Water injection (oil production)
In the oil industry, waterflooding or water injection is where water is injected into the oil reservoir, to maintain the pressure, or to drive oil towards the wells, and thereby increase production. Water injection wells may be located on- and offshore, to increase oil recovery from an existing reservoir.
Normally only 30% of the oil in a reservoir can be extracted, but water injection increases the recovery and maintains the production rate of a reservoir over a longer period.
Waterflooding began accidentally in Pithole, Pennsylvania by 1865. Waterflooding became common in Pennsylvania in the 1880s.
Filters
Filters clean the water and remove impurities, such as sediments, shells, sand, algae and other biological matter. Typical filtration is to 2 micrometres, but depends on reservoir requirements. After filtration the remaining matter in the filtrate is fine enough to avoid blockage of the pores of the reservoir. Sand filters are a commonly used filtration technology.The sand filter has beds with various sizes of sand granules. The water flows through the first, coarsest, layer of sand down to the finest. To clean the filter the process is inverted. After the water is filtered it continues to the de-oxygenation tower.
Sand filters are bulky, heavy, have some spill over of sand particles and require chemicals to enhance water quality.
A more sophisticated approach is to use automatic self-cleaning backflushable screen filters.
The importance of proper water treatment is crucial; especially with river-, and seawater, intake water quality can vary significantly which may have significant impact on the performance of the water treatment facilities.
This may result in poor water quality, bioclogging of the reservoir and reduction of oil production.
De-oxygenation
Oxygen must be removed from the water because it promotes corrosion and growth of certain bacteria. Bacterial growth in the reservoir can produce hydrogen sulfide, a source of production problems, and may block the pores in the rock.A deoxygenation tower brings the injection water into contact with a gas stream. The filtered water flows down the de-oxygenation tower, splashing onto a series of trays or packing causing dissolved air to be transferred to the gas stream.
An alternative or supplementary method, also used as a backup to deoxygenation towers, is to add an oxygen scavenging agent such as sodium bisulfite and ammonium bisulphite.
Another option is to use membrane contactors. Membrane contactors bring the water into contact with an inert gas stream, such as nitrogen, to strip out dissolved oxygen. Membrane contactors have the advantage of being lower weight and compact enabling smaller system designs.
Water injection pumps
The high pressure, high flow water injection pumps are placed near to the de-oxygenation tower and boosting pumps. They fill the base of the reservoir with the filtered water to push the oil towards the wells like a piston. The result of the injection is not quick, it needs time.Water injection plants
The configuration of the plant elements described above and their operating conditions are outlined in this section. These examples are the former Amoco North West Hutton installation and the Buzzard installation in the North Sea.North West Hutton
The water injection system had two design cases- Case A – Injection of 100,000 barrels of water per day , injection pumps operating in parallel with a discharge pressure of 3,000 psi
- Case B – 60,000/65,000 BWPD, pumps in series /parallel, discharge pressure is 3,000 psi and 30,000/35,000 BWPD with a discharge pressure of 5,000 psi
Filtered water was routed to the top of the deaerator. This was a vertical vessel 12.6 m high and 4.0 m diameter, the internals comprise a packed bed. Air was stripped from the water by an upflow of fuel gas, gas/air was routed from the top of the vessel to the flare. Oxygen scavenger was injected into the deaerator vessel to remove any residual oxygen. Deaerated water was drawn from the base of the vessel by the deaerator pumps and was transferred to the cold water header operating at 90 psig.
Process and utility coolers were supplied from the cold water header, warm water from the coolers was routed to the degassing drum where any air or gas was removed. From the degassing drum water passed to the injection filters.
Water was filtered in the water injection filters, one duty and one on standby/backwash. From the filters water was routed to the water injection pumps.
The three water injection pumps each had a capacity of 221 m3/hr with a differential head of 2068.5 metres. The pumps discharged to the 3,000 psi manifold and wellheads. The single water injection booster pump took its suction from the discharge of the water injection pumps and discharged to the 5,000 psi manifold and wellheads.
There were eight water injection wells, each well had a capacity of 15,000 BWPD.
Buzzard
An alternative configuration and technology is used on the Buzzard field in the North Sea. Seawater lift pumps deliver 4,000m3/hr at 12 barg to the seawater coarse filtration package. After filtration the water is used to cool the cooling medium in the cooling medium plate exchangers. 2322.7 m3/hr of seawater now at 6 barg and 20°C is routed to the fine filters and then to the sulphate removal membrane where reverse osmosis is used to remove sulphate ions from the water.Desulphated water flows to the top of the deaerator column, this operates at a partial vacuum sustained by the deaerator vacuum unit. The deaerator internals comprise three packed beds. Deaerated water is taken from the base of the deaerator by transfer pumps which deliver 1632 m3/hr at 3.6 barg to the degasser surge drum. From the surge drum water is transferred to the water injection pumps which deliver water at up to 250,000 BWPD to up to 11 water injection wells.
Produced water is also injected into the reservoir at up to 350,000 BWPD.
Water injection wells
The table shows the number of water injection wells on a selection of offshore installations mainly in the North Sea.| Installation | Location | No. of water injection wells | Installation | Location | No. of water injection wells | |
| Brent C | North Sea | 9 | Namorado I | South America | 3 | |
| Claymore A | North Sea | 10 | Namorado II | South America | 11 | |
| Cormorant A | North Sea | 18 | Cherne I | South America | 5 | |
| Statfjord A | North Sea | 6 | Eider | North Sea | 7 | |
| Murchison | North Sea | 10 | Nelson | North Sea | 9 | |
| Magnus | North Sea | 5 | Tiffany | North Sea | 7 | |
| Brae A | North Sea | 14 | N W Hutton | North Sea | 8 |