Two Phase Flow Course-1
Two Phase Flow Course-1
Two Phase Flow Course-1
Instructor:
Valid Taghikhani
1
Course syllabus
Introduction to multiphase flow
PVT analysis and Gas/Liquid mixture properties
Basic concepts of two phase flow
Isothermal Vertical Two Phase Flow
Flow Through the Valves and Restrictions
Heat Transfer in Non-Isothermal Vertical Two Phase Flow
Isothermal Horizontal and Inclined Two Phase Flow
Pipeline Problems and Flow Assurance
(WAX/Ashpaltene/Hydrate)
Pigging and slug catchers
Analytical Modeling and Solution of Two Phase Flow
Computer applications (OLGA, pvt-sim, PIPEPHASE) 2
References
3
Course grading scheme
4
Multiphase Production system
Surface
Well
equipment
Reservoir
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
Horizontal
Inclined
Liquid charge system
Gas Charge system
Back pressure regulator
Chiller/heater
FL Deck
Multiphase pump
Gamma ray densitometer
Session 2:
PVT Analysis and Gas/Liquid Mixture Properties
25
26
27
28
29
30
Gas/liquid properties
31
32
33
34
35
36
Standings correlation
37
Vasquez-Beggs correlation
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
Sessions 4 and 5:
Basic concepts of two phase flow
54
55
56
57
58
Voil
VGas
Voil
Slip velocity VGas
between oil Voil
and gas VGas
phases
Voil
VGas
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
At Low Flow Rates Liquid Accumulates in the Flowline Increasing
the Pressure Drop
Friction
Dominated
Gravity
Dominated
68
Liquid Holdup Depends on Flowline Geometry and Flowrate
69
Liquid Holdup Can Lead to Liquid Slugging
70
71
two phase models for Vertical flow
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
If constants are included:
79
Vertical Two phase Flow
80
81
82
83
The Hagedorn and Brown Model
84
85
86
If constants are included:
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
More details and discussion on
Hagedorn and Brown
Good for slug flow regime
Inadequate for bubble and mist flow
Acceleration term is not accurate enough
The method is simple and straightforward
Liquid hold up is not accurately
correlated and most of the time physically
meaningless
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
The Beggs and Brill Model
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
The Duns and Ros Model
118
119
120
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122
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124
125
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127
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135
136
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144
145
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147
148
149
150
151
152
two phase flow through restrictions and
piping components
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158
159
160
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162
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165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
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175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
two phase models for horizontal flow
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
Heat Transfer in a Well Column
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
Two Phase Inclined Flow
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
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253
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257
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259
260
261
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263
Pipeline Problems
264
Pipeline problems summary
http://www.hydrafact.com/images/pigging_to_remove_wax.jpg
Wax Appearance Temperature (Cloud Point)
McAleese, Stuart Operational Aspects of Oil and Gas Well Testing. Elsevier.
Types of Wax Chemical Treatments
Corrosion Problems
Arise during
Transportation
Refining
Processing
Coatings
Examples: polyethylene, polypropylene, epoxy coatings
Chemical Additives
Problems with using incompatible chemicals cause severe
problems that often exceed the cost of the chemicals
Choose chemicals wisely
Black, coal-like
structures
Come out of oil when
pressure conditions
(typically it is less T
dependant) increase to
critical pressure
http://www.hydrafact.com/images/asphaltene_deposition.jpg
SARA Classification
Saturates
include all hydrocarbon components with saturated (single-bonded)
carbon atoms. These are the n-alkanes, i-alkanes, and cycloalkanes
(naphthenes)
Aromatics
include benzene and all the derivatives composed of one or more
benzene rings.
Resins
are components with a highly polar end group and long alkane tails.
The polar end group is composed of aromatic and naphthenic rings
contains heteroatoms such as oxygen, sulfur, and nitrogen.
Pure resins are heavy liquids or sticky solids
Asphaltenes are large highly polar components made up of
condensed aromatic and naphthenic
rings, which also contain heteroatoms.
Pure asphaltenes are black, nonvolatile powders.
Saturated
Non polar hydrocarbon non-
polar, without double bonds,
but including straight-chain
and branched alkanes,
cycloalkanes
Generally by increasing
molecular weight of oil
,number of saturated
decreases
Waxes are in this class
Aromatic
Precipitated asphaltene
from different n-Alkane
are different.
Asphaltene Aggregation behaviour
Asphaltene Possible Damage Place
S aturated Asphaltene
CII
Aromatic Re sin
McAleese, Stuart Operational Aspects of Oil and Gas Well Testing. Elsevier.
Asphaltene Solutions
Asphaltene Inhibitor
Solvents
Dispersants (like AA)
Oil/Dispersants/solvents
Pigging
McAleese, Stuart Operational Aspects of Oil and Gas Well Testing. Elsevier.
Pipeline problems conclusions
292
293
294
295
296
297
A Typical Offshore Tieback
Separator
Danger Areas
Riser
Wellhead Choke Manifold
Flow Line
SSSV Jumper
Drivers:
Hydrate Avoidance Longer Tiebacks
Higher Water Cuts
Risk Management Environmental Restrictions
Well
Cost of Chemicals 298
What is Scale Precipitation?
Precipitation of inorganic salts from formation
and injection water
Scaling by poorly soluble salts can be inhibited sterically i.e. preventing the salts
from depositing on surfaces (Not covered in PVTsim).
