The invention relates to methods and systems for generating steam for downhole use.
Steam Assisted Gravity Drainage or “SAGD” (pronounced sag-DEE) is an enhanced oil recovery technology for producing heavy crude oil and bitumen. It is an advanced form of steam stimulation in which a pair of horizontal wells are drilled into the oil reservoir, one a few meters above the other. High-pressure steam is continuously injected into the upper wellbore to heat the oil and reduce its viscosity, causing the heated oil and any condensed water to gravity drain into the lower wellbore, where it can be pumped to the surface.
Generally speaking, high quality, high temperature, and high pressure steam is required. The SAGD process may call for 100% quality, 7,000-11,000 kPA and 238-296° C. temperature steam. Considering oil production volume, and the fact that at least 3 barrels of water are needed for every barrel of oil, the water requirements for SAGD are immense, although water recycling can reduce water consumption considerably.
In addition to requiring large amounts of water, the cost of steam generation is a major contributor to the cost of oil production. The fuel needed to heat water to steam and the transportation of high quality steam to the well pad all contribute to high costs. In addition to the cost of steam generation, each barrel of oil produced in SAGD is co-produced with 3-5 barrels of water, which then must be separated from the oil, and treated before recycling. Water treatment facilities further contribute to cost.
Steam can be produced in various ways, including conventional drum boilers, direct steam generators, and once through steam generators. If the water is sufficiently cleaned, e.g., with evaporator technology, a drum boiler can be used, where the water runs through the boiler more than once, and steam is collected at the top in a drum for distribution, while condensate travels back through the boiler for reheating.
However, the “once-through steam generator” or “OTSG” is more commonly used to provide the steam for SAGD, and other steam based enhanced recovery methods such as cyclic steam generation or “CSS,” because recycled water typically is not clean enough for conventional boiler use.
The OTSG features a single pass of water through the generator coil, where the feedwater is heated and eventually vaporized by a countercurrent of e.g., hot gas produced by the furnace. Regardless of what boiler technology is used, usually the boiler feedwater is preheated by heat exchange with e.g., a hot combustion gas, usually flue gas, or a hot fluid, such as the hot produced fluids. The recapture of otherwise waste heat reduces the overall energy needed to make steam.
The preheated feedwater is then converted to steam in the OTSG by the heat radiated from the furnace, resulting in about 80% quality steam, i.e. the weight ratio of water to steam at the outlet of the generator is about 1:4. The 80% quality steam then goes through a series of liquid-steam separators (also called “flash drums”) to increase the steam quality of OTSG.
Although it is possible to further heat (superheat) the low quality steam to generate 100% steam, this increases fouling of the OTSG as all of the water evaporates and leaves significant solids behind to foul the heat transfer surfaces. Thus, the relatively low steam quality helps to maintain wet conditions in the OTSG tubes in order to reduce fouling and scaling.
The water remaining once the low quality steam and water are separated is called “blow-down” water and has fairly high levels of dissolved organic compounds. Typical blow-down levels are about 20%. Blowdown can be reused in the OTSG, thus saving on overall water usage, but clean boiler feedwater is preferred, because the organics contribute to fouling of the boiler. Thus, blowdown water must be treated before reuse.
There are OTSG designs that include a preheat section, typically called an “ecomomizer”, a vaporizer or “radiant” section, and a “superheater” section so that a high quality steam can be generated within a single OTSG unit. However, these units are quite large, expensive, and as noted, superheating steam leads to fouling unless very clean feed-water is used, which is not usually practical given the imperative to reuse water.
Typically, the OTSG is located at the central processing facility (CPF) and the steam is transported to the well pad for injection because the boiler and preheat equipment is too large to be placed at the well pad. However, the steam-lines that connect the CPF boilers to the pads are costly and limited in length due to pressure loss and steam condensation issues. This contributes further to cost.
Therefore, there is the need for an improved steam generation methods that reduce the cost of steam production, e.g., by eliminating the need for steam-lines, but without overcrowding the well pad.
The present disclosure provides a method of reducing the need for steam lines, but without overcrowding the well pad.
