The second
paper highlighted from the subsea/flow assurance track addresses flowline and
pipelines. Remotely operated dry hyperbaric welding technology has been further
developed in recent years and is now becoming the basis for offshore
applications both in subsea pipeline repair and hot-tapping technology. This
paper outlines the welding technology and the operational systems developed and
built to provide an offshore service.
The Pipeline
Repair System pool (PRS pool) is a joint development between Statoil and Hydro
to provide repair and construction support for the large oil and gas pipeline
transportation system on and from the Norwegian Continental Shelf in the North
Sea.
The
development is funded by a consortium of companies sharing costs in exchange
for access to the equipment. In 1987 Statoil was appointed to manage and
operate the system and since then a continuous development has been undertaken.
Currently PRS is the main repair contingency for approximately 10,000 km of
subsea pipelines with dimensions ranging from 8 to 44 in. and water depths down
to 600 m. This coverage is now being extended to water depths of 1,000 m as new
pipelines come onstream.
The PRS is a
comprehensive suite of subsea pipeline construction and repair tools, from
isolation plugs and cleaning tools to large manipulation and installation
frames, and welding habitat enclosures. The repair methods range from applying
support clamps to weakened sections to cutting away damaged sections and replacing
with new pipe, joining to the old by either mechanical connections or
hyperbaric welding.
The PRS pool
has over the last few years also invested in technology for remote hottapping
into subsea pipelines, the objective being to provide technology for development
projects which the commercial supplier market does not provide on short notice.
In order to
achieve this, new unique equipment and welding technology has been developed
and qualified with the objective to provide a fully remote operated system without
the need for diver-assisted tasks.
Pipeline
repair by welded sleeve technique
Traditional
hyperbaric welding techniques involve the use of precision machining of the
pipe ends and performing butt welds using the GTAW (gas tungsten arc welding)
process. This involves precision alignment that can be very demanding
(particularly on the second end and especially for large-diameter pipes).
The new
approach avoids the need to achieve butt to butt closure and limits the
requirement on precision alignment by threading a sleeve (slightly oversized to
the pipe) over one end and drawing it back over the two pipe ends to be joined
and making the welded join between the end of the sleeve and the pipe using a
GMAW (gas metal arc welding) fillet weld. This technique is used on relatively
small-diameter onshore pipelines and is part of the tools of the plumbing
trade, but it has not been deployed subsea for production pipeline repair.
The
development described in this paper is intended for use for repair of up to 44-in.
pipelines down to depths in excess of 1,000 m.
Such a
method is not covered directly in the existing regulations and codes of
practice, although some work has been performed to establish fitness for
purpose assessment criteria for sleeve welds, and as a result the project has
been working in conjunction with Det Norske Veritas to establish criteria that
could eventually form a code of practice.
The authors
discuss next the structural design of the welded sleeve against all relevant
limit states for maximum loads that can occur and with a safety margin dictated
by the use of appropriate safety factors.
The relevant
limit states are bursting, global yielding (including buckling), local
overstressing/overstraining, unstable fracture (including possible lifetime
crack growth) and fatigue. The relevant load cases are pressure testing (after
repair), maximum loading during operation and fatigue during operation. It is
necessary to consider axial loads that are both tensile-dominated (e.g., for
unrestrained pipe segments) and compressive-dominated (e.g., for partially or
fully restrained segments). Generally the design is governed by the
tensile-dominated maximum loading case in operation.
Remote
hot-tapping into subsea pipelines
The basic
principle of hot-tapping is to establish a new branch pipeline connection to an
existing (mother) pipeline while under full pressure. This involves connecting
the branch pipe, including a valve, to the mother pipeline, usually by means of
welding or mechanical clamp connections, cutting a hole in the pipe wall by a
machine attached to the valve, retracting the cutting head, closing the valve,
and disconnecting and recovering the cutting machine. The pipe branch may now
be extended by spools and tied-in to a new pipeline in the usual manner. This
strategy has been shown to be very cost-effective compared to alternative
methods, including shutdown and tie-in at ambient pressure.
So far,
divers have been used to weld the branch pipe to the mother pipeline and for
all installation and cutting operations.
The primary
focus of the remote hot-tap project is the development of a novel design
combining the use of a remotely installed mechanical clamp (the retrofit tee),
providing the necessary structural strength as well as interfaces toward the
isolation valve module and the hot-tap cutting tool, and a saddle-formed
"seal weld" made by remotely operated hyperbaric GMA welding inside
the branch pipe.
The authors
continue to provide a comprehensive overview of the structural design of the
hot-tap tee, the hyperbaric GMAW process, welding qualifications, experimental
equipment, procedural development, and installation of the welded sleeve and
hot-tap tee.
Dry
hyperbaric GMAW technology has been formally qualified for water depths down to
1,000 m and demonstrated and verified to a water depth down to 2,500 m.
The offshore
systems and welding technology is part of the PRS pool in Norway and is ready
for real applications offshore.
New unique
equipment and welding technology has been developed and qualified with the
objective to provide a fully remote operated system without the need for
diver-assisted tasks.
Sumber : Apeland, Kjell Edvard; Berge, Jan Olav; Verley, Richard; Armstrong, Michael;Woodward, Neil. "Deepwater Remote Welding Technology for Pipeline Repair and Hot-Tapping". 30 Januari 2014. http://search.proquest.com/docview/227301945?accountid=31562
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