Lecture 4
Lecture 4
✓ Cryogenic distillation
✓ Adsorption
✓ Membrane separation
TABLE 1 : Comparison of Nitrogen Removal Processes
FIGURE 3 NRU by use of two-column cryogenic distillation. Valves are J-
T valves.
FIGURE 5 Separating N2 from natural gas by use of membranes.
FIGURE 6 Schematic of an enhanced oil recovery (EOR) system.
NATURAL GAS COMPOSITION
COMPONENT VOL.%
• METHANE C1 82.75
• ETHANE C2 5.74
• PROPANE C3 3.82
• BUTANES C4 1.40
• GASOLINE C5+ 1.00
• CO2 & N2 5.00
• H2S 0.04
COMPARISION OF RECOVERY FROM
• CRYOGRNIC
• ABSORPTION REFRIGERATION
REFRIGERATION
Recovery.
Recovery.
• 60-90%
• ETHANE. 20-40%
• 90-98%
• PROPANE 70-90%
• 100%
• BUTANE 100%
• 100%
• NATURAL
• GASOLINE 100%
CONCLUSION
Note:
INTRODUCTION
(Refrigeration)
(Distillation)
• Operating pressure, P
• Operating temperature, T
• System composition or concentration, x and y
In Summary
Cascade Refrigeration
• Cascade refrigeration refers to two refrigeration circuits thermally
connected by a cascade condenser, which is the condenser of the low-
temperature circuit and the evaporator of the high-temperature circuit.
• A cascade system utilizes one refrigerant to condense the other primary
refrigerant, which is operating at the desired evaporator temperature.
This approach is usually used for temperature levels below −90◦F, when
light hydrocarbon gases or other low boiling gases and vapors are being
cooled.
Mixed Refrigerants
• The evaporation process takes place over a temperature range rather than
at a constant temperature as with pure component refrigerants. The mixed
refrigerant is blended so that its evaporation curve matches the cooling
curve for the process fluid.
In this process, the nonideal behavior of the inlet gas causes the
gas temperature to fall with the pressure reduction, as shown by
line ABC’ in Figure2. The temperature change depends primarily
on the pressure drop.
The process of developing offshore oil and gas reserves can be divided into the
following major
steps:
1. Exploration
2. Exploratory drilling
3. Development drilling
4. Production
5. Storage and offloading
6. Transportation
FACTORS DRIVING DEEPWATER RUSH
Offshore
1. A hydrocarbon exploration well was drilled offshore Brazil in 2965 m of water
in 2001.
2. A production well was completed with a subsea completion system offshore
Brazil in 1852 m of water in 1998.
The offshore technology is steadily in progress towards deeper and deeper seas to
search and produce subsea resources for the future welfare of the world.
As per SPE publication:
“Since 1947, the offshore industry has moved from the first platform out of
sight of land to safely producing in 7,000 feet (2,100 meters) of water and
safely drilling in 10,000 feet (3,050 meters) of water.”
1. Because of the location remote from infrastructure, offshore rigs also carry on board a number
of service systems such as cementing, geophysical logging,
and so on.
2. In addition, there are lots of specific services on board such as ROV, divers, meteorological
measurements, helicopter, etc.
3. Accommodations and catering for crews working for 24 hours are requiredon the rig.
All these factors make offshore rigs complex and sophisticated, and therefore offshore drilling costs are
higher than land drilling costs for similar depth wells.
There are two basic types of offshore drilling rigs:
1. Rigs that can be moved from place to place, allowing for drilling in
multiple locations.
Moveable rigs are often used for exploratory purposes because they are much cheaper to
use than permanent platforms.
Once large deposits of hydrocarbons have been found, a permanent platform is built to
allow their extraction.
Different types of moveable offshore platforms:
1. Drilling Barges.
2. Jack-Up Rigs.
3. Submersible Rigs (swamp barges).
4. Semisubmersible Rigs (Anchor-stationed or dynamically positioned).
5. Drillships (Anchor-stationed or dynamically positioned ).
Drilling structures used for developing offshore fields from
stationary platforms are of two types:
To choose roughly the type of offshore drilling rigs according to water depth and conditions of sea state and
winds:
5. Subsea Templates:
Subsea technology covers a wide range of offshore activities. Examples are subsea
Xmas trees, manifolds, templates, flowlines and risers, control systems, well fluid
boosters, multiphase pumping and metering, water separation, water injection, remote
and diverless connections, guideline-free installations, seabed electrical power
distribution systems, interventions, etc.
6. Subsea Pipelines:
Subsea pipelines are used to transfer oil from the production platforms to storage
facilities or to the shore
There are two basic leg configurations of jack-up rigs:
In regions where the weather conditions are not harsh, it is possible to use lower cost fixed platforms that
are designed to support only the derrick and the drawworks.
The tender anchored alongside the platform contains drilling equipment such as pumps and tubular goods,
and accommodation for personnel. A catwalk connects the platform and the tender.
