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Production • Processing • Handling


Conveying difficult media to oil and gas fields


Conveying systems have to be adapted to the media and the environment if production is to be efficient under such conditions. Jörg Eitler reports.


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espite all efforts to promote renewable energies, global demand for crude oil and natural gas has continued unabated. Prices are rising and interest in opening up new


sources, including unconventional sources, is rising with them. Methane from coal seams and highly viscous oil at more than 10,000 mPas are already of commercial interest, but are just as complicated to extract as oil sand mixtures from the Sudanese desert.


Te traditional image of oil production using pumpjacks with their distinctive ‘donkey’ heads is still to be seen on many oil fields around the world.


Progressing cavity pump However, pumpjacks are increasingly being replaced by a less spectacular, but more efficient system - progressing cavity oil pumps. Te primary success of this technology is its ability to convey highly viscous oils at above 50,000mPas while maintaining stable pressure.


What is more, it can do so with almost no pulsation or shear forces, thereby avoiding emulsion effects in oil/water, which would significantly hinder subsequent separation of the oil/water mixtures at the surface. Te volumetric efficiency of a downhole


progressing cavity pump is between 75 and 90 per cent compared to only around 30 per cent for pumpjacks and 35 per cent for electrical centrifugal submersible pumps.


Drive heads As the body of the progressing cavity pump is comparatively slim, it is perfectly suited to the interior of the bore hole. NETZSCH has developed various drive heads for different performance and speed requirements to generate the torque above ground. Te vertical GH drive, for example, comes with 20 to 100H.P. and 3,400Nm torque and is specially designed for large loads and rotation reduction of 1:4. Te right-angled RH version, on the other hand, is used for very low piston-rod speeds and


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can be connected to a combustion or hydraulic motor thanks to its particular geometry. Te highly economical DH direct drive is the option for higher rotation speeds up to 500rpm.


In this case, the drive is connected to the pump body itself, which is available in various designs. Te standard NTZ model has low life cycle costs thanks to its small number of wearing parts and is suitable for oil mixtures with up to 40 per cent gas or sand content at up to 160°C. It can achieve conveyance rates of between 0.5 and 300m³/d at maximum 300 bar.


Tis type of pump is used, for example, to extract methane in coal seams in the Qinshui Basin in China.


Te water is removed using the


progressing cavity pump until the gas is released and can be collected. An additional flow controller was integrated into the control system to avoid running dry.


Te NTU pump series, on the other hand, was designed with the focus on low start and operating torques and low interference from temperature or chemicals.


Te steel housing of the spiral form of the inner elastomer stator was


Fig. 2. The volumetric efficiency of progressing cavity pumps is between 75 and 95 per cent.


Fig. 1. Progressing cavity pumps are increasingly replacing traditional pumpjacks.


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