jet pump performance in liquid and gas...

16
JET PUMP PERFORMANCE IN LIQUID AND GAS PUMPING MFIP 2014 Antti Mikkonen, Reijo Karvinen Tampere University of Technology, Finland

Upload: nguyencong

Post on 02-Jul-2018

215 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

JET PUMP PERFORMANCE

IN LIQUID AND GAS

PUMPING

MFIP 2014

Antti Mikkonen, Reijo Karvinen

Tampere University of Technology, Finland

Jet pump

• Transfers

momentum from

power fluid 𝑄𝑃 to

suction liquid 𝑄𝐿 (water and oil) and to

suction gas 𝑄𝐺

(natural gas)

29.9.2014 2/12

Jet pumps in oil wells

29.9.2014 3/12

• Robust tool for harsh

environment

• No moving parts

• Insensitive of pumped

fluid (water, oil, natural

gas, sand, …)

• Model includes

• Pipes

• Jet pump

Feed water pump

0.5 - 3 km

Jet pump

(water, oil, gas)

Gas

separation

Commercial software

jet pump and pipes (water, oil, natural gas)

29.9.2014 4/12

Multiphase pipe flow

• Orkiszewski’s

method for vertical

pipe

– Oil field specific

• Varying fluid

properties including

phase changes

(natural gas)

5/12

History

• First documented jet pump 1858

– Steam locomotive feed pump

• One-dimensional subsonic

– Gosline and O’Brien (1934)

– Cunningham (1969-1994)

• One-dimensional subsonic

• CFD

Steam locomotive jet pump image:

Strickland L. Kneass, (1894), Practice and Theory of the Injector, John Wiley & Sons (Reprinted by Kessinger Publications, 2007)

29.9.2014 6/12

One-dimensional theory

• Compressible two-phase flow

• Conservation of mass, momentum and

energy

• Equation of state, ideal gas

• Phase changes assumed negligible

• Losses modelled with minor loss coefficients

Δ𝑝𝑓 =1

2𝑘𝜌𝑉2

29.9.2014 7/12

Equations

29.9.2014 8/12

Jet exit pressure 𝑝𝑛

• Strongly non-one-

dimensional flow in

the circled area

• Jet exit pressure

must be chosen

• 𝑝𝑛 = 1 − 𝜃 𝑝𝑠 + 𝜃𝑝𝑜

29.9.2014 9/12

Mixing starts

Results

29.9.2014 10/12

Single-phase (water) Two-phase (water-air)

Conclusion

• One-dimensional theory gives excellent

results if enough experimental data is

available

– Better loss correlations are needed

– Better fluid property correlations are needed

• CFD is preferred if experimental knowledge is

not available

29.9.2014 11/12

Future research

Experimental work General purpose

multiphase flow program

29.9.2014 12/12

J. Orkiszewski. Predicting two-phase pressure drops in vertical pipe.

Journal of Petroleum Technology, Volume 19, Number 6, 1967

More results

29.9.2014 13

CFD

• Axisymmetric two-dimensional mesh

• Only one-phase case solved

• Easy to automatize and embed into existing

one-dimensional code

• Extension to multiphase flow straightforward

• Accurate for one-phase incompressible flow

• Accuracy unknown for multiphase flow

29.9.2014 14

Equations

29.9.2014 15

Why jet pumps?

• Oil wells are deep and

hard to access

– Up to 3000 m deep

– Remote locations

• Easy to adapt to drops

in reservoir pressure

29.9.2014 16