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Abstract
Greenish-brown sludge is formed in
significant quantities during production of oil and water from the Serang field,
offshore East Kalimantan, Indonesia. This interfacial sludge is comprised
of entrained free oil, water and solids, and is stabilized by material described
as "metallic soap". In the absence of fluid treatment, removal and disposal
of the sludge is tedious, expensive, and represents significant un-recovered
oil.
The sludge was carefully characterized to understand its
formation mechanism, so that remedial actions could be taken to mitigate its
deposition. The sludge was characterized by elemental analyses, x-ray
diffraction, nuclear magnetic resonance, Fourier transform infra-red
spectroscopy, gas chromatography-mass spectrometry, and scanning electron
microscopy. The results of the characterization studies suggest that sludge
filtered and dried at 100ēC (to remove free oil and water removed) consists of
~70 wt% branched and straight chain hydrocarbons in the range C14
C28. About 20 wt% of the sludge consists of C28 C30 carboxylate
salts and <5 wt% is inorganic minerals. Emulsification of oil, water
droplets and solids by carboxylate salts and bicarbonate ions from water is the
most likely sludge formation mechaNISM.
Laboratory and field tests have demonstrated that the sludge
can be dissolved by low doses of commercially available sludge dissolving agents
containing combinations of acids. As a result of dissolving the sludge,
incremental oil is recovered, which offsets chemical treatment and sludge
disposal costs. Although the sludge may be dissolved at the Santan onshore
processing facility (end of pipe), sludge formation is best mitigated by
treating the point-of-source at the Serang offshore platform.
Venue: SPE 6th International Conference
on HSE in Oil and Gas Exploration
Authors: D L Gallup, P C
Smith, J Chipponeri, D Mulyono, A
Rintoko
SPE Paper
No:
73960
Date: March 2002 |