1. Field of the Invention
This invention is directed to a subsea slurry generation system.
2. Background Art
U.S. Pat. No. 7,530,398 discloses a system for assuring subsea hydrocarbon production flow in pipelines by chilling the hydrocarbon production flow in a heat exchanger and causing solids to form, periodically removing deposits and placing them in a slurry utilizing a closed loop pig launching and receiving systems. U.S. Pat. No. 7,530,398 is herein incorporated by reference in its entirety.
U.S. Patent Application Publication Number 2009/0020288 discloses a system for assuring subsea hydrocarbon production flow in pipelines by chilling the hydrocarbon production flow in a heat exchanger and causing solids to form, periodically removing deposits and placing them in a slurry utilizing a closed loop pig launching and receiving systems. U.S. Patent Application Publication Number 2009/0020288 is herein incorporated by reference in its entirety.
U.S. Patent Application Publication Number 2006/0186023 discloses a method of transporting a produced fluid through a pipe while limiting deposits at a desired pipe inner-wall location comprising providing a pipe having an inner surface roughness Ra less than 2.5 micrometers at said desired pipe inner-wall location, forcing the produced fluid through the pipe, wherein the produced fluid has a wall shear stress of at least 1 dyne per centimeter squared at said desired pipe inner-wall location. U.S. Patent Application Publication Number 2006/0186023 is herein incorporated by reference in its entirety.
One aspect of the invention provides a system for maintaining production flow in a subsea pipeline having a proximate and a distal end, the pipeline being in fluid communication with a production facility on a distal end, the system comprising a flow loop comprising an inlet in fluid communication with at least one subsea well adapted to receive a hydrocarbon production flow, and an outlet in fluid communication with the proximate end of the pipeline; a pig launching system, adapted so that a pig may be selectively placed into the flow loop inlet; and a pig receiving system, adapted so that a pig may be removed from the hydrocarbon production flow from the flow loop outlet; wherein the flow loop has an inner surface roughness less than about 1000 micro-inches.
Advantages of the invention include one or more of the following:
A cold flow loop that produces a slurry flow with smaller particles, more dispersed particles, and/or better flowability.
A cold flow loop that has less solids buildup on an inner wall of the loop, such as less wax, hydrates, and/or other solids.
A pigging system that allows pigging of wall deposits without the usual increase in resistance to pig travel with distance as the pigged material agglomerates in front of the pig.
A pigging system that requires less differential pressure over the length of the flow-line during a pigging operation.
In one aspect, embodiments disclosed herein relate generally to apparatuses and methods for transporting hydrocarbons. Specifically, embodiments disclosed herein relate to a system for cooling a production stream to create a slurry prior to transporting the production stream to a production system (e.g., an offshore rig, a facility on the shore). As used herein, ‘production stream’ refers to a stream of hydrocarbons containing water or brine, gas, oil, together with dissolved solids such as waxes, asphaltenes, organic and inorganic salts, and/or other small particles that are extracted from a wellbore during production.
Embodiments disclosed herein further relate to a system for more effective removal of deposits from a heat exchanger or a chilling loop in a subsea, cold flow assurance system. Additionally, embodiments disclosed herein relate to a system for producing a more suitable slurry for transport through a downstream flow line or conduit. Embodiments disclosed herein also relate to a system to remediate deposits in the downstream flow line or conduit.
Hydrocarbons are extracted from wellbores that are located in various environments having varying temperatures and pressures. These environments include a subsea environment, where wellbores are located at the bottom of the sea, up to thousands of feet below the surface of the ocean. In the subsea environment, the temperature of the ocean water that surrounds the wellbores may be lower than the temperature inside the wellbore. A cold flow process system may be used to transport the production stream from the wellbore to the production system. A cold flow process system is a subsea system that may lower the temperature of the production stream to approximately the same temperature as the surrounding deep sea-water. During operation, the production stream flows out of the wellbore and into a subsea conduit that acts as a heat exchanger (e.g., a chilling loop). The subsea conduit may be exposed to the ocean water, which may cause the temperature of the production stream to decrease. Additionally, the chilling loop may be a jacketed counter-flow heat exchanger or any other type of heat exchanger known in the art. As a result of the decrease in temperature of the production stream, dissolved solids may precipitate and new solids may form within the production stream. Further, while solids precipitate and hydrates form, the solid deposits may become adhered to the inner wall of the subsea conduit, constricting flow and possibly blocking the conduit. The partial and/or complete blockage of the conduit may stop production and/or decrease efficiency of the operation.
