The invention relates to a method for converting hydrates buried in the water bottom into a marketable hydrocarbon composition.
Such a method is known from US patent application US 2008/0088171. In the known method a mixture of methane hydrates and mud is prepared with an underwater mining assembly and then brought to a methane dome near the water surface by a series of buckets that are attached to a pair of rotating chains. The methane hydrate is collected and allowed to decompose into methane and water in the methane dome from where the methane is removed to produce liquefied natural gas or synthetic liquid fuels.
A disadvantage of the known method is that methane hydrates are generally present at water depths of more than 1 kilometer, such that very long chains and a large amount of buckets are required to lift the mixture of methane hydrates and mud to the water surface, so that the known method requires costly and heavy equipment, which makes the known bucket dredging method unsuitable and uneconomic for use at large water depths.
Other underwater hydrate excavation methods are known from U.S. Pat. No. 6,209,965, US patent application US2003/0136585, International patent application WO98/44078 and Chinese patent application CN101182771.
It is an object of the present invention to provide an improved method for producing a marketable hydrocarbon composition from a hydrate deposit buried in the water bottom, which is economic and suitable for use at large water depths.
In accordance with the invention there is provided a method for converting hydrates buried in a water bottom into a marketable hydrocarbon composition, the method comprising:
inducing an underwater excavator to excavate hydrate cuttings from the hydrate deposit and to mix the excavated hydrate cuttings with water and/or bottom particles to form a pipeline transportable hydrate containing slurry;
inducing a slurry lifting assembly, which is connected to the excavator, to lift the slurry through a riser conduit to a topsides vessel floating at the water surface;
separating the slurry in a slurry separation assembly at or near the topsides vessel into a transportable methane containing intermediate product and a tailings stream;
transporting the transportable methane containing intermediate product to a facility in which the intermediate product is converted into a marketable hydrocarbon composition; and
wherein the slurry lifting assembly comprises a slurry pump, which is actuated by the tailings stream.
An advantage of actuating the slurry pump by the tailings stream is that the relatively large density of the tailings stream is used to actuate the slurry pump, which reduces the amount of power required to lift the slurry to the topside vessel and/or to pump the tailings stream back from slurry separation assembly to the slurry lifting assembly, in particular if the slurry lifting assembly is located at a water depth of several hundred meters or several kilometers below the water surface.
It is preferred that:
the tailings stream is pumped down through a tailings return conduit to the slurry lifting assembly by a tailings injection pump at the topsides facility;
the slurry pump is actuated by a hydraulic motor which is actuated by the tailings stream; and
the tailings stream is discharged to a tailings disposal site at the water bottom via a flexible tailings disposal pipe which is connected to an outlet port of the hydraulic motor.
The hydraulic motor may be a positive displacement motor and the slurry pump may be a positive displacement pump, which pumps the slurry in a substantially turbulent flow regime through the riser conduit.
The positive displacement pump and motor may comprise a diaphragm pump and motor assembly, which comprises a flexible diaphragm, which is arranged in a substantially vertical orientation in a housing, such that it divides the housing in a hydrate slurry containing chamber and a tailings stream containing chamber.
It is preferred that the hydrate slurry containing chamber and/or the tailings stream containing chamber comprise at least one fluid in and/or outlet port arranged near a lower end of the chamber in order to prevent plugging of the chamber by solid particles in the hydrate slurry and/or tailings stream.
These and other features, embodiments and advantages of the method according to the invention are described in the accompanying claims, abstract and the following detailed description of non-limiting embodiments depicted in the accompanying drawings, in which description reference numerals are used which refer to corresponding reference numerals that are depicted in the drawings.
The assemblies shown in
In accordance with the invention hydrates are dredged from underwater hydrate deposits in the seabed using a seabed excavator of a type developed for deepsea mining of other commodities. This will produce a slurry of hydrate, water and sediment which enters an intermediate production facility from which the intermediate product is separated and transported to the surface as described below.
In the embodiment shown in
In this embodiment methane hydrate is produced in its solid state at the topsides at a low temperature within an oil-based slurry. The main advantages of this intermediate product are that the hydrate at low temperature will exhibit a self-preservation effect and therefore remain metastable as a solid substance, which is a convenient phase for shipping, and the slurry can be pumped directly onto the ship without the need for complex solids-handling equipment.
In this version, the seabed excavator 21 excavates hydrates from a hydrate deposit 30 in the seabed 31 and passes a slurry of methane hydrate, particulate sediment and seawater via a flexible hose 32 into a hydrate slurry separation assembly 22. Within the separation assembly 22 the sediment sinks buoyantly and is drawn from the bottom 23 of the assembly 22 and disposed of as tailings 33 at a suitable site.
