The present invention concerns a subsea separation apparatus for treating crude oil comprising a separator module with a separator tank for the separation of water, gas, sand and crude oil from fluids flowing from a well. The apparatus or plant is designed to be placed on the seabed adjacent to, or on the well.
During the exploitation of oil and gas offshore, the produced fluids are usually led to a plant, for instance on an offshore platform, for the separation of the various phases of the fluid. These phases includes mainly hydrocarbons, water, and in some cases sand. The separation is usually performed with conventional separation equipment, such as hydrocyclones and sedimentation tanks.
However the are disadvantages connected to placing such separation equipment on offshore platforms. In many cases the platforms imposes limitations to the weight and other design parameters of such plants. Risers, and other equipment to bring the well fluids to the platform and plant, must be dimensioned to lead larger amounts of fluid to the platform, than the fluids that are to be produced. In addition, any reinjection of water into the well will require a lot of additional equipment for leading separated water down into the well. Alternatively, cleaned, but still oil containing water may be dumped directly into the sea, but this is problematic in areas sensitive to pollution.
It has therefore been suggested to place the separation plant on the seabed. This reduces the requirement for surface placed plants, and the need to transport fluids to the surface is reduced in the same amount as the water fraction in the fluid.
Such subsea plants are for instance known from Norwegian Patent NO 304388 describing a method and an apparatus for the separation of a hydrocarbon flow on the seabed. The patent describes a subsea plant for the separation of crude oil fractions. The solution primarily concerns an arrangement and a method for sand processing, and appears limited to the separation of sand in produced water. The processing of sand takes place in the arrangement after pressurization. The sand is taken out downstream in relation to the separator in water with lower pressure. A water injection pump is used to increase the pressure to a pressure just over the pressure in the separator tank to force the sand to flow into the oil and gas export line. The disadvantages of this, is that the pump must circulate sand containing water, which involves a considerable risk for increased wear with correspondingly high maintenance frequency. This is very cost intensive.
The handling of sand production is a common problem for underwater separation plants. Norwegian patent NO B1 172555 describes an underwater station for the handling and transport of a well flow. The underwater station is placed on the seabed and is intended for the separation of crude oil fractions in the same way as in the solution of the applicant. It is described that a multi phase flow is transformed to 2 phases; a gas phase and a liquid phase, such that the flow as a whole can be moved by means of a single phase pump and a gas compressor. The separation is hence primarily motivated from the transporting needs, meaning that a known single phase compression technology for the pressurization and allows thereby the transfer of the well flow over greater distances than in the case of pressure drop driven transport. What appears described, is mounting the pump directly under the separator and the compressor directly over the separator, in a vertical assembly. The solution of the applicant includes a 3 phase separation where gas, oil and water are treated with the purpose of removing the water fraction.
Norwegian Patent NO B1 309587 shows an apparatus for the separation of an oil/liquid phase from a gas phase in a well head fluid. The patent describes an arrangement for centrifugal separation that either can be placed at the surface or as a part of a subsea plant, for 2-phase separation of crude oil or wet gas.
The apparatus is intended to inflict gravitational forces on the well fluid beyond normal gravitation (g), with the purpose of being able to part the liquid phase from the gas phase quickly, that is 2-phase separation.
The solution of the applicant involves a gravitational separation where the separation is driven with approximately one time the gravitation, 1×g, with the purpose of splitting or dividing crude oil in 3 phases.
Accordingly, the present invention concerns a subsea separation apparatus with a separator tank according to claim 1.
The separation apparatus or the separation plant with a separator tank according to the invention is designed for the separation of water, gas, sand and crude oil from fluids flowing from a well. The separator tank and separator plant is furthermore intended for being placed on the seabed, preferably directly on a well head used as a water injection well, with supply flow of well fluid from a neighbouring production well or a collection of such wells. Alternatively, the well head that the separation plant is placed over, may be a production well or may include production tubing both for production and water injection, a so called “multiple tubing completion”.
