Abstract
Flaring has always been an inseparable part of oil production and exploration. Previously, waste gas collected from different parts of facilities was released for safety or operational reasons and combusted on top of a flare stack since there was not the possibility to treat or use this type of gas. Concerns about global warming led to several initiatives for reducing flaring or even eliminating combustion. Treating flare gas was made possible by the introduction of flare gas recovery systems that have become increasingly obligatory. Most solutions add a flare gas recovery system to an existing flare system. In a typical scenario, after analyzing the existing facility and collecting the necessary data, alternative designs are proposed and criteria are determined to make a choice between the proposed alternatives. In this paper two designs of a gas control system are proposed, and reliability was chosen as the deciding factor. Using repairable dynamic fault trees, the failure models of the two designs have been implemented. Afterwards, a novel hybrid technique, the Stochastic Hybrid Fault Tree Automaton, is used to model the working conditions in which the system operates, with the aim to achieve a more realistic assessment and evaluate the disaster likelihood associated to these failures. It is shown that the latter enables a richer analysis where the effects of failure can be better assessed. This is important for correct choice between design alternatives because, as shown in the case study, the results of the two analyses can lead to contrasting conclusions of the solution to adopt. Further investigations have been carried out focusing on the safety sub-systems and on the basic events in each design. The Importance Measure analysis revealed that some of the components were responsible for most of the critical failures, thus locating some areas of possible design improvement.
Highlights
One of the major trends in the current scientific works is towards bringing together both financial benefits from exploiting terrestrial resources while trying to keep intact the natural balance that governs the environment
This is a significant departure from earlier work, we describe a transformation from the Dynamic Fault Tree (DFT) to Hybrid Dynamic Fault Trees (HDFT) by means of the Stochastic Hybrid Fault Tree Automaton (SHyFTA) formalism, and using we model the physical process of the gas flaring
This paper presented the dependability analysis for the conceptual design of Flare Gas Recovery System to install into an existing plant, performed during the EPC bidding phase
Summary
One of the major trends in the current scientific works is towards bringing together both financial benefits from exploiting terrestrial resources while trying to keep intact the natural balance that governs the environment. High-pressure gas in this process is burnt-off in at appropriate height into the lowpressure atmosphere, at the stack top, with a visible flame. With an efficient combustion, requiring an appropriate mixture of fuel with air, the main products are water vapor and CO2, but depending on the combination of the waste gas it can contain toxins such as benzene, carbonyl sulfide (COS) or Nitrogen oxide (NOx) or methane (CH4), as found in [1]. Many negative effects of flaring process have been found analyzing the groundwater samples of Delta State Nigeria in [2] which revealed a correlation with a poor water quality. Negative effects on the atmosphere and broadly on human health were reported in [3] which reviewed the impacts of flaring on the soil
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