Subsea Umbilicals
20220275693 · 2022-09-01
Inventors
Cpc classification
F16L11/22
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
E21B43/013
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
F16L3/22
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16L3/2235
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
E21B43/013
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
Abstract
A subsea control bundle umbilical comprises: a carrier pipe; a bundle of elongate functional elements being tubes and/or cables that extend longitudinally within the carrier pipe; and spacers spaced apart longitudinally along the bundle. The spacers support the functional elements of the bundle and are movable longitudinally relative to the carrier pipe upon insertion during assembly, and also during installation of the umbilical and in use. As the umbilical does not convey production hydrocarbons flowing from a subsea well, any tubes within the carrier pipe have an inner diameter of no more than 70mm. Any such tubes contain only a control fluid or a service fluid for supporting production of hydrocarbons. Each spacer comprises a stack of blocks and an opening that extends along a longitudinal axis through the spacer at an interface between abutting blocks of the stack. Each opening receives a respective elongate functional element of the umbilical.
Claims
1. A subsea control bundle umbilical, comprising: a carrier pipe; a bundle of two or more elongate functional elements being tubes and/or cables that extend longitudinally within the carrier pipe; and spacers spaced apart longitudinally along the bundle, the spacers supporting the functional elements of the bundle and being movable longitudinally relative to the carrier pipe,
2. The umbilical of claim 1, wherein the carrier pipe contains no tubes with an inner diameter of greater than 70 mm.
3. The umbilical of claim 1 or claim 2, wherein any tube within the carrier pipe contains only a control fluid or a service fluid for supporting production of hydrocarbons.
4. The umbilical of any preceding claim, further comprising at least one connection head that is positioned at an end of the carrier pipe and comprises connection elements that are in fluid communication or electrical contact with respective functional elements of the bundle.
5. The umbilical of claim 4, wherein the at least one connection head is a towhead that comprises a towing line attachment point supported by a frame configured for towing the umbilical before installation.
6. The umbilical of any preceding claim, wherein the carrier pipe is a monolithic pipe of polymer or polymer composite material.
7. The umbilical of any of claims 1 to 5, wherein the carrier pipe comprises a series of pipe lengths joined end to end.
8. The umbilical of any preceding claim, wherein the carrier pipe has an outer diameter of no greater than ten inches (254 mm).
9. A spacer for a subsea control bundle umbilical, the spacer comprising a stack of two or more blocks and at least one opening that extends along a longitudinal axis through the spacer at an interface between abutting blocks of the stack to receive a respective elongate functional element of the umbilical, wherein outer blocks of the stack support rollers that are angularly spaced in a circular array.
10. The spacer of claim 9, wherein the interface is substantially planar but is interrupted by at least one open-ended channel for receiving a respective one of the functional elements.
11. The spacer of claim 10, wherein each opening is defined by alignment between opposed channels in the abutting blocks of the stack.
12. The spacer of any of claims 9 to 11, wherein each block of the stack has a thickness on the longitudinal axis that exceeds its height on an axis that is orthogonal to the longitudinal axis and to the interface.
13. The spacer of any of claims 9 to 12, wherein the outer blocks define chamfered corners of the spacer at which the rollers are supported.
14. The spacer of any of claims 9 to 13, wherein the rollers are supported by brackets that each embrace one of the outer blocks.
15. The spacer of claim 14, wherein each bracket engages at least two blocks of the stack.
16. The spacer of any of claims 9 to 15, wherein one or more inner blocks of the stack are substantially cuboidal.
17. The umbilical of any of claims 1 to 8, wherein at least one of the spacers is a spacer as defined in any of claims 9 to 16.
18. The umbilical of claim 17, wherein frictional force between the abutting blocks of the spacer and one or more of the functional elements at the interface exceeds resistance to movement of the spacer relative to the carrier pipe in a direction parallel to the longitudinal axis.
19. The umbilical of claim 17 or claim 18, wherein the carrier pipe exerts radially-inward pressure on the spacer that clamps the functional elements between abutting blocks of the stack.
20. The umbilical of claim 19, wherein the inward pressure exerted by the carrier pipe deflects the abutting blocks of the stack into contact along their interface.