Within the separation assembly 22 the hydrate fragments float upwards and are drawn off the top of the assembly 22 into a riser 24 as a water/hydrate slurry which then enters a water to oil slurry unit 25, which comprises a conveyor belt 35 and a cold oil injection conduit 36 and is positioned deep enough below the water surface 34 to be within the Gas Hydrate Stability Zone (GSHZ)—possibly on the water bottom 31 attached to the separation assembly 22. The hydrate is moved into a slurry chilled to approximately −20° C. with the carrier being a suitable hydrocarbon (e.g. gasoil) which then passes up a riser 26 to a floating topsides facility 27. At the topsides facility 27 the slurry can be pumped through a hose 28 into a shuttle tanker 29 where the oil is separated from the slurry for re-use. The shuttle tanker 29 then transports the cold solid hydrate to shore for marketing.
The tailings stream 49 discharged by the hydraulic motor 52 flows through a flexible tailings disposal pipe 54 to a tailings disposal site 55 at the water bottom 42.
Each assembly 61A-C comprises a spherical housing in which a substantially vertical flexible membrane 62A-C is arranged, which divides the interior of the housing into a hydrate slurry containing chamber 63A-C and a tailings stream containing chamber 64A-C.
Each hydrate slurry containing chamber 63A-C is connectable via a first valve 65A-C to a flexible riser 66 connected to a pump 67 mounted on a excavator 68 and via a second valve 68A-C to a slurry riser conduit 69.
The slurry riser conduit 69 is suspended from a production vessel 70, which floats at the water surface 71 and carries a slurry separation assembly 72 into which the slurry riser conduit 69 discharges the hydrate slurry 73 and in which the slurry 73 is separated into a methane(CH4) stream 74 and a tailings stream 75.
The tailings stream 75 is pumped by a high pressure multiphase pump 76 into a tailings return conduit 77, which is connectable to each tailings stream containing chamber 64A-C via a third valve 78A-C.
Each tailings stream containing chamber 64A-C is furthermore connectable to a flexible tailings disposal pipe 79 via a fourth valve 80A-C.
The first to fourth valves are connected to fluid in and outlet ports 81A-C and 82A-C, which are arranged near a lower end of the spherical housings of the diaphragm pump and motor assemblies 61A-C to inhibit accumulation of solid debris in the housings.
As illustrated only the second and third valves 68A and 78 A of the uppermost diaphragm pump and motor assembly 61A are open, which permits the tailings stream pumped by the high pressure pump 76 to press the membrane 62A to the right as illustrated by arrow 85, thereby pumping hydrate slurry from the hydrate slurry containing chamber 63A into the slurry riser conduit 69.
Of the two lowermost diaphragm pump and motor assemblies 61B-C solely the first and fourth valves 56B-C and 80B-C are open, which permits the hydrate slurry 75 pumped by the pump 67 on the excavator to press the membranes 63B-C to the left as illustrated by arrows 87B-C, thereby pumping tailing streams 75 from the tailing stream containing chamber 64B-C via the tailings disposal pipe 79 to a tailings disposal site 88 at the water bottom 89.
Particularly if the subsea pumping station 60 is located at a large water depth from several hundred meters up to several kilometers then it is beneficial to use the tailing stream to power the diaphragm pump and motor assemblies 61A-C, since the tailing stream has a higher density than the surrounding seawater so that a relatively low power high pressure pump 76 may be used to pump the tailing stream into the tailings return conduit 77, which subsequently generates a much higher pressure in the diaphragm pump and motor assemblies 61A-C, due to the hydrostatic head of the tailing stream in the tailings return conduit 77.
Diaphragm pump and motor assemblies 61A-C are compact and robust and are able to significantly increase the pressure of the hydrate slurry 75 to such a high pressure that the slurry 75 is lifted in a turbulent flow regime through the slurry riser conduit 69 to the production vessel 70 at the water surface 71, thereby inhibiting plugging of the conduit 69 by hydrate and/or soil deposits. Diaphragm pump and motor assemblies 61A-C are in use in the mining industry and are able to pump soil slurries with a high content of solids over long periods of time.
The use of the diaphragm pump and motor assembly 61A-C and/or other slurry pumps actuated by the tailings stream 75 returning to the water bottom 89 allows to lift the hydrate slurry 73 to the topsides vessel 70 in an economic and reliable matter since at least part of the energy and pressure required to lift the hydrate slurry is recycled into the returning tailings stream 75, whereby the hydraulic head of the tailings stream 75 in the tailings return conduit 77 significantly reduces the power and hydraulic head that is to be generated by the high pressure pump 76 at the floating vessel 70, in particular if the pump and motor assembly 61A-C is arranged at a large waterdepth, which may range from several hundred meters to several kilometers below the water surface 71.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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09152818.2 | Feb 2009 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2010/051782 | 2/12/2010 | WO | 00 | 8/11/2011 |