In certain instances, solid particles flowing through conduit or lines are not necessarily a problem. If the particles do not deposit on walls or equipment, and do not have a large impact on flow characteristics, they may simply flow with the rest of the fluids, as a slurry, without creating a problem situation. Thus, it is desired to achieve a situation where solids precipitate and hydrates form in a controlled manner where solids deposited on the walls may be easily removed with little impact on production. In addition, it is desired to transport the solids with the rest of the production stream in the form of a slurry to a production system by means of a downstream conduit or flow line. Accordingly, a system that may control the precipitation of solids and formation of hydrates, while controlling deposit formation on the walls prior to and during transporting a production stream from a wellbore to a production system is described below.
The subsea conduit 200 is designed to cool the production stream 224 to the deep sea-water ambient temperature as disclosed herein. Those of ordinary skill in the art will appreciate that an acceptable temperature may be higher or lower than the deep sea-water 226 temperature. For example, a bare-pipe heat exchanger will have an asymptotic temperature change with respect to the ambient deep sea-water 226 temperature. Therefore, an acceptable temperature value may be a determined value, a range, or a percentage of error above the deep sea-water temperature. These acceptable values may be based on precipitation and hydrate forming temperatures or size limits for the subsea conduit.
The subsea conduit 200 shown in
After the production stream 224 enters the subsea conduit 200 through the production stream inlet 230, the production stream 224 flows through the subsea conduit 200. The production stream 224 temperature may approach the ambient deep sea-water 226 temperature as it flows through subsea conduit 200. The production stream 224 may exit the subsea conduit 200 via the production stream outlet 232. The production stream 224 exiting the subsea conduit 200 may be substantially different than the production stream 224 entering. For example, the production stream 224 exiting the subsea conduit 200 may be lower temperature, higher viscosity, and include more solid particles than the production stream 224 entering the subsea conduit 200. The production stream 224 exiting the subsea conduit 200 may be a slurry suitable for transport through a long downstream conduit or flow line and at approximately the same temperature as the ambient deep sea-water 226. A suitable slurry is capable of flowing through the downstream conduit or flow line 300 (
As shown in
A pig 244 may be used to remove the solid deposits 240 adhered to the inner wall surfaces 242 of the subsea conduit 200. A pig 244 is a device located and moved within a conduit to clean an inner wall surface and to clear partial and/or complete blockages using the pressure of the fluid. The pig may include sensors and equipment to perform additional tasks such as conduit inspection and repair. A pig may have dimensions and shape configured to correspond to the conduit to be cleaned, allowing a maximum cleaning action on the inner wall. Additionally, a pig may be designed for the specific application based on the composition of a production stream, temperatures and pressures of a production stream, and the desired tasks for the pig to perform.
In the embodiment shown in
Referring back to
In one embodiment, the inner wall surface 242 of the subsea conduit 200 has an average roughness of 1000 micro-inches or less, for example less than 500, or less than 250 micro-inches. Standard conduit used in subsea applications typically has an average roughness of 1800 micro-inches (450 micro-meters). In accordance with embodiments disclosed herein, conduit with an inner wall average roughness of 1000 micro-inches (25 micro-meters) or less may be used. To form a conduit with an average roughness of 1000 micro-inches or less, a standard conduit with an approximate average roughness of 1800 micro-inches may undergo special mill processing or a finishing process (e.g., polishing). Advantageously, pigging a conduit with an average roughness of 1000 micro-inches or less, in accordance with embodiments disclosed herein, may result in fewer residual solid deposits on the inner wall surface than pigging a standard conduit with an approximate average roughness of 1800 micro-inches. The inner wall of the conduit with an average roughness of 1000 micro-inches or less may be cleaned more completely and improve the removal of deposits by pigging. The deposits removed may be smaller particulates, thus creating a more suitable slurry. Fewer residual solid deposits after pigging, provides better thermodynamic properties of the conduit. For example, even a thin layer of wax may act as an insulator and greatly decrease the thermodynamic efficiency of a heat exchanger. Those of ordinary skill in the art will appreciated that other solid deposits may have similar thermodynamic effects as wax.