The basis of the disclosure is a process that reduces the thermal duty and, consequently, the size and footprint of well pad boilers. This is accomplished by preheating the well pad boiler feed water to as high a temperature as possible without any vaporization at the CPF and transporting the preheated water to the well pads. Because the feedwater arrives at the well pad at a higher temperature, less energy is needed to convert that feedwater into steam. This reduces the required heat transfer surface area within the boiler and consequently reduces the size and footprint of that boiler. It also reduces the fuel gas and combustion air demand, minimizing utility requirements at the well pads.
Any steam generator technology can be used at the well pad, including water tube drum boilers, fire tube drum boilers, direct steam generators, oxy-fired direct steam generators, OTSG units, and the like. However, the smaller footprint is desired, and thus a single water tube drum boiler may be preferred. Drum boilers also offer the advantage of less blow down, thus reducing the flow rate of blow down that needs to be transferred from the pads to the CPF. Evaporative water treatment is relatively costly, but can be offset by the lower drum boiler versus OTSG boiler costs. However, any steam generator can be used.
The preheated water would ideally be heated to a temperature within 5-30° C., preferably 10-25° C. of the boiling point at the well pad boiler operating steam pressure. Subcool is desired to minimize the likelihood of flashing in the lines. A preferred subcool is 10-20° C. or about 10° C.
SAGD surface facilities include water-preheating capabilities, and in most cases, preheat OTSG feedwater with heat from produced fluids, OTSG blow-down, warm glycol, and other hot streams. However, these heat recovery systems only enable preheat temperatures of 140-180° C. If supplemental preheating is required, it will need to be provided by a fired heater, boiler, or other high temperature heat source. Several embodiments are described herein.
The first embodiment applies to processes that include boilers both at the CPF and at the well pads. In these applications, the CPF boilers provide the necessary preheating. Two options are shown in
In the second option, the well pad boiler feed-water is heated by heat exchange with the hot OTSG blow-down. This enables the use of existing OTSGs, but will impact the OTSG heat recovery system because blow-down heat that would otherwise preheat OTSG feed-water is now used to heat pad boiler feedwater.
A possible limitation of this embodiment is that it requires some steam generation at the CPF, which implies that the preheat temperature may be limited by the ratio of well pad to CPF steam generators. This can be addressed by preheating the feed water in a dedicated fired heater placed at the CPF, as shown in
An alternate heat source to a fired heater is a gas turbine that generates on-site power, as shown in the embodiment of
The invention includes any one or more of the following embodiments, in any combination thereof:
A method of generating steam for use in a well to produce oil comprising heating a boiler feedwater located at a central processing facility (CPF) to produce heated boiler feedwater (HBFW), transporting the HBFW, which has a subcool of 5-30° C. or 10-20° C., to a well pad via hot water lines, feeding the HBFW into a well pad boiler located at the well pad, and converting the HBFW to steam in the well pad boiler. The steam is then injected into a well located at said well pad to produce oil.
The initial heating at the CPF can be performed by a gas burning water heater, a gas burning turbine heater that produces electricity and HBFW, a once through gas generator (OTSG), or combinations thereof. The well pad boiler can be a water tube drum boiler.
The initial heating at the CPF can also be preceded by a preheating step that preheats the boiler feedwater before it is feed into the heater at the CPF. The HBFW can also be preheated before being heated by the well pad boiler. In some embodiments, both preheating steps occur.
A steam generator system for oil production having a water heater located at a CPF to heat boiler feedwater to HBFW, where the HBFW has a subcool of 5-30° C., a hot water line for transporting the HBFW from the CPF to a steam generator at a well pad, and a steam line for injecting steam into a well at the well pad. The heaters and lines are all fluidly connected.
The steam generator system can have a heat exchanger located at the CPF for preheating said boiler feedwater. The steam generator system can have a heat exchanger located at the well pad for preheating said HBFW. Alternatively, a heat exchanger can be located at both the CPF and well pad for preheating the boiler feedwater and HBFW, respectively.
The steam generator at the well pad can be a water tube drum boiler. The water heater at the CPF can be a gas fired water heater, natural gas fired water heater, a gas burning turbine heater that produces electricity and HBFW, a once through gas generator (OTSG), or combinations thereof
An improved method of producing steam for oil production, the method including heating boiler feedwater in a steam generator at a CPF, and transporting the steam in a steam line to a well pad for downhole use, the improvement being heating boiler feedwater in a water heater located at a CPF to 5-30° subcool, transporting the heater boiler feedwater at 5-30° C. subcool to a steam generator located at a well pad, and further heating the heated boiler feedwater in the steam generator to produce steam for downhole use.
