To ensure continuity of
supply, E&P companies have to consider opportunities in ever increasing
water depths. Assisting this are new technological advances, including pipeline
manufacture and design that increase the technical feasibility of deepwater
developments.
Deepwater pipeline
challenges
Conventional pipeline
design, although concerned with many factors, is dominated generally by the
need to withstand an internal pressure. The higher the pressure that products
can be passed down the line, the higher the flow rate and greater the revenue
potential. However, factors critical for deepwater pipelines become dominated
by the need to resist external pressure, particularly during installation.
Local infield lines,
such as subsea umbilicals, risers, and flowlines (SURF) usually are modest
challenges as they are small in diameter and inherently resistant to
hydrostatic collapse. In smaller sizes, these lines generally are produced as
seamless pipe which is readily available and generally economical.
However, deepwater
trunklines and long-distance tiebacks present a greater challenge. To increase
subsea production these lines tend to be larger in diameter with a thicker pipe
wall to withstand the hydrostatic pressure and bending as it is laid to the
seabed.
Typically these lines
are often 16 in. to 20 in. (40 cm to 50 cm) in diameter, which presents a
further complication as the pipe sizes lie at the top end of economical
production for seamless (Pilger) pipes. The Pilger process can produce the
thick walled pipe required for these developments but often the manufacturing
process is slow, the cost of material high, and the pipe lengths short. As a
result, the most economical method to manufacture these lines is the UOE
process. The increasingly stringent industry demands have driven this design
toward its practical limits of manufacture and installation.
Corus Tubes has
responded by manufacturing UOE double submerged arc welded (DSAW) linepipe to
the deepest pipelines in the world. This pipe overcomes significant challenges
associated with deepwater developments and facilitated a number of pioneering
projects such as Bluestream and Perdido.
In the UOE process,
steel plate is pressed into a “U” and then into an “O” shape and then is
expanded circumferentially. Wall thickness and diameter requirements for
deepwater trunkline pipe continue to be challenging for manufacturing economics
and installation capabilities.
Distribution curve depicting ovality of Perdido pipe (457 mm x 20.62 mm thick).
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While few producers
manufacture UOE pipes at 16- to 20-in. outside diameter, this manufacturing
method is quicker to market and more cost-effective than seamless alternatives.
Corus Tubes’ process seeks to optimize the design of the material and minimize
the wall thickness to:
- Reduce material cost
- Reduce welding cost
- Reduce installation time
- Reduce pipe weight for
logistics and submerged pipe weight considerations
- Increase design scope enabling
a wider range of deepwater developments.
Det Norske Veritas (DNV)
says the acceptability of a pipeline design for a given water depth is
determined by means of standard equations that measure the relationship between
OD, wall thickness, pipe shape, and material compressive strength.
Pipe shape
Finished pipe shape is
optimized by balancing the manufacturing parameters, pipe compression, and
expansion. The crimp, U-press, and O-press combination ensures that the pipe
size is controlled, often beyond most offshore specifications. Enhanced pipe
“roundness”, wall thickness, and diameter tolerance removes uncertainty in the
design and production stages and allows pipe wall thickness optimization.
Compressive strength
Pipe manufactured by the
UOE process undergoes various strain cycles, both tensile and compressive. The
combination of these cycles affects the overall behavior of the material in
compression. This is indicated in the equation given in the offshore design standard DNV OS F101 by the presence of the Fabrication
Factor αfab. For standard UOE processes, the term represents a de-rating of 15%
in the compressive strength as a result of the material response to the strain
cycles during forming, known as the Bauschinger Effect.
When material is first
placed in tension such that it is deformed plastically, the yield stress in
compression is reduced. This originally was reported by Bauschinger in 1881. It
is relevant to pipe making because during the forming process the material is
placed in tension during expansion. Following this, the material is dispatched
for installation, where the pipe sees compressive stress from the pressure of
the seawater. Conventionally, the 15% reduction in compressive strength
compensates for the Bauschinger Effect.
Since the early 1990s,
Corus Tubes has observed that the results it obtained from the forming process
often yielded higher compressive strengths than those obtained from the
standard equations. Research and process development leads to a greater
understanding of the metallurgical transformations during pipe forming. It is
possible to reverse the Bauschinger Effect to deliver pipe with compressive
strengths higher than conventionally expected.
Three things influence
the final pipe mechanical properties in compression:
1 Choice of plate
feedstock. The strength of the final pipe is a function of the chemistry and
grain structure of the mother plate from which it is fabricated. All aspects of
plate manufacture, the chemistry, rolling schedule as well as cooling rates ensure
that the final plate properties change to give the required pipe
characteristics.
