Successful Field Surveillance using Portable Multi-Phase Flow Meter in a High Gas-Volume Fraction and High Water-Cut Application in East Kalimantan, Indonesia

2005 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jiten D. Kaura
2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luis E. Granado ◽  
Antonio Drago ◽  
Faycal Smail ◽  
Abdelhak Khalfaoui ◽  
Giovanni Fidanza ◽  
...  

2016 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 179-193 ◽  
Author(s):  
An Zhao ◽  
Yun-Feng Han ◽  
Ying-Yu Ren ◽  
Lu-Sheng Zhai ◽  
Ning-De in

Author(s):  
Mohamed Odan ◽  
Faraj Ben Rajeb ◽  
Mohammad Azizur Rahman ◽  
Amer Aborig ◽  
Syed Imtiaz ◽  
...  

Abstract This paper investigates issues around four-phase (Oil/CO2/water/sand) flows occurring within subsea pipelines. Multi-phase flows are the norm, as production fluid from reservoirs typically include sand with water. However, these multi-phase flow mixtures, whether three- or four-phase, are at risk of forming slug flows. The inclusion of sand in this mixture is concerning, as it not only leads to increased levels of pipeline erosion but it also has the potential, to accumulate sand at the bottom of the pipe, blocking the pipe or at the very least hindering the flow. This latter impact can prove problematic, as a minimum fluid velocity must be maintained to ensure the safe and regulated flow of particles along a pipeline. The presence of low amounts of sand particles in oil/gas/water flow mixtures can serve to reduce the pressure exerted on bends. The sand volume fraction must in this case, be relatively low such that the particles’ resistance causes only a moderate loss in pressure. Therefore, the study aims to gauge the impact of oil/gas/water/sand mixtures on various pipeline structures as well as to further investigate the phenomenon of flow-induced vibration to determine the optimal flow variables which can be applied predicting the structural responses of subsea pipelines.


2020 ◽  
Vol 21 ◽  
pp. 100654
Author(s):  
Gao Wei ◽  
Cheng Qinglin ◽  
Huang Zuonan ◽  
Duan Zhigang ◽  
Sun Wei ◽  
...  

Sensors ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 16 (10) ◽  
pp. 1703 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yanjun Wang ◽  
Haoyu Li ◽  
Xingbin Liu ◽  
Yuhui Zhang ◽  
Ronghua Xie ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aidyn Kartamyssov ◽  
Beibit Bissakayev ◽  
Bolat Zhumabayev ◽  
Raziya Shektebayeva ◽  
Miro Durekovic ◽  
...  

Abstract The objective of this paper is to demonstrate multiple application of multi-energy gamma ray venture type multiphase flowmeter (MPFM) trial campaign in Karachaganak gas condensate giant carbonate field, operated by KPO B.V. The results of MPFM that was included into surface well test spread, to verify its performance, was compared against portable test separator and plant production testing facilities (control separator, flowmeters) and manual sampling results. MPFM from other vendors historically failed to deliver accurate production measurement mainly due to complexity of reservoir fluid in Karachaganak field. To ensure the MPFM considers this complexity, PVT samples were taken to provide laboratory data for PVT model of the MPFM to ensure sufficient quality of PVT data and compare against PVT model inside MPFM. First application of MPFM was during clean-up of the well prior handover well to production. Using MPFM helped to improve the quality during data acquisition. This information was critical for the well to be accepted by processing facility it is hooked-up to and to define optimal operating regime. Validation of BS&W, GOR and rates in unstable (foaming, carry over) and transient phase of production using MPFM has shown practical advantages. Another application was for water sampling loops to measure water cut and production rates. KPO has had challenges with inaccurate water cut measurement due to the limitations of existing test separators. A recent approach of performing fluid sampling (sampling loop) at the well head proved to be reliable source of measurements. In addition, the MPFM in combination with the test separator has been used to further improve the quality of the measurements of each phase. The third MPFM application had been with high gas-volume-fraction (HGVF) pumps, that helped to produce from low reservoir pressure, low GOR and high water cut wells. The operational range of HGVF pump was limited to maximum 75-80% of gas-volume-fraction (GVF). MPFM measures GVF in real-time to ensure HGVF pump operates in optimum operational range by managing the surface flow conditions. With current limitations of test separators in Karachaganak field and due to complexity of the gas-condensate fluid, the use of MPFM brings additional quality in the measurements (rates, water cut and GOR) which is crucial for field production optimization, reservoir management and short and long term forecasting.


2018 ◽  
Vol 73 (6) ◽  
pp. 485-499
Author(s):  
Weixin Liu ◽  
Ningde Jin ◽  
Yunfeng Han ◽  
Jing Ma

AbstractIn the present study, multi-scale entropy algorithm was used to characterise the complex flow phenomena of turbulent droplets in high water-cut oil-water two-phase flow. First, we compared multi-scale weighted permutation entropy (MWPE), multi-scale approximate entropy (MAE), multi-scale sample entropy (MSE) and multi-scale complexity measure (MCM) for typical nonlinear systems. The results show that MWPE presents satisfied variability with scale and anti-noise ability. Accordingly, we conducted an experiment of vertical upward oil-water two-phase flow with high water-cut and collected the signals of a high-resolution microwave resonant sensor, based on which two indexes, the entropy rate and mean value of MWPE, were extracted. Besides, the effects of total flow rate and water-cut on these two indexes were analysed. Our researches show that MWPE is an effective method to uncover the dynamic instability of oil-water two-phase flow with high water-cut.


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