
超深水油氣田的發現不僅帶來了機遇,也帶來了技術難題。目前只有剛性金屬管柱和無粘結柔性管可以滿足超深水作業環境,但二者卻不具有經濟可行性,未來還在急切期待新技術的開發。
來自 | Offshore
編譯 | 周詩雨
墨西哥灣、巴西和安哥拉沿海的超深水區塊(深度超過1500米),在給人們帶來不計其數的開采機遇的同時,也提出了許多技術上的挑戰。特別是超深水作業環境以及這種環境所需要的相對較大的管柱直徑,現有的柔性管規格不能很好的滿足需求,這就為剛性管和柔性管技術提出了嚴峻的挑戰。
當作業深度超過2000米、設計壓力超過1000psi時,要想滿足工程需求,則必須對現有的柔性管技術進行創新。同時還需要進行嚴格的測試,證明新技術的穩健性和耐久性。
為了解決這些問題,美國通用公司在美國能源安全研究伙伴關系(RPSEA)的支持以及美國能源部國家能源技術實驗室的資助下,著手進行了一項開發項目:形成質量過關、可用于超深水作業的8英寸內徑柔性管柱。項目的研究主體是一種新型混合柔性立管技術,通過設計、性能分析、材料和子組件測試以及最終的現場試驗,對該技術進行開發和認證。技術認證的標準制定參考了API/DNV標準和推薦測試方案。 下面主要介紹一下項目的第一階段。
設計的基本思想是開發一款可適用于超深水應用的,具有最優單位長度質量的混合復合材料和金屬/聚合物柔性管。在通用公司的設計中,使用了可以完全粘結到熱塑性阻擋層的碳纖維增強熱塑性復合壓力外殼來代替常規金屬壓力外殼。為了降低項目的整體風險,縮短推出合格產品的時間,許多已有的層和材料都仍采用與現有無粘結柔性管道技術中相同的材料(如金屬胎體、阻隔材料、拉伸金屬外殼、絕緣層和護套等)。
技術評估
目前有兩個可以滿足商業化要求的備選方案,但還沒有進行驗證的技術。
第一個是傳統的剛性金屬管柱,通常作為鋼懸鏈線立管(SCR)或頂部張緊立管系統。盡管該技術可以設計出滿足工作深度、設計壓力和服務要求的較大尺寸立管(大于7英寸),但這是以犧牲整體系統和安裝成本為代價的。
在超深水中,管道的壁厚必須足夠厚才能承受坍塌負載,而這同時也導致整個管柱系統的重量達到一個難以接受的水平。那么,要想實現該方案,則需要在整個結構中安裝大量的浮力塊,而這又會大大增加成本。另外,基于剛性管道自身的性質,其在連接到井場時,需要許多小長度的管道,這就危及到了可靠性、安全性和系統成本。最后,為了能夠適應酸性環境,需要強度較低的合金,因此單位長度的管道重量還需要增加,浮力要求也會更多。
第二個技術是無粘結柔性管。常規的無粘結柔性管采用的是多層構造,主要為金屬材料增強的熱塑性管道襯里。在柔性管的剖面示意圖中可以觀察到這種典型的結構。每層都有特定的功能,其中金屬層包括:用于抗塌陷的胎體、用于耐壓的箍殼,以及用于承載軸向張力和壓力端蓋負載的拉伸外殼。
通過對各層幾何形狀和尺寸的優化,可根據具體的油田規范進行無粘結柔性管的定制設計。根據作業要求,模塊化的設計可為用戶提供定制解決方案。柔性管是連續的,其長度由輸送卷軸尺寸或圓盤傳送帶決定。因此在超深水作業中,多個長度的柔性管存在連接在一起的可能性。典型的卷軸大約可繞1000米左右的管柱,相應的舉升能力為330噸。此外,為了在超深水應用中實現動態穩定的系統立管或管線配置和安裝方案,作業者必須采用模塊化的方法。
與剛性管柱相比,柔性管技術有以下兩個優勢。
第一,通過改變各個小層的設計,可以定制其橫向強度,進而實現抗張和抗坍塌強度的優化,達到較小的單位長度重量。這樣就降低了管柱的總體重量,減少對輔助設施的需求,如浮力塊等。
第二,由于管柱的長度是連續的(7英寸的可達到約1000米),作業中可以采用標準的卷軸設備,簡化了安裝后勤工作,降低了系統費用。
盡管具有以上優勢,但是傳統的無粘結柔性管仍存在幾個重大的技術難題。
一個最主要的問題是,當深度達到3000米后,柔性管管柱的重量和坍塌負載還是太大了,現有材料技術都已經達到了各自的技術極限。
第二個難題是,在高的設計壓力下,胎體和壓力外套的不規則表面可能會導致阻擋層完整性的進一步復雜化。類似地,由于阻擋層的外表面是通過未粘結但互鎖的環箍層增強的,因此總是存在小間隙,在三軸應力的作用下會發生襯管的熱塑性蠕變,當壓力增大時也會出現相應問題。
在常規設計中,往往還會增加一套功能層:橋接間隙的抗擠壓層或防止阻擋層局部蠕變的補償擠出量。
但增加層同時也額外增加了制造成本,并且在結構內加入新層后,如果管柱環空中發生氣滲現象,則會帶來更復雜的問題??偠灾?,無論是采用剛性金屬或柔性無粘結立管,在技術上都是可行的。但是由于系統和應用費用的問題,在經濟上還仍然不可行。出于這些原因,加之考慮到超深水資源所帶來的巨大機會,能夠滿足技術要求的、經濟可行的低風險新技術亟需被開發。
The ultra-deepwater (greater than 5,000 ft or 1,500 m) discoveries in the Gulf of Mexico, as well as offshore Brazil and Angola, present enormous development opportunities but also technical challenges. Specifically, the combination of ultra-deepwater and relatively large pipe diameter is outside current flexible pipe qualification scope, and imposes severe engineering challenges to both rigid and flexible pipe technologies.
