The present invention relates to a system for injecting liquid chemical into a subsea well and to pumps designed for use in such a system. Although the term “subsea” is used for convenience to indicate the location of wells to which the system relates, this should be understood to include reference to any substantial body of water beneath which a well may be located. Furthermore pumps of the character to be more particularly disclosed herein are not restricted to use in such systems and may also find application in, for example, automotive fuel injection systems, hydraulic actuator systems, or in other areas where high fluid pressures need to be generated by electrically-powered pumps with a minimum of moving parts.
It is a well known practice, in order to maintain the efficient operation of a production oil or gas well, to inject certain chemicals in liquid form into the well at selected times and positions, for example corrosion inhibitors to inhibit corrosion of downhole equipment and wax inhibitors to inhibit the formation of waxy substances that block the flow of product. For high pressure, high temperature (HPHT) wells and extremely high pressure, high temperature (XHPHT) wells, pressures typically in the range of 15,000-25,000 PSI (100-170 MPa) need to be generated by the pumps in such systems. In the case of subsea wells it is not always practical to have pumps at the surface platform (or only at the surface platform) due to the cost of running high pressure umbilicals down to the wellheads (which can involve umbilical lengths of some thousands of metres) and the pressure drop across such long umbilicals, meaning that control of the delivery pressures and flow rates at the wellheads can be quite problematic. It is therefore common to employ the pumps (or additional pumps) for such systems underwater in the vicinity of the wellheads. However, a subsea environment presents particularly serious challenges to the reliability of such chemical injection pumps due to the aggressive conditions under which they are required to operate and the difficulty of accessing and effecting any required maintenance or repair of the equipment located underwater. Current systems typically employ hydraulically-actuated pumps, requiring hydraulic control lines to be run down to the sea bed, and regular maintenance, and are therefore both complex and costly to operate. The present invention therefore aims to provide an alternative pumping system for such service, which can be electrically operated, has a minimum of moving parts and in particular avoids the need for any rotating parts and attendant high performance bearings and seals; in other words an essentially “solid state” solution.
In one aspect the present invention accordingly resides in a system for injecting liquid chemical into a subsea well comprising:
The invention also resides per se in various features of the pump to be more particularly described and illustrated herein.
The invention will now be more particularly described, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
Referring to
Within body part 11 is mounted an elongate piezoelectric actuator 19, being fixed at its base by a screw 20. In this respect the actuator 19 sits in a cradle 21 at its base equipped with flats to prevent rotation of the actuator as the screw 20 is tightened. This actuator comprises a stack of piezoelectric ceramic discs (not individually shown) within a housing, preloaded by an internal spring (also not shown), which when energized expand in the longitudinal direction of the stack with a maximum strain rate of around 0.1% of the length of the stack, and return to their unstrained condition, with assistance from the spring, when the energising voltage is removed. By applying voltage pulses to the actuator, therefore, its free end (upper end as viewed in the Figures) can be caused to reciprocate at the frequency of the pulses. Leads carrying the energising voltage to the actuator are routed through a radial bore in the body part 11 (not shown). Actuators of this kind are commercially available and typically used for generating mechanical vibrations at sonic frequencies e.g. for sonar equipment.
Rigidly screwed to the free end of the actuator 19 is a plunger 22, typically of Hastelloy®, which consequently also reciprocates in use in accordance with the energisation of the actuator. The plunger 22 is formed at its upper and lower ends with narrower and wider cylindrical surfaces 23 and 24, joined by a frustoconical surface 25. The surfaces 23 and 24 are a close sliding fit in correspondingly bored portions 26 and 27 of the head 12 and the bores 26 and 27 are joined by an internal frustoconical surface with clearance around the surface 25 of the plunger to define a small space 28 and accommodate the reciprocation of the plunger. A small pumping chamber 29 is defined between the topmost surface of the plunger 22 and the facing surface of the head 12, through which ports 30 and 31 open from the valves 17 and 18. As the plunger is reciprocated by energisation of the actuator 19, therefore, its upper end acts as a piston to alternately compress and expand the volume of the chamber 29. More particularly movement of the plunger to the top of its stroke compresses the volume of the chamber 29, causing the valve 18 to open and expelling the contents of the chamber towards the outlet 16. As the plunger 22 returns to the bottom of its stroke the volume of the chamber 29 is expanded so that the valve 18 closes, the valve 17 opens and a fresh quantity of chemical enters the pumping chamber from the inlet 15.
In this respect the upper end (piston) of the plunger 22 is sealed against the bore 26 of the head 12 as shown in
In use the pump 11 will be immersed in a bath of hydraulic fluid and bores (not shown) through the body part 11 convey this fluid to the space 35 around the piezoelectric stack 19 for cooling the same. Circulation of this fluid to enhance cooling may occur through natural convective flow or an additional small conventional circulating pump (not shown) may be provided for this purpose. Bores (not shown) through the head 12 also convey this fluid to the space 28 around the plunger 22 for lubricating the movement of the plunger, the seal 32 also serving to keep this fluid out of the pumping chamber 29.
It will be appreciated that by virtue of the limited stroke length of the actuator 19 and corresponding size of the pumping chamber 29 only a small volume of liquid will be pumped in each cycle, although the total flow rate is of course a function of the actuation frequency. By way of example, a single pump substantially as illustrated, with an actuator length of 200 mm and stroke of 0.2 mm, has been found to be capable of pumping liquid at a rate of up to 5 litres per hour at an outlet pressure of up to 20,000 PSI (140 MPa) from an inlet pressure of up to 10,000 PSI (70 MPa) when actuated at between 30 and 70 Hz, and substantially higher rates and/or pressures should be achievable by ganging a plurality of such pumps together. The ratio of the swept volume of the pumping chamber 29 to its total volume (including the volume of the ports 30, 31 and any “dead” space between the valves 17, 18) will be at least 1:7.
A typical control system for the pump 10 within a unit 5 is illustrated in
The assembly of the pump shown in
A feature of the pump 10 described and illustrated herein is that the plunger 22 is connected directly to the actuator 19 and avoids the use of any lever or the like force- or movement-amplifying means. In the described chemical injection system the pump also acts directly on the liquid to convey it towards the injection point(s) in the well as distinct from a system where, say, a piezoelectric pump is used to pressurise a hydraulic fluid for operation of a ram or the like.
The pump 10, being a positive displacement pump, can also usefully function as a metering unit by controlling the frequency or other characteristic of operation of the piezoelectric actuator, meaning that separate orifice plates or the like devices need not be employed for this purpose. Indeed such a pump can be used as a metering unit even in the case where it is not required to provide, or boost, the pressure of the system, then simply controlling the rate of flow of fluid though it under a separately-generated pressure differential.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0700114.2 | Jan 2007 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/GB2007/004940 | 12/21/2007 | WO | 00 | 6/25/2009 |