The present invention concerns a method and equipment for reducing or eliminating multiple dispersions in fluid flows each consisting of two or more fluid components with different specific gravities and viscosities, in particular fluid flows of oil and water from different oil/gas production wells in formations beneath the surface of the earth or sea.
All production wells will have different contents of water in oil, so-called water-cut, which develop differently over time. If several oil-continuous and/or water-continuous wells are mixed together, multiple dispersions will be created, i.e. dispersions in which drops are dispersed inside other drops, creating several drop layers outside each other. If several oil-continuous and water-continuous wells are mixed together, very complex dispersions may be created with many drop layers that will be very difficult, if not impossible, to separate.
The present invention represents a method and equipment that aim to reduce or eliminate the creation of such complex dispersions with several drop layers (several drops inside each other).
The present invention will be described in further detail by means of examples and with reference to the attached drawings, where:
a-e show diagrammatic examples of practical embodiments of the method and equipment in accordance with the present invention.
As stated above, all production wells for oil/gas will have different contents of water in oil, so-called water-cut, which develop differently over time. In a flow of oil and water in a production pipe from a well, situations may, therefore, occur in which there is more water than oil, i.e. a water-continuous flow, or in which there is more oil than water, i.e. an oil-continuous flow. The inventors of the present invention have found that if several oil-continuous and/or water-continuous wells are mixed together, multiple dispersions will be created, i.e. dispersions In which drops are dispersed inside other drops, creating several drop layers outside each other. If several oil-continuous and water-continuous wells are mixed together, very complex dispersions may be created with many drop layers that may be very difficult to separate.
The number of changes in phase continuity when wells are mixed, for example in a manifold as illustrated in
Tests have shown that multiple dispersions are much more difficult to separate than single dispersions. The diagram in
It is usually impossible to destabilize multiple dispersions using emulsion breakers (chemicals). The main reason is that the emulsion breaker can only be mixed into the outer continuous phase. The inner drop phases are, therefore, inaccessible to the emulsion breaker.
The main idea of the present, invention is to obtain a method that makes it possible to minimize or eliminate alternate mixtures of flows with opposite phase continuity (oil-continuous or water-continuous). The result will be the fewest possible numbers of drop layers in the dispersion after the wells have been mixed or by avoiding mixture before separation of the fluid in question.
A typical well transport system with double pipelines that can be round-pigged is used in the North Sea in the Troll field (Troll Pilot) and is shown in further detail in
A practical embodiment of the idea based on the pipe system in
In the example shown in
The system shown in
A system that is even better than the one shown in
The system in
An alternative is to run both pipes (oil-continuous fluid and water-continuous fluid) separately up to the separator, where the oil-continuous fluid is mixed into the oil phase and the water-continuous fluid is mixed into the water phase. See
An equivalent system may involve using two pipe separators, one for the water-continuous flow, RT1, and one for the oil-continuous flow, RT2, as shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20050767 | Feb 2005 | NO | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/NO2006/000056 | 2/10/2006 | WO | 00 | 1/25/2008 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2006/085775 | 8/17/2006 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20090126927 A1 | May 2009 | US |