Subsea produced non-sales fluid handling system and method
10539141 ยท 2020-01-21
Assignee
Inventors
- Mohan G. Kulkarni (The Woodlands, TX, US)
- Kevin T. Corbett (Missouri City, TX, US)
- Paul M. Sommerfield (Giddings, TX, US)
- Kamran Ahmed Gul (Tomball, TX, US)
Cpc classification
F04D25/0686
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
E21B47/135
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
E21B47/005
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
International classification
E21B43/12
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
F04D29/044
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04D25/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A system, including: a subsea separation system that separates sales and non-sales fluids, wherein the subsea separation system includes a fluid polishing system; a seal-less pump that boosts production fluid pressure; and a water quality monitoring system, including an oil-in-water sensor and a solids-in-water sensor, that monitors a fluid discharged from the subsea separation system.
Claims
1. A system, comprising: a plurality of manifolds for gathering oil, gas and water from a plurality of wells via a plurality of subsea trees which are fluidly connected to the plurality of wells; at least one subsea distribution unit (SDU), wherein the at least one SDU is fluidly connected to at least one of the plurality of manifolds and is configured to provide hydraulic power and chemicals to the at least one of the plurality of manifolds; a subsea separation system fluidly connected to the plurality of manifolds, wherein the subsea separation system separates a first sales fluid comprising the oil, a second sales fluid comprising the gas, and a non-sales fluid comprising the water, wherein the subsea separation system includes a fluid polishing system; a subsea chemical storage unit for supplying chemicals to the fluid polishing system for treating the non-sales fluid; a subsea seal-less pump that boosts the pressure of the non-sales fluid; a water quality monitoring system, including an oil-in-water sensor and a solids-in-water sensor, that monitors the non-sales fluid discharged from the subsea separation system into a subsea environment; a subsea pumping system that transports the first sales fluid to a topside or shore based hydrocarbon facility; a subsea gas compression system that transports the second sales fluid to the topside or shore based hydrocarbon facility through a gas flow line which is fluidly connected to the subsea gas compression system; and a subsea dehydration system fluidly located between the subsea gas compression system and the gas flow line and configured for removing gas-entrained water, gas-entrained water vapor, or a combination thereof from the second sales fluid.
2. The system of claim 1, further comprising a communication system that includes a fiber-optic communication cable between the top-side or shore based hydrocarbon facility and the subsea separation system.
3. The system of claim 1, further comprising an all-electric control system that operates the subsea separation system including a water polishing and a water discharge system, pumps, compressors, electrical equipment, HIPPS, the subsea trees and the plurality of manifolds.
4. The system of claim 2, further comprising an optic-based pressure, temperature, flow, vibration, and production fluid phase sensors that make optical measurements of the subsea separation system and communicates the optical measurements with topside/shore based electronic components via the fiber-optic communications cable.
5. The system of claim 4, further comprising a processor that receives measurements from optic-based pressure, temperature, flow, vibration, and production fluid phase sensors and uses the measurements in a feedback or feed-forward control process to control performance of the subsea separation system.
6. The system of claim 1, wherein the subsea dehydration system comprises a glycol dehydrator or a dry-bed dehydrator.
7. A method, comprising: transferring, via a plurality of manifolds, oil, gas and water from a plurality of wells via a plurality of subsea trees which are fluidly connected to the plurality of wells to a subsea separation system; providing hydraulic power and chemicals to at least one of the plurality of manifolds via at least one subsea distribution unit (SDU); separating, with the subsea separation system that includes a fluid polishing system, a first sales fluid comprising the oil, a second sales fluid comprising the gas, and a non-sales fluid comprising the water; chemically treating the non-sales fluid in the fluid polishing system with chemicals supplied from a subsea chemical storage unit; monitoring, with a water quality monitoring system that includes an oil-in-water sensor and a solids-in-water sensor, the non-sales fluid discharged from the subsea separation system; using a subsea seal-less pump to boost the pressure of the non-sales fluid; discharging appropriate quality non-sales fluid at the seabed into a subsea environment; using a subsea pumping system to transport the first sales fluid to a topside or shore based hydrocarbon facility; using a subsea gas compression system to transport the second sales fluid to the topside or shore based hydrocarbon facility through a gas flow line which is fluidly connected to the subsea gas compression system; using a subsea dehydration system, fluidly located between the subsea gas compression system and the gas flow line, and configured to remove gas-entrained water, gas-entrained water vapor, or a combination thereof from the second sales fluid prior to passing the second sales fluid to the gas flow line.
8. The method of claim 7, further comprising controlling the subsea separation system with an all-electric control system.
9. The method of claim 7, further comprising: using a fiber optics communication system to communicate between the topside or shore based hydrocarbon facility and the subsea separation system.