The pressure equipment is preferably placed upstream in relation to the nodes where the well fluid is merged, and downstream closed to the production well. The purpose of this arrangement is to exploit the heat of the crude oil to, with a temperature as high as possible, ensure the best possible conditions for the separation of water from the crude oil. The equipment may be placed on existing well heads and can easily be connected or disconnected as a module.
The separator tank of the plant is designed substantially concentric about the well head with necessary components or modules placed around it, above it or below, such that the center of gravity of the plant is placed substantially directly above or concentrically around the well head. The separator tank has an opening hole extending there through, essentially in the middle, allowing the well head below to extend through the hole and create a substantially rotationally symmetrical volume. Alternatively, a single phase pump, a multiple phase pump or compressor may be placed in the opening extending through the tank.
Such plants may include a number of elements and modules. Examples of such elements are a permanent guide base (PGB), guide base or flow base, a temporary guide base (TGB) or base frame, a separator module, a well head Christmas tree, a filter unit, connection equipment, oil-in-water censors, connecting frames, permanent bases for guidelines or guide posts, injection pumps, transformers, choke bridge modules for processed water, “hydrocyclone for sand separation”, Christmas tree for water injection, production Christmas tree, pumps for cast off oil, control mechanisms for Christmas trees, hydrocyclone for oil separation etc.
The elements are preferably built as modules that are placed on the seabed and assembled in a certain order.
These elements or modules are preferably dimensioned according to limitation in connection with installation of the equipment These limitations are typically the size of the opening of the lower deck or “moonpool on launching” and maintenance vessels.
The plant enables the separated water to be directly reinjected into the well bore, the latter in the case of a multiple tube completion. Alternatively, separated water may be dumped on the seabed, given a preceding oil separating treatment to reduce the oil content of the separated water. In both cases, transport of water to the surface is avoided. The plant, if it is adapted for reinjection, may comprise a downstream pump with possibly a hydrocyclone (for sand separation) in front. The plant may comprise a hydrocyclone (for oil separation) in the situation where water is dumped at the seabed. In the latter case it may be necessary with an oil-in-water probe or sensor for the control of the oil content.
Direct reinjection at the well head is an environmentally favourable solution. The plant is preferably placed directly on the well head.
The plant is adapted for the connection of pipelines to stab able branch pipes on the plant, and for the connection of a power cable in addition to the placement of a subsea transformer. It can furthermore include connections for a control cable and connections for the placement of control and monitoring equipment.
The plant may include a protective structure of glass reinforced plastic (GRP) or of another suitable material, that makes it possible to trawl over the unit and to protect the plant.
The separator tank according to the invention is preferably torus shaped or in any other way assembled of pressure shell elements with dually curved surfaces. The solution according to the invention involves the separation of crude oil to get rid of the water fraction by directly dumping this fraction to the sea or reinjection to the reservoir by means of an injection well. The torus- or ring shaped separator tank is a gravitational separator tank for the separation of process water. The injection point at the well head Christmas tree is preferably placed immediately adjacent to the center of the separator tank. The sand is washed away ahead of the separator tank by means of a “liquid/gas/sand cyclone” ahead of the inlet of the separation tank. In other words, the invention comprises sand separation from the crude oil phase by means of a “gas/liquid/sand cyclone” at the inlet The separator tank has no rotating parts, but includes internal guide vanes or plates leading the well flow in a circle around the injection well head, and can be cochleate or reassemble a snail shell. The torus shaped separator tank itself is adapted for 3-phase separation of the well flow. The outer measurements of the tank are reduced to a minimum to make retrieval of the tank to the surface during maintenance operations offshore, easier and more cost effective.
The crude oil preferably flows substantially horizontally through the tank and passes a sector one or several times around the opening in the middle. The central opening extending through the tank is available for process equipment for crude oil. This process equipment may include a water injection Christmas tree, a production Christmas tree or a choke bridge module.
