Isothermal Transport (Core-Flow Type) of Heavy and Ultraviscous Oil in Curved Pipes: A Transient Study by CFD ()
1. Introduction
In the world oil production scenario, light oils, also called conventional oils, have dominated the market throughout history. These oils are technically easier to produce, have a lower production cost, higher performance after being refined, in addition to providing high-value products [1]. However, in recent decades its accumulations have been reduced gradually. Thus, there is an interest in potential heavy oil reserves, estimated by the IEA (International Energy Agency) at around 6 trillion barrels around the world [2].
Heavy oils are composed of high molecular weight hydrocarbons, consequently, they have a high relative density, related to the presence of unwanted product contents such as asphaltenes, metallic components (nickel and vanadium) and sulfur. Furthermore, they are characterized by having a low API degree, between 10 and 20, and high viscosity ranging from 100 cP (0.1 Pa·s) to 10,000 cP (10 Pa·s). The production of this type of oil is, on average, twice as expensive in terms of production cost and energy consumption. This fact is related to low mobility due to its high viscosity in reservoir conditions, along with the presence of unwanted components already mentioned, making it more difficult to produce, transport and refine these oils.
In Brazil, the Campos Basin is the location that contains the largest amount of heavy oil in deep waters, being responsible for approximately 90% of the oil production in the country [3]. Producing heavy oil in deep waters and transporting it in pipelines are expensive and highly complex tasks. The main problems are related to guarantee the flow of oil in severe conditions, subject to the hydrate formation and the paraffin deposition on the inner walls of the pipeline, and ensure the proper pressure drop in the flow. In some cases, problems such as the paraffin deposition can cause an increase in the pumping power requirement, decreasing in the volumetric flow rate, and even causing the complete blockage of the pipeline.
Core Annular Flow (CAF) can be defined as an alternative technique for transporting heavy oils. This technique uses parietal lubrication, that is, the annular flow of water in the pipe to carry the heavy oil in the center, thus, reducing friction effects [4], and the lowest amount of energy required for pumping [5]. Due to its high potential, several researchers have given the great interest in developing works related to this technique [6] - [16]. Unfortunately, several works are related to horizontal and vertical pipes, and few researches are focused on non-conventional geometries [17] [18] [19] [20] [21].
Sarmadi et al. developed a methodology for transporting heavy oil using an annular flow with three layers. The third layer, next to the wall, is a lubricating layer. These authors verified that the addition of the extra layer ensures the stability of the transport, allowing a stable annular flow. Furthermore, they authors verified that the method produces a significant reduction in pressure drop.
Ameri et al. [22] studied the core-flow system in a vertical pipe in a configuration with onlulated nucleus. These authors found that the ideal proportion for water and oil input ranged from 0.07 to 0.5 depending on the surface velocity of the oil transported. Furthermore, in the research was verified that a higher oil flowrate requires smaller amounts of water to reach the minimum friction pressure gradient.
Strazza et al. [23] carried out a trial study of resuming a core-flow system starting from a stratified flow. The authors comment about the importance of the water injection velocity in removing the oil that is trapped to lipophilic wall, and to keep the stable oil core.
During the Core Annular Flow, numerous difficulties related to the transportation of heavy oils are encountered. Given the importance of the physical problem under discussion, there is a need for further studies on the development and optimization of existing techniques, thus allowing the commercial use of these reserves from a technical and economic point of view. Therefore, in complement of this topic, this work aims to perform, numerically, an energetic and hydrodynamic analysis of a heavy oil-water two-phase flow, using the core-flow technique, in non-conventional ducts (curved pipes).
2. Methodology
2.1. The Physical Problem and the Geometry
The physical problem to be studied herein consists of the two-phase flow (core-flow type) of heavy oil in a curved pipe (Figure 1). For this propose was used the computational fluid dynamics (Ansys CFXÒ commercial software).
In the present work, a structured three-dimensional mesh representing the study domain was generated in the ICEM CFD module of the ANSYS CFX 12.0 software. This mesh was created using a set of points, curves, surfaces, and solids describing its shape (curved pipe) and dimensions (diameter and length). The
modeling of the physical problem with appropriated boundary conditions were specified in the Ansys CFXÒ.
