Youquan Bao,
Jinjun Zhang*,
Xinyi Wang and
Wenwen Liu
National Engineering Laboratory for Pipeline Safety, MOE Key Laboratory of Petroleum Engineering, Beijing Key Laboratory of Urban Oil & Gas Distribution Technology, China University of Petroleum-Beijing, Beijing, 102249, China. E-mail: zhangjj@cup.edu.cn; Fax: +86-10-8973-4627; Tel: +86-10-8973-4627
First published on 19th August 2016
Gelled waxy crude oil is a soft material with very complex rheological behavior that plays a critical role in one of the most concerning problems in the flow assurance of deep-water petroleum development—i.e., pipeline restart. Because the rheological behavior of gelled waxy crude oil is very dependent on shear history, it may hopefully reduce the pipeline blocking risk if a transitory startup of the pump (known as transitory restart) is implemented during the pipeline shutdown period and causes the nearly gelled oil to flow. The essence of transitory restart is the influence of pre-shear on the structural behavior of gelled oil. In the present work, transitory restart was simulated by a rheometer to study the structural behavior of crude oil after being pre-sheared with and without subsequent cooling. Numerical simulations were carried out to investigate the effect of structural behavior on pipeline restart. The results show that the gelled crude oil structure is incompletely recoverable once broken in the isothermal condition. As a benefit from the incompletely recoverable behavior, pre-shear can reduce the structural strength of gelled oil and cause the structure to break down more rapidly. Based on this mechanism, transitory restart can reduce the minimum pressure difference required for successful restart and save restart time. In addition, it is found that the propagation velocity of the yield cross-section gradually decreases during the restart process rather than always being equal to the speed of sound in crude oil. The attenuation of the propagation velocity of the yield cross-section decreases with increasing structure strength of crude oil and increasing restart pressure.
Gelled waxy crude oil features the complex rheological behavior of structured fluids, such as yield stress, creep and recoil,2–4 hysteresis loop,5–7 structural breakdown and recovery,2,8,9 etc. Among such behavior, the recoverability of the broken structure, also called the structure reversibility, of the gelled waxy crude oil deserves special attention. Wardhaugh et al.10 and Chang et al.11 observed that the broken-down structure of a waxy crude oil could be only poorly recovered, so they suggested that it would be more appropriate to call the gelled waxy crude oil a shear-degrading material rather than a thixotropic material. While Rønningsen et al.,2 Kané et al.4 and Visintin et al.12 reported that the recoverability of the broken-down gel structure was related to the shear rate imposed to break the gelled oil structure. On the other hand, El-Gamal,13 Ding et al.,9 Kané et al.,4 Singh et al.,14 Hénaut et al.15 and Visintin et al.12 all observed that the formation of the gelled structure could be delayed and the yield stress could be reduced by shearing the waxy crude oil during the development of the wax crystal structure—i.e., in the cooling process. Indeed, this structural strength weakening phenomenon, also called the structure behavior effect of pre-shear, is an expression of the partial recoverability of the structure.
Restartability of a pipeline is among the major concerns in the flow assurance of waxy crude transportation. The rheological behavior of gelled crude oil intrinsically determines the restartability of a pipeline. Taking advantage of the partial recoverability of the gelled waxy crude structure, if possible, could be quite helpful to improve the restartability of a pipeline. Specifically, this involves implementing a transitory startup after a certain period of shutdown and before the final startup of the pipeline. The role of this transitory flow is to break the building-up but weak gel structure and thus help the eventual restart of the pipeline. This is the objective of the present study.