10. The method of claim 7, further comprising measuring variables using optic based sensors.
11. The method of claim 7, further comprising receiving measurements from optic-based pressure, temperature, flow, vibration, and production fluid phase sensors and optimizing performance of the subsea separation system by using the measurements in a feedback or feed-forward control process.
12. The method of claim 7, wherein the subsea dehydration system comprises a glycol dehydrator or a dry-bed dehydrator.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) While the present disclosure is susceptible to various modifications and alternative forms, specific example embodiments thereof have been shown in the drawings and are herein described in detail. It should be understood, however, that the description herein of specific example embodiments is not intended to limit the disclosure to the particular forms disclosed herein, but on the contrary, this disclosure is to cover all modifications and equivalents as defined by the appended claims. It should also be understood that the drawings are not necessarily to scale, emphasis instead being placed upon clearly illustrating principles of exemplary embodiments of the present invention. Moreover, certain dimensions may be exaggerated to help visually convey such principles.
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(9) Exemplary embodiments are described herein. However, to the extent that the following description is specific to a particular embodiment, this is intended to be for exemplary purposes only and simply provides a description of the exemplary embodiments. Accordingly, the invention is not limited to the specific embodiments described below, but rather, it includes all alternatives, modifications, and equivalents falling within the true spirit and scope of the appended claims.
(10) The present technological advancement can provide a subsea produced non-sales fluid handling system that includes a combination of subsea equipment to separate and discharge water and associated solids in a cost-effective wayat the seabed. This system can reduce CAPEX and OPEX for subsea hydrocarbon resource development and production. The reduced CAPEX can be obtained by eliminating the water disposal wells, water disposal flow lines, as well as reducing the amount of topsides equipment necessary to handle the non-sales fluids. This system can also reduce or eliminate corrosion issues in production flow lines and pipelines and reduce hydrate inhibition requirements, which can significantly reduce OPEX. Oil and gas production volumes can also increase as larger gas flow lines and pipelines can be used with little-to-no liquid hold-up. In addition, slugging issues (varying or irregular flows of gas and liquids in pipelines) and back-pressure can be relieved from the wells, allowing them to flow more efficiently.
(11) Non-limiting embodiments of the present technological advancement can result in the elimination of the water disposal well(s), water disposal flow line(s), and replacement of the large separate control/communication and power umbilicals with a single power and fiber optic communication cable. Additional benefits of the novel system include reduction in host size, equipment footprint, complexity, weight, and cost, improvements in reliability of the subsea control system and subsea pumps, and reduction or elimination of corrosion and hydrate inhibition requirements and other flow assurance issues.
(12) The present technological advancement can include a subsea processing system including a gravity-based or compact separation system, with all ancillary components necessary to process (de-oil, polish, etc.) the non-sales fluids prior to discharge, a subsea dehydration system that prepares the gas for transport or first stage compression prior to transport to host facilities, a subsea produced water quality monitoring (PWQM) system including oil-in-water sensors and solids-in-water sensors to monitor the discharged fluids, a combination of subsea equipment (manifold, jumpers etc.) for gathering oil, gas and water stream to the separation system, and a combination of subsea equipment (valves, pipes, pumps) to be used to discharge non-sales fluids at the seabed.
(13) Pumps may be required to enable the disposal of produced water at the seabed (to overcome the pressure difference if separator operating pressure is lower than the ambient pressure) or inject chemicals. The pumps for the processing and chemical injection systems could be seal-less (magnetic drive or canned motor) pumps. Such pumps provide higher reliability by eliminating the need for mechanical seals between the motor and pump shafts, and simplify the barrier fluid system.
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(15) The system shown in
(16) Typically, a seal-less pump design can be achieved using a canned motor pump or a magnetic coupling. Such seal-less pumps are disused in A User's Engineering Review of Sealless Pump Design Limitations and Features, T Hernandez, Proceedings of the Eighth International Pump User's Symposium, 1991, pp. 129-146 (the entirety of which is hereby incorporated by reference). Further exemplary details of a seal-less pump can be found, for example, in U.S. Patent Publication 2015/0354574, the entirety of which is hereby incorporated by reference.
(17) The system can also include subsea chemical storage 204 for treating production lines and/or injection lines, or as needed. Seabed chemical storage is a new technique, whereas chemicals have been previously stored and pumped from the host facility to its mixing point using umbilical tube(s). Seabed chemical storage and mixing can provide further CAPEX reduction through smaller topside equipment footprint and elimination of umbilical tube(s) used for chemical transport. Chemicals for water treatment can include chlorination, sulfate removal, and/or biocide dosing. Other chemicals used for subsea production systems include MeOH, corrosion inhibitors if needed, asphaltene inhibitor, scale inhibitor, etc. The non-sales fluid that is discharged can be treated to comply with environmental discharge standards, as applicable. The subsea chemical storage units 204 can store enough chemical for a given period and can be refilled periodically using a shuttle tank. Subsea storage of chemicals will eliminate the need for injection chemical umbilical tube(s).
