The present invention concerns the field of subsea separation systems for producing oil and water More specifically, the invention provides a separation system able to provide both clean oil and clean water for injection or other disposal.
The product stream from subsea oil wells contains oil, gas and water. Current subsea separation systems only perform bulk separation in addition to providing a clean water phase. The clean water phase may be used for pressure support by injecting it into a reservoir. In order to transport the oil over extended distances the water content should typically be below 3% to avoid having to use excessive volumes of hydrate formation inhibitor. In a subsea context this would entail the use of large bore umbilicals, as well as high-capacity pumps, for providing the hydrate formation inhibitor. Such a system solution is highly inefficient due to the costs of large umbilicals/pumps, energy usage and large space requirement topside.
Oil reservoirs or subsea aquifers, where production water is normally deposited, usually require an oil content below 100 ppm to avoid pore clogging. Some reservoirs and aquifers require even cleaner water to remain open.
Thus, there is a need for a subsea separation system which produces both a clean oil phase and a clean water phase suitable for injection into a reservoir. Designing such a subsea system is not trivial, since there is no low pressure separator, slop tank, etc. available subsea to which a reject stream, or streams, from an oil/water separation component may be routed for additional purification/separation. Further, the system pressure needs to be maintained as high as possible to minimize any energy needed to pressurize the clean oil phase for transportation.
The aim of the present invention is a subsea separation system which provides both a clean oil phase for transportation and a clean water phase for reservoir injection.
The invention provides a subsea separation system able to convert a subsea well product stream into a gas stream, a clean oil phase and a clean water phase. The system of the invention is further defined in the attached claims, and in the following.
In one embodiment, the invention provides a subsea separation system for separating a product stream comprising a bulk separation unit, an oil polishing unit, and a water polishing unit.
The bulk separation unit comprises an inlet for the product stream, a first outlet for a water phase, a second outlet for an oil phase, and a third outlet for a gas phase.
The oil polishing unit comprises an inlet, a first outlet for a clean oil phase, and a second outlet for a reject stream, wherein the inlet is in fluid communication with the second outlet of the bulk separation unit.
The water polishing unit comprises an inlet in fluid communication with the first outlet of the bulk separation unit, a first outlet for a reject stream, and a second outlet for a clean water phase. The system of the invention is characterized in that a first conduit connects the second outlet of the oil polishing unit upstream of, or to, the water polishing unit, and a second conduit connects the first outlet of the water polishing unit upstream of, or to, the oil polishing unit, wherein the first and/or second conduit comprises a pressurizing device for increasing the pressure of a reject stream.
Alternatively, the system of the invention may be characterized in that the second outlet of the oil polishing unit is fluidly connected upstream of, or to, the water polishing unit, and the first outlet of the water polishing unit is fluidly connected upstream of, or to, the oil polishing unit, wherein a pressurizing device for pressurizing a reject stream is arranged downstream of the second outlet of the oil polishing unit and/or the first outlet of the water polishing unit.
In one embodiment of the system of the invention, the second outlet of the oil polishing unit and/or the first outlet of the water polishing unit is connected upstream of, or to, the bulk separation unit.
In yet another embodiment of the system of the invention, a reject treatment unit is arranged downstream of at least one of the second outlet of the oil polishing unit and the first outlet of the water polishing unit, and upstream of the bulk separation unit.
In yet another embodiment of the system of the invention, gas evolved in the oil polishing unit or in the water polishing unit, during use, is pressurized separately from a liquid reject stream and returned upstream of, or to, the bulk separation unit.
In yet another embodiment of the system of the invention, a liquid level of the oil polishing unit and/or the water polishing unit is arranged such that a reject stream may be returned upstream of, or to, the oil polishing unit, the water polishing unit and/or the bulk separation unit, without the use of a pressurizing device, during use.
In yet another embodiment of the system of the invention, the oil polishing unit comprises a second inlet for receiving a reject stream during use, and a third conduit connects the first outlet of the water polishing unit with said second inlet.
In yet another embodiment of the system of the invention, a fourth conduit connects the second outlet of the oil polishing unit with the water polishing unit.
In yet another embodiment of the system of the invention, the oil polishing unit comprises a cyclonic separator device and/or a gravity separator.
In yet another embodiment of the system of the invention, the oil polishing unit comprises an inline electrostatic coalescer (IEC) arranged upstream of the cyclonic separator device and/or the gravity separator.
In yet another embodiment of the system of the invention, the water polishing unit comprises at least one cyclonic separator, and preferably two or more serially connected cyclonic separators.
In yet another embodiment of the system of the invention, the water polishing unit comprises at least one further element suitable for separating oil from water, such as a flotation unit, a membrane separator or a gravity separator, wherein said element is arranged downstream of the cyclonic separator(s).
In yet another embodiment of the system of the invention, the clean water phase is suitable for injection into a reservoir during use, and preferably contains less than 100 ppm oil.
In yet another embodiment of the system of the invention, the clean oil phase is suitable for transport during use, and preferably contains less than 3% water by volume.
In yet another embodiment of the system of the invention, the reject treatment unit comprises at least one component which during use will provide an enhanced separation of individual phases of a reject stream when returned to the bulk separator, wherein the enhanced separation is obtained by, for instance, chemical injection, heating and/or droplet coalescing.
In yet another embodiment of the system of the invention, at least part of the clean oil phase is pressurized by a pressurizing device, such as a pump or ejector.
In a further aspect, the invention provides a method for subsea separation of a product stream, comprising the steps of:
In the context of the present invention, the term “clean oil phase” is intended to mean an oil phase comprising typically less than 3% of water by volume, and the term “clean water phase” is intended to mean a water phase comprising less than 100 ppm by volume of oil.
The term “water polishing” is intended to mean a process wherein a water phase is purified by removing oil until the water contains less oil than required for injection, for example 100 ppm.
The term “oil polishing” is intended to mean a process wherein an oil phase is further purified by removing water until the oil contains less water than required, typically below 3%.
The term “pressurizing device” is intended to mean any suitable type of device able to increase the pressure of a fluid flow, such as a pump, an ejector or a compressor.
A first embodiment of a system according to the invention is shown in
The water polishing unit 3 may comprise various components for separating residual oil from the water phase received from the bulk separator 1. Such water polishing components are well known to the skilled person and examples of such are given below. The water polishing unit provides a clean water phase (outlet 13) suitable for injection into a reservoir, and a reject stream (outlet 12). The reject stream (throughout this specification the reject stream from the water polishing unit is also termed an oil reject stream even if it is not necessarily oil continuous), comprising oil and a significant amount of water, is returned to, or upstream of, the bulk separation unit. Before being returned to the bulk separation unit 1, the pressure of the reject stream from the water polishing unit is boosted by a pressurizing device 14, e.g. a pump or ejector, and submitted to a reject treatment unit 18. This unit may provide similar pre-treatment as in the reject treatment unit 17 for the water reject stream.
The product stream will often contain some gas, and the bulk separation unit commonly comprises a gas outlet 15 for separating the gas from the water and oil phases.
Two similar separation systems are shown in
A more detailed schematic drawing of a separation system is shown in
All of the embodiments shown in
Water polishing components include, e.g., cyclonic separators such as hydrocyclones, flotation units, membrane separators and gravity separators. The order in which these components are arranged, when the water polishing unit comprises more than one component, may vary but is usually decided by their capacity for removing oil, i.e. the component with the highest capacity, e.g. a cyclonic separator, is arranged upstream of those components having a lower capacity, e.g. a membrane separator. Such components and their arrangement are well known to the persons skilled in the art of separation technology.
The oil polishing unit may comprise various components suitable for separating residual water from an oil phase. Such oil polishing components include cyclonic separators, inline electrostatic coalescers (IECs) and gravity separators. The oil phase may first be led through an IEC to facilitate the separation in the cyclonic separator(s) and/or gravity separator(s). In both the water polishing unit and the oil polishing unit, the various components may be arranged in parallel and/or series to obtain the desired effect, i.e. an increased throughput capacity, increased separation efficiency, or increased system robustness. All components, both oil polishing components and water polishing components, must be suitable for high pressure separation and environments.
A common feature of all the embodiments shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20140053 | Jan 2014 | NO | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2015/050090 | 1/6/2015 | WO | 00 |