Experimental Investigation Of The Shear Effect On Oil-Water Emulsion Flow In Pipelines

Emulsion flows have been a severe flow assurance issue, mainly in mature oil fields. Its formation occurs due to shear on oil-water flows caused by artificial lift methods, such as Electrical Submersible Pumps (ESP), and/or valves. The shear rate has an important role in emulsion flow behavior related to its relative viscosity and phase inversion. Therefore, this work presented an experimental investigation of the shear effect on three emulsion systems flowing in a pipeline. The shear element used was a combination of an 8-stage ESP and a glob valve. The emulsion systems analyzed were unstable emulsion and stable emulsion with and without a demulsifier. The experimental investigation was carried out for two ESP rotational speeds, 2400 and 3500 rpm, and one total volumetric flow rate, varying the water cut. From this study, it was observed that phase inversion occurred with increasing shear. Moreover, the effective viscosity was the same regardless of the surfactant presence for the three emulsion systems tested.

Experimental investigation of the Electrical Submersible Pump’s energy consumption under unstable and stable oil/water emulsions: A catastrophic phase inversion analysis

The presence of water in crude oil exploitation by the Electrical Submersible Pump (ESP) systems may cause several problems in energy consumption and operational instabilities due to emulsion formation. Indigenous surfactants in crude oil also contribute to emulsion stabilization, which can exacerbate these problems. In this paper will be experimentally investigated the influence of the emulsion stability on ESP energy consumption and operational instabilities through an 8-stage ESP operating with unstable and stable emulsions, with and without a demulsifier. The experimental tests were performed for one oil viscosity, a constant total flow rate, and two ESP rotational speeds. Initially, the ESP relative dimensionless power (RDP) was analyzed along with the emulsion system and the droplet size distribution (DSD). An interesting difference regarding the presence of surfactants was observed experimentally in the RDP and phase inversion points. The relationship among the ESP dimensionless power, torque, and electrical current with maximum droplet size allowed to conclude that these parameters can be related to the start of the coalescence process, i. e, able to predict the catastrophic phase inversion (CPI) point.