This application is a 371 U.S. National Phase of PCT Application No. PCT/NO2007/000370, filed Oct. 19, 2007, which claims Norwegian Patent Application No. NO 2006 4750, filed Oct. 20, 2006. Each of these applications is herein incorporated by reference in their entirety for all purposes.
This invention relates to a system for monitoring the performance of subsea equipment e.g. in relation to oil/gas installations, and particularly accumulator banks associated with pumps.
In oil/gas installations there are several units positioned at the sea floor or downhole in oil or gas wells, performing necessary tasks in order to control the production or to transport the hydrocarbons from the well to the sea surface or to land. Many of these units contain equipment being subject to wear and thus have to be repaired or replaced from time to time. These intervals depend on use and the conditions on location, and are therefore difficult to predict. The result is an occasional emergency stop in the production.
It is an object of this invention to provide a solution that enables the operator to detect how many of the accumulators are still operative, and to consider whether the accumulators should be replenished or if maintenance may be necessary.
In the particular type of subsea pumping system addressed here, an accumulator bank of a multitude of hydraulic accumulators is used for storing energy for maintaining overpressure in the subsea pump during cool-down in the system. If e.g. the topside plant is suddenly shut down, the subsea pump stops and gradually cools down. The dielectric oil inside the motor contracts, and a lube oil supply represented by the accumulator bank is thus needed in order to maintain the slight overpressure of dielectric oil compared to the fluid pressure inside the pump.
The lube oil supply of such an accumulator bank will be reduced during use, and the accumulators will stop working one by one.
It is an additional object of the present invention to provide an estimated time to service based on measurements provided from the accumulator bank so as to reduce the downtime of subsea equipment by replacing or repairing the subsea accumulators at the right time.
These objects are obtained with a system and method as described in the accompanying independent claims.
The present invention thus reduces the downtime of the system by giving the operator sufficient time to prepare the maintenance before the system stops working completely.
The invention will be described more in detail below with reference to the accompanying drawings, illustrating the invention by way of examples.
If the amount of fluid in the system decreases, the gas presses the piston downwards, and hydraulic fluid is forced out into the system. The effect is that the accumulator dampens pressure fluctuations in the system. The amount of dampening depends on the amount of pressurised gas, i.e. the volume of the accumulator.
Often a multitude of smaller accumulators are connected together in order to provide larger capacity than a single accumulator can provide. Such an arrangement is usually called an accumulator bank.
If a certain amount of fluid (e.g. 1 liter) is suddenly drawn from the system, the pressure will drop a certain amount (e.g. 10 Bar). How much the pressure drops when 1 liter fluid is suddenly removed depends on the size of the accumulator.
Over time some of the gas above the piston (the “pre-charge”) may leak out, which reduced the efficiency of the accumulator (i.e. the pressure will decrease more when 1 liter of fluid is suddenly extracted). Once gas begins leaking out, it usually does not take long before all the gas has disappeared into the surrounding environment, after which point the accumulator no longer works as an accumulator. For a bank of accumulators, the individual accumulators usually stop working one at a time, more or less at random.
In the particular type of subsea pumping system we are addressing, an accumulator bank of a multitude of hydraulic accumulators is used to maintain overpressure in the subsea pump during cool-down. In one typical implementation a bank of 8, 20 liter accumulators was used.
If e.g. the topside plant 3 is suddenly shut down, the subsea pump 1 stops and gradually cools down. The dielectric oil inside the motor contracts, and a lube oil supply is thus needed in order to maintain the slight overpressure. The overpressure may be controlled via a mechanical regulator.
The lube oil accumulator bank contains sufficient volume to be able to supply all oil needed for a complete cool-down under worst case condition. There is also some additional capacity such that if a few accumulators fail, the size of the bank will still be sufficient.
Over time, the accumulators will stop working one by one. When e.g. three have stopped working, the accumulator bank can no longer maintain the overpressure in worst case conditions, and a pump module change-out should then be contemplated.
According to a preferred embodiment of the invention the pressure at the accumulator bank is measured, and from the time/pressure curve the deterioration in the accumulator bank can be determined. The problem is to determine how many accumulators in a bank of e.g. 8 are operational from the pressure/time curve during a cool-down event. One variable worth noting is that the fewer accumulators that are in service, the deeper will the pressure dip be in the system during a cool-down.
Furthermore, based on when e.g. the first and second accumulator ceased working, one may anticipate when the third one is likely to stop working, and plan maintenance/intervention accordingly.
The performance of an accumulator or accumulator bank can be inferred from the pressure drop as fluid is consumed, but until now no prediction of time to service is made for an accumulator bank. The normal solution is to implement an alarm when the pressure drops too low. This, however, is not an ideal solution.