In one embodiment, a suitable slurry may be formed using a bypass pig in combination with a subsea conduit having an inner wall average roughness of less than 1000 micro-inches. Given a bypass pig with proper shape, dimensions, and fluid flow, in this embodiment, the bypass pig may produce a slurry with smaller particulates. A slurry with small particulates is less prone to causing flow assurance upsets in the downstream conduit or flow line. A properly designed bypass pig, for example, may allow the correct amount of the production stream to flow through the pig so that a desired pressure difference is achieved across the pig. Additionally, the amount of production stream flow through the pig may be designed based on the amount of dissolved solids and/or deposits on the inner wall in order to provide a suitable mixture for the slurry. A properly designed bypass pig may also have dimensions and shape configured for the given conduit, providing sufficient cleaning action on the inner wall.
In one embodiment, a suitable pig may include one or more of the following characteristics:
1) incorporates a passage for bypass flow through the center of the pig 244,
2) is designed such that the bypass flow liquid-volumetric rate is roughly ten (10) times the volumetric rate of the solids (deposits) pigged from the wall,
3) may be constructed with a body composed of materials used in standard scrapper pigs (e.g., polyurethane) and a bypass composed of standard elements used in the oil and gas industry for flow (e.g., rigid or flexible tubing with an orifice), and/or
4) has an outer diameter a little greater than the pipe inner diameter as is common for scraper pigs.
In one embodiment, the downstream conduit or flow line 300 may be equipped with a pigging system. The pigging system includes a pig launcher 334 and a pig receiver 336. While the suitable slurry greatly reduces deposition buildup, the pigging system may be used for routine cleaning to ensure proper flow over time. Pig 344 may be any pig known in the art, or preferably a bypass pig. A pig, and particularly a bypass pig, in the downstream conduit or flow line 300 may have a similar design, provide similar performance, and provide similar advantages to a pig in the subsea conduit described above. For example, the pig 344 may clean the inner wall surface 342 preventing partial or complete blockages that disrupt the flow of production stream 324 through the downstream conduit or flow line 300. Furthermore, a bypass pig may help to remediate issues of accumulation or agglomeration of solid deposits in front of the pig. The bypass pig may reduce the pressure drop upstream of the pig and improve cleaning of the inner wall of the subsea conduit. Even if standard conduit, with standard wall roughness, is used for the subsea conduit, using a bypass-pig pigging system to remove deposits from the subsea conduit reduces the deposition rate and flow assurance upset.
One embodiment disclosed herein discloses an inner wall surface 342 of the downstream conduit or flow line 300 that has an average roughness of 1000 micro-inches (25 micro-meters) or less. Standard conduit used in subsea applications typically has an average roughness of 1800 micro-inches (450 micro-meters). As previously discussed with respect to
Runs 1 and 2 show that differential pressure across the pig increases as the wax accumulates. Runs 3-5 additionally show accumulation over time and distance; however, the accumulation is to a lesser extent because most of the deposits were removed in Runs 1 and 2. Runs 1-5 all have higher differential pressures at the end of each run than the Baseline run. This shows that although much of the wax had been removed, there was still some accumulation that increased pressure.
The results of this experiment illustrate a need for using a bypass pigging system, which may reduce differential pressure by reducing agglomerations of deposits in front of the pig. A bypass pig may create a slurry which creates less drag than an agglomeration of deposits in front of a standard pig. The slurry may flow easier through the conduit as a result of less drag.