21. A subsea installation comprising at least one umbilical of any of claims 1 to 8 or of any of claims 17 to 20.
22. A method of making a subsea control bundle umbilical, the method comprising: assembling a bundle comprising two or more spacers that support two or more elongate functional elements being tubes and/or cables, the spacers being spaced apart longitudinally along the bundle; and inserting the bundle longitudinally into a carrier pipe to extend longitudinally within the carrier pipe.
23. The method of claim 22, comprising pulling the bundle into the carrier pipe.
24. The method of claim 22 or claim 23, further comprising attaching at least one connection head to an end of the carrier pipe and effecting fluid communication or electrical contact between connection elements of the connection head and respective functional elements of the bundle.
25. The method of any of claims 22 to 24, further comprising towing the umbilical to an installation site using a towing line attached to the connection head.
26. The method of any of claims 22 to 25, comprising filling any tube within the carrier pipe only with a control fluid or a service fluid for supporting production of hydrocarbons.
27. The method of any of claims 22 to 26, comprising assembling each spacer as a stack of two or more blocks, with each functional element extending through the stack at an interface between abutting blocks of the stack.
28. The method of claim 27, comprising adding a final block to the stack to complete the spacer immediately before the spacer enters the carrier pipe during insertion of the bundle.
29. The method of claim 27 or claim 28, comprising exerting radially-inward pressure from the carrier pipe onto the spacer to clamp the functional elements between blocks of the stack.
30. The method of claim 29, comprising deflecting the abutting blocks of the stack into contact along the interface.
31. The method of any of claims 27 to 30, comprising holding the abutting blocks together only by friction between the blocks and one or more of the functional elements at the interface.
Description
[0040] In order that the invention may be more readily understood, reference will now be made, by way of example, to the accompanying drawings in which:
[0041]
[0042]
[0043]
[0044]
[0045]
[0046]
[0047]
[0048]
[0049]
[0050]
[0051]
[0052]
[0053]
[0054]
[0055]
[0056] The tubes 12, also known in the art as fluid cores or fluid lines, may be made of carbon steel but are preferably made of corrosion-resistant steel alloys such as Duplex® steel. However, other materials such as polymer composites could be used instead.
[0057] The tubes 12 comprise first and second groups of smaller-diameter tubes 12A, 12B and a third group of larger-diameter tubes 12C. In use, the smaller-diameter tubes 12A, 12B are apt to carry hydraulic oil or another fluid for powering or controlling subsea equipment. Conversely, the larger-diameter tubes 12C are apt to carry a flow of service fluids, such as methanol or MEG, for supporting the production of oil and gas.
[0058] The tubes 24 have a small internal diameter, typically of less than two inches (50.8 mm), but may be tens or hundreds of metres long to correspond to the length of the umbilical.
[0059] The cables 14 are also grouped together. They comprise power cables 14A, also known in the art as power cores, and control cables 14B, each containing electrical conductors. There could also be data cables, which may contain optical fibres, but such cables have been omitted from this simplified view.
[0060] The spacer 10 is substantially square in the frontal view shown in
[0061] Each bracket 20 supports a respective roller 22 that turns about an axis 24 parallel to the plane of the associated chamfered corner. Thus, the axis 24 of each roller 22 is orthogonal to the axes 24 of the rollers 22 at neighbouring corners but is parallel to the axis 24 of the roller 22 at the diagonally-opposed corner. Further, the axes 24 of the rollers 22 are co-planar with each other, lying in a plane that is disposed between, and parallel to, the front face 18 and the rear face.
[0062] Each tube 12 and cable 14 is held snugly within a respective one of the through-holes 16. Thus, the diameters of the through-holes 16 match the outer diameters of the associated tubes 12 and cables 14. The through-holes 16 extend through the spacer 10 on parallel longitudinal axes that extend orthogonally with respect to the planes of the front face 18 and the rear face.
[0063] The spacer 10 has a layered structure that comprises a stack of spacer blocks 26. Each spacer block 26 is a monolithic mass or a hollow body of a moulded or machined polymer material such as polyurethane. As will be explained, each spacer block 26 is shaped to embrace, engage and support at least one group of the tubes 12 or cables 14 that extend through the spacer 10.
[0064] The thickness of the spacer 10 from the front face 18 to the rear face exceeds the height of each spacer block 26 in a direction parallel to the front face 18 or the rear face. However, the thickness of the spacer 10 is significantly less than its width across the front face 18 or the rear face.