The pressure required to initiate the flow of a pipeline filled with a structured fluid such as gelled waxy crude might be simply predicted by the following equation:16
ΔP = 4Lτy/D | (1) |
Accurate prediction of the restart process of a gelled waxy crude pipeline requires numerical computation. For this purpose, it is generally assumed that the restart process deals with an isothermal and compressible flow through a pipeline with a constant diameter, and the rheological behavior of the gelled oil varies in the radial and axial directions during the restart process, indeed reflecting the time-dependent structure breakdown behavior of the gelled waxy crude oil.7,19–25 The mathematical model consists of the continuity equation, the momentum equation and the constitutive equation. According to the dimensionality of the continuity equation and momentum equation, the mathematical models could be divided into a 2D model,20 1.5D model22,24,25 and 1D model.19,21,23 Compared with the 1D model, the 2D model could provide more information on the restart process, such as the radial profiles of flow velocity and rheological properties, but at the cost of longer computing time. Different constitutive equations were adopted to describe the structural breakdown behavior of gelled waxy crude oil, such as the time-dependent Bingham equation,19,26 the Houska model22,25,27 and some elasto-viscoplastic thixotropic models.7,23,24,28 However, most of the studies on numerical computation were focused on the numerical algorithm, with few of them integrating both the real rheological behavior of the crude oil and the numerical algorithm.
In the present work, the effect of the pre-shear on the structural behavior of the gelled waxy crude oil was first studied experimentally to investigate the isothermal recovery of the gelled oil, and microscopic observations were simultaneously made to probe into the mechanism of the macroscopic rheological behavior. The structural breakdown behavior was then quantitatively characterized. Finally, numerical computations of pipeline restart were performed to study the effect of the pre-shear at various shear rates and temperatures on the restart behavior of the gelled waxy crude oil pipeline.
Parameter | Value | Test method |
---|---|---|
Density at 20 °C (kg m−3) | 863.6 | ISO 3675-1998 |
WAT (°C) | 48.6 | Differential scanning calorimetry29–31 |
Pour point (°C) | 37.0 | ASTM D5853-11 |
Gelation point (°C) | 36.1 | Dynamic rheological measurement4,32,33 |
Wax content (wt%) | 24.2 | Differential scanning calorimetry31,34 |
Resins (wt%) | 7.9 | ASTM D4124-09 |
Asphaltenes (wt%) | 2.9 | ASTM D4124-09 |
The thermal and shear history of a waxy crude oil before pipeline restart was simulated via the procedures shown in Table 2.
Step | Contents | Engineering background |
---|---|---|
Step 1 | Preheat the sample and measuring system to 50 °C, then load the sample into the measuring system and keep isothermally for 10 min | Heat the oil before it is pumped into the pipeline |
Step 2 | Cool the sample to 37 °C at a rate of 0.1 °C min−1 while sheared at 30 s−1 | Normal operation of the pipeline |
Step 3 | Statically cool the sample to pre-shear temperature Tp-s | Shutdown of the pipeline |
Step 4 | Shear the sample at a shear rate of p-s for 30 min (i.e., pre-shear) | Transitory restart |
Step 5 | Statically cool the sample to 34 °C at a rate of 0.1 °C min−1 | Shutdown of the pipeline |
Step 6 | Isothermally hold for th, SAOS (strain amplitude 0.05% and frequency 1 Hz) to track the structure recovery process of the sample | — |
The history simulation conditions and experimental designs were set as shown in Table 3. The repeatability tests of SAOS and stepwise increases in shear rate are shown in Fig. S1 and S2.†
Experiment | History simulation condition | Testa | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tp-s (°C) | p-s (s−1) | th (min) | Yield stress | Structural breakdown behavior | Micro-examination | |
a Y denotes that the test was conducted.b Step (5) was not applicable.c Step (4) and step (5) were not applicable for Tp-s = 34 °C. | ||||||
Isothermal recoveryb | 35 | 0/1/10 | 1/60/120/240/480 | Y | N.A. | Y |
Effect of the rate of pre-shearc | 34 | 0 | 120 | Y | Y | N.A. |
35 | 1/10 | 120 | Y | Y | N.A. | |
Effect of the pre-shear temperature | 36 | 10 | 120 | Y | Y | N.A. |
The gelation of waxy crude oils is attributed to the formation of the 3D network of wax crystals resulted from the attractive forces between the crystals.2,12,37 Pre-shear can influence both the formation of the wax crystal network, which is partially irreversible,38,39 and the geometric characteristics (such as count, size, morphology, and so on) of wax crystals, and the latter in turn changes interactions between the wax crystals and then results in different rheological behavior. Fig. 2 shows the microscopic images of the samples non-sheared and pre-sheared at different rates at 35 °C. According to the upper part of Table 4 (th = 1 min), analysis of microscopic images using Image J reveals that (1) pre-shear makes the wax crystal smaller; (2) the higher the rate of pre-shear, the smaller the wax crystals becomes; and (3) the boundary box fractal dimension increases with increasing rate of pre-shear, which means that the morphology of waxy crystals becomes more complex.