An improved method of producing steam for oil production, the method including heating boiler feedwater in a steam generator at a CPF, and transporting the steam in a steam line to a well pad for downhole use, the improvement comprising heating boiler feedwater in a water heater located at a CPF to 10-20° C. subcool, transporting the boiler feedwater at 10-20° C. subcool to a water tube drum steam generator located at a well pad, and heating the boiler feedwater in the water tube drum steam generator to produce steam for injection into a well located at said well pad.
An improved method of producing steam for oil production, the method includes heating boiler feedwater in a steam generator at a CPF, and transporting the steam in a steam line to a first well pad for downhole use, the improvement comprising heating boiler feedwater in a water heater located at a CPF to 10-20° C. subcool, transporting the boiler feedwater at 10-20° C. subcool to a second well pad, preheating the 10-20° C. subcooled boiler feedwater in a heat exchanger located at the second well pad, converting the preheated boiler feedwater to steam in a water tube drum boiler located at the second well pad, and injecting the steam into a well located at the second well pad.
As used herein, a “water tube drum boiler” is a drum based steam generator having 1-4 drums, which function to collect the steam generated in the water tubes and acts as a phase-separator for the steam/water mixture. Water is routed back through the boiler. See e.g.
As used herein, a “Once-Through Steam Generator” or “OTSG” is a specialized type of heat recovery steam generator without boiler drums. See e.g.
The OTSG without a superheating section typically produces a “wet” steam that consists of about 77% steam and 23% water. The water that is separated from the steam is known as “blowdown water.” It typically has concentrated levels of TOC and thus is quite dirty.
As used herein, “economizer” means the device for reducing energy consumption in a steam-generating operation by preheating feedwater. Typically, an economizer is in the form of heat exchanger where the thermal energy is transferred from a high temperature fluid (e.g., steam condensate, flue gas or other waste heat source) to the feedwater such that less energy is required to vaporize it. Economizers are mechanical devices intended to reduce energy consumption or to perform another useful function such as preheating a fluid. In boilers, economizers are heat exchange devices that heat fluids, usually water, up to but not normally beyond the boiling point of that fluid. Economizers are so named because they can make use of the enthalpy in fluid streams that are hot, but not hot enough to be used in a boiler, thereby recovering more useful enthalpy and improving the boiler's efficiency. They are fitted to a boiler and save energy by using e.g., the exhaust gases from the boiler or other hot plant fluids to preheat the cold feedwater. It has been reported that approximately 35 to 50% of the total absorbed heat in OTSG is transferred in the economizer.
As used herein, “radiant section” means the section in a steam generator where the heating of feedwater is primarily achieved by radiant heat transfer.
As used herein, “subcooling” is any temperature of a liquid or solid below its saturation temperature. Saturation is simply the term used to describe the point where a change of state in a substance is taking place. For water at sea level, the boiling temperature is 212° F. or 100° C. Therefore, the saturation temperature is 212° F. or 100° C. A subcool of 10° C. or 20° C. will protect the lines from steam flashing if the pressure is reduced.
“Flash steam” is the name given to the steam formed from hot condensate when the pressure is reduced. The transport of subcooled water will prevent steam flashing, and thus the erosion and damage that can occur on flashing.
As used herein, a “hot water line” is rated for hot water use, but not for steam use. Steam lines are typically subject to much stricter requirements due to the high-pressure steam they carry. They are thus more costly.
The use of the word “a” or “an” when used in conjunction with the term “comprising” in the claims or the specification means one or more than one, unless the context dictates otherwise.
The term “about” means the stated value plus or minus the margin of error of measurement or plus or minus 10% if no method of measurement is indicated.
The use of the term “or” in the claims is used to mean “and/or” unless explicitly indicated to refer to alternatives only or if the alternatives are mutually exclusive.
The terms “comprise”, “have”, “include” and “contain” (and their variants) are open-ended linking verbs and allow the addition of other elements when used in a claim.
The phrase “consisting of” is closed, and excludes all additional elements.
