aalshaiba
Chemical
- Jul 22, 2012
- 2
Hello everyone,
I was analyzing a pipeline design from a wellhead tower to a recipient separator. The objective was to see whether the GOR increase can lead to overpressure the downstream facilities as it will see more gas eventually (flare system).
However, the analysis indicated something quite interesting; increasing the GOR lead to increasing in the pressure drop (i.e.: downstream facilities would face lower pressure each time!). This was against my intuition as I thought the opposite may occur. Anyway, when looking at the two-phase flow regime map, it seems that having high GOR pushed the wellfluid beyond the slug flow regime (bubble flow regime). Still I am trying to make sense out of it, but I am having difficulty analyzing this.
Could anyone help me with this?
Thanks
I was analyzing a pipeline design from a wellhead tower to a recipient separator. The objective was to see whether the GOR increase can lead to overpressure the downstream facilities as it will see more gas eventually (flare system).
However, the analysis indicated something quite interesting; increasing the GOR lead to increasing in the pressure drop (i.e.: downstream facilities would face lower pressure each time!). This was against my intuition as I thought the opposite may occur. Anyway, when looking at the two-phase flow regime map, it seems that having high GOR pushed the wellfluid beyond the slug flow regime (bubble flow regime). Still I am trying to make sense out of it, but I am having difficulty analyzing this.
Could anyone help me with this?
Thanks