2 Choice of mill
compression and expansion parameters. By optimizing the various compression and
expansion cycles, a set of manufacturing conditions can be determined to enhance
collapse performance to potentially reduce pipe wall thickness in future
deepwater applications.
3 Controlled low
temperature heat treatment. With the correct plate chemistry it is possible to
deliver a lift in compression strength through the application of a low
temperature heat treatment. This final part of the process can be measured and
assured only if the correct attention has been paid to the previous
manufacturing stages.
A number of
groundbreaking projects have pushed the boundaries of deepwater exploration and
production, and enhanced understanding of pipeline capabilities and limits. In
2000, ExxonMobil used 64 km (40 mi) of line pipe for the Hoover/Diana project
which reached depths of 1,450 m (4,800 ft). This also was the first time that small
diameter pipe from Corus Tubes’ UOE mill in Hartlepool, UK, was supplied to the
deepwater Gulf of Mexico market.
In 2001, Corus Tubes
supplied 94 km (45,000 metric tons [49,604 tons]) of three-layer polypropylene
coated, high grade, sour service linepipe and bends for the technically
challenging Bluestream project which supplies gas from Russia to Turkey under
the Black Sea. Corus also was selected to provide pipe for the deepest section
of the pipeline at 2,150 m (7,054 ft) water depth.
Corus Tubes recently
supplied line pipe to the Perdido Norte project in the Gulf of Mexico. Williams
commissioned the production of small diameter UOE pipe and approximately 312 km
(194 mi) of uncoated steel line pipe for ultra deepwater depths from
3,500-8,300 ft (1,067-2,530 m) with a rugged seabed terrain. The pipe,
manufactured to withstand a service rating equivalent to ANSI 1500, is one of
the deepest pipelines in the world.
One section of the
pipeline transfers hydrocarbons from the FPS host in Alaminos Canyon block 857
and terminates in East Breaks block 994 (78 mi [126 km]). The gas pipeline
terminates at Williams Seahawk pipeline in East Breaks block 599 (106 mi [171
km]). The 18-in. (46-cm) diameter pipe was manufactured in wall thicknesses
ranging from 19.1 mm to 27.0 mm (¾ in. to 1 in.).
Further to the
experiences on Perdido, Corus has produced a thicker pipe at 18-in. diameter
for the Petrobras Tupi project. The pipe has a wall thickness of 31.75 mm (1 ¼
in.) and lies in a water depth of 2,200 m (7,218 ft) offshore Brazil. While
this project is not the deepest, it represents a milestone in pipe forming.
This is the thickest UOE pipe ever manufactured at 18-in. diameter (note as the
diameter of a pipe reduces and thickness increases, the levels of strain and power
required to forming it increases).
Tupi is a testimony to
the complexity of deepwater pipe design. While collapse at these water depths
is a critical design state, there also were concerns about corrosion, since the
Tupi production has some small amounts of contaminants in the exportation gas
(about 5% CO2 and a very small amount of H2S). Even though the exported gas
should be dehydrated, the CO2 raises concerns about pipe corrosion and is
managed by increasing the nominal wall thickness to account for loss of
material during life. At the end of the pipe life it still must withstand the
pressure at the seabed even with a reduced wall thickness.
The H2S, although not
expected in the exported gas, could cause cracking to occur in steels where the
grain structure and cleanliness is not optimized. In addition, high levels of
forming strain can exacerbate the situation. Corus Tubes applied its knowledge
of steel production and pipe forming to ensure that the plate it procured from
Dillinger Hutte and Voest Alpine provided ultimate resistance to H2S corrosion.
Pipelines in deepwater
require the tightest dimensional tolerances to maximize resistance to collapse
and to maximize girth weld fatigue resistance. Furthermore, pipelines from
16-in. to 28-in. (71-cm) are seen as the future for deepwater export pipeline
systems.
About the author
Martin Connelly is
responsible for ensuring Corus Tubes’ line pipe can meet the difficult
technical demands. He also oversees the company’s new product and market
development. Connelly joined Corus Group in 1993 after graduating with a first
class honors degree in Metallurgy and Engineering Material from Strathclyde
University. He worked in a number of technical, quality, and operational roles
before being promoted to product development metallurgist.
Source
:
http://www.offshore-mag.com/articles/print/volume-69/issue-7/flowlines-__pipelines/deepwater-pipelines.html
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