AL GasLift
AL GasLift
AND OPTIMIZATION
by
Gábor Takács, PhD
The use and copying of this product is subject to a license agreement. Any other use is prohibited. No part of this publication may
be reproduced, transmitted, transcribed, stored in a retrieval system or translated into any language in any form by any means
without the written consent of the copyright owner.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
APPENDICES .............................................................................................................................. 79
APPENDIX B.............................................................................................................................. 80
APPENDIX D.............................................................................................................................. 82
APPENDIX E.............................................................................................................................. 85
APPENDIX F .............................................................................................................................. 92
CLASS PROBLEMS..................................................................................................................... 1
PAGE II
1. GAS LIFT INSTALLATION TYPES
1.1 INTRODUCTION
Gas lifting is a process of lifting fluids from an oil well by the injection of gas (a)
continuously in the upward-rising liquid column (in case of continuous flow gas lift), or
(b) underneath an accumulated liquid slug in a relatively short period of time to move the
slug to the surface (intermittent lift). In both cases, high-pressure gas (or air in early
practice) from the surface is led downhole, either through the casing-tubing annulus, the
tubing, or some special conduit. This gas is injected into formation fluids at
predetermined depth or depths in the well. To achieve an efficient operation and to
ensure that the proper amount of gas is injected at all times, gas entry must be controlled
by utilizing some kind of a downhole control device. In modern practice gas lift valves
are used for downhole gas injection control.
Different gas lift installations contain different combinations of downhole equipment:
gas lift valves, packers, mandrels, nipples and subs, etc. The type of gas lift installation is
mainly governed by the type of lift used: continuous flow or intermittent lift. Equipment
selection is based on original well conditions but should provide for the necessary
flexibility to reduce the number of future workover operations. A proper gas lift
installation design, therefore, assures trouble-free operation for the entire productive life
of a well. [ 1, 2 ]
The usual gas lift installation types are classified in two broad categories: tubing flow
and casing flow installations. In a tubing flow installation lift gas is injected in the
casing-tubing annulus and production occurs through the tubing string, whereas a casing
flow installation allows gas injection through the tubing string and the well is produced
from the annulus. The following sections present detailed discussions of the most
common versions of gas lift installations.
In these cases, lift gas from the surface is injected down the casing-tubing annulus and
liquid production takes place up the tubing string. Except in wells with extremely large
liquid production rates, tubing flow installations are generally recommended because of
their many advantages: no corrosive and/or abrasive liquids flow in the casing string,
well killing is easily accomplished, etc.
1.2.1 OPEN INSTALLATION
In the open gas lift installation the tubing is simply hung inside the casing string and
no packer is run in the well. (Fig. 4.1) This is the original installation type used in the
early days of gas lifting when no gas lift valves were installed on the tubing and lift gas
had to be injected at the tubing shoe. This resulted in poor economics of gas usage that
is why today's open installations contain gas lift valves.
Fig. 4.1
Open tubing flow installation
with gas injection
at the tubing shoe
recommended.
If gas lift valves are also run in an open
installation, a substantial length of tubing
should extend below the operating valve as
shown in Fig. 4.2 to prevent gas to be blown
around the tubing shoe. The fluid "seal" thus
created permits a constant flowing bottomhole
pressure independent of injection pressure
fluctuations. Bottomhole pressure in such
cases can attain the same values as if a packer
were installed and the well can be lifted with
optimum gas usage.
There are several drawbacks of open
installations in continuous flow:
• Every time the well is shut down, well Fig. 4.2
fluids rise in the annulus and the well Open tubing flow installation
should be unloaded to the depth of the with a “fluid seal” and gas lift valves
This type of installation (Fig. 4.3) differs from the open installation by a packer set at
a deep enough point in the well. The packer isolates the tubing from the annulus and
eliminates most of the disadvantages of an open installation. Very often, in order to limit
the damage done by well fluids passing through unloading valves, a sliding side door is
run just above the packer. This is opened during initial unloading and provides
communication between the annulus and the tubing string. Most of the liquid flow from
the annulus to the tubing takes place through the open side door reducing the amount
passed by the open unloading valves. After unloading, the door is closed by a wireline
operation and the well is put on gas lift. The semi-closed installation offers the following
advantageous features:
A closed gas lift installation differs from a semi-closed one by the application of a
standing (check) valve at the tubing shoe, see Fig. 4.4. Most wells on intermittent gas
lift employ this type of downhole construction. The standing valve eliminates the effects
of gas lift pressure on the formation since during injection, gas pressure in the tubing is
isolated from the formation by the standing valve, while in the annulus the packer seals
it. The average flowing bottomhole pressure during an intermittent cycle can thus be kept
to a minimum and it is not affected by injection pressure. A sliding side door to reduce
the damage of the unloading valve string is often run above the packer.
Fig. 4.4
Closed gas lift installation
Fig. 4.5
Variation of bottomhole pressure
in the closed and semi-closed installations
Chamber installations are used in intermittent gas lift wells with low formation
pressures near abandonment, because such installations enable the lowest possible
flowing bottomhole pressures to be attained in gas lift operations. The explanation for
this feature is that well fluids in chamber installations accumulate in special chambers
having substantially larger diameters than the tubing. If the same liquid column height is
allowed to accumulate, chambers will contain much greater liquid volumes due to their
bigger capacities. Since bottomhole pressure is proportional to the hydrostatic pressure
of the liquid column which, in turn, depends on column height only, pressure buildup
In cases where two packers cannot be set in the well (open hole completions, long
perforated intervals, bad casing, etc.) the insert chamber installation is used. In this case,
the chamber is constructed from a larger pipe section at the bottom of the tubing string.
Since it has to be run through the casing string, the diameter of an insert chamber is
considerable less than that of the casing. In spite of this disadvantage, all benefits of
chamber lift operation can be realized with insert chambers as well. The main
components and the operation of an intermittent cycle are identical to those described
above for the two-packer chamber installation.
Two basic versions of insert chambers can be classified based on the type of packer
used. In cases when the well’s production rate justifies the use of a more expensive
bypass packer, the installation schematically depicted in Fig. 4.7 is used. As shown, the
Multiple installations involve production of more than one formation through the
same well. Although production by gas lift of several zones is possible, dual
installations with two formations being simultaneously produced are predominantly
used. As in case of any dual or multiple oil well installation, the main principle to be
followed is that different zones must be produced independently of each other. The
reason for this is that accountability of the liquid rates coming from the different
formations cannot be ensured if commingling of the wellstreams is allowed.
It follows from the above principle that dual gas lift installations are equipped with
two tubing strings reaching to the depth of the two zones opened in the well. Since the
two tubing strings share a common casing annulus and must therefore utilize the same
injection pressure, interference of the two zone’s operation is a basic problem. One rarely
used solution involves a separate conduit that supplies gas to one of the zones, the other
zone being supplied from the casing annulus.