For a flexible pipe solution, the combination of greater than 2,000 m (6,561 ft) operation depth and high design pressures (greater than 10,000 psi) will require technical innovations in current flexible pipe technology and rigorous testing to prove to customers that these new technologies are robust and durable.
To address those needs, GE, with the support of the Research Partnership to Secure Energy for America (RPSEA), and with funding from the US Department of Energy’s National Energy Technology Laboratory, embarked on a development program to qualify flexible pipe with an internal diameter of eight inches for ultra-deepwater applications. The program is based on a novel hybrid flexible riser technology that is being developed and qualified by a combination of design, analysis of performance, material and subcomponent testing and finally, a field trial. Guidance for the qualification effort was obtained from the relevant sections of the standards and recommended practices from API and DNV. The discussion below covers Phase 1 of the project. Phase 2 will be discussed in a subsequent article.
The design concept consists of a hybrid composite and metallic/ polymer flexible pipe with optimized mass per unit length for ultra-deepwater applications. In the GE design, the conventional metallic pressure armor is replaced with a carbon fiber reinforced thermoplastic composite pressure armor which is fully bonded to the thermoplastic barrier layer. In an effort to decrease overall programmatic risk and time to realize a qualified product, many of the existing layers and materials remain the same as those used in today’s qualified unbonded flexible pipe technology (e.g., the metallic carcass, barrier materials, metallic tensile armor, insulation and sheath). The details of the benefits and challenges of the individual layers of the design concept, as well as the design concept for the pipe’s end fittings, are summarized here.?
Technology assessment
There exist two potentially capable, yet unqualified, commercialized technologies for the design requirements. The first potential solution would be to use conventional rigid metal piping typically applied as a steel catenary riser (SCR) or a top tensioned vertical riser system. Though the concept can be designed at relatively large diameters (greater than seven inches) to meet the working depth, design pressure and service requirements, it is at the expense of overall system and installation cost.
At depth, the pipe wall thickness necessary to support the collapse loads is significant and drives the overall pipe system weight to infeasible levels. In order to achieve a solution, a large number of buoyancy modules would need to be applied to the overall structure and would drive increased cost. The rigid nature of the pipe would also require many short lengths of pipe to be connected on site, which would compromise reliability, safety, and system cost. Lastly, to support sour service, lower strength alloys are required thus increasing the pipe weight per length and adding additional buoyancy requirements. In summary these challenges result in a system that although technically feasible, would require an unrealistic amount of material and deployment cost.
The second potential technology is unbonded flexible pipe. Conventional unbonded flexible pipe designs are a multi-layer construction based upon a thermoplastic pipe liner reinforced with metallic materials. A typical construction can be seen in the cutaway schematic of the flexible pipe. Each layer has a specific function, where the metallic layers include: a carcass for collapse resistance, hoop armor for pressure resistance, and tensile armor to carry axial tension and pressure endcap loading.
Unbonded flexible pipes are individually designed to the required field specification by optimizing the layer geometry and dimensions, adopting a modular approach which enables custom solutions to be delivered to operational requirements. For ultra-deepwater applications several lengths would likely be joined together because flexible pipes are delivered in continuous lengths defined by the delivery reel size or by a carousel equipped vessel. Typical reel capacity is approximately 3,300 ft (1,000 m), related to the typical lifting capacity of 300 metric tons (330 tons). Additionally, a modular approach for ultradeepwater applications is necessary to achieve a dynamically stable system riser or flowline configuration and installation strategy.
Compared to rigid pipe, flexible pipe technology has several advantages. Because the directional strength can be tailored by changing the design of the individual layers, the tensile or collapse strengths can be optimized to achieve a lower mass per unit length. The resulting benefit is an overall lower pipe weight and decreased need for auxiliary equipment such as buoyancy modules. Secondly, because a continuous length of pipe (approximately 3,300 ft at seven inches) can be deployed from a standard reel, the installation logistics are simplified and the system costs reduced.
Despite those advantages, there exist several significant challenges for conventional flexible unbonded pipe. The primary challenge is that, despite the ability to optimize the layers, at 10,000 ft (3,000 m), the pipe weight and collapse loads are simply too large, and have pushed designs using current material technologies to their limits. Accordingly, though it does not need as many buoyancy modules, an unbonded flexible pipe would still incur significant deployment and materials costs due to the auxiliary measures required to compensate for the pipe weight.
Second, at the high design pressures required for these applications, the irregular surface of the carcass and pressure armor can cause further complications with the integrity of the barrier layer. Similarly, as the external surface of the barrier is reinforced by an unbonded but interlocked hoop layer, there is always a small gap which again is problematic on pressurization due to thermoplastic liner creep under the applied triaxial stress. Conventional design involves applying another functional layer; either an anti-extrusion layer to bridge the gaps or a sacrificial extrusion to prevent localized creep of the barrier. These extra layers inherently add extra cost to the manufacturing process and, by creating new interfaces within the structure, can also present more complex problems with permeated gases in the pipe annulus. In summary, though it may be feasible to meet the technical requirements of the pipe technology using either rigid metal or flexible unbonded pipe, it will likely remain uneconomic due to the system and deployment costs required to achieve those solutions. For those reasons, and considering the enormous opportunity that ultra-deepwater resources represent, it is imperative that new technologies are developed that can achieve the technical requirements, at low enough risk, and at a feasible cost.
未經允許,不得轉載本站任何文章: