Chemical-based monitor warns of rising levels of well water
Unwanted inflows of water are the single most important factor causing production problems for oil companies. A company such as Statoil alone produces enough water to fill a 350 000 tonne tanker every day. Much of this water could be replaced by saleable oil if measures to prevent water from flowing into the wells were implemented. ‘Chemical intelligence’ However, a solution might now be at hand. Statoil has just started producing from a well that makes use of a new ‘chemical intelligence’ technique that monitors unwanted inflows of water. The equipment being used in the project was supplied by Trondheim-based ResMan, a small start-up company set up by the Foundation for Scientific and Industrial Research at the Norwegian Institute of Technology (Sintef). It has taken about a year to develop the prototype that has just been installed on the Urd field in the Norwegian Sea. Scientists believe that it will offer operating companies completely new possibilities for well control. ResMan md Fridtjof Nyhavn outlined the problems caused by water in wells: “When oil is produced, all the fluids in the reservoir, including the water, start to move. “We decided to test this technology on Urd as we regard it as an extremely useful tool for the future,” noted Statoil’s Sigurd Hundsnes. It is this liberation of tracers – controlled by condition and environmental conditions – that is described as ‘chemical intelligence’. Measurements using chemical intelligence can be made without having to send any sort of cabling down the well. “The pilot tests on Statoil’s field are extremely important for us,” says ResMan’s director of development Anne Dalager Dyrli. “We have demonstrated the system in the laboratory under conditions similar to well conditions, and we have produced sufficient plastic staves at full scale to meet the needs of a complete well. “All of these steps, up to installation in a well, have taken place without any problems worth mentioning. The fact that production is now under way according to plan on the field shows that the ResMan system in the well situation has no negative effects on production and that the downhole parts of the system are functioning properly. Renewables-based syngas Anyone who has overheated vegetable oil or sweet syrup knows that neither oil nor sugar evaporate. The oil smokes and turns brown, while the sugar turns black. Both leave a nasty film of carbon on the cookware. Now a University of Minnesota team in the US has invented a ‘reactive flash volatilisation process’ that heats oil and sugar about a million times faster than you can in your kitchen. This produces hydrogen and carbon monoxide, a mixture called synthesis gas, or syngas, because it is used to make chemicals and fuels, including gasoline. The new process works 10–100 times faster than current technology, with no input of fossil fuels and in reactors at least 10 times smaller than current models. The work could significantly improve the efficiency of fuel production from renewable energy sources. “It’s a way to take cheap, worthless biomass and turn it into useful fuels and chemicals,” said team leader Lanny Schmidt, a Regents professor of chemical engineering and materials science at the university. “Potentially, the biomass could be used cooking oil or even products from cow manure, yard clippings, cornstalks or trees.” Biodiesel One up-and-coming fuel is biodiesel, which is produced from soy oil. Currently, the key step in conversion of the oil to biodiesel requires the addition of methanol, a fossil fuel. The new process skips the biodiesel step and turns oil straight into hydrogen and carbon monoxide gases by heating it to about 1000°C. About 70percent of the hydrogen in the oil is converted to hydrogen gas. Similarly, using a nearly saturated solution of glucose in water, the process heats the sugar so fast that it, too, breaks up into syngas instead of its usual products: carbon and water. Schmidt and his university colleagues, graduate students James Salge, Brady Dreyer and Paul Dauenhauer, have produced a pound of synthesis gas in a day using their small-scale reactor. Here’s how the new process works: the oil and sugar water are sprayed as fine droplets from an automotive fuel injector through a tube onto a Because the catalytic disc is porous, the syngas passes through it and is collected downstream in the tube. No external heat is needed, because the chemical reactions that produce syngas release enough heat to break up subsequent molecules of oil or sugar. “The secret is ultrafast flash volatilisation,” said Schmidt. “It happens here because we vapourise the fuel and mix it with oxygen before it sees the catalyst so it doesn’t burn to char. This is potentially 100 times faster than what is currently available to make syngas and hydrogen.” |
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