Fig. 4.12
Coiled tubing (CT) gas lift installation
In a casing flow installation gas is injected down the tubing and production rises in
the casing-tubing annulus, see Fig. 4.13. It is generally used in continuous flow gas lift
wells producing extremely large liquid rates that exceed the capacity of the tubing string
run in the well. Its main drawback is that the casing is exposed to well fluids restricting
application to non-corrosive liquids.
Fig. 4.13
Casing flow gas lift installation with
bull-plugged tubing
2.1 INTRODUCTION
The gas lift valve is the heart of a gas lift installation since it provides the necessary
control of well production rates and its performance determines the technical and
economic parameters of fluid lifting. Because of its importance, there is a great number
of varieties of gas lift valves developed over the years. The abundance of the different
operating principles and technical features allows the operator to choose the proper type
of valve for any case.
2.1.1 EVOLUTION OF GAS LIFT VALVES
The great variety of different operating principles and features of gas lift valves
developed over the years makes it difficult to set up a system of classification covering
all possible types. Based on different aspects, valves can be grouped in different classes.
The following overview introduces the main classes where current or early gas lift valves
belong to and gives a short description of their main technical features.
Based on their control of operation, all gas lift valves can be classified into one of the
following groups:
• Mechanically controlled from the surface (by wireline, drop bar, etc.).
• Other control methods include flow velocity, specific gravity, etc.
• Pressure operated valves are opened and closed by injection and/or production
pressures. They include a huge number of different subtypes to be described in
subsequent sections.
According to their application, gas lift valves can be used for unloading or as an
operating valve:
• Unloading valves are used for the startup of gas lift operations only and are
usually closed during normal production. A string of unloading valves with the
proper setting is activated every time the well is brought back to production after
shutdown.
• Operating valves ensure normal gas lift operations and inject the right amount of
gas into the well. The valves suited for continuous and intermittent gas lifting
may be different because of the different requirements of these two principal
types of gas lift.
Gas lift valves can also be classified according to the method they are run in the well:
• Conventional valves are attached to the outside of the tubing in special mandrels
and can be run and retrieved along with the tubing string only.
• Retrievable valves require special mandrels with inside pockets to receive the
valve. Such valves are run on wireline tools inside the tubing string and can be
retrieved without the need to pull the tubing.
• Concentric valves are special subs in the tubing string and can be run and
retrieved with the tubing string only.
Finally, gas lift valves can be classed according to the place fluid flow occurs (in the
tubing or in the casing annulus), although most valves can be applied in both cases
depending on the type of the valve mandrel used.
• Tubing flow valves inject gas from the casing-tubing annulus into the tubing
string, whereas
• Casing flow valves allow the injection from the tubing string to the well’s
annular space.
2.1.3 SUPPORTING CALCULATIONS
To accurately describe the operation of pressure operated gas lift valves, one must
consider the valve’s actual operational conditions: the temperature and the injection
pressure at valve setting depth. Both parameters affect the behavior of the valve in the
well and their proper knowledge is of prime importance in gas lift design. Temperature at
valve setting depth affects the pressure in the valve’s gas dome and, in turn determines
the force arising on the bellows cross sectional area. Injection pressure at valve depth, on
the other hand, provides a force trying to open the valve. However, both the above
parameters, i.e. dome charge pressure and injection pressure at valve depth are not
readily available and have to be calculated from surface data. The present section
describes the ways to solve this problem.
This equation allows one to find downhole or surface dome pressures from the
knowledge of the other pressure. Solution for the downhole bellows pressure results in
the formula below, where the usual workshop temperature of 60°F is assumed to prevail
at charging conditions:
Z ( pd , Tv ) Tv + 460 '
pd =
(
Z pd' , Tch ) 520
pd 3.2
(
b = 1.207 × 10 −7 T 3 − 1.302 × 10 −4 T 2 + 5.122 × 10 −2 − 4.781 10 −5 ) 3.4
c = (− 2.461 × 10 −8
)
T 3 + 2.640 × 10 −5 T 2 − 1.058 × 10 −2 + 1.880 10 −8 3.5
where: T = temperature, F
p = pressure, psia.
The above formulas give accuracies better than ±0.1% in the indicated ranges of
pressure and temperature. Their utilization in the iterative solution discussed above
allowed the development of charts like the one presented in Fig. 3.5, where downhole
400
1700
360
1600
320
1500
280
1400 240
Nitrogen Dome Charge Pressure at Valve Temperature, psig
1300 200
160
1200
120
1100
80
1000
900
800
700
600
500
400
300
200
200 300 400 500 600 700 800 900 1000
Fig. 3.5
Chart for calculating the change in dome pressures
for gas lift valves charged with nitrogen gas
dome pressure, pd, is plotted as a function of surface dome charge pressure, pd’, for
different temperatures. Appendix D contains full-page copies of similar charts with
different pressure ranges.
Some manufacturers use natural gas to charge their gas lift valves. The behavior of
natural gas, as discussed in Section 2.2.4.1, heavily depends on its composition and
cannot be as accurately predicted as the behavior of nitrogen gas. Therefore, calculation
320
1700
280
1600
240
1500
1400
1300
160
1200
120
1100
80
1000
900
800
700
600
500
400
300
200
200 300 400 500 600 700 800 900 1000
Fig. 3.6
Chart for calculating the change in dome pressures
for gas lift valves charged with a natural gas of Sp.Gr. = 0.70
1500
1400 13,000
11,000
10,000
1300
9,000
8,000
7,000
1200
6,000
5,000
4,000
1100
3,000
Downhole Pressure, psig
2,000
1,000
1000
900
800
700
600
500
400
400 500 600 700 800 900 1000
Fig. 3.7
Downhole vs. surface injection pressure chart
for a gas specific gravity of Sp.Gr. = 0.70
2.2.1 INTRODUCTION
Out of the great many kinds of gas lift valves invented in the last hundred years, only
the pressure operated type survived to these days. Pressure operation means that the
valve’s behavior is controlled by injection pressure, production pressure, or both.
This control mechanism is easily adapted to gas lifting since pressure control is a
frequently occurring operation in the oil field. Using the familiar pressure control devices
at the surface, gas lift valves are easily controlled by changing the surface injection
pressure, which in turn involves pressure changes at the valve’s setting depth. This
pressure provides a control signal to the valve and the valve behaves according to its
predetermined mechanical features. In order that the valve “senses” the changes in
pressure, all pressure operated valves are provided with a reference pressure or force that
comes from a gas charged dome, a spring, or a combination of both. By properly
setting these references at the surface (with the right amount of pressure charge or spring
force) the valve can be made to open and close according to the actual requirements of
the gas lift installation.
