Unstable Gas Lift at the Heidrun Field

Gas lift is used in oil wells to maintain the production by injecting gas into the tubing. The dynamics of the system often causes pressure variations and a fluctuating flow rate. Others have proposed design concepts for stable gas lift systems. However, measurements have been superficial and sparse...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Haugen, Sara Bjørkelund
Other Authors: Asheim, Harald Arne
Format: Master Thesis
Language:English
Published: NTNU 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2452863
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spelling ftntnutrondheimi:oai:ntnuopen.ntnu.no:11250/2452863 2023-05-15T17:47:08+02:00 Unstable Gas Lift at the Heidrun Field Haugen, Sara Bjørkelund Asheim, Harald Arne 2017 http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2452863 eng eng NTNU ntnudaim:17413 http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2452863 Petroleumsfag Petroleumsproduksjon Master thesis 2017 ftntnutrondheimi 2019-09-17T06:52:38Z Gas lift is used in oil wells to maintain the production by injecting gas into the tubing. The dynamics of the system often causes pressure variations and a fluctuating flow rate. Others have proposed design concepts for stable gas lift systems. However, measurements have been superficial and sparse and it has made it difficult to enable satisfactory verification of the concepts. This thesis is based on flow rate, pressure and temperature data from a well at the Heidrun field in the Norwegian Sea. The measurements have been logged at a sufficient frequency to capture the most relevant dynamics. The well considered has periods where it produces evenly with a stochastic variation around 7 % and then it might suddenly change to oscillations with over 90 % deviation in the flow rate. The wavelength of the oscillations are 7−10 min. Such shifts seams to occur without preceding disturbances, and it only affects the tubing pressure and flow rate, not the annular variables. This means, that casing heading is not the reason behind the oscillating behaviour. A gas lift model has been implemented in Matlab to predict static changes in several variables, like phase fraction and pressure. Pressure predicted by this model compared to the measurement at Heidrun coincide with a maximum deviation of 2.3 %. A dynamical model based on an inflow correlation to simulate the well pressure was developed. The predictions was not consistent with the oscillations observed from the measurements, because the inflow correlation did not compare with the measured data. The pressure response analysis did not show any sign of instabilities. However, an unstable well with oscillations was observed. The likely reason for the inconsistency is the casing heading assumption in the model. The large pressure drop across the downhole injection valve makes gas inflow insensitive to tubing variations, this decoupling prevents casing heading. Master Thesis Norwegian Sea NTNU Open Archive (Norwegian University of Science and Technology) Heidrun ENVELOPE(2.327,2.327,65.325,65.325) Norwegian Sea
institution Open Polar
collection NTNU Open Archive (Norwegian University of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftntnutrondheimi
language English
topic Petroleumsfag
Petroleumsproduksjon
spellingShingle Petroleumsfag
Petroleumsproduksjon
Haugen, Sara Bjørkelund
Unstable Gas Lift at the Heidrun Field
topic_facet Petroleumsfag
Petroleumsproduksjon
description Gas lift is used in oil wells to maintain the production by injecting gas into the tubing. The dynamics of the system often causes pressure variations and a fluctuating flow rate. Others have proposed design concepts for stable gas lift systems. However, measurements have been superficial and sparse and it has made it difficult to enable satisfactory verification of the concepts. This thesis is based on flow rate, pressure and temperature data from a well at the Heidrun field in the Norwegian Sea. The measurements have been logged at a sufficient frequency to capture the most relevant dynamics. The well considered has periods where it produces evenly with a stochastic variation around 7 % and then it might suddenly change to oscillations with over 90 % deviation in the flow rate. The wavelength of the oscillations are 7−10 min. Such shifts seams to occur without preceding disturbances, and it only affects the tubing pressure and flow rate, not the annular variables. This means, that casing heading is not the reason behind the oscillating behaviour. A gas lift model has been implemented in Matlab to predict static changes in several variables, like phase fraction and pressure. Pressure predicted by this model compared to the measurement at Heidrun coincide with a maximum deviation of 2.3 %. A dynamical model based on an inflow correlation to simulate the well pressure was developed. The predictions was not consistent with the oscillations observed from the measurements, because the inflow correlation did not compare with the measured data. The pressure response analysis did not show any sign of instabilities. However, an unstable well with oscillations was observed. The likely reason for the inconsistency is the casing heading assumption in the model. The large pressure drop across the downhole injection valve makes gas inflow insensitive to tubing variations, this decoupling prevents casing heading.
author2 Asheim, Harald Arne
format Master Thesis
author Haugen, Sara Bjørkelund
author_facet Haugen, Sara Bjørkelund
author_sort Haugen, Sara Bjørkelund
title Unstable Gas Lift at the Heidrun Field
title_short Unstable Gas Lift at the Heidrun Field
title_full Unstable Gas Lift at the Heidrun Field
title_fullStr Unstable Gas Lift at the Heidrun Field
title_full_unstemmed Unstable Gas Lift at the Heidrun Field
title_sort unstable gas lift at the heidrun field
publisher NTNU
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2452863
long_lat ENVELOPE(2.327,2.327,65.325,65.325)
geographic Heidrun
Norwegian Sea
geographic_facet Heidrun
Norwegian Sea
genre Norwegian Sea
genre_facet Norwegian Sea
op_relation ntnudaim:17413
http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2452863
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