Figure 1 shows the numerical mesh from the curved pipe with a total length of 12 m and a curvature radius equal to 0.2 m. In the oil inlet regions, an internal diameter (Di = 0.14 m) and the external diameter of the pipe (De = 0.15 m) were adopted, where the annular region (De – Di) refers to the water inlet. This arrangement causes water to flow in the annular region, lubricating the oil core and thus reducing friction between the oil and the pipe wall. This mesh was obtained after the grid and time refinements.
2.2. Mathematical Modeling
The heavy oil-water two-phase flow in curved pipes is governed by general conservation laws, as follows:
1) Mass Conservation Equation:
(1)
where the sub-indices α and β correspond to the involved phases; f is the volume fraction,
is the density,
is the velocity vector;
is the mass source term and
is the mass transfer term between the fluid phases.
2) Momentum Equation:
(2)
where
is the dynamic viscosity, p is the pressure,
is tensor product,
represents the term of the external forces acting on the system per volume unit. In the term referring to the momentum transfer induced by the interfacial mass transfer (the third term on the right side of the equation),
corresponds to the mass flow rate per unit volume of the phase β to phase α and vice-versa.
The tensor product of two vector is given by:
(3)
and the term
can be obtain by:
(4)
In Equation (2),
describes the interfacial force per unit volume over the phase α due to the interaction with the phase β. This parameter represents the sum of several forces, such as wall lubrification force, lift force, interfacial drag force, virtual mass force, turbulent dispersion force and solids pressure force. In the work, we use the mixing model at the interface between the phases. In this case, only the interfacial drag force is considered, being given by:
(5)
where CD = 0.44 is the drag coefficient [24], and
is the density of the fluid mixture, given as follows:
(6)
The viscosity of the fluid mixture is given by:
(7)
The interfacial area density per volume unit,
, defines the treatment model for interfacial transfer (particle, mixture and free surface models). In this research we use the following equation:
(8)
3) Turbulence equations:
The k-ε turbulence model was used to describe the flow of the water phase. This is a turbulent viscosity model where Reynolds tensors are assumed to be proportional to the mean velocity gradients, with the constant of proportionality being characterized by the turbulent viscosity (idealization known as Boussinesq’s hypothesis).
The characteristic of this type of model is that two transport equations modeled separately are solved for the turbulent length and the time scales or any two combinations linearly independent of them. The variable k represent the transport equation for the turbulent kinetic energy, and ε represent the turbulent kinetic energy dissipation rate, as follows:
(9)
(10)
where Gα is the generation of turbulent kinetic energy within phase α, C1 and C2 are empirical constants. The dissipation rate of turbulent kinetic energy and the turbulent kinetic energy of phase α, are, respectively, defined by:
(11)
(12)
where lα is the length of the spatial scale, qα is the velocity scale and, cμ is an empirical constant, being as follows:
(13)
where cα is an empirical constant and μtα corresponds to turbulent viscosity, defined by:
(14)
The value of the constants used in the Equation (7) and Equation (8) are: C1 = 1.44, C2 = 1.92, Cμ = 0.09, σk = 1.0, and σε = 1.3. These information can be found in the literature.
2.3. Initial and Boundary Conditions
As an initial condition, it was considered that the entire pipe was filled with water. The boundary conditions applied to the study domain are as follows:
1) An annular section for the inlet of water:
(15)
2) An inlet section for oil:
(16)
where t is the time.
3) At the boundaries of the pipe wall: a roughness value of 4.5 × 10−5 m and the no-slip condition were considered.
(17)
2.4. Fluid Properties and Numerical Procedures
The properties of the fluids used in the numerical simulation of the heavy oil-water two-phase flow, using the core-flow technique, are shown in Table 1.
Regarding the numerical simulation of the physical problem, some assumptions were made, which are shown in Table 2.
3. Results and Discussion
The numerical simulation was carried out in a transient state with a total process time equal to t = 10 s and a time-step Δt = 0.05 s. As evidenced in the initial and boundary conditions, the water flow rate is constant (iqual to 4 kg/s), while the oil flow rate is a time-dependent function with decreasing behavior (decreasing from 15 to 0 kg/s), as shown in Figure 2. This type of simulation tries to show the behavior of the core-flow when the pumping of oil decreases in the course of the process keeping the water flow rate to be constant. The idea is to approach
Table 1. Thermophysical properties of the fluids used in the numerical simulation.