2.2.2 VALVE MECHANICS
2.2.2.1 Introduction
This section discusses the mechanical construction of the most important kinds of
pressure operated gas lift valves and gives an overview of their operational features. All
valves will be fully described and their opening and closing conditions will be detailed
using force balance equations. Although these balance equations are only valid for
static conditions and the dynamic performance of the valves is covered in a later
section, basic understanding of the various valve’s performance is ensured.
Formerly, when classifying gas lift valves, the industry used the terms “casing
pressure operated” and “tubing pressure operated” to denote valves that are more
sensitive to casing or tubing pressure, respectively. These terms are correct if a tubing
flow installation is used where casing pressure automatically means injection gas
pressure and tubing pressure reflects to the pressure of the produced fluid. For casing
flow installations, however, the above terms can be misleading because gas is injected
through the tubing string and fluid production occurs in the annulus. This is the reason
why the above terms seem to be outdated and are being gradually replaced by the
expressions “injection pressure operated” (IPO) and “production pressure operated”
(PPO) which are more general and always refer to the right pressures. In the following,
these terms will be used.
Throughout the discussion of the various valve types, for the sake of simplicity and to
provide a uniform treatment, valves will be depicted in their conventional (tubing
outside mounted) versions for tubing flow installations, wherever possible. These basic
valves, as will be seen later, can be used in tubing or casing flow installations as well as
in injection or production pressure operations, depending on the various possible
combinations of their versions (conventional or wireline retrievable) and the types of gas
lift mandrels used.
Appendix F contains tables with mechanical data on gas lift valves available from
some leading manufacturers of gas lift equipment.
Since the valve is injection pressure operated, it is most sensitive to injection pressure
and this is the pressure it is usually opened with. This is the reason why the above
equation is solved for injection pressure. The resulting formula is called the valve’s
opening equation and gives the value of the injection pressure necessary to open the
valve:
Av
pd Ab
pio = − pp 3.16
Av A
1− 1− v
Ab Ab
Fig. 3.22
Schematic drawing of an unbalanced,
bellows charged gas lift valve
As seen from the opening equation, the injection pressure required to open the valve
in the closed position depends not only on the dome charged pressure but on the
production pressure as well. The higher the production pressure, the lower the injection
pressure necessary for opening the valve. At a constant production pressure, as soon as
the injection pressure reaches the value calculated from Eq. 3.17, the valve starts to
open. For the following discussion it is assumed that as soon as the valve opens the valve
stem completely lifts off the seat and the full area of the port is opened for injection gas
flow.
If the valve is fully open, as in Fig. 3.22, a new balance of the forces acting on the
valve stem must be written up. When doing so, a general assumption is that the pressure
on the valve stem tip equals the injection pressure. This can be justified because the
total flow area of the valve inlet ports is much greater than the cross sectional area of the
valve port, so flowing gas pressure will drop across the valve port. This means that the
pressure upstream of the port is very close to injection pressure. Thus, injection pressure
acts on the total bellows area and tries to keep the valve open. Closing force comes from
the dome charge pressure, as before, and the balance of forces results in the following
equation:
pd Ab = pi Ab 3.18
It should be mentioned that the above treatment considers static conditions only and
the dynamic performance of the valve (subject of a later section) may be different. This
is caused by the fact that the pressure below the valve stem may be different from
injection pressure when the valve closes. In intermittent gas lift, at the moment the
operating valve closes, production and injection pressures are very close to each other
and the valve closes at the injection pressure found from its closing equation. In
continuous flow applications, however, injection pressure is always greater than
production pressure and the valve closes at an injection pressure different from the value
found from Eq. 3.19.
A graphical presentation of the opening and closing performance of an unbalanced
injection pressure operated valve at downhole conditions is given in Fig. 3.23. The
presence of a reverse flow check valve, always attached to gas lift valves, prevents
operation at any production pressure greater than injection pressure, above the pp = pi
line. At injection pressures lower than dome charge pressure, the required production
pressure to open the valve would be more than the actual injection pressure and, because
of the action of the reverse flow check, the valve is closed. This area is indicated by the
darkest shading in the figure. The opening injection pressure (Eq. 3.17) is a linear
function of production pressure and is shown in bold line. Opening of the valve occurs
along this line, whereas closing occurs along the vertical line pi = pd. Inside the triangle
formed by the line of the opening pressure and the constant dome charge pressure, the
state of the valve depends on its previous state: if it was closed before then it stays closed
as long as injection or production pressures (or both) do not cross the bold line. If the
valve was opened previously then it stays open until injection pressure drops below the
dome charge pressure.
650
600
CAMCO J-20
550 Port Size 7/16"
Production Pressure, psig
500 pd
450
pd'
400 @ Tv
350 o
@ 60 F
300
250
SPREAD PPE
200
150
100
50
TRO
0
350 400 450 500 550 600 650
Valves are set in special valve testers, usually at zero production pressure. Applying
the opening equation and substituting a production pressure of pp = 0, we can find the
injection pressure required to open the valve at these conditions from Eq. 3.17. This
pressure is called the valve’s test rack opening pressure, or TRO value:
pd′
TRO = 3.21
1− R
As seen, PPEF is a geometrical constant for a given valve with a given port size and
represents the drop in the valve’s opening injection pressure for a unit increase in
production pressure. In a tubing flow installation, production pressure equals tubing
pressure, PPEF may therefore be called tubing effect factor (TEF), a formerly widely
used term. Eq. 3.23 reveals that for a given valve PPEF increases as valve port size
increases.
Valve spread is defined as the difference between the opening and closing pressures
of a gas lift valve. This difference is caused by the fact that different pressures act on the
valve port when the valve is open and when it is closed. Spread is a function of the valve
geometry, dome charge pressure, and production pressure and is defined as:
SPREAD = pio − pic 3.24
After substitution of the opening pressure from Eq. 3.17 and the closing pressure
from Eq. 3.19 we get:
pd − p p R
SPREAD =
1− R
− pd =
R
1− R
(
pd − p p ) 3.25
The above formula contains the PPEF defined by Eq. 3.23 and the final formula for
valve spread is:
(
SPREAD = PPEF pd − p p ) 3.26
As shown in Fig. 3.24 for an example valve, valve spread is zero when injection and
production pressures are identical and reaches its maximum at zero production pressure.
For a given valve size (given bellows area) valve spread heavily depends on port size.
This is illustrated in Fig. 3.25 where valve characteristics for every available port size of
an example valve are given for a set dome charge pressure. Spread (the difference of
opening and closing pressures) is seen to increase as port diameter increases.
Valve spread is a very important parameter in intermittent gas lift installations
utilizing a choke on the surface to inject the lift gas into the annulus. Under such
situations, casing pressure continuously increases until valve opening pressure is reached
and the gas lift valve starts to inject gas into the tubing. As soon as the valve opens,
casing pressure starts to drop and the gas lift valve closes when casing pressure drops to
the dome pressure of the valve. Because of this process, lift gas is stored in the annulus
whose pressure extremes are the valve’s opening and closing pressures. The amount of
gas stored in the annulus and used for fluid lifting can easily be calculated based on the
volume of the annulus and the pressure drop, the latter being equal to valve spread.
Therefore, the amount of gas used for one intermittent cycle is a direct function of the
actual valve spread. This implies that the selection of valve ports is a critical factor in
intermittent gas lift design because valve spread is defined by the port area. An improper
port size always results in too low or too high injection volumes per cycle.
Production Pressure,sig
500 pd
450
CAMCO J-20
400
pd = 480 psig
350
300
250
200
150
100
1/4 3/8 1/2
50 5/16
Port Size, in = 3/16 7/16
0
450 500 550 600 650
Because this valve is much more sensitive to production pressure than injection
pressure, the above equation is solved for production pressure at the instant the valve
opens. Using the terminology as before and denoting the group R/(1 – R) by injection
pressure effect factor (IPEF), we get:
pd
p po = − IPEF pi + p sp 3.35
1− R
Fig. 3.28
Unbalanced valve with normal seat used in
production pressure operated service
The term IPEF is a geometrical constant for a given valve with a given port size and
represents the drop in the valve’s opening production pressure for a unit increase in
injection pressure. In a tubing flow installation, injection pressure equals casing pressure,
IPEF may therefore be called casing effect factor (CEF), a formerly widely used term.
In the open position, the pressure under the valve stem is assumed to equal production
pressure because the valve is supposed to open fully. To ensure this kind of operation,
small ports are used in production pressure operated valves. If the port is larger the
valve must be choked upstream of the port. Through this solution, production rather
than injection pressure will act on the total bellows area in the open position making the
valve relatively insensitive to injection pressure. The valve’s closing conditions are
described by the following force balance equation, valid in the valve’s open position:
pd Ab + p sp ( Ab − Av ) = p p Ab 3.36
From this, the closing production pressure of the valve is easily found:
p pc = pd + p sp (1 − R ) 3.37
If the opening and closing equations are combined, the following formula describes
the relationship of the opening and closing production pressures:
p pc − R pi
p po = 3.38
1− R
2.2.3.1 Introduction
Although gas passage characteristics of gas lift valves are of paramount importance,
the gas lift industry did not investigate the problem in depth for many years. In the past,
the performance of gas lift valves was described by the static force balance equations
1200
Fig. 3.48
Comparison of the gas injection rates through a fixed orifice
and a throttling gas lift valve
The throttling valve’s gas passage characteristics are different from the behavior of a
fixed orifice as shown in Fig. 3.48. At lower production pressures, flow through the
orifice reaches critical conditions and there is no control over the gas volume injected in
the production string. The gas lift valve, in contrast, allows an ideal control of the gas
throughput capacity. In continuous flow operations, the throttling portion of the
performance curve permits the maintenance of a constant flow gradient in the
production string, a basic requirement for an efficient lifting of well fluids. This valve
then properly responds to fluctuations in well inflow conditions and is therefore often
called a “proportional response” valve.
2.2.3.3 General Models
Research into the dynamic behavior of gas lift valves received a new impetus in the
1980s, after the founding of TUALP (Tulsa University Artificial Lift Projects), an
industry-sponsored research consortium. Several papers were published [ 22 – 25 ]
covering the main results of many years’ experimental work. The approach adopted by
TUALP and most of the present-day investigations can be summed as up as follows:
• for each valve a large database is set up by measuring all significant flow
parameters for a variety of closely controlled test conditions,
• from the measured gas rates and other relevant parameters, flow coefficients are
calculated for each case, and
• using statistical methods, flow coefficients and other pertinent performance data
are correlated.
Nieberding et al. [ 22 ] were the first to point out that gas passage through gas lift
valves can occur under two different flow patterns: orifice and throttling flow. Orifice
flow is very similar to gas flow through a fixed choke, whereas throttling flow resembles
flow through a variable area Venturi device. Fig. 3.50 shows schematic performance
curves in the gas rate vs. production pressure coordinate system for these two flow
patterns. The orifice flow model can be divided into two regions: subcritical and
critical. For a constant injection pressure, pi, decreasing production pressures entail an
pp cr.
any further decrease in pi < ptran pi > ptran
tubing pressure. This
flow pattern occurs with Submax. Subcrit.
the valve stem at its
maximum travel when the THROTTLING
valve port behaves as a MODEL
ptran
fixed orifice. (see
ppmax
Section 2.4.5) ppc pd pi pi
For injection pressures
less than a definite Production Pressure
transition pressure ptran, Fig. 3.50
the valve behaves
Schematic gas lift valve performance curves
differently and is in the for the orifice and the throttling flow patterns
throttling flow pattern.
When production
pressure decreases from pp = pi, the gas rate increases from zero, due to an increasing
pressure differential across the valve seat. After reaching a maximum value, injection
rate linearly decreases with production pressure until gas flow ceases at the closing
production pressure, ppc. This kind of behavior was discussed in detail previously. The
throttling type of performance curve is also divided into two regions by the production
pressure belonging to the maximum flow rate and denoted by ppmax. The subcritical
region is similar to the orifice flow and the sub-maximal region is the usual application
range of the valve.
2.2.3.3.1 Valve Performance Curves
The calculation model described in API RP 11V2 allows the determination of gas lift
valve performance curves, which show the gas throughput rates for different
conditions. Fig. 3.51 contains relevant curves for the CAMCO BK type valve with a
5/16” port, a dome charge pressure of 800 psig, and a valve temperature of 140°F. The
transition pressure, as calculated from Eq. 3.76 and shown in bold line, divides the two
characteristic flow patterns of the valve. Injection pressure is held constant for each
curve and gas rate varies with production pressure. Use of such performance curves is
helpful when analyzing the injection conditions of gas lift valves.
800
400
pi (psig) = 974
300 945
916
200 887
858
100 829
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
800
900
1000
1100
1200
0
Fig. 3.51
Gas throughput performance of a CAMCO BK gas lift valve,
calculated from API RP 11V2
2.2.4.1 Introduction
Before they are run in the well, gas lift valves must be set to the accurate
specifications determined during the installation design calculations. The proper setting
of each valve in the installation ensures that the well will operate according to the
original design. Installation design calculations prescribe the required valve type, port
size, dome charge pressure, spring adjustment, differential spring setting, etc. When the
required valve with the necessary port is selected, the gas lift expert needs to correctly set
the valve’s pressure setting. As will be seen later, direct setting of the dome charge
pressure is seldom possible so opening or closing pressures are set in special valve
testers. The recommended pressure setting procedure is detailed in Appendix B of
API Spec. 11V1 [ 10 ].
For bellows-type gas lift valves, the most important phase of valve setting is the
checking of the dome charge pressure because the nitrogen gas contained in the valve
dome is subject to great changes in temperature. Charging is done at a controlled shop
temperature but the valve, after run in the well, operates at a much higher temperature
valid at valve setting depth. The resultant dome pressure increase can accurately be
calculated, making it possible to properly account for the temperature effect. If the valve
does not contain a gas charge but a spring only, valve setting procedures are simpler
since the behavior of metal springs is not affected by temperature. Therefore, the valve
can be set to downhole specifications in the shop.
Valve setting procedures necessitate the use of several pieces of special equipment:
• Valve Testers. Depending on valve type, such testers allow the determination
and adjustment of the opening or the closing pressure of the valve.
determine with the sleeve-type tester. As seen, this tester simulates actual well
conditions since pressure can be applied not only to the bellows but also to the valve port
area. The two pressure gauges measure injection (upstream) and production
(downstream) pressures acting on the bellows and the port areas, respectively.
Almost any type of gas lift valve can be set and adjusted with the use of this valve
tester but its main application is for spring loaded throttling valves without any dome
charge pressure. The usual setting procedure involves the following steps:
1. The valve is installed in the tester with an initial spring setting.
2. With Valve A closed, open Valve B and apply supply pressure to the inlet ports
of the gas lift valve. As pressure increases, at one point the gas lift valve opens
and injection pressure reaches to Valve A. Both pressure gauges read the same
value.
3. Close Valve B to cut off gas supply. The gas lift valve stays open and the gauges
show identical upstream and downstream pressures.
Fig. 3.54
Schematic drawing of an encapsulated gas lift valve tester
If a gas lift valve with a bellows charge is to be set, the procedure is modified to
ensure that the gas charge is always under the specified valve setting temperature. This
involves frequent immersion of the valve in the controlled temperature water bath.
During the evolution of gas lift equipment, many different valve types working on
different principles had been developed. Recent advances include a surface controlled
electric valve [ 28 ] in which the size of the valve port and the gas throughput capacity is
remotely controlled. As discussed previously, in today’s gas lift technology the pressure
operated valve is the dominant type but the valves presented in this section deserve
introduction.
2.3.1 ORIFICE VALVE
In many continuous flow gas lift wells the operating valve is a simple choke (square-
edged orifice) installed in the gas lift valve mandrel and often called an orifice valve.
These “valves” come in the same housing and main dimensions as gas lift valves and can
The nozzle-Venturi gas lift valve invented by Schmidt [ 29 ] replaces the orifice
valve and prevents the heading problems associated with subcritical flow through
orifices. It is similar to an orifice valve in construction but instead of a fixed choke, the
flow control element is a converging-diverging Venturi device. The nozzle-Venturi and
the orifice valves are compared in Figure 3.66, where cross-sections and pressure
distributions along the flow path are shown. It is assumed that critical flow with sonic
velocity occurs in the throat section of both devices. Flowing pressure in the orifice valve
Fig. 3.67
Gas passage characteristics of
orifice and nozzle-Venturi gas lift valves
With the above parameters given, the two main tasks of the installation design can be
accomplished by the use of a graphical procedure. Design calculations are done in a
rectangular coordinate system with the ordinate representing well depth (with zero depth
at the top) and the abscissa representing pressure. The use of this coordinate system
provides a simple and easily understandable way to depict well pressures.
1. First the well’s static bottomhole pressure, SBHP, is plotted at total well
depth. The kill fluid gradient is started from this pressure and is extended
towards the surface until it intersects the ordinate axis. The intersection
denotes the static liquid level in the well.
2. Since inflow parameters are known, the required flowing bottomhole pressure,
FBHP, is found from the desired rate and the inflow performance
relationship (IPR), and is plotted at total well depth.
3. The next task is to plot the injection pressure distribution in the well’s annulus
starting from the surface operating gas lift pressure. This pressure should be
available at the wellsite at all times and must be selected based on compressor
discharge pressure, line losses, and an allowance for fluctuating line pressures.
Starting from the surface injection pressure, pinj, the increase in annulus
pressure can is calculated.
4. Since liquid rate and formation gas-liquid ratio, GLRp, are known, a pressure
traverse starting from the flowing bottomhole pressure, FBHP, can be
established. This curve may be calculated from any multiphase flow
correlation or may be traced from available flowing gradient curves.
where: GLRtotal = calculated GLR above the point of gas injection, scf/bbl,
GLRp = formation GLR, scf/bbl,
Design Considerations
The above procedure results in reliable designs as long as all required parameters are
well known. In practice, however, this is not always the case and the following
considerations should be taken into account:
• The surface gas injection pressure should be based on the pressure always
available at the wellsite. In case of a fluctuating line pressure, its minimum
value must be taken as the design pressure. This ensures that the required surface
injection pressure is available at all times.
There are two very basic considerations affecting continuous flow gas lift design
which must be mentioned before any detailed discussion. Both relate to the effectiveness
of the gas lift process and can be easily understood by using basic multiphase flow
principles only. One shows the effect of injection depth, the other shows the effect of
multipoint injection on the performance of a well placed on continuous flow gas lift.
3.1.1.1 The Effect of Injection Depth
The effect of gas injection depth on the performance of a continuous flow gas lift
well will be shown for two basic cases, for constant and variable liquid rates. If the well
is assumed to produce at a constant liquid rate, the effect of the depth of gas injection is
schematically shown in Fig. 5.5. Liquid rate being constant, the well’s flowing
bottomhole pressure, FBHP, is also constant. In the knowledge of the formation gas-
liquid ratio, GLRp, flowing tubing pressure starts from FBHP at well depth and changes
along the solid curve drawn upwards. Assume that three gas lift valves at different depths
are installed in the well and investigate the required injection gas volumes if injection
occurs through each of them in turn.
If, in each case, the well is produced against the same surface backpressure, WHP,
then using the basic design procedure described before, the gas-liquid ratios belonging to
each injection point can be determined. In Fig. 5.5, these are denoted as GLR1, GLR2,
and GLR3 for the injection points 1, 2, and 3, respectively. If the pressure traverse curves
above each injection point are compared to the individual curves of a gradient curve
sheet then it must be obvious that the steeper the curve the higher the gas-liquid ratio,
which means that in this case GLR1 > GLR2 > GLR3. Thus, without performing any
detailed calculations, a basic conclusion can be drawn: deeper gas injection points
result in lower injection gas requirements.
WHP
Pressure, psi with variable liquid rates and
assume that the well produces
against a constant wellhead
pressure. Further, assume that there
GLR2
is a sufficient volume of injection
GLR1 gas available to achieve the
1 GLR3 minimum pressure gradient
above the point of gas injection. As
shown in Fig. 5.6, a pressure
2 traverse curve belonging to the
Well Depth, ft
Pressure, psi
see that they increase in the same order, i.e.
ql1 < ql2 < ql3. Therefore, gas injection at deeper
depths results in higher liquid production rates Pressure Traverse
for All Rates
from the same well.
From the above, a generally applicable
1
conclusion can be drawn on the effect of gas
injection depth on the performance of a well
placed on continuous flow gas lift: deeper gas
Well Depth, ft
3
3.1.1.2 Multi-Point vs. Single-Point Gas
Injection ql3
FBHP1
FBHP2
Injection @ 8,000 ft
Well Depth, ft
production of 600 bpd against the 3500 GLR = 1,000 GLR = 1,000 scf/bbl
wellhead pressure of 300 psi, as indicated 4000
through the two gas lift valves and for 6000 GLR = 500
simplicity, let the individual injection 6500
Even the elementary treatment of continuous flow gas lifting presented so far allows
one to study the effects of the most important parameters (wellhead pressure, injection
WHP2
WHP3
capacity wells. [ 6 ]
Injection Point
Well Depth, ft
injection pressure should be set as
Injection Point
high as possible, if a continuous
flow installation with a sufficiently GLR3
high efficiency is desired. In other
Injection Point
words, gas injection at the depth of
the perforations is ideal.
Increasing the surface gas pressure,
however, in addition to the GLRp
implications caused by the higher
gas compression requirements, has
another limiting factor. It must not
Injection Point
reach a pressure higher than the
well’s flowing bottomhole pressure FBHP
at perforation depth, since greater Fig. 5.10
pressures would be unnecessary for Comparison of lift gas requirements for different
ensuring gas injection at the surface gas injection pressures.
bottom.
3.1.2.3 Tubing Size
The size of the flow pipe (i.e. the tubing size for tubing flow installations) markedly
influences the performance of vertical multiphase flow. Since continuous flow gas lifting
involves flow of a multiphase mixture with varying gas content, the injection gas
requirement must reflect the size of the flow pipe. The effect of pipe size on the
multiphase pressure drop, however, is not as simple as that of the wellhead pressure and
can vary in different ranges of the flow parameters. A smaller pipe may develop less
pressure drop than a bigger one, provided mixture flow rates are low to medium. For
higher liquid flow rates, bigger pipes become more and more favorable as the mixture
rate increases because friction losses become the governing factor in the total pressure
drop.
As briefly discussed above, contrary to the effects of wellhead and injection pressures,
no decisive conclusion can be made on the effect of flow pipe size on the lift gas
requirements. This is the reason why this topic is discussed in more detail in the next
sections, where Systems Analysis (NODAL) methods are applied to the description of
continuous flow gas lift.
3.2.1 INTRODUCTION
The previous sections dealt with quite simple cases where only the tubing string’s
performance was studied for a known liquid flow rate. Not included in the evaluation
were the performance of the formation and the surface system. However, as discussed in
Section 2.7, for a proper analysis of well performance, the complete production system
consisting of the formation, the well, the surface flowline, and the separator must be
simultaneously considered. This can be accomplished by the application of NODAL
Analysis methodology. [ 8, 9 ]
The production system of a continuous flow gas lift well is shown with the node
points in Fig. 5.12. The tubing string is divided at the depth of the operating gas lift
valve, where the injection of lift gas takes place, in two sections. Although the liquid
flow rate, ql, is identical in both sections, the section below the point of gas injection
contains the gas produced from the formation only, GLRp, whereas the section above the
injection point contains the injected gas volume as well, GLRtotal. The flowline contains
the same liquid and gas rates as those reaching the wellhead.
Fig. 5.12
The production system of a well placed on
continuous flow gas lift.
In short, the NODAL Systems Analysis procedure consists of the following basic
steps.
In some cases in continuous flow gas lift operations, the operating wellhead pressure
is assumed to stay constant, usually justified by the existence of a very short flowline.
The production system in such cases comprises of the well’s tubing and the formation,
and the surface flowline’s performance is disregarded. This simplification, of course,
reduces the amount of the required calculations but can give very misleading results,
especially if an improperly sized flowline (with a too big or a too small diameter) is used.
3.2.2.1 Injection Pressure Given
Many times, the available surface injection gas pressure is given. In such cases the
Solution Node for systems analysis is selected at the well bottom (Node 2 in Fig. 5.12),
resulting in two subsystems: the tubing string and the formation. The inflow pressure at
Node 2, represented by the flowing bottomhole pressure, must be set equal to the
outflow pressure from the same node, represented by the tubing intake pressure, to find
the well’s liquid flow rate.
When describing the performance of a continuous flow gas lift well, the above
procedure can be applied to two different cases depending on the available amount of
injection gas. These are: (a) unlimited and (b) limited lift gas availability.
Unlimited Gas Availability
If the lift gas volumetric rate available at the wellsite is not limited by compressor
capacity or other restrictions, total GLRs (gas-liquid ratios) for the different liquid rates
can be set equal to their optimum values. Optimum GLR means that value for which the
tubing pressure traverse curve exhibits the lowest gradient. This GLR, therefore, ensures
the best use of the lift gas because the pressure drop in the tubing string is at a minimum.
Although optimum GLRs are usually high, the unlimited availability of lift gas makes it
possible to use them for the calculation of well performance.
The required steps of the calculation model are detailed below in conjunction with the
schematic drawing in Fig. 5.13.
1. Plot the surface gas injection pressure, pinj, at zero depth.
2. Starting from the surface injection pressure, calculate the gas pressure
distribution in the well’s annulus and plot it with well depth.
Given Parameters:
Wellhead Pr., WHP
ql1
Injection Pr., pinj
GLR1
Tubing Size, d
ql2
GLR2
ql3
GLR3
Well Depth, ft
ql1
GLRp
ql2
GLRp
ql3
GLRp
Fig. 5.13
Graphical determination of a well’s
tubing performance curves
for known wellhead and injection pressure cases.
Fig. 5.14
Schematic determination of a gas lifted well’s
liquid rate by Systems Analysis with the
Solution Node at the well bottom.
Example 5.4: Find the well’s liquid production rate if wellhead pressure is constant at
200 psi, and there is an unlimited supply of lift gas available at the wellsite with an
injection pressure of 1,000 psi. Well data are given below.
Solution
The problem can be solved either with the use of gradient curve sheets or with
computer calculations, main results are presented in Fig. 5.15 and Table 5.1.
Assumed liquid flow rates and the respective optimum GLR values (found from
gradient curve sheets) are as follows:
ql = 1,000 bbl and GLR = 1,500 scf/bbl,
ql = 1,500 bbl and GLR = 1,200 scf/bbl, and
ql = 2,000 bbl and GLR = 1,200 scf/bbl.
