The present invention relates to compact cooler designs for subsea applications.
Subsea coolers are well-known. Due to the environment in which they are used, several challenges not commonly encountered in non-subsea coolers must be addressed. Examples of subsea coolers, for cooling a well flow such as a hydrocarbon flow, are disclosed in for example the applicant's own published application WO 2011008101 A1, which is hereby incorporated by reference in its whole, or in Norwegian patent NO 330761 B1. Other known subsea coolers are described in WO 2010110674 A2 and WO 2010110676 A2.
A common solution for subsea coolers is the use of passive coolers. In these solutions the fluid to be cooled, e.g. a well flow, is led through multiple pipes arranged in a large common volume of cooling fluid, i.e. seawater. Large amounts of seawater pass through the common volume at a relatively slow rate due to natural convection, i.e. the seawater rises through the cooler since it is heated by the fluid to be cooled. Thus, it is difficult to regulate or control the cooling effect of passive coolers. Further, the design of passive coolers makes it difficult to obtain a compact cooler due to restraints caused by the rate of heat transfer, the required distance between the cooling fluid pipes etc.
A potential solution to at least some of the disadvantages of a passive cooler solution is the use of active coolers having a “pipe-in-pipe” solution. In these coolers, a first pipe containing the fluid to be cooled is surrounded by a second pipe (or an element having a channel through which the first pipe is arranged). The inner wall of the second pipe (or element channel) and the outer wall of the first pipe delimit a flow channel through which the cooling fluid is passed. In a “pipe-in-pipe” solution, the rate of the cooling fluid is controlled by a pump. The advantages of a “pipe-in-pipe” solution are the increased temperature control (i.e. increased control of cooling effect) and, as a consequence of being an active cooler, the possibility of designing a more compact cooler.
However, the use of a “pipe-in-pipe” solution with seawater as the cooling fluid presents corrosion problems not present in passive coolers. First of all, it is difficult to protect the inner pipes against corrosion due to the restricted flow channels, and secondly, corrosion may have detrimental effects since corrosion products may obstruct the flow channel.
Based on the prior art, there is a need for a compact subsea cooler providing increased temperature control.
The present invention provides a subsea cooler design which alleviates at least some of the disadvantages related to the use of “pipe-in-pipe” coolers subsea.
The present invention provides a subsea cooler design which alleviates at least some of the disadvantages of the prior art coolers.
The invention is defined in the attached claims, and in the following:
In a main embodiment, the invention provides a subsea cooler comprising at least one pipe and a housing, wherein
In the context of the present application, the term fluidly connected in relation to the flow channel is intended to mean a connection, such as a conduit, which ensures that cooling fluid is transferred from the inlet to the flow channel and from the flow channel to the outlet.
In another embodiment of the subsea cooler according to the invention, the flow channel is formed by at least a first inner surface and at least a second inner surface of the housing, and where the first inner surface extend along a straight section of the pipe, and the second inner surface extend along at least parts of a bend section, wherein a sacrificial anode is arranged at the second inner surface.
The second inner surface may form at least parts of a flow channel along, and surrounding, a bend section. The second inner surface may be provided at the outside of a bend to form at least parts of the flow channel around the bend. The first and second inner surfaces may form a continuous flow channel for a fluid at the outside of the connected straight and bend sections of the pipe.
The second inner surface may also be described as being situated on the outside of a bend section. The term “outside of a bend section” is intended to mean that the second inner surface of the housing is situated at a distance to the bend section pipe and also being arranged at the outside of the bend of said bend section. At least parts of the second inner surface may advantageously be perpendicular to the first inner surface.
In yet another embodiment of the subsea cooler according to the invention, the flow channel is formed by at least a first inner surface and at least a second inner surface of the housing, and where the first inner surface extend along a straight section of the pipe, and the second inner surface extend along at least parts of a bend section, wherein a sacrificial anode is arranged at the first inner surface, preferably the anode is partly embedded in the first inner surface such that a substantially unobstructed flow channel is obtained.
In yet another embodiment of the subsea cooler according to the invention, each bend section of the pipe is in electrical contact with a sacrificial anode.
In yet another embodiment of the subsea cooler according to the invention, the at least one sacrificial anode is in electrical contact with the pipe via an electrical conductor, such as a wire.
In yet another embodiment of the subsea cooler according to the invention, at least a part of at least one of the inner surfaces of the housing is made in a non-metallic material.
In yet another embodiment of the subsea cooler according to the invention, a further electrical conductor connects the at least one sacrificial anode to the pipe, such that a closed circuit is formed between the pipe and the anode.
In yet another embodiment of the subsea cooler according to the invention, the cross-sectional area of the flow channel is larger at the bend sections than at the straight sections, said cross-section in a plane perpendicular to a centerline of the pipe.
In yet another embodiment of the subsea cooler according to the invention, the flow channel comprises at least one cavity arranged such that, during use, corrosion products from the sacrificial anode may accumulate in said cavity by gravitation and/or by being pushed to said cavity by a cooling fluid flow.
In yet another embodiment of the subsea cooler according to the invention, the cavity is arranged below a bend section.
In yet another embodiment of the subsea cooler according to the invention, the straight sections of the pipe comprises multiple fins in the longitudinal direction of the corresponding straight section, preferably the height (h) of the fins is such that the fins are able to support the pipe against the first inner surface.
In yet another embodiment of the subsea cooler according to the invention, the subsea cooler comprises multiple parallel arranged pipes, wherein the outlets of the pipes are connected to a common outlet header pipe and the inlets of the pipes are connected to a common inlet header pipe.
In yet another embodiment of the subsea cooler according to the invention, the housing have multiple housing elements comprising at least a first housing element which include the first inner surface and at least a second housing element which include at least one of the second inner surfaces.
In yet another embodiment of the subsea cooler according to the invention, the first housing element comprises a block having multiple through-bores, each bore comprising a first inner surface.
Preferably, the second housing element is arranged to enclose multiple parallel bend sections.
In yet another embodiment of the subsea cooler according to the invention, the second housing element comprises at least one cavity arranged such that, during use, corrosion products from the sacrificial anode may accumulate in said cavity by gravitation.
The principle of pipe-in-pipe cooler solutions is shown in
A cross-section of a subsea cooler according to the invention is shown in
Sectional views of the cooler in
An alternative embodiment of a cooler according to the invention is shown in
A further embodiment of a cooler according to the invention is shown in
When the sacrificial anodes 11 (i.e. galvanic anodes) are corroded, a corrosion product is formed (e.g. Al2O3, ZnO or Mg(OH)2). The corrosion products are commonly not water soluble and may pose a potential clogging problem in the flow channel 8. To avoid clogging due to these corrosion products, the cooler may advantageously comprise cavities 14 in the flow channel 8. The cavities 14 are arranged such that at least some of the corrosion products, if/when they separate from the sacrificial anode 11, are accumulated in the cavities 14 due to gravity. A cross-sectional view of a bend section 6 comprising a cavity 14 in the surrounding housing element 4, or flow channel 8, is shown in
In pipe-in-pipe coolers, the inner pipe 1 must be supported to keep its position in the flow channel 8. A solution for obtaining such support is to provide the straight sections 5 of the pipe(s) with fins 15, see
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20140561 | Apr 2014 | NO | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2015/059343 | 4/29/2015 | WO | 00 |