The Application of Data Validation and Reconciliation to Upstream Production Measurement Integration and Surveillance – Field Study

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vincent van der Bent ◽  
Amin Amin ◽  
Timothy Jadot

Abstract With the advent of increased measurements and instrumentation in oil and gas upstream production infrastructure; in the wellbore, in subsea and on surface processing facilities, data integration from all sources can be used more effectively in producing consistent and robust production profiles. The proposed data integration methodology aims at identifying the sources of measurement and process errors and removing them from the system. This ensures quasi error-free data when driving critical applications such as well rate determination from virtual and multiphase meters, and production allocation schemes, to name few. Confidence in the data is further enhanced by quantifying the uncertainty of each measured and unmeasured variable. Advanced Data Validation and Reconciliation (DVR) methodology uses data redundancy to correct measurements. As more data is ingested in a modeling system the statistical aspect attached to each measurement becomes an important source of information to further improve its precision. DVR is an equation-based calculation process. It combines data redundancy and conservation laws to correct measurements and convert them into accurate and reliable information. The methodology is used in upstream oil & gas, refineries and gas plants, petrochemical plants as well as power plants including nuclear. DVR detects faulty sensors and identifies degradation of equipment performance. As such, it provides more robust inputs to operations, simulation, and automation processes. The DVR methodology is presented using field data from a producing offshore field. The discussion details the design and implementation of a DVR system to integrate all available field data from the wellbore and surface facilities. The integrated data in this end-to-end evaluation includes reservoir productivity parameters, downhole and wellhead measurements, tuned vertical lift models, artificial lift devices, fluid sample analysis and thermodynamic models, and top facility process measurements. The automated DVR iterative runs solve all conservation equations simultaneously when determining the production flowrates "true values" and their uncertainties. The DVR field application is successfully used in real-time to ensure data consistency across a number of production tasks including the continual surveillance of the critical components of the production facility, the evaluation and validation of well tests using multiphase flow metering, the virtual flow metering of each well, the modeling of fluid phase behavior in the well and in the multistage separation facility, and performing the back allocation from sales meters to individual wells.

Author(s):  
Bing Cheng ◽  
Qingping Li ◽  
Jue Wang ◽  
Qing Wang

Due to the inconvenient maintenance and high costs of subsea flowmeters, virtual subsea flow metering technology is developed for subsea gas condensate fields, especially for marginal fields. In this paper, virtual subsea flow metering technology is introduced, the advantages are summarized, and international virtual metering products are listed. For a typical gas field virtual subsea flow metering system, the configuration, input and output data, as well as flow models and calculation methodology is explained. A virtual flow metering field application case in a subsea tieback gas condensate field in offshore China is introduced, from the project background to the application execution and finally the results. The virtual metering results met well with gas field data and showed great robustness by continuously working on the site.


Tech-E ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 23
Author(s):  
Bella Liantono ◽  
Edy Edy

Project planning has several stages or project activity plans that can result in the running of a project more optimally to the project estimation that can help the planning manager or project manager work together in preparing project implementation at PT. Pakarti Tirtoagung. PT. Pakarti Tirtoagung is a business that will produce an intangible product (service) / service activity for construction and oil services that will be used for the needs of other companies. Problems at PT. Pakarti Tirtoagung in processing project data using the MS system. Excel which results in data redundancy so it must check data -  data and must be input again. This results in data redundancy and lack of data consistency so the presentation of project manager information is less accurate. Then this research uses CPM (Critical Path Method) method to determine the level of project progress in order to optimize project duration, possibility of accelerating time of project implementation and make it easier as admin by supporting project estimation activities, making it easier to manage planning of project activities and preparing a project scheduling. The design is implemented using PHP and MySQL database servers.


1999 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alejandro Zaleta-Aguilar ◽  
Armando Gallegos-Muñoz ◽  
Antonio Valero ◽  
Javier Royo

Abstract This work builds on the previous work on “Exergoeconomics Fuel-Impact” developed by Torres (1991), Valero et. al. (1994), and compares it with respect to the Performance Test Code (PTC’s) actually applied in power plants (ASME/ANSI PTC-6, 1970). With the objective of proposing procedures for PTC’s in power plant’s based on an exergoeconomics point of view. It was necessary to validate the Fuel-Impact Theories, and improve the conceptual expression, in order to make it more applicable to the real conditions in the plant. By mean of a program using simulation and field data, it was possible to validate and compare the procedures. This work has analyzed an example of a 110 MW Power Plant, in which all the exergetic costs have been determined for the steam cycle, and a fuel-impact analysis has been developed for the steam turbines at the design and off-design conditions. The result of the fuel-impact analysis is compared with respect to a classical procedure related in ASME-PTC-6.


2019 ◽  
Vol 7 (4) ◽  
pp. 353-365 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter J. Cobb ◽  
Tiffany Earley-Spadoni ◽  
Philip Dames

AbstractThe methodical recording and representation of spatial data are central to archaeological fieldwork and research. Until recently, centimeter-level precise geolocation equipment was the exclusive domain of researchers who could afford setups costing tens of thousands of dollars. However, high-quality measurements are being made more accessible by rapidly evolving technologies. These new tools, when used together with mobile technology for efficiently recording field data, open up the possibility of capturing the precise location of every find during an archaeological surface survey. An important step in reaching the desired outcome—centimeter-level recording for all—is experimentation with a variety of emerging low-cost setups. Accordingly, we tested the Reach and Reach RS, differential global navigation satellite systems (dGNSS) equipment produced by the company Emlid, during a surface survey in Armenia in June 2018. Our field application demonstrates that the use of dGNSS is already possible and that the described advances in precision enable improved recording and representation of spatial data.


2012 ◽  
Vol 55 (1) ◽  
pp. 10-24 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Hale ◽  
Jesse Porter

Multiple Degree of Freedom (MDOF) excitation systems and MDOF vibration control systems continue to improve, and are now standard equipment in many dynamic test laboratories. Determination of an input specification for such MDOF systems is critically dependent on properly acquired field data. Validation of field data will be discussed and demonstrated employing the same transformation tools used in both transformation-based 6-degree-of-freedom (6-DOF) vibration control and generalized MDOF vibration specification development (VSD).


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