p-s (s−1) | th (min) | Total count | Area of wax crystal (μm2) | Perimeter of wax crystal (μm) | Boundary box fractal dimension | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Average | Variance | Average | Variance | ||||
0 | 1 | 3106 | 8.24 | 25.76 | 9.70 | 15.39 | 1.09 |
1 | 1 | 3335 | 7.79 | 23.11 | 9.24 | 13.74 | 1.16 |
10 | 1 | 4106 | 6.51 | 20.02 | 8.17 | 10.53 | 1.30 |
0 | 480 | 3022 | 8.30 | 24.96 | 9.79 | 15.21 | 1.08 |
10 | 480 | 4210 | 6.43 | 19.90 | 8.08 | 11.07 | 1.27 |
Fig. 3 shows the isothermal recovery of the broken-down structure represented by the modulus and loss angle, which is compared with the structural build-up of the non-sheared sample. This structural evolution may be well described by the exponential correlation proposed by Visintin et al.12 as shown in eqn (2):
(2) |
Fig. 3 Evolution of the modulus and loss angle with isothermal holding time for samples non-sheared and pre-sheared at 10 s−1 at 35 °C (symbol represents measured data, and line represents the fitted result using eqn (2)). |
p-s (s−1) | G′ | G′′ | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
G′0 (Pa) | G′∞ (Pa) | t′cr (min) | n′ (—) | AADs (%) | G′′0 (Pa) | G′′∞ (Pa) | t′′cr (min) | n′′ (—) | AADs (%) | |
0 | 99.24 | 690.79 ± 8.81 | 133.41 ± 6.59 | 0.5869 ± 0.0122 | 1.50 | 41.05 | 142.78 ± 1.80 | 114.42 ± 7.33 | 0.5387 ± 0.0143 | 1.26 |
10 | 0.41 | 104.41 ± 0.84 | 254.97 ± 3.04 | 1.3977 ± 0.0138 | 7.33 | 1.75 | 51.50 ± 0.39 | 206.34 ± 2.89 | 1.1922 ± 0.0142 | 2.97 |
It is obvious that although the broken-down structure recovers somewhat during the isothermal holding period, it cannot reach the state of the non-sheared oil. From Table 5, it can be seen that the asymptotic values of G′∞ and G′′∞ of the sample pre-sheared at 10 s−1 are only 15.1% and 36.1% of the corresponding values of the non-sheared sample. These recovery rates are basically equal to those observed by Ronningsen et al.,2 Kané et al.4 and Visintin et al.12
In addition to the modulus, the yield stress, as shown in Fig. 4, also indicates a weak recovery of the broken-down structure. After isothermal holding for 480 min, the yield stress of the sample pre-sheared at 10 s−1 is 39.6% of the non-sheared sample. Therefore, it is important to note that the recovery rate is not a unique value, and its value depends on the parameter used to evaluate the recovery behavior, such as storage modulus, loss modulus, loss angle and yield stress. However, no matter which parameter is used, all results show that the broken-down structure of a waxy crude oil could be only partially recovered.
For the samples non-sheared and pre-sheared at 10 s−1, the micrographs of wax crystals were taken after isothermal holding 480 min at 35 °C, and the results are shown in Fig. 5. By comparing the statistical analysis results of Fig. 5 with those of Fig. 2, i.e. Table 4 and Fig. 6, it may be found that the count, average size and size distribution of wax crystals change little after isothermal holding for 480 min at 35 °C. This illustrates that the partial recovery of the broken-down structure during the isothermal holding period results from the evolution of the interlocks of particles rather than the changes of the geometric characteristics of particles.