When the alarm is given, the state of the accumulator bank is so bad that the need for service/maintenance/intervention is imminent. With a simple static alarm, the setting is set so low as not to trigger nuisance alarms, which in turn means that when an alarm is finally given, the state of the accumulator bank has deteriorated much. The subsea accumulator bank is usually replenished via the umbilical 2.
The difference in pressure drop depending on whether all 8 accumulators are working, or only 7 out of 8, is not much, and is not readily detected.
In accordance with the invention, the pressure in the subsea accumulator bank is monitored. The time variation of this pressure is also simulated, by means of a process model. The simulations are done for various numbers of active accumulators, and by comparison with the measured pressure curve the number of active accumulators is estimated.
The simulated pressure-time curve needs to be compensated for the temperature at the time the pump stopped, so in a preferred embodiment a temperature sensor is also provided in the areas containing lube oil inside the pump. There is a difference if the pump was hot or just lukewarm at the time the cool-down starts as the amount the lube oil volume shrinks depends on the delta temperature, which in turn depends on the initial temperature.
The process may be modelled in various ways. A simple process model for this system can, for instance, be expressed as a differential equation, where the pressure at the accumulator bank is differentiated with respect to time:
Here P is the pressure at the accumulator bank, Qin is the flow of lube oil into the accumulator bank, Qout is the flow out of the accumulator bank, N is the number of active accumulators, and κ is some constant. The inflow comes from the umbilical, and a simple umbilical model can be expressed as follows:
Qin=β(Ptop−P+c0),
where Ptop is the pressure at the topside end of the umbilical, c0 is the static pressure drop due to gravity, and β is some constant. The flow out of the accumulators depend on the cooling of the pump, and assuming a standard cool-down behaviour, the outflow can be estimated as
Qout=αγ(T0−Tα)e−γt,
in which T0 is the initial lube oil temperature in the pump when the pump stops, Ta is the temperature of the water surrounding the pump, and α and γ are constants. The process model is now fully described. Instead of running this model at the time of the analysis, this step may be replaced by use of tabulated values.
The accumulator bank is usually sized such that 3 out of 8 accumulators can be out of service, and the remaining 5 then have sufficient capacity to maintain the fluid pressure under worst case conditions. This may vary between implementations, but these values are typical for the system described in this example.
By noting when accumulator #1 and #2 ceased working, one may thus extrapolate when accumulator#3 will stop working, and plan maintenance accordingly.
One may also adopt the philosophy that when accumulator#2 fails, intervention is made whenever practical (e.g. within 1 month) knowing that the system will be fully operational for some time.
To summarize, one embodiment of the invention relates to a method or system including at least two accumulators, for estimating the number of active accumulators in a subsea accumulator bank comprising:
The system and method comprising at least one sensor for detecting a chosen parameter, in the accumulator bank at chosen intervals of time, and a recording unit for recording the sampled measured parameters. The main parameter will preferably be pressure but other related parameters like temperature may be contemplated alone or together with pressure information.
A storage device in the system contains characteristic information related to the pressure development in the accumulator bank during pressure reductions at the device and representing different numbers of active accumulators in the accumulator bank. This information may be based on models, like mentioned above, or previously sampled and statistically prepared data about the system under similar circumstances. The stored information will preferably be related to pressure, but temperature related information may also be stored.
The calculation means for comparing the recorded measured parameters with the stored characteristic information, e.g. pressure and temperature related information, and determining from this comparison the number of active accumulators in the accumulator bank, may be positioned anywhere, e.g. on shore, and it needs not to be physically linked to the pumping system.
The data set and/or the selected curves are registered at chosen intervals of time providing a basis for extrapolation so as to enable the system to predict the future development of the situation, thus providing an estimated time to service. This may enable the system to calculate the time for maintenance, as is described more closely in the simultaneously filed patent Norwegian patent application No. 20064749 and the corresponding PCT-application which are included here by way of reference.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20064750 | Oct 2006 | NO | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/NO2007/000370 | 10/19/2007 | WO | 00 | 5/10/2010 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2008/048109 | 4/24/2008 | WO | A |
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Entry |
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PCT Search Report dated Oct. 3, 2008 of Patent Application No. PCT/NO2007/000370 filed Oct. 19, 2007. |
Good, Craig A; McAdams, James P: “Mathematical Prediction and Experimental Verification of Deep Water Accumulator Capacity” OTC 13234, Apr. 30, 2001, May 3, 2001. |
Sattler, Jeffry P: “BOP Subsea Hydraulic Accumulator Energy Availability, How to Ensure you Have What You Need” SPE 74469, Feb. 26, 2002, Feb. 28, 2002 XP002469979. |
Norwegian Search Report dated May 18, 2007 of Patent Application No. 20064750 filed Oct. 20, 2006. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20100294383 A1 | Nov 2010 | US |