Soma Chakraborty, S. Lehrer, Jagrut Jani, S. Ramachandran
{"title":"Cost-Effective Sour Management in Mixed Production Systems","authors":"Soma Chakraborty, S. Lehrer, Jagrut Jani, S. Ramachandran","doi":"10.2118/194884-MS","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"\n Sour production from offshore and land-based wells causes hydrogen sulfide (H2S) release during downhole and topsides operations. Improper handling of H2S can lead to serious environmental and safety concerns as well as numerous corrosion and compliance issues. Consequently, H2S can add significantly to the total cost of well operations. The application of efficient H2S management technologies can reduce environmental and safety concerns, enable the use of lower-cost materials, and comply with H2S specifications. To remove H2S from mixed production applications, several chemistries are commonly used. The most common are triazines, glyoxal, and metal-based chemistries. Although each can be effective to a certain extent, these technologies have issues with efficiency or they can create serious side issues. The reaction of triazines with H2S in mixed production is highly inefficient and it creates scaling. Glyoxals suffer from poor efficiency, thermal instability, and corrosivity. The metal-based chemistries are the most efficient in mixed production, but in certain application regimes they can create serious solids and emulsion issues. These challenges can increase CAPEX and OPEX as well as lead to significant downtime and lost production. To overcome issues with currently used chemistries in mixed sour production, extensive research was conducted to identify chemistry that would efficiently remove H2S while minimizing negative side effects.\n Systematic evaluation was performed for a series of chemistries to compare the scavenging efficiency, with a special emphasis on mixed production systems. Focus was also given on studying the associated side effects like emulsification tendency, scaling tendency, etc. to ensure the chemistry had no/minimal side effects seen by the more conventional chemistries. A high-throughput lab technique is presented that was designed to mimic scavenging tendency in sour mixed production environment. A continuous gas flow testing technique that helped study the reaction kinetics is also described.\n Laboratory and pre-field results proved the efficacy of the new non-MEA, non-triazine chemistry in mitigating H2S in upstream, midstream and downstream applications while being especially efficient in mixed production systems. Laboratory testing proved the chemistry to be highly efficient compared to triazine in mixed production systems. Results also indicated the chemistry is non-emulsion forming and has very little scaling tendency. Testing conducted in the field demonstrated that the new chemistry cost-effectively removes H2S and meets the operator specifications.\n The novel, non-triazine scavenger technology has significantly better performance than triazine, no emulsion concerns, acceptable HSE, non-corrosive effects, and less downstream concern than MEA triazine or metal-based scavengers. The new and differentiated chemistry reduces CAPEX and OPEX, drives productivity, improves reliability and reduces non-productive time.","PeriodicalId":11321,"journal":{"name":"Day 3 Wed, March 20, 2019","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2019-03-15","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Day 3 Wed, March 20, 2019","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.2118/194884-MS","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Sour production from offshore and land-based wells causes hydrogen sulfide (H2S) release during downhole and topsides operations. Improper handling of H2S can lead to serious environmental and safety concerns as well as numerous corrosion and compliance issues. Consequently, H2S can add significantly to the total cost of well operations. The application of efficient H2S management technologies can reduce environmental and safety concerns, enable the use of lower-cost materials, and comply with H2S specifications. To remove H2S from mixed production applications, several chemistries are commonly used. The most common are triazines, glyoxal, and metal-based chemistries. Although each can be effective to a certain extent, these technologies have issues with efficiency or they can create serious side issues. The reaction of triazines with H2S in mixed production is highly inefficient and it creates scaling. Glyoxals suffer from poor efficiency, thermal instability, and corrosivity. The metal-based chemistries are the most efficient in mixed production, but in certain application regimes they can create serious solids and emulsion issues. These challenges can increase CAPEX and OPEX as well as lead to significant downtime and lost production. To overcome issues with currently used chemistries in mixed sour production, extensive research was conducted to identify chemistry that would efficiently remove H2S while minimizing negative side effects.
Systematic evaluation was performed for a series of chemistries to compare the scavenging efficiency, with a special emphasis on mixed production systems. Focus was also given on studying the associated side effects like emulsification tendency, scaling tendency, etc. to ensure the chemistry had no/minimal side effects seen by the more conventional chemistries. A high-throughput lab technique is presented that was designed to mimic scavenging tendency in sour mixed production environment. A continuous gas flow testing technique that helped study the reaction kinetics is also described.
Laboratory and pre-field results proved the efficacy of the new non-MEA, non-triazine chemistry in mitigating H2S in upstream, midstream and downstream applications while being especially efficient in mixed production systems. Laboratory testing proved the chemistry to be highly efficient compared to triazine in mixed production systems. Results also indicated the chemistry is non-emulsion forming and has very little scaling tendency. Testing conducted in the field demonstrated that the new chemistry cost-effectively removes H2S and meets the operator specifications.
The novel, non-triazine scavenger technology has significantly better performance than triazine, no emulsion concerns, acceptable HSE, non-corrosive effects, and less downstream concern than MEA triazine or metal-based scavengers. The new and differentiated chemistry reduces CAPEX and OPEX, drives productivity, improves reliability and reduces non-productive time.