The tank may be adapted with a center tube for guidline less stabbing and assembly of the well head Christmas tree in the opening going there trough. The tank is designed as a pressure wessel and has an upper and a lower shell connectected internally with a thick-walled tube, and externally with a double layer ring structure. The tank may for instance be made of a metal material or a polymer laminate (GRP).
The tank is designed to relatively speaking have a greater pressure resistance towards internal pressure, compared to the pressure resistance towards external pressure, in a way such that loss of internal pressure not will result in a collapse of the tank, with the effect that retrieval of the installed equipment to the surface is prevented.
The separator tank is internally designed as a labyrinth or a snail shell and is cochleate. The inlet is at the inner side by the center, and the flowing cross section may be progressively increasing such that the velocity component gradually is reduced. At the end of the snail shell, it is placed a standard well wall for collecting the oil fraction pooring over this wall. Separated oil is retrieved behind this wall. A sink for separated water is placed ahead of this wall. Fluid flow concerns are made during the design of the interior, primarily to increase retension time and to reduce turbulence.
The surrounding equipment of the tank, such as pump for separated oil, hydrocyclones, pump for separated water, and in some cases compressors for separated gas, is arranged such that tubular connections are radially configured, and therefore has a minimum length. This is to reduce heat loss. The tank and tubing may be thermally insulated to improve the separation processes and to reduce the probability of ice plug creation.
The tank interior may include fixed level sensors to measure the level of the water/oil transition and oil/gas transition. Because the tank has outer measurements and a mass, accepting simpler retrieval, the level sensors may be integrated as fixed parts, and not as separate retrievable modules, which reduces the need for the use of passages in the pressure shell.
Short description of the enclosed drawings:
a shows the separation plant of
b shows the separation plant of
a is a schematic diagram of a well head unit with a cross section of a separator tank according to the invention adapted for being placed on a production well, where the outlet for oil and outlet for pressurized water is shown; and
b is a schematic diagram of a well head unit with a cross section of a separator tank according to the invention adapted for being placed on a production well, where an outlet for water and an outlet for pressurized oil/gas is shown.
The invention will now be described in greater detail with reference to the enclosed drawings, where similar reference numerals refers to similar components.
From
The
For reinjection (shown on
The plant has preferably standardized components for both the case with direct reinjection, and the case where process water is dumped at the sea bed, This makes it possible to use exchangeable components for the two different cases. This has many advantages in connection with the equipment costs, fabrication time, production flexibility and reduced stock holding of spare components for the operator. Examples of such components are separator tank 3a, hydrocyclone for particle separation 17a, connection spools 6, and flow base/guide base (PGB) 2 with flow tubes, connection frame and stearing posts, the latter in the case where guidelines are used.
The guide base 2 may be modified to control the flow of separated water in the case where separated water is dumped at the sea bed. The plant may imply that the outlet for separated water from the separator module 3 has a design that both can accept of the type pump/motor insert (in the case of reinjection), or a hydrocyclone for oil separation (in the case dumping at the sea bed). Both inserts may make use of a system with radially acting sealing arrangements.
The shown arrangement implies a “placing of the modules in layers”, where relative reliability considerations are the basis for the placement of the individual components in the function controlled arrangement, that in the invention is shown with a vertical connection or “stack-up”. ROV-operated valves may for instance be placed in the guide base 2 along with piping systems and alternatively a collector tank for sand 5, see the hydrocyclone for particle separation 17a. The separator module 3 that is being supported by the guide base 2 includes remotely operated valves. Above the separator tank 3, vertical connection spools 6 are used as connection tubular. These connect the tubing system in the guide base 2 with the separator tank 3a. On the inlet side, the connection tubular 6 may include a hydrocyclone for particle separation 17a, as a relatively high degree of mechanical wear results in expected high frequency of replacement. The outlet side for separated water also implies connection spools for the connection tubular 6, and reference is made to the water injection-tree 4a and the choke bridge module 18, used in the cases with direct reinjection and dumping at the sea bed respectively. The water injection-tree 4a can be said to have a double function; as a connecting element, corresponding connection tubular 6, and as a valve block for well head valves necessary for the injection function. The choke bridge module 18 is thought to contain oil-in-water sensing instruments 22 and control/choke valves, where one, some or all of these components are either separately retrievable or fixedly mounted in the module.
A very important feature, is to prevent hydrate creation in tubes that contains water that continuously or periodically contains hydrocarbons. This is called “cold spots” that are cold places in the tubular system that may cause hydrate creation, with the relating hazard of clogged tubes. By leading tubes through the separator tank 3, as shown in
In connection with
FIGS. 11 to 15 show the separator tank (shown as 3a on the figures mentioned above) according to one embodiment of the invention.
The tank for tree phase separation of the well flow may have a stabbing skirt placed at the top of the center tube, adapted for guideline less installation of a Christmas tree. This is particularly favourable for installations of arrangements, placed in deep water (>600 m w.d.). The tank is designed as a pressure vessel and may have an upper and a lower shell connected internally with a thick walled tube and externally with a double walled, ring structure. The tank is designed to be relatively stronger for internal pressure, compared to external pressure such that implosion with any loss of internal pressure not shall result in deflection or collapse of the tank, preventing retrieval to the surface.
The tank may include an internal arrangement 44, 45 made as a “labyrinth” or a “snail shell”. The inlet is placed innermost at the center and the cross section of the flow is progressively increasing such that the velocity of the flowing crude oil gradually is reduced. At the end of the “snail shell” a standard well wall 41 is placed. Separated oil goes out behind the well wall and separated water goes out in front, through a sink at the bottom of the tank. It is made flow technical concerns during the design of the internal arrangement, first of all to maximize the time of residence and to minimize turbulence.
The separator tank has thereto affixed surrounding equipment such as a pump (for separated water), hydrocyclones an compressors (for separated gas). These elements are arranged such that tube connections are oriented with radial orientation, and have thereby the shortest possible length to reduce heat loss. The tank and the tubes are in addition thermally insulated to improve the separation process, in addition to reduce the hazard for the creation of hydrate ice plugs inside the tubes.
The internal arrangement of the separation tank may include permanently installed level sensors to part liquid/gas and liquid/liquid (oil/water). As the tank has external measurements and a mass allowing simple retrieval to the surface, the level sensors may be integrated as permanently installed parts, as opposed to separately retrievable modules. In this way unnecessary use of space and passages such as flange joints is avoided.
The shown separator tank is a tank with three horizontal spheres or cup shells. In the shown embodiment, there are internal plates, deflectors that are placed to increase the separation time and to increase the distance between inlet and outlet as much as possible.
The chambers are shown with an internal quantity splitter. Separated crude oil in cup # 2 is divided in two volumes for separation in cup # I and # 3 respectively by means of an internal quantity splitter, shown as placed in a Y-configuration in cup #2.
This separator tank also comprises internal deflectors, see above, where separated water at the outlet of the flow path, is led through a built in hydrocyclone 16 arranged to reduce oil content in separated water.
The separator tank, as a part of a separator module described above, can find its use where the center position is used to place a pump for separated water, and/or a combination of liquid pump and gas compressor. This gives a very compact assembly of the equipment.
a is a schematic diagram of a well head unit for production with pressure in the water outlet, adapted for placement on a production well, where the inlet 38, the outlet for oil 40 and the outlet for pressurized water 39 is shown.
b is a schematic diagram of a well head unit for the production with pressure in the oil/gas outlet, showing a cross section of a separator tank according to the invention adapted for being placed on a production well, where the inlet 38, the outlet for water 39 and the outlet for pressurized oil/gas 40 is shown.
In this specification it has been described a subsea plant. It may however also been practical to use such a plant at land based installations.
| Number | Date | Country | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| 20020989 | Feb 2002 | NO | national |
| Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| PCT/NO03/00070 | 2/27/2003 | WO |