Original Growth Model: f CSMHyK
J. Boxall and S. Yang
Water Entrainment:
Log-normal distribution with 40m mean size
Nucleation:
Instantaneous at 6.5 F subcooling
300
Pigging
The large liquid slug is caught in a large separator called a Slug Catcher
Flow
Pig
301
Types of Pigs
Spheres:
Easy to handle.
Can be re-inflated to compensate for wear.
Negotiate irregular bends.
Little energy for movement < 2psi.
Foam Pigs:
Inexpensive and versatile.
Can be fitted with brushes to remove deposits.
Steel Pigs:
Durable with replaceable sealing elements.
Can also be equipped with brushes and blades.
Solid-Cast Pigs:
Light in weight, allow for longer and more efficient sealing.
302
303
Review of pigging-
Where is the problem?
Pigging
Wax
Pig Incline
Distance
307
Pig Receiver Station
308
Flow Assurance
309
A Typical Offshore Tieback
Separator
Danger Areas
Riser
Wellhead Choke Manifold
Flow Line
SSSV Jumper
Drivers:
Hydrate Avoidance Longer Tiebacks
Higher Water Cuts
Risk Management Environmental Restrictions
Well
Cost of Chemicals 310
Original Growth Model: f CSMHyK
J. Boxall and S. Yang
Water Entrainment:
Log-normal distribution with 40m mean size
Nucleation:
Instantaneous at 6.5 F subcooling
311
Sessions 5 and 6:
Gas Hydrates and CSM-Gem
312
Typical stable hydrate structures
sI cubic
sII cubic
sH hexagonal
316
317
Typical Hydrate Equilibrium Curve
318
319
Hydrate Prevention
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
Hydrate Remediation
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
WAX
339
Wax Definition
Solid that precipitates when oil is cooled
typically below 80C (176 F)
Paraffinic and naphtenic molecules
Wax deposition
pipelines and process equipment
wells (rare)
not in reservoirs
Typical WAT/Cloud Points
Type of fluid C
Oil 31
Oil 39
Oil 41
Gas Condensate 48
Oil 40
Oil 39
Oil 35
Oil 38
Oil 36
Oil 41
Oil 22
Gas Condensate 32
Oil 34
Oil 35
Oil 37
Oil 39
Rnningsen et al. (1991)
Phase Diagram - Wax
14000
1 Solubility effect.
12000 L+Wax L Dissolved gas acts
10000 as wax solvent
2
8000 Wax app. T
P/ psi
6000
Sat P 2 Volumetric effect.
4000
Volume increase
2000 1 when melting wax
L+Vap+Wax L+Vap
0
0 50 100 150 200
T / F
Modeling of Wax Precipitation
Vapor
Vapor f iV yi iV P ; iV from EOS
Liquid
f i L xi iL P ; iL from EOS
Liquid
Wax
Solid (wax) f i S si f i oS ; ideal solution
(Pedersen & Rnningsen)
f iV f i L f i S i 1, 2 , ..., N
Effect of Pressure on WAT
Effect of Gas on WAT
Non-Newtonian
6
Viscosity Effects
1.25
5
1.20
III Decreasing temperature
4 II
viscosity (cP)
1.15
V isco sity, cP
3 1.10
1.05
2
I 1.00
1 0.95
0.90
0
0.85
280 290 300 310 320 330 340 350
0.80
T (K) 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50
Shear Rate, 1/s
I II III
E wax F 4
liq exp(D wax ) wax
dv dv x
x
dy dy
Scale Formation
347
What is Scale Precipitation?
Precipitation of inorganic salts from formation
and injection water
Scaling by poorly soluble salts can be inhibited sterically i.e. preventing the salts
from depositing on surfaces (Not covered in PVTsim).
Importance of Scale Precipitation
Practical problem for the
petroleum industry
Fluid (In)compatibility:
Between injected seawater and formation brine.
Thermodynamic Equilibria Considered
Carbonates Sulphates
H2O(l) + CO2(aq) H+ + HCO3- Ca++ + SO4-- CaSO4(s)
Precipitation
K under saturated
Y K equilibrium
K super saturated
Activities in Ionic Solutions
- - r
+ - + -
- + - +
- + - +
-
Ecoulomb r 1
A 0.509 at 25 C
Pitzer (1973,1975,1979,1984,1986):
f (m, z , parameters )
Scale Precipitation in Wellbores
Reservoir Fluid Analysis
Seawater contains
seven times more
sulphate than formation
brine
Bottomhole Scale Evaluation
Scale Precipitation with Sea Water injection
700
600
500
400
BaSO4
100
0
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
Vol. % Sea Water
Mid Wellbore Scale Evaluation
Scale Precipitation with Sea Water injection
700
600
60 bara 500
130C
400
BaSO4
SrSO4
300 CaSO4
CaCO3
200
100
0
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
Vol. % Sea Water
Top Wellbore Scale Evaluation
Scale Precipitation with Sea Water injection
30 bara 450
117C 400
350
300
250
BaSO4
SrSO4
200
CaSO4
CaCO3
150
100
50
0
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
Vol. % Sea Water
Topside Scale Evaluation
Scale Precipitation with Sea Water injection
350
300
250
8 bara
60C 200
BaSO4
150 CaCO3
100
50
0
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
Vol. % Sea Water
Sessions 13 and 14:
PIPEPHSE, OLGA and pvt-sim
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