scholarly journals Operation and Maintenance of Remotely Controlled Gas-Turbine Units

Author(s):  
R. C. Hill ◽  
R. H. Hubbell ◽  
M. L. Krapp

Trans-Arabian Pipe Line Company and the Arabian American Oil Company have installed a group of portable auxiliary pumping units at intermediate locations on the crude-oil pipeline across Arabia to the Mediterranean. The units are powered by 5000-hp General Electric gas turbines burning crude oil for fuel and are controlled by radio from upstream pump stations. Operating experience between 1957 and September 1959 indicates that the design promise of 80 per cent operating factor was conservative. Intensive effort has been applied to overcome mechanical faults, crude-oil combustion problems, and control instability. Major problems are discussed in detail with a description of the methods and facilities used to reduce the effect on operating reliability and maintenance expense. The paper briefly discusses development work now in progress which is expected to smooth out seasonal capacity fluctuations and possibly result in a substantial increase over design rating. Since much of the development work is still in progress, it is the intent of this paper to review the operation of the subject pumping units to date. It is intended that a paper to follow this one at a future date will report in more detail the operating experience as a result of the work now being done.

1980 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. W. Temple ◽  
F. L. Foltz ◽  
H. R. Jamalallail

The 747-mile East-West Crude Oil Pipeline across Saudi Arabia employs 60 gas turbines for pumping and power generation. Mainline pump drives are three United Technologies Corporation FT4A-9 modular industrial gas turbines at each of 11 pumping stations. Two of the three mainline gas turbines are required for maximum throughput, while the third is an operational spare. High reliability and availability constraints and the remote unmanned station concept underscore the need for a modern maintenance information system. This paper describes an independent multiple-fault diagnostic/prognostic system, employing a patented gas path analysis technique.


2017 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 112 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leksono Mucharam ◽  
Silvya Rahmawati ◽  
Rizki Ramadhani

Oil and gas industry is one of the most capital-intensive industry in the world. Each step of oil and gas processing starting from exploration, exploitation, up to abandonment of the field, consumes large amount of capital. Optimization in each step of process is essential to reduce expenditure. In this paper, optimization of fluid flow in pipeline during oil transportation will be observed and studied in order to increase pipeline flow performance.This paper concentrates on chemical application into pipeline therefore the chemical can increase overall pipeline throughput or decrease energy requirement for oil transportation. These chemicals are called drag reducing agent, which consist of various chemicals such as surfactants, polymers, nanofluids, fibers, etc. During the application of chemical into pipeline flow system, these chemicals are already proven to decrease pump work for constant flow rate or allow pipeline to transport more oil for same amount of pump work. The first application of drag reducer in large scale oil transportation was in Trans Alaskan Pipeline System which cancel the need to build several pump stations because of the successful application. Since then, more company worldwide started to apply drag reducer to their pipeline system.Several tedious testings on laboratory should be done to examine the effect of drag reducer to crude oil that will be the subject of application. In this paper, one of the testing method is studied and experimented to select the most effective DRA from several proposed additives. For given pipeline system and crude oil type, the most optimum DRA is DRA A for pipeline section S-R and for section R-P is DRA B. Different type of oil and pipeline geometry will require different chemical drag reducer. 


Author(s):  
L. Maderni ◽  
S. Gabella

The paper deals with design criteria and operating experience of Authors’ Company Gas Turbine Power Plants operating on crude oils from different sources. In particular a group of power stations located in Middle East is described, where crude oils from different fields are used. While two of the above power stations use basically the same crude oil, the other ones are fed by different fuel sources. Accordingly, different fuel handling and treatment plants have been selected, different problems have been encountered and different operating experiences have been accumulated. The positive operating results obtained confirm that reliable operation on crude oil requires each individual application be “tailor made” on the basis of the knowledge of the relevant fuels properties.


Author(s):  
Dilip K. Mukherjee

In several industrial processes, various hydrocarbons, such as low BTU blast furnace gas, syngas, Naphtha, heavy oil and condensate, are available as by-products or residues. Burning such unconventional fuels for combined cycle power generation can be attractive in certain countries due to their low prices or availability compared to natural gas or distillate. In this paper, design and operating experience of combined cycle power plants burning such unconventional fuels, e.g. Bao Shan in China burning LBTU gas, GVK in India burning Naphtha and Api in Italy burning medium Btu gas from heavy oil (refinery bottom) gasification etc. are discussed. The high degree of manufacturers’ ability to develop such projects and design the required equipment — burners/combustors, CC power train and control systems — is illustrated. In addition, the development of Naphtha and condensate burner for GT13E2 is described in short.


2012 ◽  
Vol 488-489 ◽  
pp. 1076-1081
Author(s):  
Jian Hua Ye ◽  
Yu Feng Ren ◽  
Shu Kun Luo

We have used Groundwater Modeling System (GMS) to numerical simulate the groundwater pollution migration caused by crude oil leak in the research regions. The result of the numerical simulation shows those 40 years after the crude oil leak, the contaminative area of pollutant reaches 46595 m3, and then the pollutant doesn’t arrive the pumping well. The density of the pollutants is less than 0.01mg/L. Therefore, we suggest that pipeline projects should make a specific effective plan for groundwater environmental monitoring for the sake of providing reference to institute relative countermeasure for prevention and control groundwater pollution.


