Affiliation:
1. PDVSA Petróleo y Gas División Occidente
2. PDVSA INTEVEP
3. REDA, a Camco International Company
Abstract
Abstract
A project was undertaken to verify new technology for handling gas using an electrical submergible pumping (ESP) system and to assess the production increase potential for wells in the Venezuelan Lake of Mamcaibo. There is also a potential application for the technology in the Venezuelan field north of Monagas where gas venting through the annulus presents hazards due to the high corrosiveness level. Tests were performed in the Tia Juana Experimental Test Well facilities to determine the viable amount of gas that could be produced through the equipment on a percent by volume basis. An analysis and summarization was performed on 290 historical files recorded during the testing. The results indicate that there is now the potential to produce four to five times more gas through an ESP system with this technology than has been previously accepted in the industry. The application of this technology to the Lake of Maracaibo is expected to affect 250 wells providing additional production of 75,000 STB/D of oil and a savings of 180 MMSCF/D of gas used to gas lift these wells. Installation of the system in the first three wells in the Lake of Mamcaibo has substantiated the test results. The purpose of this paper is to present the test parameters, results, application potential and initial field results.
Introduction
The need to operate electric submergible pumping systems in wells having free gas fractions greater than those traditionally handled has generated the development of new technologies such as the Advanced Gas Handling system (AGH)1, U.S. patent number 5628616. A project was undertaken to verify this new technology. The objective was to evaluate the performance of the ESP system with the Advanced Gas Handler in controlled field conditions, handling different flow rates and free gas fractions at pump intake level. Problems with producing high gas fractions through ESP systems have been well documented.2.3,4.5,6 During fluid flow through a pump, the gas bubbles tend to lag behind the liquid in the lower pressure area of the impeller. The gas accumulates in that low-pressure area over a period of time. Once this gas accumulates into a long continuous column in the pump such that the pump no longer generates any discharge pressure, gas-locking occurs, and the equipment shuts down on amperage underload. The amount of gas a pump can handle without the threat of gas-locking has depended on stage designs and sizes. The smaller flow pumps with radial stages have been known to handle 10% to 15% free gas by volume or .11 to .17 vapor-to-liquid ratio, whereas the larger flow pumps with mixed flow staging can tolerate 20010 to 25 % free gas by volume or .25 to .33 vapor-to-liquid ratio. Many ESP applications today are requiring the ability to handle 30% to 50010 free gas by volume in the smaller flow pumps and 40010 to 60% free gas by volume in the larger flow pumps. The Lake of Mamcaibo wells have high gas-oil-ratios. Producing them with the standard ESP configuration was not considered a feasible option. However, the present gas lift production is declining and is resource costly. If it could be determined that the new AGH technology expanded the envelope to at least 40010 free gas by volume capability for an ESP system, it would be a production option for these wells.
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2 articles.
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1. Success Story of a Novel Completion Technology of Hybrid ESP-Gas Lift System Trial;Day 3 Thu, October 12, 2023;2023-10-06
2. Optimize Oil Field Electrification To Minimize Power Consumption;2022 International Conference on Electrical and Computing Technologies and Applications (ICECTA);2022-11-23