[0065] The spacer blocks 26 will be referred to in this description as, from bottom to top in
[0066] Two of the brackets 20 that support the rollers 22 are mounted on the first spacer block 26A and, in this example, overlap onto and embrace the second spacer block 26B. The brackets 20 that support the other two rollers 22 are mounted on the fifth spacer block 26E and, in this example, overlap onto and embrace the fourth spacer block 26D. The brackets 20 thereby help to hold together those pairs of abutting spacer blocks 26A, 26B and 26D, 26E.
[0067] Each group of tubes 12 or cables 14 is a coplanar parallel array that is sandwiched between abutting spacer blocks 26 of the stack. Each group is therefore aligned in the stack with a respective planar interface 28 between abutting spacer blocks 26. Each through-hole 16 is bisected by the interface 28 between abutting spacer blocks 26.
[0068] In this respect, reference is now also made to
[0069] Specifically,
[0070] It will be apparent from
[0071] The top mating face 32A of the first spacer block 26A is interrupted by an inset array of parallel open-ended channels 30A, each extending from the front face 18A to the rear face.
[0072]
[0073] The second spacer block 26B shown in
[0074] The top and bottom mating faces 32B, 34B of the second spacer block 26B are each interrupted by inset arrays of parallel open-ended channels 30B. The array of channels 30B on the bottom mating face 34B is a mirror image of the corresponding channels 30A on the top mating face 32A of the first spacer block 26A. When the spacer blocks 26A, 26B are stacked together such that the bottom mating face 34B of the second spacer block 26B is opposed to the top mating face 32A of the first spacer block 26A, the aligned channels 30A, 30B of the spacer blocks 26 come together around the tubes 12A of the first group. The conjoined channels 30A, 30B thereby complete the through-holes 16 that hold the first group of tubes 12A in the spacer 10 as shown in
[0075] The array of channels 30B on the top mating face 32B of the second spacer block 26B corresponds to the array of channels 30A on the top mating face 32A of the first spacer block 26A.
[0076]
[0077] The top and bottom mating faces 32C, 34C of the third spacer block 26C are each interrupted by inset arrays of parallel open-ended channels 300. The array of channels 30C on the bottom mating face 340 is a mirror image of the corresponding channels 30B on the top mating face 32B of the second spacer block 26B. Thus, when the spacer blocks 268, 26C are stacked together such that the bottom mating face 34C of the third spacer block 26C is opposed to the top mating face 32B of the second spacer block 268, the aligned channels 30B, 30C of the spacer blocks 26B, 26C come together around the tubes 12B of the second group. The conjoined channels 30B, 300 thereby complete the through-holes 16 that hold the second group of tubes 128 in the spacer 10 as shown in
[0078] The channels 300 on the top mating face 32C of the third spacer block 260 are enlarged to accommodate the larger tubes 120 of the third group. The tubes 120 of the third group are shown in
[0079]
[0080] The top and bottom mating faces 32D, 34D of the fourth spacer block 26D are each interrupted by inset arrays of parallel open-ended channels 30D. The array of channels 30D on the bottom mating face 34D is a mirror image of the corresponding channels 30C on the top mating face 32C of the third spacer block 26C, and so those channels 30D are similarly enlarged. When the spacer blocks 26C, 26D are stacked together such that the bottom mating face 34D of the fourth spacer block 26D is opposed to the top mating face 32C of the third spacer block 26C, the aligned channels 30C, 30D of the spacer blocks 26C, 26D come together around the tubes 12C of the third group. The conjoined channels 30C, 30D thereby complete the through-holes 16 that hold the third group of tubes 12C in the spacer 10 as shown in
[0081] The array of channels 30D on the top mating face 32D of the fourth spacer block 26D differ in size to accommodate the cables 14A, 14B that, correspondingly, differ in size across their group. The cables 14A, 14B are shown in
[0082] It will be apparent from
[0083] Moving on now to
[0084] In this example, the spacers 10 are assembled at a series of assembly stations 46A-D. Guide systems 48 are interspersed between the assembly stations 46A-D to guide the convergent tubes 12A-C and cables 14A, 14B into alignment with the various spacer blocks 26A-E as shown in
[0085] The process of assembling one spacer 10 is shown in this schematic diagram. However, in practice, multiple spacers 10 will be assembled sequentially as the tubes 12A-C and cables 14A, 14B move past one or more assembly stations 46, typically being advanced together in a stepwise manner. The completed spacers 10 are distributed along the length of the bundle 40 as shown.