If weather conditions (wind, swell, and current) become too harsh, the drilling operations must be shut
down due to excessive motion of the tender.
The tender platforms are used in Gulf of Guinea and the Persian Gulf waters where good weather conditions
prevail, resulting in low downtime less than 2% of total operation time.
(II) Compliant Structures
Compliant structure by definition includes those structures that extend to the ocean bottom and directly
anchored to the seafloor by piles and/or guidelines.
Typically designed to have their lowest modal frequency to be below the wave energy, as opposed to the
fixed structures, which have a first modal frequency greater than the frequency of wave energy.
1. Articulated Platforms:
One of the earliest compliant structures that started in relatively shallow waters and slowly moved into deep
water.
The base below the universal joint on the seabed may be a gravity base or may be piled.
The tower is ballasted near the universal joint and has a large enough buoyancy tank at the free surface to
provide large restoring force (moment).
(II) Compliant Structures
2. Compliant Tower:
A compliant tower is similar to a traditional platform and extends from surface to the sea bottom, and it is fairly
transparent to waves.
Compliant tower is designed to flex with the forces of waves, wind and current. It uses less steel than a
conventional platform for the same water depth.
3. Guyed Tower:
A guyed tower is a slender structure made up of truss members, which rests on the ocean floor and is held in
place by a symmetric array of catenary guidelines.
Technologies Required by Floaters:
Most floating production units are neutrally buoyant structures (which allows six-degrees
of freedom) which are intended to cost-effectively produce and export oil and gas.
1. FPSO:
The FPSO generally refers to ship-shaped structures with several different mooring
systems.
2. FPS:
FPS refers to Floating Production systems which are finding application in marginal
and deepwater field development.
Drillships
The Larger is a Drillship with Dual-Activity Drilling System (TSF Discoverer Enterprise), and the Smaller is a Previous
Generation Drillship (TSF Discoverer 534) Alongside with a Supply Boat
(III) Floating Structures
3. Semi-Submersible Platform:
Semi-submersibles are
multi-legged floating
structures with a large
deck. These legs are
interconnected at the
bottom underwater
with horizontal
buoyant members
called pontoons.
Semisubmersible Platform
A computer graphic of a semisubmersible installation.
A computer graphic of a
semisubmersible
installation.
The advantages of semisubmersibles include the following:
1. Semisubmersibles can achieve good (small) motion response and, therefore, can be more easily positioned over a
well template for drilling.
2. Semisubmersibles allow for a large number of flexible risers because there is no weathervaning system.
Disadvantages of semisubmersibles:
1. Pipeline infrastructure or other means is required to export produced oil.
2. Only a limited number of (rigid) risers can be supported because of the bulk of the tensioning systems required.
3. Considering that most semisubmersible production systems are converted from drilling rigs, the topsides weight
capacity of a converted semisubmersible is usually limited.
4. Building schedules for semisubmersibles are usually longer than those for shipshaped offshore structures.
Semisubmersible (As Drilling Rig)
Semi-submersibles are multi-legged floating structures with a large deck. These legs are interconnected at
the bottom underwater with horizontal buoyant members called pontoons.
Semisubmersibles have submerged pontoons (lower hulls) that are interconnected to the drilling deck by
vertical columns
The lower hulls provide improved stability for the vessel. Also, the open area between the vertical columns of
semisubmersibles provides a reduced area on which the environment can act.
In drilling operations, the lower hulls are submerged in the water about half-length of the column, but do not
rest on the seabed. When a semisubmersible moves to a new location, the lower hulls float on the sea surface.
Semisubmersible rigs are towed by boats, and some rigs have self propelled capacity.
On drilling site to keep the position, the anchors usually moor semisubmersibles, but the dynamic
positioning systems are used by new generation semisubmersibles.
Semisubmersible Drilling Rig
4. Spar:
The Spar concept is a large deep draft, cylindrical floating Caisson designed to support drilling and production
operations. Its buoyancy is used to support facilities above the water surface.
It is, generally, anchored to the seafloor with multiple taut mooring lines.
Because of the reduced heave motion, the use of rigid risers (instead of flexible risers), which are self-buoyant, is
easier.
Types of Spars:
1. Classic spar
2. Truss spar
3. Cell spar
(Cell spar is3rd generation spar. The hull consists of multiple ring-stiffened tubes, or “cells”,
which are connected by horizontal and vertical plates. This method of construction is
cheaper than the traditional plate and frame methods.)
SPAR platforms
(III) Floating Structures
A Tension Leg Platform (TLP) is a vertically moored compliant platform. The floating platform
with its excess buoyancy is vertically moored by taut mooring lines called tendons (or tethers).
The structure is vertically restrained precluding motions vertically (heave) and rotationally (pitch and roll).
It is compliant in the horizontal direction permitting lateral motions (surge and sway).
A computer graphic of a tension leg platform (TLP) installation
(III) Floating Structures