Abstract:
Heavy oil production has drawn more and more attention in petroleum industry. The amount of heavy oil in the world is twice more than the conventional oil (low
viscosity), which has been consumed rapidly from the past. The understanding
of flow patterns and pressure losses in multiphase flow with high viscosity oil
are vital to assist the design of transportation pipeline.
This thesis involves experimental investigation of two phase and three phase
flows under high oil viscosity conditions (up to 17000cP) in horizontal pipelines.
The multiphase (oil/water/solid/gas) facility was designed and constructed at
Cranfield University and consists of 6m long horizontal pipeline of 0.026m
diameter along with instrumentations.
The principal objectives of the work were to study the effect of viscosity, water
cut, temperature variance, and flow conditions on flow patterns and pressure
drops for (oil/gas and oil/water) two phase flows; to compare the measured flow
parameters and phase distribution with those predicted from models found in
the literature for two phase flows; and to conduct an experimental study of gas
injection effect on pressure gradient in (oil/water/gas) three phase flow. Due to
the nature of heavy oil reservoirs, sand is associated with oil/water mixture
when extracted; therefore sand concentration effect on pressure drop in
(oil/water/sand) three phase flow is also examined.
For oil-air flow, a smooth oil coating was observed in the film region of slug flow,
while a ripple structure of oil coating film was found at higher superficial air
velocity for slug flow regime and annular flow regime. The ripple structure was
believed to increase the effective roughness of the pipe wall, which resulted in
higher pressure gradients.
The pressure drop correlations from Beggs and Brill (1973) and Dukler et al.
(1964) were used to compare with experimental pressure gradients for oil/air
flow. It was found that these correlations failed to predict the pressure gradients
for heavy oil/air flows in this work.
Several new heavy oil/water flow patterns were named and categorized based
on observations. Though the heavy oil viscosity is an essential parameter for oil
continuous phase flow on pressure drop, it had no significant effect beyond
Water Assist Flow (WAF) condition, as a threshold was found for water cut with
fixed superficial oil velocity. The transition criterion by McKibben et al. (2000b)
for WAF was found to be able to predict this threshold reasonably well.
Core Annular Flow (CAF) models were found to greatly under predict the
pressure gradients mainly due to the coating (oil fouling) effect associated with
this study. A new coating coefficient was introduced to models presented by
Bannwart (2001) and Rodriguez et al (2009).
The addition of solid in the mixed flow led to minor increase in the pressure
gradient when the particles were moving with the flow. However, higher sand
concentration in the system led to higher pressure gradient values.
The addition of gaseous phase to the oil/water flow was more complex. The
gaseous injection was beneficial toward reducing the pressure gradient when
introduced in oil continuous phase only at very low water cuts.