Author(s):  
Andrés Mendizábal ◽  
Francisco Montalvo

The OCP (Oleoducto de Crudos Pesados - Heavy Crude Oil Pipeline) pipeline in Ecuador crosses through several regions determined by unique characteristics and threats. The pipeline runs almost parallel and at some points close (30km) to the border with Colombia, country with a very active group of illegal armed forces. It is also known that the logistics of these illegal groups operate within Ecuador. Within this context, and also considering minor delinquency within Ecuador, OCP Ecuador S.A. emphasized on the need to have a Security Management Model that addresses the security threats to which the pipeline is vulnerable. Under this model the company has invested in the implementation of an Integrated Electronic Security System (SISE) in order to monitor and control security of terminals, pumping and pressure reduction stations, block valve sites and other specific sites along the pipeline. This paper describes the SISE, its equipment and how it is managed in order to present a security model to other pipeline operators with similar threats.


Author(s):  
D. G. Rittener

This paper gives an account of the two years’ experience with the gas turbines running on desalted crude taken from the Sarir-Tobruk pipeline in Libya. It also describes the difficulties encountered in the primary stages of operation and the changes made to eliminate them.


Author(s):  
Qing Miao ◽  
Jinghua Liang ◽  
Baoliang Jiang

When hot waxy crude oil is pumped into the cold pipeline, the oil temperature will decrease with time and along the pipeline. As soon as the oil temperature near the pipe wall is below the WAP (wax appearance point), the wax contained in the crude will precipitate from the crude and deposit on the inner pipe wall with liquid part entrapped in it. This phenomenon is called wax deposition of the crude oil pipeline. The formation of the wax deposition reduces the throughput of the pipeline but enhances the operation pressure of the pipeline, which brings about more consumption of the power and reduces the safety of the pipeline. More seriously, when the wax deposition layer in the pipeline grows enough thickly, the pipeline would face the danger of shutdown and the enormous loss of economy would occur. So the removal of the wax deposition layer periodically, that is, pigging is strongly needed. Periodic pigging could reduce the operation pressure of the pipeline and keep the throughput of the pipeline, which makes the pipeline avoid hidden trouble of shutdown. Although pigging could solve the problem of the wax deposition of crude oil pipeline successfully, another problem of how to determine the pigging frequency must be faced. Relative to a suitable pigging frequency (though it is difficult to determine), more often pigging could increase the operation cost and wear and tear the inner wall of the pipe but a prolonged interval of pigging may make trouble. Usual means of determining the pigging frequency of a pipeline is mainly based on the pressure drop calculation between two pump stations. From Darcy formula for calculating the pressure loss of the pipeline, the average equivalent inside diameter (say hydraulic inside diameter) of the pipeline could be obtained. Then the average wax deposition thickness in the means of hydraulics could be calculated being based on the original inside diameter of pipeline. According to the average wax deposition thickness and operation experiences, the pigging frequency could be determined. This is true if the wax deposition along the pipeline is almost identical. But in most cases, i.e. to most crude oils and pipelines, the wax deposition profile along the pipeline is not unchanged but a complex curve. In later cases, the average wax deposition thickness calculated from the pressure drop between two pump stations hydraulically exaggerates the average extent of wax deposition but ignores the severity of wax deposition at some local position of pipeline. Thus the pigging frequency determined from the pressure drop might result in more errors, that is, a more frequent pigging or one with more safety troubles. From all the above, a prediction of wax deposition in the pipeline is very necessary and important to the decision of a safe and economic pigging frequency. But due to the complexity of the problem of wax deposition, it is very difficult to predict the wax deposition of one crude oil in a pipeline theoretically. A semi-experience method based on molecular diffusion principle for predicting the wax deposition of Daqing crude oil in the Northeast Pipelines in China is developed and introduced in this paper. Using this method, the wax depositions in the Northeast Pipelines in different seasons are calculated numerically on computers. Based on the calculation results, a more rational pigging scheme aimed at the Northeast Pipelines, which considers the variation of wax deposition along the pipeline, are given.


2012 ◽  
Vol 546-547 ◽  
pp. 817-821
Author(s):  
Hui Li

In order to solve the accurate collection and processing of crude oil long-distance pipeline monitoring system data and set the scene for packet transmission problem, we based on Modbus protocol settings for automation and control, data processing and analysis of the reliability of the final draw a line unit as the unit of data organization.


1970 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. S. Revzin

Some problems arising from the development of gas pumping units including gas turbines and centrifugal compressors, and particularly problems resulting from the tendency of increasing the pipeline diameters and gas pressure are considered. An operating experience with gas turbines GT-6-750 installed at the natural gas transmission lines is described.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document