Pressure traverses valid above the point of gas injection and started from the wellhead
pressure are plotted first, and their intersections with the annulus gas pressure give the
three gas injection points, see Table 5.1. Starting from the injection points, pressure
traverses using the formation GLR of 150 scf/bbl are constructed and the flowing
bottomhole pressures corresponding to the three liquid rates are found. These values,
denoted p2 OUT in Table 5.1, are the outflow pressures at Node 4 (see Fig. 5.12). Plotted
in function of the liquid rate in Fig. 5.16, they represent the Tubing Performance
Curve. Now flowing bottomhole pressures belonging to the assumed liquid rates are
3,000
Well Depth, ft
3,500
4,000
4,500
5,000 ql =2,000
GLR=150
5,500
6,000 ql =1,000
GLR=1,500
ql =1,500
6,500 GLR=150
7,000
7,500
FBHP3 FBHP2 FBHP1
Fig. 5.15
Determination of tubing performance curves
for an unlimited gas supply case
in Example 5.4.
Table 5.1
System performance calculation results for Example 5.4,
unlimited gas supply.
Below
ql Above injection injection Formation
p4 GLR p3 Linj GLR p2 OUT p2 IN
bpd psi scf/bbl psi ft scf/bbl psi psi
1,000 200 1,500 1,072 7,500 150 1,073 2,100
1,500 200 1,200 1,030 5,666 150 1,721 1,900
2,000 200 1,200 999 4,323 150 2,194 1,700
1000
1000 1200 1400 1600 1800 2000
Liquid Flow Rate, bpd
Fig. 5.16
Determination of the well’s liquid rate for Example 5.4.
3.2.3 CONCLUSIONS
The present section introduced the use of NODAL Systems Analysis principles to the
description of the operation of continuous flow gas lift wells. As shown, most of the
conditions occurring in practice can be analyzed with the use of these principles. This
makes NODAL Analysis a powerful and universal tool, with the help of which
production engineers can tackle everyday problems. As will be shown in later sections,
this tool provides a sound foundation for the optimization of gas lift installations.
The performance of a continuous flow gas lift well, in general, can be characterized
by the possible operating points of the production system. Depending on the selection of
the Solution Node, these can be plotted on a wellhead pressure – liquid rate (see
Fig. 5.25), or on a bottomhole pressure – liquid rate diagram. (see Fig. 5.23) In both
cases, the required gas injection volumes belonging to each operating point being known
makes it possible to prepare liquid rate – gas injection rate diagrams, frequently called
Gas Lift Performance Curves
Liquid Production Rate, bpd
1200
1100
1000
Injection pressure = 1,000 psi
900
0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 1.2 1.4 1.6 1.8 2.0 2.2
Fig. 5.29
Gas Lift Performance Curve for the example well.
The gas lift performance curve is a plot of the well’s liquid rate vs. the gas injection
rate for a given surface gas injection pressure and shows the producing system’s
response to continuous flow gas lifting. Such performance curves have a very
1,700
Orkiszewski Duns & Ros
Liquid Production Rate, bpd
1,600
1,500
1,400
1,300
1,100
1,000
Gas Lift Performance Curves have a multitude of uses in the design and analysis of
wells placed on continuous flow gas lift. The conditions for attaining maximum and
optimum liquid production rates for individual wells or groups of wells are easily found,
etc. Such applications are detailed in subsequent sections.
4.1 INTRODUCTION
For many years in the petroleum industry, natural gas had a low price, and energy
costs were also much lower than recently, so it did not matter what amount of injected
gas was used to lift a given amount of oil to the surface. Optimum conditions, then,
always meant achieving the maximum possible oil rate, irrespective of the injected gas
volume. [ 20 ] The increased demand and the rising cost of natural gas, however, has
completely changed this situation and today optimum conditions for continuous flow gas
lifting are based on the economic parameters of fluid lifting.
The most general definition of the optimum conditions for continuous flow gas
lifting of a single well or a group of wells may be stated as setting up a schedule of gas
injection and liquid production rates over time that ensures the maximum present-value
profit over the life of the wells. Since this definition implies that the wells’ production
rates are not limited, those cases require a different treatment when, for reservoir or other
purposes, well rates are prescribed. Then liquid rates, and consequently, total cash flow
is constant, and the objective of optimization is to ensure a minimum of operating costs
over the life of the field. Both of the above scenarios have their importance in practice, as
will be shown later in this section.
When seeking the optimum conditions for continuous flow gas lifting of a single well
or a group of wells alike, the designer must select the right combination of the system
parameters listed below.
• Tubing size,
• Surface gas injection pressure,
• Separator pressure, and
• Flowline size.
The order of importance of the above parameters can vary, depending on actual well
and field conditions. Anyway, their proper combination (which is also a function of the
well(s) production conditions) satisfies the objective of the optimization process. In
practice, due to the great number of possible cases, different scenarios are assumed,
based on local conditions, then lift gas requirements and economic parameters are
calculated, and finally the one meeting the criteria of optimization is selected.
As mentioned above, the conditions selected for gas lifting a single well or a group of
wells must ensure optimum production over the total life of the well(s). This means that
calculations have to be performed with predicted well data for future conditions. Also,
because of the many possible (and many times unpredictable) changes in well conditions
over time (e.g. well inflow performance), calculations may have to be repeated from time
to time. Although the importance of production time in the process of optimization as
well its possible effects on the outcome of optimization are fully recognized, the
When dealing with a single well placed on continuous flow gas lift, there may be
several typical cases requiring different treatments for finding the well’s optimum
producing conditions. The well’s liquid rate may be prescribed by reservoir
considerations or the capacity of the well can be fully utilized. A compressor delivering
lift gas at a given discharge pressure may be available in the field or one has to be
selected by the designer. If available, compressor capacity may be unlimited or only a
limited amount of lift gas can be used.
In the following, calculation models for each of the above cases are detailed.
4.2.1 PRESCRIBED LIQUID RATE
Many times, reservoir engineering or other considerations limit the liquid rate to be
lifted from the well. The general criteria for optimum gas lift conditions has to be
modified to that of securing the least amount of production costs. Since cash inflow is
determined by the given liquid rate, maximum profit is ensured by the minimum of
costs. In the following, for simplicity, production costs will be defined by the operating,
and in particular by compression costs, the largest operating cost component in gas
lifting. This approach is fully justified for cases when a compressor is available but for
more detailed analyses considerations for capital expenditures may also be required.
Basically, the operating cost of gas compression can be found from the cost of power
and the required brake horsepower of the unit. Brake horsepower calculations, however,
may differ for the different compressor types, compression ratios, numbers of stages, etc.
[ 20 ] This is the reason why, in the following sections, compressor power is
approximated by the required adiabatic power. Although this is usually lower than the
actually observed power, many investigators [ 5, 19, 21 ] rely on its use in comparative
studies.