Fig. 5 Morphology of wax crystals after isothermal holding for 480 min for samples non-sheared and pre-sheared at 10 s−1 at 35 °C. |
Fig. 6 Size distribution of wax crystals after isothermal holding for 480 min for samples non-sheared and pre-sheared at 10 s−1 at 35 °C. |
Fig. 7 Evolution of the modulus and loss angle with isothermal holding time for samples non-sheared and pre-sheared at different rates at 35 °C/36 °C and subsequent cooling to 34 °C (symbol represents measured results, and line represents fitted result by eqn (2)). |
Tp-s (°C) | p-s (s−1) | G′ | G′′ | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
G′0 (Pa) | G′∞ (Pa) | t′cr (min) | n′ (—) | AADs (%) | G′′0 (Pa) | G′′∞ (Pa) | t′′cr (min) | n′′ (—) | AADs (%) | ||
34 | 0 | 289.14 | 1211.25 ± 9.92 | 30.04 ± 1.01 | 0.6511 ± 0.0122 | 1.62 | 94.22 | 227.79 ± 1.01 | 18.85 ± 0.51 | 0.5986 ± 0.0117 | 1.02 |
36 | 10 | 45.70 | 760.90 ± 11.08 | 37.16 ± 1.36 | 0.9224 ± 0.0271 | 1.56 | 27.71 | 199.67 ± 3.26 | 27.92 ± 1.42 | 0.9120 ± 0.0483 | 1.6 |
35 | 1 | 28.93 | 528.23 ± 3.59 | 55.63 ± 0.77 | 1.0393 ± 0.0089 | 3.39 | 19.76 | 160.25 ± 0.99 | 41.30 ± 0.64 | 0.9819 ± 0.0122 | 3.06 |
35 | 10 | 10.72 | 248.05 ± 1.44 | 59.67 ± 0.65 | 1.0792 ± 0.0070 | 3.46 | 9.09 | 87.50 ± 0.35 | 46.17 ± 0.43 | 0.9619 ± 0.0060 | 1.69 |
To study the structural breakdown behavior of samples experiencing different history conditions, the stepwise increases in shear rate were imposed, and the results are shown in Fig. 8. The viscoplastic thixotropic model of waxy crude oil proposed by Teng et al.6 was used to quantitatively characterize these structural breakdown processes. Teng's model is
(3) |
Fig. 8 Shear stress responses to stepwise increases in shear rate at 34 °C for samples experiencing different pre-shear conditions. |
Teng's model is a viscoplastic thixotropic model, so only the experimental data after stress overshoot were used to determine the model parameters by least square fitting. The contrast between measured results and fitted results is shown in Fig. S3.† The relevant parameters of Teng's model are listed in Table 7 in which τy is the yield stress measured by the van method and τy1 is the yield stress fitted by eqn (2). There are slight differences between the values of τy and τy1.
Tp-s (°C) | p-s (s−1) | τy (Pa) | τy1 (Pa) | k (Pa sn1) | Δk (Pa sn1) | n1 (—) | n2 (—) | a (—) | b (—) | m (—) | AADs (%) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
34 | 0 | 25.33 | 26.09 ± 0.11 | 0.79 ± 0.01 | 14.92 ± 0.07 | 0.7583 ± 0.0014 | 0.8406 ± 0.0006 | 0.00339 ± 0.0001 | 0.0181 ± 0.0002 | 0.9916 ± 0.0026 | 1.1 |
36 | 10 | 16.01 | 16.89 ± 0.07 | 0.61 ± 0.01 | 8.19 ± 0.04 | 0.7873 ± 0.0014 | 0.8353 ± 0.0090 | 0.0074 ± 0.0020 | 0.0231 ± 0.0030 | 0.9906 ± 0.0038 | 0.8 |
35 | 1 | 13.29 | 12.67 ± 0.05 | 0.65 ± 0.01 | 6.05 ± 0.02 | 0.7756 ± 0.0011 | 0.8324 ± 0.0012 | 0.0063 ± 0.0003 | 0.0185 ± 0.0002 | 1.0134 ± 0.0053 | 1.5 |
35 | 10 | 8.81 | 7.51 ± 0.03 | 0.58 ± 0.01 | 5.05 ± 0.02 | 0.8025 ± 0.0011 | 0.8350 ± 0.0011 | 0.0246 ± 0.0004 | 0.0567 ± 0.0007 | 1.0373 ± 0.0060 | 1.2 |
As shown in Table 7, at the same pre-shear temperature Tp-s = 35 °C, a higher rate of pre-shear increases the reductions of yield stress, structure-independent consistency and structure-dependent consistency of the sample at 34 °C; i.e., the stress overshoot during the structural breakdown process is reduced from 41.6 Pa to 17.6 Pa and 12.7 Pa by pre-shearing at 1 s−1 and 10 s−1, respectively. At the same rate of pre-shear p-s = 10 s−1, a larger temperature drop after pre-shearing reduces the reductions of yield stress, structure-independent consistency and structure-dependent consistency of the sample at 34 °C; i.e., the stress overshoot during the structural breakdown process is reduced from 41.6 Pa to 24.0 Pa and 12.7 Pa by pre-shearing at 10 s−1 at 36 °C and 35 °C, respectively. The increase in n1 with increasing rate of pre-shear indicates that the oil structure becomes less non-Newtonian. In addition, the structural breakdown rate b of the pre-sheared sample significantly increases, which means that the structure of the sample becomes more easily broken down.