[0086]
[0087] A pulling system 50 acting on the bundle 40 in tension pulls the bundle 40 and the spacers 10 into and along the carrier pipe 42. The fifth spacer block 26E is added to the first to fourth spacer blocks 26A-D at the fourth workstation 46D to complete the spacer 10, immediately before the spacer 10 is carried by the advancing bundle 40 into an open end of the carrier pipe 42.
[0088] The rollers 22 of the spacers 10 are equi-angularly spaced about the central longitudinal axis 52 of the carrier pipe 42. Thus, as best appreciated in the cross-sectional view of
[0089] The carrier pipe 42 may be fabricated from tubular lengths of steel joined end-to-end, for example by welding, or may be a continuous tubular length of a polymer or polymer composite material. In each case, the inner surface of the carrier pipe 42 is sufficiently smooth that the spacers 10 can roll along it with minimal resistance. The carrier pipe 42 also has enough structural integrity to bend along its length without collapsing or buckling.
[0090] As noted above, engagement between the spacer blocks 26 may conveniently be effected simply by friction at their mutual interfaces 28 when the spacer blocks 26 are stacked together. To keep the spacer blocks 26 together in the stack and hence to maintain the structural integrity of the spacer 10, the friction between any two abutting spacer blocks 26 and the tubes 12 or cables 14 at their mutual interface 28 exceeds the resistance to movement of the spacer 10 along the carrier pipe 42.
[0091] In this respect, the feature that the thickness of the spacer 10 exceeds the height of each spacer block 26 increases both the stability of the spacer blocks 26 and the abutting interface area that is available for frictional contact. Also, the mating faces 32, 34 of the spacer blocks 26 could have a high-friction surface such as a roughened finish to increase their frictional engagement with the mating faces 32, 34 of abutting spacer blocks 26.
[0092] On entering the carrier pipe 42, the stack of spacer blocks 26 that form the spacer 10 are held together by the surrounding wall of the carrier pipe 42. In particular, the spacer blocks 26 cannot tip relative to abutting spacer blocks 26, thus ensuring the stability and structural integrity of the spacer 10 as a whole.
[0093] In the example illustrated, the width of the spacer 10 is slightly oversized with respect to the inner diameter of the carrier pipe 42 so that the spacer 10 is squeezed radially inwardly against resilient deformation of the spacer blocks 26 on entering the carrier pipe 42. This beneficially increases the frictional forces that act between the stacked spacer blocks 26 and that grip the tubes 12 and the cables 14 of the bundle 40.
[0094] In this respect, the spacer blocks 26 are shown in
[0095] Moving on now to
[0096] It will be apparent from
[0097] The carrier pipe 42 may extend as a single monolithic structure along its full length from one UTA 54 to the other UTA 54, as is possible if the carrier pipe 42 is of a polymer or composite material such as TCP. Alternatively the carrier pipe 42 may comprise a series of shorter pipe lengths joined end to end, for example being fabricated by welding together a succession of steel pipe joints.
[0098]
[0099] Thus, the UTA 54 serves as a head for the umbilical 44 and contains piping and cables that join the tubes 12 and cables 14 of the bundle 40 to a set of connection elements such as the ports 56 and sockets 58.The ports 56 and the sockets 58 provide for the umbilical 44 to be connected fluidly and electrically to other equipment at a subsea location. For this purpose, flexible jumper pipes may be connected to the ports 56 and the plugs of flying leads may be coupled with the sockets 58.
[0100]
[0101] One or both of the UTAs 54 may have attachment points 64 for towing lines. To illustrate the latter possibility,
[0102]
[0103]
[0104] Finally,
[0105] The surface installation 80 is exemplified in
[0106] Many other variations are possible within the inventive concept. For example, tubes and cables could be mixed in the same group, or the bundle could contain only cables or only tubes.
[0107] In principle, the umbilical of the invention could be stored, transported and installed by conventional reel-lay methods. In that case, a UTA could be preinstalled on a free end of the umbilical that is not spooled onto a reel. If required, one or more UTAs could be attached to the umbilical offshore aboard a reel-lay vessel when installing the umbilical. Where the umbilical is configured to be installed by reel-lay, the or each UTA need not be equipped to serve as a towhead.
[0108] Whilst