and more than two inductors can be used as return conductors, with the phase displacement of the currents of the forward conductor to all return conductors amounting to 180° and the total of the return line currents corresponding to the forward conductor current.
According to
Different variants were described above which express the subject matter of the main patent application for the EMGD method in concrete terms. The following variants are regarded as particularly advantageous:
An essential part of the apparatus is, as described above, that an inductor is positioned directly above the production pipe. Furthermore, types of circuitry (
The EMGD can be subdivided into three phases. Phase 1 forms the heating of the reservoir without bitumen being conveyed. The bitumen melts here in the direct vicinity of the inductors. The melted regions are still insulated from one another and there is also no connection to the production pipe. In Phase 2, the bitumen is in the vicinity of the inductor, which is directly above the production pipe and is melted over such a wide area that there is a connection to the production pipe. The bitumen is conveyed from this central reservoir region with an accompanying pressure relief. There is also no connection with the melted regions of the outside inductors.
In phase 3, the central and external melted regions have connected with one another, accompanied by a pressure relief in the outer regions. The bitumen is conveyed from the whole reservoir until it is fully extracted.
To advantageously embody the EMGD, in Phase 1, the heating output is concentrated on the inductor directly above the production pipe in order to achieve as early a conveying start as possible. A continual or gradual displacement of the heating output components from the central region into the outer regions takes place in the subsequent phases 2 and 3, allowing for the compressive strength of the respective reservoir region. This requires different procedures depending on the type of circuitry and the positioning of the inductor.
In the configuration according to
With the configurations according to
To maximize concentration of the heating output component on the central region (advantageous in Phase 1), inductor A and inductors B and C are to be operated as a forward conductor and return conductors respectively. The generator is used here as an alternating current source and the phase displacement between A and B, C amounts to 180°. With a homogenous electrical conductivity of the reservoir, the heating output components are ½ (A, central region) to ¼ (B), ¼ (C).
With a current feed having the same amplitude and 120° phase displacement (three-phase current), a uniform heating output entry of ⅓ of the overall heating output for A, B and C is obtained, this being advantageously useable in phases 2 and 3.
After adequately heating the central region, no further heating output is to be introduced there and the current feed of the inductor A can (at least partially) be completely discontinued. To this end, operation takes place as an alternating current generator with an inductor B as a forward conductor and inductor C as a return conductor. The heating pipe components are 0 for A and ½ for B, C in each instance.
According to the demands on the heating output distribution of the EMGD phases, one of the above modes of operation i)-iii) is set. It is also possible to switch repeatedly between these modes of operation within the EMGD phases.
Other amplitude ratios and phase displacements are also conceivable as a modification of the mode of operation ii), it being possible for said amplitude ratios and phase displacements to also result in asymmetrical heating output distributions if the reservoir conditions so require this. In the extreme case, it is possible to leave one of the external inductors (B or C) without current and to feed current to A as a forward conductor and C or B as return conductors, wherein the generator only needs to supply alternating current.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10 2008 022 176 | May 2008 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2009/055297 | 4/30/2009 | WO | 00 | 11/4/2010 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2009/135806 | 11/12/2009 | WO | A |
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