Managing Friction Pressures to Reduce Fuel Consumption and Emissions for a Fracturing Fleet

Zacary Beveridge, Nathan McLaughlin, S. Kakadjian
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Abstract

Friction pressure has always been a limiting factor for placing water and proppant during a hydraulic fracture treatment. Mitigating friction pressure has relied heavily upon using chemicals to reduce the friction and ultimately the hydraulic horsepower required to complete the job. Costs to reduce friction pressure have always been associated with the type and amount of friction reducer (FR) used. Best practices being associated with using as little as necessary to achieve the treatment. On the contrary, utilizing the minimum amount of FR can increase overall costs for treatment due to increased fuel usage which leads to increased emissions. As the industry strengthens focus surrounding Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) and optimizing costs for well completions, this paper discusses a unique approach to decrease friction pressures, reduce fuel usage, and ultimately optimize the completions treatment and associated cost. Using friction models based on laboratory data and fuel consumption models built from flowmeter measurement during treatment, various pumping scenarios can be combined to estimate fuel consumption for diesel and dual fuel engines at varying FR set points. Incorporating a friction pressure model allows for treating pressure to be estimated and used within the fuel consumption model. Providing commodity costs and emissions factors allows for understanding of total cost and emissions changes with increased FR usage. Varying FR usage, treatment rate, and number of pumps gives room for optimization and understanding of the variables that demonstrate the greatest effect on total costs and emissions. Increasing FR leads to decreased treating pressure and required hydraulic horsepower which reduces fuel consumption and generated emissions. The cost reductions depend on commodity prices as well as the types of fuel used (diesel or a blend of diesel and natural gas). Utilizing current market pricing, an increase in FR concentration from 0.4 gal per thousand to 0.6 gal per thousand resulted in a decrease in overall costs of nearly 5% per pumping hour and emissions reductions of up to 15.9%. By changing the conventional wisdom of lowering costs by reducing chemical concentrations to optimizing based on the bigger picture, emissions, treatment costs, and equipment utilized are reduced. Additional horsepower can be utilized for backup and further reduce non-productive time and increase efficiency. With proper planning and understanding, this solution will provide a more efficient environment for completions.
管理摩擦压力,减少压裂车队的燃料消耗和排放
在水力压裂处理过程中,摩擦压力一直是限制水和支撑剂投放的因素。降低摩擦压力主要依靠使用化学品来减少摩擦,最终降低完成工作所需的液压马力。降低摩擦压力的成本一直与减摩剂(FR)的类型和用量有关。最佳做法是在必要时尽量少用,以达到处理效果。相反,使用最少的减摩剂可能会增加处理的总成本,因为燃料用量增加会导致排放增加。随着业界对环境、社会和治理(ESG)以及优化完井成本的关注不断加强,本文讨论了一种降低摩擦压力、减少燃料用量并最终优化完井处理和相关成本的独特方法。利用基于实验室数据的摩擦模型和根据处理过程中流量计测量结果建立的燃料消耗模型,可以将各种泵送方案结合起来,以估算不同 FR 设定点下柴油发动机和双燃料发动机的燃料消耗。结合摩擦压力模型可以估算处理压力,并在燃料消耗模型中使用。通过提供商品成本和排放系数,可以了解增加阻燃剂用量后的总成本和排放变化。不同的阻燃剂用量、处理率和泵的数量都会对总成本和排放量产生最大的影响,这就为优化和了解这些变量提供了空间。增加阻燃剂用量可降低处理压力和所需液压马力,从而减少燃料消耗和排放。成本的降低取决于商品价格以及使用的燃料类型(柴油或柴油与天然气的混合燃料)。利用当前的市场价格,将 FR 浓度从 0.4 加仑/千升提高到 0.6 加仑/千升,可使每抽水小时的总成本降低近 5%,排放量减少高达 15.9%。通过改变传统的通过降低化学品浓度来降低成本的做法,转而从全局出发进行优化,从而减少了排放量、处理成本和设备使用。额外的马力可用于备用,进一步减少非生产时间,提高效率。通过适当的规划和理解,该解决方案将为完井提供更高效的环境。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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