Oil Characterization 1
Oil Characterization 1
Oil Characterization 1
Oil Characterization
1
© 2003 AspenTech. All Rights Reserved.
EA1031.31.05
05 Oil Characterization.pdf
2 Oil Characterization
Workshop
The petroleum characterization method in HYSYS converts laboratory
analyses of condensates, crude oils, petroleum cuts, and coal-tar liquids
into a series of discrete hypothetical components. These petroleum
hypo components provide the basis for the property package to predict
the remaining thermodynamic and transport properties necessary for
fluid modeling.
Learning Objectives
Once you have completed this section, you will be able to:
Prerequisites
Before beginning this module you need to understand the basics of the
fluid package (Getting Started).
2
Oil Characterization 3
Process Overview
Mole Mass Volume
Component
Fraction Fraction Fraction
N2 0.0048 0.0017 0.0014
CO2 0.0087 0.0048 0.0039
H2S 0.0000 0.0000 0.0000
C1 0.4183 0.0843 0.1871
C2 0.0887 0.0335 0.0626
C3 0.0711 0.0394 0.0517
i-C4 0.0147 0.0107 0.0127
n-C4 0.0375 0.0274 0.0312
i-C5 0.0125 0.0113 0.0121
n-C5 0.0163 0.0148 0.0156
C6+ 0.3274 0.7721 0.6217
H2O 0.0000 0.0000 0.0000
TOTAL 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000
3
4 Oil Characterization
TOTALS 0.3274
4
Oil Characterization 5
1. Open the case you saved at the end of the Getting Started module.
2. Click the Enter Basis Environment icon to return to the Basis
Enter Basis Environment icon Environment.
3. Go to the Oil Manager tab and click the Enter Oil Environment
button. You could also press the Oil Environment button on the tool
Bar. The Oil Characterization view appears.
5
6 Oil Characterization
Oil Characterization
The petroleum characterization in HYSYS accepts different types of
The Minimum amount of information about the oil. The more information you can supply about
information that HYSYS your sample, the more accurate the representation.
requires to characterize an
oil:
There are three steps involved in characterizing any oil in HYSYS:
• a laboratory distillation
curve
or 1. Characterize the assay.
• two of the following 2. Generate hypocomponents.
bulk properties:
Molecular Weight, 3. Install the oil in the flowsheet.
Density, or Watson K
Factor.
Assay Types
Accurate volatility characteristics are vital when representing a
petroleum fluid in your process simulation. HYSYS accepts the following
standard laboratory analytical assay procedures:
6
Oil Characterization 7
Light Ends
Light Ends are defined as pure components with low boiling points.
Components in the boiling range of C2 to n-C5 are most commonly of
interest.
Bulk Properties
Bulk Properties for the sample may also be supplied. The bulk
properties are optional if a distillation curve or chromatograph have
been supplied.
7
8 Oil Characterization
• Mass Density. The mass density must be between 250 and 2000
kg/m3.
• Watson (UOP) K Factor. This must be between 8 and 15.
• Bulk Viscosities. Given at two reference temperatures, typically
37.78°C and 98.89°C (100°F and 210°F).
• The units for density
can be mass density,
API or specific gravity,
chosen from the drop
down list in the Edit
Physical Property Curves
Bar
• The Watson K Factor HYSYS accepts different types of physical property curves:
is an approximate
index of paraffinicity. K
= (Mean Avg BP)1/3/ • Molecular weight curve
(sp gr 60F/60F)
• Density curve
• Viscosity curve
8
Oil Characterization 9
7. Once the correct Data Type is chosen, a third cell should appear.
This is the Light Ends cell; use the drop-down list to select Input
Composition as shown below.
Figure 2
8. Select the Light Ends radio button in the Input Data group.
9. Specify the Light Ends Basis as Mole %.
10. Enter the following data. Note that the default basis for Light Ends is
You need to enter the light Liquid Volume %; this must be changed before the data is entered.
components in the fluid
package for them to be
For this Component... Enter this Mole Fraction...
available to the Oil Manager.
N2 0.48
H2S 0.00
CO2 0.87
C1 41.83
C2 8.87
C3 7.11
i-C4 1.47
n-C4 3.75
i-C5 1.25
n-C5 1.63
C6 0.00
H2O 0.00
9
10 Oil Characterization
11. Select the Paraffinic radio button and specify the Basis as Mole.
Enter the following data.:
12. Select the Aromatic radio button, and enter the following mole
fractions:
10
Oil Characterization 11
14. Select the Bulk Props radio button to enter the Bulk information.
Just as with fluid packages, 15. The Molecular Weight is 79.6 and the Standard Density is 0.6659
assays can be imported and
SG_60/60api.
exported to be used in
different cases. 16. Once you have entered all of the data, click the Calculate button.
The status message at the bottom of the Assay view will display
Assay Was Calculated. HYSYS indicates that the sum of all fractions
does not equal to 1.
Once the Assay is calculated, the working curves are displayed on the
Working Curves tab. The working curves are regressed from the Assay
input. The calculation of the Blend is based on these working curves.
17. Close this view to return to the Oil Characterization view. You
should still be on the Assay tab of the view.
Notice that all of the buttons on the view are now accessible.
11
12 Oil Characterization
Cut Ranges
You have three choices for the Cut Option Selection:
Range Cuts
37.78 - 425°C (100 - 800°F) 28 (4 per 37.78°C/100°F)
425 - 650°C (800 - 1200°F) 8 (2 per 37.78°C/100°F)
650 - 870°C (1200 - 1600°F) 4 (1 per 37.78°C/100°F)
• User Ranges. You specify the boiling point ranges and the
number of cuts per range.
1. Move to the Cut/Blend tab of the Oil Characterization view. Click the
Add button to create a new Blend.
2. In the Name cell, change the name from the default, Blend-1 to Res-
Fluid.
3. From the list of Available Assays (there should only be one), select
Res-Fluid and click the Add button. This adds the Assay to the Oil
Flow Information table and a blend (cut) will automatically be
Note that reducing the calculated. The Blend is calculated using the default Cut Option,
Number of Cuts will
increase simulation speed,
Auto Cut.
but it may have a negative 4. Instead of using the default Auto Cut option, change the Cut Option
effect on simulation
accuracy.
Selection to User Points and change the Number of Cuts to 5.
The results of the calculation can be viewed on the Tables tab of the
Blend view.
12
Oil Characterization 13
1. Move to the Install Oil tab of the Oil Characterization view. The
blend, Res-Fluid appears in the Oil Install Information group.
2. In the Stream Name column, enter the name, GasWell 4, to which
the oil composition will be transferred.
HYSYS will assign the composition of your calculated Oil and Light Ends
into this stream, completing the characterization process.
13
14 Oil Characterization
Return to the Oil Environment and open the view for the blend, Res-
Fluid.
Tables Tab
The Tables tab of the blend contains various information, representing
the oil and the components. From the Table Type drop down, you can
select different information to display.
14
Oil Characterization 15
Figure 3
From the Basis drop-down list, choose Mass, Mole, or Liquid Volume for
the X-Axis.
• Distillation. You can plot one or more of the following: TBP, D86,
D86 (Crack Reduced), D1160 (Vac), D1160 (Atm), or D2887.
• Molecular Weight
• Density
• Viscosity
• Critical Temperature
• Critical Pressure
• Acentric Factor
• User Properties
15
16 Oil Characterization
16