Although both the rate of pre-shear and pre-shear temperature are different for the pre-shear conditions of Tp-s = 36 °C and p-s = 10 s−1 vs. Tp-s = 35 °C and p-s = 1 s−1, there is an interesting result regarding the stress responses to stepwise increases in shear rate for these two cases. As shown in Fig. 8, the stress overshoot of the case with Tp-s = 36 °C and p-s = 10 s−1 is higher than that of the case with Tp-s = 35 °C and p-s = 1 s−1, which means that the initial structure of the case with Tp-s = 36 °C and p-s = 10 s−1 is stronger. However, the strengths of both structures become comparable once the structure is broken, and the structural strength of the case with Tp-s = 36 °C and p-s = 10 s−1 becomes even weaker than the case with Tp-s = 35 °C and p-s = 1 s−1 in the higher shear rate steps resulting from the different structural breakdown behavior. This phenomenon illustrates the importance of structural breakdown behavior; in other words, a stronger initial structure does not mean a stronger broken structure.
To simplify the problem, the flow is assumed to be isothermal and in a horizontal pipeline with a uniform cross-section. The gelled waxy crude oil is assumed to be weakly compressible.
The conservation equations of mass and momentum are given, respectively, as24
(4) |
(5) |
The weak compressibility of gelled waxy crude oil is characterized by a constant isothermal compressibility number:
(6) |
Substituting eqn (6) into (4), the continuity equation becomes
(7) |
The flow is assumed to be fully developed, so the shear stress along the radial direction is linear as expressed in eqn (8):
(8) |
Substituting eqn (8) into Teng's model as shown in eqn (3), the thixotropic model becomes
(9) |
Before the restart, gelled waxy crude oil in the pipeline is assumed to be uniform with the velocity profile v(r, z, t = 0) = 0, pressure field P(z, t = 0) = 0, and structural parameter λ(r, z, t = 0) = 1. Once the restart is initiated, the inlet pressure instantaneously increases to P(z = 0, t) = Pin. The outlet pressure is assumed to be P(z = L, t) = 0 at all times. The no-slip condition is set on the velocity at the pipeline wall—i.e., v(r = R, z, t) = 0.
The relevant parameters of eqn (5), (7) and (9) are nondimensionalized as follows:
(10) |
The dimensionless governing equations are given by
(11) |
(12) |
(13) |
The dimensionless numbers appearing in the dimensionless analysis are shown in Table 8. The algorithm proposed by Negrao et al.24 is adopted to solve eqn (11)–(13) numerically. See ref. 24 for details about the mesh generation, solution of governing equations and algorithm realization. The present work focuses on the effect of the structural behavior of gelled waxy crude oil on pipeline restart, so the dimensionless parameters are set as shown in Table 9 according to the rheological parameters shown in Table 7.