(18) Separator system 114 can include fluid polishing system 205. Any of the existing fluid polisying technologies can be used with the present technological advancement.
(19) The present technological advancement can also include a subsea produced water quality monitoring (PWQM) system, which includes oil-in-water sensors, disposed at or near port 114a, and solids-in-water sensors, disposed at or near port 114a, to monitor the discharged fluids. Any existing sensors can be used along with the present technological advancement.
(20) Furthermore, various subsea equipment can be outfitted with optically based sensors. These sensors can communicate with computer systems and/or control modules located topside or subsea via fiber optic cables.
(21) Typically, all subsea production or processing equipment are provided with a subsea control module to control functionality of valves included on the subsea equipment, wherein the subsea control module is communicatively coupled to a topside master control station. All subsea equipment (trees, manifolds, pumps, etc.) can contain sensors for process variable (flow, temperature, pressure) measurements, wherein the sensors can be optically based.
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(24) The present technological advancement can use an all-electric control system (AC or DC power based) for operating subsea production and processing equipment (trees, manifolds, separator, dehydrator, pumps etc.). The use of all-electric control system will further simplify the umbilical by eliminating the need for hydraulic fluid tubes and can improve the reliability of subsea control system by eliminating complex components (such as directional control valves) in the conventional electro-hydraulic control systems. Further, fiber optic communications can be integrated within the control system to provide higher reliability (i.e. low noise) communications and increased bandwidth.
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(26) The combined power and communications cable 313 can provide electric power for a subsea all-electric control system (AC or DC power with transformer 305 as needed) with electronics and instrumentation that are configured for safe and efficient operation of all subsea equipment. The subsea all-electric control system can include a master control station that is topside with electrical cables and electrically operated actuators for valve operations subsea, and can be communicatively connected to all subsea sensors. Example sensors include pressure, temperature, vibration sensors, flow meters. Each of the sensors can use reliable optics-based measurement principle and communicate with topside or shore-based electronic components via a fiber-optic communications cable.
(27) The present technological advancement can also include a monitoring, and process (separation, de-oiling, polishing, dehydration) and equipment (separators, dehydrators, compressors, chemical storage, seal-less pumps, and control system) performance optimization system. All sensors measurements can be used in a computer controlled feedback and/or feed-forward controlled mechanism using mechanical/process algorithms to optimize process and equipment performance. Such a computer can include control circuitry and/or one or more processors that are programmed to execute instructions stored in a computer readable memory in order to execute a method in accordance with the present technological advancement. For example, performance of subsea equipment can be optimized, such as pump operating point (combination of power consumption, output head and flow rate) and at a system level, water discharge pressure and/or rate can be optimized to get maximum hydrocarbon production rate.
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(29) The present technological advancement can be used in the management of hydrocarbons. As used herein, hydrocarbon management includes hydrocarbon extraction, hydrocarbon production, hydrocarbon exploration, identifying potential hydrocarbon resources, identifying well locations, determining well injection and/or extraction rates, identifying reservoir connectivity, acquiring, disposing of and/or abandoning hydrocarbon resources, reviewing prior hydrocarbon management decisions, and any other hydrocarbon-related acts or activities.
(30) The present technological advancement can also be embodied as a method to extract hydrocarbons, an exemplary embodiment of which is shown in
(31) The present techniques may be susceptible to various modifications and alternative forms, and the examples discussed above have been shown only by way of example. Indeed, the present techniques include all alternatives, modifications, and equivalents falling within the spirit and scope of the appended claims. While the present technological advancement has been explained via multiple examples, features from these examples may be combined as would be recognized by those of ordinary skill in the art. The present techniques are not intended to be limited to the particular examples disclosed herein.
REFERENCES
(32) The following references are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety: U.S. patent publications 2015/0354574, 2016/0186759, 2015/0326094, 2015/0316072; 2015/0090124, 2013/0206423, 2010/0116726, 2009/0077835, 2005/0034869, and 2004/0256097; U.S. Pat. Nos. 8,534,364, 7,093,661, and 6,893,486; European patent publication EP894182; International patent publications WO2015103017 and WO1999035370; Raw water reservoir injection moves to the seabed, Offshore Magazine, Jan. 1, 2000; Treating and Releasing Produced Water at the Ultra Deepwater Seabed, 2012 Offshore Technology Conference, Daigle et al., and Subsea Water Intake and TreatmentThe Missing Link?, SPE News Australasia, Eirik Dirdal, 17 Jan. 2014.