Table 2. Assumptions made to solve the governing equations.
Figure 2. Transient behavior of mass flow rates of oil and water phases.
this physical situation to a real process such as a performance reduction of the oil pump due to a problem in the suction of the pipeline or even a variation in the engine rotation velocity done manually to attend operational requirements.
Figure 3 illustrates the behavior of the pressure drop and the required power as a function of time. From the analysis of this figure, it is observed that maximum value is obtained and it can be used as a parameter for dimensioning the system. The maximum pressure drop obtained for oil transportation using the core-flow technique was ΔP = 2879.37 Pa, which corresponds to the maximum power required of 41.14 W. Note that length of the pipe is 12 m only. The pipe is full filled with water in t = 0 s and following, the oil and water starts to flow along the pipe, simultaneously.
The pressure field at time t = 3 s and 6.5 s are shown in Figure 4. By analyzing the figure, we can see a decrease in fluids flow pressure due to friction along the
Figure 3. Transient behavior of the pressure drop and pumping power required during 10 s of process.
Figure 4. Pressure field along the pipe at different moments.
pipe wall, especially in the curvature region, as expected for at this geometry type.
In the petroleum industry always is desirable to transport crude oil as possible at fixed pressure drop. Thus, to compare the performance of the core-flow technique plays important role. For heavy oil single-phase flow, the pressure drop achieved was ΔP = 81780.9 Pa. Therefore, a reduction factor of 28.4, which is the relationship between the pressure drop of the oil single-phase flow and the two-phase flow using the core-flow technique, was verified. There was a reduction in pressure drop equivalent to 96.48% when using the core-flow technique for transporting heavy oil, thus showing its efficiency in terms of the high-energy gain in the process, that is essential to make the production of heavy oils to be optimized and economically attractive.
Figure 5 and Figure 6 show the volumetric fraction field of the oil along the pipe. Variations in volumetric fraction can be interpreted like a mixture of the involved phases or even formed emulsion. From the analysis of these figures, it can be seen that the oil core remains stable, being lubricated by the water that flows close to the pipe wall in the annular region. However, the oil core is non-concentric,
Figure 5. Volumetric fraction field of oil along the pipe at different moments.
Figure 6. Volumetric fraction field of oil in transversal planes before and after the curvature point at different moments.
mainly due to the difference in density between the two fluids, inducing interfacial waves in the core-annular flow and at the same time increasing, even more, its hydrodynamic stability. This behavior can be seen clearly in Figure 6, especially of the times equal to 7, 9, and 10 s.
Regarding the oil velocity behavior illustrated in Figure 7 and Figure 8, it is observed clearly the presence of a water stream near the pipe wall. From the analysis of the predicted results, the superficial velocity of heavy oil tends to be zero as the radius, r, increases approaching the radius of the pipe, R, evidence
Figure 7. (a) Superficial velocity field and (b) velocity vectors of the heavy oil at t = 8 s.
Figure 8. Oil superficial velocity profile at (a) 2 m before curvature and (b) at 2 m after curvature.
that it does not touch the pipe wall, not even in the curvature region, confirming the oil core lubrication performed by the water flow, reaching a maximum superficial velocity of 0.56 m/s.
4. Conclusions
From the obtained results, it can be concluded that:
1) The core-flow technique proved to be an excellent alternative solution for the transport of heavy oils due to the reduction in the energy consumption used in the process;
2) The use of the core-flow technique for the proposed problem presented a reduction factor in the pressure drop of 28.4 compared to the heavy oil single-phase flow;
3) The use of the core-flow technique provided a maximum reduction in pressure drop equal to ΔP = 2879.37 Pa and the maximum required power of 41.14 W;
4) The reduction in pressure drop when using the core-flow technique was 96.48%;
5) During the entire process, the oil core was stable and non-concentric, not even touching the pipe wall;
6) In pipeline projects for transporting heavy oils, the radius of curvature must be analyzed during the design process, to avoid breaking the stability of the core-flow pattern due to its high local pressure drop.
Acknowledgements
The authors thank CNPq, CAPES, FINEP, and ANP (Brazilian Research Agencies) for financial support.