Definition | Symbol | Name |
---|---|---|
Reynolds number | Re | ρ0cd/μr |
Aspect ratio | δ | D/L |
Yield number | Γ | τy1α |
Viscosity ratio | S | Δk/k |
Build-up number | Bu | aL/c |
Break down number | Bd | bρ0mL1−m/c1−3m |
Tp-s (°C) | p-s (s−1) | Re | δ | Γ | S | Bu | Bd | n1 | n2 | m |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
34 | 0 | 52563.53 | 5.00 × 10−4 | 1.30 × 10−6 | 18.89 | 0.0222 | 3.1932 × 105 | 0.7583 | 0.8406 | 0.9916 |
36 | 10 | 71883.33 | 8.45 × 10−7 | 13.43 | 0.0484 | 4.0149 × 105 | 0.7873 | 0.8353 | 0.9906 | |
35 | 1 | 65994.02 | 6.34 × 10−7 | 9.31 | 0.0412 | 4.5197 × 105 | 0.7756 | 0.8324 | 1.0134 | |
35 | 10 | 77790.04 | 3.76 × 10−7 | 8.71 | 0.1608 | 1.9794 × 106 | 0.8025 | 0.8350 | 1.0373 |
To ensure the mesh independence of the simulation results, the effect of mesh size on the simulation results is investigated (see Fig. S4 and S5† for more details). The radial grid number Nr = 50 and the axial grid number Nz = 500 are confirmed.
Fig. 10 Steady-state outlet velocity versus restart pressure for different pre-shear history conditions. |
The times at which the oil at different axial positions starts to flow (called “restart times”) are given as shown in Fig. 11. The restart times are almost the same for axial position z* < 0.2, whereas the curves no longer overlap for z* > 0.2. The higher the rate of pre-shear, the longer is the restart time. The differences in restart times illustrate that the propagation velocities of yield cross-sections (equivalent to the “yield front” proposed by Davidson et al.19) for different pre-shear history conditions are unequal.
The derivation of curves in Fig. 11 is obtained by the Origin software program to obtain the propagation velocity of yield cross-section and the results are shown in Fig. 12. The velocity of the yield cross-section is equal to the sound speed in gelled oil in the initial period, and it then decreases during the propagation process. The stronger the structural strength, the greater is the velocity decline. In addition to the structural strength of gelled oil, the restart pressure also has an effect on the propagation of the yield cross-section. Fig. 13 shows the propagation velocities of the yield cross-section for the case with Tp-s = 35 °C and p-s = 1 s−1 under different restart pressures. It is clear that the velocity of the yield cross-section is equivalent to the sound speed in gelled oil in the initial period regardless of how much pressure is imposed, and then decreases sharply with decreasing restart pressure
Fig. 12 Propagation velocities of yield cross-section when passing different axial positions for different pre-shear history conditions (restart pressure = 0.003). |
By tracking the propagation process of the yield cross-section for different pre-shear history conditions and restart pressures the propagation velocities of the yield cross-section when it reaches the outlet can be obtained as shown in Fig. 14. It can be seen that the propagation velocity of the yield cross-section increases with increasing rate of pre-shear and increasing restart pressure but to no more than the sound speed in gelled oil. Fig. 12, 13 and 14 all indicate that the assumption of Davidson et al.,19 that the propagation velocity of the yield front is identical to the sound speed in gelled oil during the pipeline restart process, is unreasonable.
Fig. 14 Propagation velocities of yield cross-section when reaching the outlet for different pre-shear history conditions and restart pressures. |
Actually, in the initial restart period, the total pressure difference is applied on a short upstream distance, so the structure of the gelled oil is broken rapidly, and the propagation velocity of the yield cross-section is almost equal to the sound speed. As the pressure wave propagates downstream, the pressure is dissipated and the applied pipeline length becomes longer, so the structure of the gelled oil is broken at a relatively slow rate; i.e., the propagation velocity of the yield cross-section decreases. Thus, the assumption that the speed of the yield front is identical to the sound speed in gelled oil during the pipeline restart process applies only to the situations in which the structure is weaker or the restart pressure is sufficiently higher.
The total restart time is also a main concern when working with the restart problem. Fig. 15 shows the total restart times for different pre-shear history conditions and restart pressures It can be seen that the total restart time is close to unit, which is equal to the total restart time for weakly compressible Newtonian flow, provided that the restart pressure is sufficiently higher. The pre-shear can effectively reduce the total restart time under a given restart pressure, even by orders of magnitude.