In a separate experiment, having the same setup as the experiment of
In one embodiment, there is disclosed a system for maintaining production flow in a subsea pipeline having a proximate and a distal end, the pipeline being in fluid communication with a production facility on a distal end, the system comprising a flow loop comprising an inlet in fluid communication with at least one subsea well adapted to receive a hydrocarbon production flow, and an outlet in fluid communication with the proximate end of the pipeline; a pig launching system, adapted so that a pig may be selectively placed into the flow loop inlet; and a pig receiving system, adapted so that a pig may be removed from the hydrocarbon production flow from the flow loop outlet; wherein the flow loop has an inner surface roughness less than about 1000 micro-inches. In some embodiments, the system also includes a bypass pig within the flow loop. In some embodiments, the flow loop is exposed to a subsea environment to provide for cooling of the hydrocarbon production flow approaching a temperature of the subsea environment. In some embodiments, the system also includes a bypass fluid conduit between the flow loop inlet and the proximate end of the pipeline. In some embodiments, the flow loop comprises a forced coolant pipe-in-pipe system, having inner and outer pipes, adapted so that production flows through the inner pipe and coolant flows through the annulus formed between the inner and outer pipes in a direction counter to the production flow direction. In some embodiments, the coolant is seawater. In some embodiments, the pipeline has an inner surface roughness less than about 1000 micro-inches. In some embodiments, the pipeline further comprises one or more bypass pigs.
In one embodiment, there is disclosed a method for maintaining production flow in a subsea pipeline, comprising producing a hydrocarbon from at least one subsea well; transporting the hydrocarbon from the at least one subsea well to a heat exchanger; passing the hydrocarbon through the heat exchanger, in order to cool the hydrocarbon and precipitate at least one solid selected from waxes, paraffins, asphaltenes, and/or hydrates; passing the hydrocarbon through a pipeline from the heat exchanger to a host; and pigging the heat exchanger with a pig to produce a slurry of the solids in the hydrocarbon; wherein the heat exchanger comprises a pipe having an inner surface roughness less than about 1000 micro-inches. In some embodiments, the pig comprises a bypass pig. In some embodiments, the pig is recovered from an outlet of the heat exchanger and recycled to an inlet of the heat exchanger. In some embodiments, the pipeline has an inner surface roughness less than about 1000 micro-inches. In some embodiments, the method also includes pigging the pipeline with one or more bypass pigs.
In one embodiment, there is disclosed a method for maintaining production flow in a subsea pipeline, comprising producing a hydrocarbon from at least one subsea well; transporting the hydrocarbon from the at least one subsea well to a heat exchanger; passing the hydrocarbon through the heat exchanger, in order to cool the hydrocarbon and precipitate at least one solid selected from waxes, paraffins, asphaltenes, and/or hydrates; passing the hydrocarbon through a pipeline from the heat exchanger to a host; and pigging the heat exchanger with a pig to produce a slurry of the solids in the hydrocarbon; wherein the pig comprises a bypass pig.
Advantageously, embodiments disclosed herein provide for a system configured to create a suitable slurry for flow through a downstream conduit or flow line. When a suitable slurry is at approximately the same temperature as the ambient deep sea-water temperature, solid deposits are less likely to form on the inner wall surfaces. Therefore, the downstream conduit and flow line may remain operational for longer periods between pigging runs. Additionally, less buildup of solid deposits results in a lower chance that a pig will become stuck in the downstream conduit or flow line. A subsea conduit, as disclosed herein, may be shorter than the downstream conduit or flow line thereby reducing the distance pigs travel. Embodiments disclosed herein provide a system to transport the production stream with fewer interruptions from a constricted cross-sectional flow area and long, high pressure pigging runs that reduce flow rate. Therefore, the embodiments disclosed herein provide a system providing higher production of hydrocarbons.
While the invention has been described with respect to a limited number of embodiments, those skilled in the art, having benefit of this disclosure, will appreciate that other embodiments can be devised which do not depart from the scope of the invention as disclosed herein. Accordingly, the scope of the invention should be limited only by the attached claims.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US11/32096 | 4/12/2011 | WO | 00 | 10/11/2012 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61324148 | Apr 2010 | US |