Abstract
Summary Exploitation of offshore petroleum reservoirs has recently moved to ever-increasing water depths. Production from fields in water deeper than 1800 m is now a reality. The use of long deepwater risers that conduct production from multiple wellheads on the sea-floor to the surface predisposes the system to severe slugging in the riser for a wide range of flow rates and seabed topography. When one considers the length of the deepwater risers, the problem is expected to be more severe than in production systems installed in shallower waters. Severe slugging could occur at high pressure, with the magnitude of the pressure fluctuations so large as to cause a shorter natural flow period with subsequent consequences, such as premature field abandonment, loss of recoverable reserves, and earlier-than-planned deployment of boosting devices. In this study, a novel idea to lessen or eliminate severe slugging in pipeline/riser systems has been thoroughly investigated. This idea was first proposed by Barbuto1 and later developed independently by Sarica and Tengesdal.2 The principle of the technique is to transfer pipeline gas to the riser at a point above the riser base. The transfer process will reduce both the hydrostatic head in the riser and the pressure in the pipeline, consequently lessening or eliminating severe slugging by maintaining steady-state two-phase flow in the riser. An experimental study has been conducted with a 7.62-cminside-diameter (ID) riser (14.63 m high) and pipeline (19.81 m long) system. A broad range of data was collected from the facility in both the severe slugging and stable regions. It was found that the severe slugging models currently available do not predict the region accurately for larger-diameter pipes. Data acquired with the external gas bypass have proved the proposed elimination technique.
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