(1) The broken-down structure of a waxy crude oil could be only partially recovered in the isothermal condition. The pre-shear makes the wax crystals smaller and the morphology of wax crystals more complex. The changes in the count and size of wax crystals are unobvious during the isothermal aging period after pre-shearing at 10 s−1, whereas the storage modulus, loss modulus and yield stress all weakly recover until becoming steady. The recovery rates of the storage modulus, loss modulus and yield stress are 15.1%, 36.1% and 39.6%, respectively.
(2) For the conditions in which the oil samples were pre-sheared with subsequent cooling, at the same pre-shear temperature, a higher rate of pre-shear increases the reductions in yield stress, structure-independent consistency and structure-dependent consistency of the sample; i.e., the stress overshoot during the structural breakdown process is reduced from 41.6 Pa to 17.6 Pa and 12.7 Pa by pre-shearing at 1 s−1 and 10 s−1, respectively; and makes the oil structure less non-Newtonian as well as the structural breakdown process faster. At the same rate of pre-shear, a larger temperature drop after pre-shearing reduces the reductions in yield stress, structure-independent consistency and structure-dependent consistency of the sample; i.e., the stress overshoot during the structural breakdown process is reduced from 41.6 Pa to 24.0 Pa and 12.7 Pa by pre-shearing at 10 s−1 at 36 °C and 35 °C, respectively.
(3) The propagation velocity of the yield cross-section during the restart process is not yet identical to the sound speed in gelled oil. Actually, the propagation velocity is equal to the sound speed in the initial restart period and then decreases during the propagation process. The propagation velocity even decreases to 1% of the sound speed in gelled oil. The attenuation of the propagation velocity of the yield cross-section decreases with increasing structural strength of crude oil and increasing restart pressure.
(4) Pre-shear can effectively reduce the minimum pressure difference required for successful restart. By pre-shearing at 1 s−1 and 10 s−1 at 35 °C, the minimum pressure difference required for successful restart is reduced to 61.4% and 32.9% of the non-shear condition, respectively. Pre-shear also can save the total restart time under a given restart pressure, even by orders of magnitude.
Tp-s | Temperature at which pre-shear is imposed [°C] |
th | Isothermal holding time [min] |
G′ | Storage modulus [Pa] |
G′′ | Loss modulus [Pa] |
ts | Total restart time [s] |
k | Structure-independent consistency in Teng's thixotropic model (eqn (3)) [Pa sn1] |
Δk | Structure-dependent consistency in Teng's thixotropic model (eqn (3)) [Pa sn1] |
v | Axial velocity [m s−1] |
V | Average velocity [m s−1] |
Vy | Velocity of the yield cross-section [m s−1] |
L | Pipeline length [m] |
D | Pipeline diameter [m] |
P | Gauge pressure [Pa] |
N | Number of nodes |
c | Sound speed in gelled oil [m s−1], |
n1, n2, a, b, m | Parameters in Teng's thixotropic model (eqn (3)) |
tcr, n | Parameters in Visintin et al.'s exponential correlation (eqn (2)) |
Δt | Time step [s] |
Δz | Space step in the axial direction [m] |
Shear rate [s−1] | |
p-s | Rate of pre-shear [s−1] |
γ | Shear strain |
δ | Loss angle [°] |
τ | Shear stress [Pa] |
τy | Yield stress [Pa] |
τy1 | Yield stress in Teng's thixotropic model (eqn (3)) [Pa] |
λ | Structural parameter, varying between 0 and 1 |
ρ | Oil density [kg m−3] |
ρ0 | Oil density at the pipeline outlet [kg m−3] |
τw | Shear stress at the pipe wall [Pa] |
α | Compressibility of oil [Pa−1] |
ss | Steady state |
in | Pipeline inlet |
out | Pipeline outlet |
z | Axial direction |
r | Radial direction |
* | Dimensionless variable |
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available: Repeatability tests of SAOS and stepwise increases in shear rate; comparison between test results and fitted results of shear stress responses to stepwise increases in shear rate; mesh size study. See DOI: 10.1039/c6ra16346g |
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2016 |