The phrase “consisting essentially of” excludes additional material elements, but allows the inclusions of non-material elements that do not substantially change the nature of the invention.
The following abbreviations are used herein:
We investigated various alternatives for reducing the cost of steam generation without overcrowding the well pad, and herein describe a method wherein water is heated at the CPF to within 5-30° C. or 10-20° C. of the boiling point at the operating pressure of the OTSG or other steam generator.
The subcooled water is transported to the well pad, where it is converted to steam in an OTSG, water tube drum boiler, or other boiler. If desired, the OTSG can be equipped with an economizer to capture waste heat from the blow-down water, produced fluids or waste flue gas. Because the feedwater is significantly preheated before transport to the OTSG, less fuel is used to create the steam. Further, the lines need only be qualified for hot fluid transport, not steam transport and thus need not meet the elevated temperature tensile tests and other high standards required for high pressure steam lines. In some embodiments, a distance of at least 100 meter or at least 1 kilometer separates the CPF from the well pad with the steam generator.
In more detail, air entering the OTSG via line 190 is preheated in heat exchanger 1060. Fuel enters the burner 1010 via line 180, mixes with preheated air from line 190 and burns to create hot gas, which travels to the other end of the OTSG heating fluid in coils 100 and 101. The hot gas pathway is from the burners to the stack. Coil 101 accepts boiler feedwater via line 130, which is preheated with blowdown water and coil 100 accepts boiler feedwater via line 110. The routing of these lines is of course variable, as noted above, depending on which option(s) is/are implemented. Hot gas that has given its latent heat to the fluid in the coils 100, 101 can be routed back to heat exchanger 1060 if desired. Alternatively, it can be routed to the stack.
Hot fluid exiting OTSG coils is routed to separator 1030 via line 150, where steam is separated from blow-down water. Steam is routed via line 160 to where its is needed, e.g., to the well pad for injection, and blowdown water run through line 170 to heat exchanger 1050 to warm incoming boiler feedwater via line 130. Preheated water can be routed via line 140 and pump 1040 to the well pad for use in drum boiler 1500.
Subcooled water enters the drum boiler 1500 at the well pad via line 140, is turned into steam in drum boiler 1500 and the steam routed to the well via steam line 240. Fuel enters a burner 1530 of drum boiler 1500 via fuel line 230, and heated air via line 220. The air from line 210 was preheated in air preheater (heat exchanger) 1510 using the exiting flue gas.
The somewhat cooled produced liquid is then routed to a separator (not shown) for separation into crude oil, routed to storage or shipment, and produced water, which is routed to water treatment facilities, in this instance suggesting an evaporator, but possibly including one or more of filtration, precipitation, warm lime softener, an advanced oxidation process, and the like.
Prewarmed water is routed via line 214 to a water heater 2000, e.g, a NG fired water heater with burner 2010 fed by air and fuel lines. Hot water is transported to the well pad by pump 2550. If desired that water was can also be heated in heat exchanger 2560 by blowdown water fed by line 219. Blowdown water then travels by line 220 to some water treatment facility.
Preheated water enters drum boiler 2500 via line 218. Drum boiler 2500 is heated by burner 2510 fed by air line 224 and fuel line 223. Air line 224 can be preheated in air preheater 2540, which is heated with hot flue gas exiting the drum boiler 2500 via line 225.
Steam exits the drum boiler 2500 via lines 220 and 222 to separator 2520 which sends water back to the drum boiler 2500 via line 220 and pump 2530 and steam to the well via line 221. The steam in lines 220 appears to be running in two directions due to the internal recirculation in water tube drum boilers. Drum boilers inherently have high internal recirculation rates, i.e. only 10-20% of the feedwater is evaporated in boiler. The 10-20% quality steam enters a drum to separate steam/water, and the water is recirculated.
This application is a non-provisional application which claims benefit under 35 USC § 119(e) to U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 62/250,872 filed Nov. 4, 2015, entitled “REMOTE PREHEAT AND PAD STEAM GENERATION,” which is incorporated herein in its entirety.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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8973658 | Macadam | Mar 2015 | B2 |
20150021031 | Macadam | Jan 2015 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20170122552 A1 | May 2017 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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62250872 | Nov 2015 | US |