Developing a water treatment system for Subsea Gas processing plant

The petroleum industry is currently moving to meet the ever-rising demand for oil and gas production. As onshore fields become depleted and decline in production, exploration and production companies have started venturing further offshore. To support this activity, there is need for new subsea prod...

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Main Author: Honer Badi M Nazhat, Dana
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Curtin University 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/2532
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author Honer Badi M Nazhat, Dana
author_facet Honer Badi M Nazhat, Dana
author_sort Honer Badi M Nazhat, Dana
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description The petroleum industry is currently moving to meet the ever-rising demand for oil and gas production. As onshore fields become depleted and decline in production, exploration and production companies have started venturing further offshore. To support this activity, there is need for new subsea production technologies to develop deepwater and ultra deepwater fields.Woodside Hydrocarbon Research Facility (WHRF) at Curtin University of Technology is working on natural gas dehydration processing using gas hydrate technology. Through the studies, a novel gas dehydration process has been developed and now proposed for subsea application. Natural gas dehydration processes generate both a treated dry gas stream and a waste stream of condensate consisting of both hydrocarbons and water. This condensate can be reinjected to the reservoir formation but this is not always economic or practical. Availability of an alternative means of treatment and disposal of the condensate would be advantageous. This study aims to investigate and to provide a basis for the design of such an alternative scheme by constructing a floating separator for the treatment and disposal of waste condensate from subsea dehydration stage.A model was developed to simulate the process of evaporation of condensate from the proposed floating separator. The calculations were performed taken into account zero wind speed and an ambient temperature around 34 C. The simulation results showed that condensate skimming time was found to be 15 days for flowrate (Qin) of 100 bbd associated with specific separator diameter and total height dimensions. By considering the ratio of diameter to total height of 2.5, the floating separator was designed to enhance the evaporation rate and to get overall structure stability due to the mechanical restrictions that might be encountered in the sea.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-25322017-02-20T06:37:57Z Developing a water treatment system for Subsea Gas processing plant Honer Badi M Nazhat, Dana deepwater fields natural gas dehydration processing demand for oil and gas subsea production technologies gas hydrate technology The petroleum industry is currently moving to meet the ever-rising demand for oil and gas production. As onshore fields become depleted and decline in production, exploration and production companies have started venturing further offshore. To support this activity, there is need for new subsea production technologies to develop deepwater and ultra deepwater fields.Woodside Hydrocarbon Research Facility (WHRF) at Curtin University of Technology is working on natural gas dehydration processing using gas hydrate technology. Through the studies, a novel gas dehydration process has been developed and now proposed for subsea application. Natural gas dehydration processes generate both a treated dry gas stream and a waste stream of condensate consisting of both hydrocarbons and water. This condensate can be reinjected to the reservoir formation but this is not always economic or practical. Availability of an alternative means of treatment and disposal of the condensate would be advantageous. This study aims to investigate and to provide a basis for the design of such an alternative scheme by constructing a floating separator for the treatment and disposal of waste condensate from subsea dehydration stage.A model was developed to simulate the process of evaporation of condensate from the proposed floating separator. The calculations were performed taken into account zero wind speed and an ambient temperature around 34 C. The simulation results showed that condensate skimming time was found to be 15 days for flowrate (Qin) of 100 bbd associated with specific separator diameter and total height dimensions. By considering the ratio of diameter to total height of 2.5, the floating separator was designed to enhance the evaporation rate and to get overall structure stability due to the mechanical restrictions that might be encountered in the sea. 2006 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/2532 en Curtin University fulltext
spellingShingle deepwater fields
natural gas dehydration processing
demand for oil and gas
subsea production technologies
gas hydrate technology
Honer Badi M Nazhat, Dana
Developing a water treatment system for Subsea Gas processing plant
title Developing a water treatment system for Subsea Gas processing plant
title_full Developing a water treatment system for Subsea Gas processing plant
title_fullStr Developing a water treatment system for Subsea Gas processing plant
title_full_unstemmed Developing a water treatment system for Subsea Gas processing plant
title_short Developing a water treatment system for Subsea Gas processing plant
title_sort developing a water treatment system for subsea gas processing plant
topic deepwater fields
natural gas dehydration processing
demand for oil and gas
subsea production technologies
gas hydrate technology
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/2532