The adiabatic power requirement (in HPs) for the compression of an ideal gas is found
from:
⎡ κ −1 ⎤
κ ⎢ ⎛ ⎞
p2 κ ⎥
HPa = 8.57 ×10 −8 T1 Qg ⎢⎜⎜ ⎟⎟ − 1⎥ 5.2
κ −1
⎢⎝ 1 ⎠
p
⎥
⎣ ⎦
WHP1
WHP2
WHP3
given and these must be taken into p inj Pressure, psi
account in gas lift calculations. Gas
injection pressure at the wellsite is GLR 1
always less than compressor Given Parameters:
discharge pressure, the difference Liquid Rate, ql
GLR
depends on the magnitude of 2
Tubing Data
Injection Pr., pinj
pressure losses in the gas distribution GLR Inflow Performance
3
lines. Similarly, wellhead pressure is
always higher than suction pressure,
allowing for pressure losses in the
gathering line. Injection and
Well Depth, ft
wellhead pressures thus being set,
only the tubing and flowline sizes
remain to be selected for an optimum
operation. The calculation model
resulting in the minimum of
compression costs is very similar to
a Systems Analysis performed with GLR
p
Example 5.11: Find the optimum conditions for gas lifting the well with the data
detailed below. Liquid production rate is prescribed as 750 bpd, an unlimited supply of
lift gas is available with a compressor discharging at 1,050 psi and a suction pressure of
80 psi. Use tubing sizes of 2 3/8” and 2 7/8”, and flowline sizes of 2” and 2.5”.
Solution
Surface injection and separator pressures were assumed as 1,000 psi and 100 psi,
respectively, corresponding to the compressor’s pressure data. The well’s flowing
bottomhole pressure is found from the inflow performance equation as FBHP = SBHP –
ql/PI = 1.500 – 750/2 = 1,150 psi. The point of gas injection was found to be identical
for both tubing sizes at 6,300 ft.
Calculations were performed on a computer and the Orkiszewski correlation was used
for vertical, and the modified Beggs-Brill correlation for horizontal multiphase flow
calculations. Results of wellhead and flowline inlet pressure calculations are listed in
Table 5.8. Final results are given in Table 5.9, where injection gas requirements and
adiabatic horsepower values are displayed for the four combinations of tubing/flowline
sizes. Fig. 5.32 shows tubing and flowline performance curves in the function of
injection GLRs. Of the four possible operating points, the case with 2 7/8” tubing, and
2.5” flowline is selected as the optimum solution because it satisfies the optimization
criteria of minimum energy requirement for continuous flow gas lifting of the example
well.
350
250
2" Flowline
200
2.5" Flowline
150
100
250 300 350 400 450 500 550 600 650 700 750 800
Fig. 5.32
Finding the optimum conditions for Example 5.11,
assuming an existing compressor.
If we start with a low amount of gas injection, the well’s response is a relatively low
liquid rate. Additional injection of a small gas volume, however, results in a relatively
high increment of liquid rate. One can easily calculate the increment of revenue and the
increment of costs involved, the balance of which is positive in this case. If gas injection
rates are further increased by the same increment, liquid production rates increase further
but the increments will be less and less, because of the shape of the performance curve,
as seen in Fig. 5.35. Eventually, a point will be reached where the increments of revenue
and production cost are just equal, and from which on any further increase in gas
injection rate would result in net economic losses. The conditions belonging to this
operating point, therefore, define the well’s optimum production by continuous flow gas
lifting.
0.0
Fig. 5.35
Schematic depiction of a typical
Gas Lift Performance Curve.
Based on previous discussions, this is the slope belonging to the optimum operating
point of gas lifting, introduced by Kanu et al. [ 24 ], and called the Economic Slope. Its
use in optimizing continuous flow gas lift installations is detailed below.
Fig. 5.35 shows a sample Gas Lift Performance Curve (heavy line) and its
derivative or slope (dashed line). At a gas injection rate belonging to the maximum of
liquid production rate, ql max, the slope is zero by definition. It must be clear that no profit
can be made on the right of this point because costs are higher than revenues. On the
lefthand side, however, profits overcome costs, up to the point belonging to the
Economic Slope where, as shown above, they are equal. Therefore, the liquid production
rate belonging to this slope represents the optimum rate, ql opt, that ensures the most
favorable economic conditions of gas lifting for the given well.
The fact that in continuous flow gas lifting the optimum liquid rate is always lower
than the possible maximum was proved by many investigators before. [ 19 – 24 ] The
Example 5.13: Find the optimum liquid and gas injection rates for the well given in
the previous examples if liquid production rate is not limited and an existing compressor
is to be used. Compressor discharge and suction pressures are 1,050 psi and 80 psi,
respectively. Use a profit on oil of $1/bbl, a water disposal cost of $0.01/bbl of water,
and a total of $400/MMscf of gas compression cost.
Solution
As before, based on production data, tubing sizes of 2 3/8” and 2 7/8”; and flowline
IDs of 2” and 2.5” are selected. From compressor pressures, an injection pressure of
1,000 psi and a separator pressure of 100 psi are established.
The points of the Gas Lift Performance Curves, as a result of computer calculations
are presented in Table 5.12 for the four combinations of tubing and flowline sizes.
Regression calculations gave the following polynomials, where the quality of fitting is
defined by the parameter R2 (R-squared) with R2 = 1 as a perfect fit. As seen, the
recommended third-order polynomials give excellent approximation of the original data.
The slopes of the performance curves were found from differentiation of the above
functions and are displayed in Table 5.13. The plots of the performance curves along
with their derivatives are presented in Fig. 5.36 for the 2 3/8”, and in Fig. 5.37 for the
2 7/8” tubing sizes.
Table 5.13
Calculated slopes of Gas Lift Performance Curves
for the cases in Example 5.13.
Calculated Slopes
Qg 2 3/8" Tubing 2 7/8" Tubing
2" Flowl. 2.5" Flowl. 2" Flowl. 2.5" Flowl.
MMscf/d bbl/MMscf bbl/MMscf bbl/MMscf bbl/MMscf
0.20 860 1151 - -
0.25 - - 742 1,015
0.30 620 857 - -
0.35 514 725 570 810
0.40 416 604 - -
0.45 327 494 419 628
0.50 247 393 351 545
0.60 115 224 230 395
0.70 17 96 128 267
0.80 -45 10 46 162
0.90 - - -15 77
1.00 -61 -38 -57 15
1.10 - - -79 -25
1.20 - - -81 -44
1.50 - - - -
Slope, bbl/MMscf
600
Slope = 535 Tubing Size = 2 3/8"
500 Injection Pressure = 1,000 psi
Separator Pressure = 100 psi
400
300
200
100
0
0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4
Fig. 5.36
Gas Lift Performance Curves and their derivatives
for the well in Example 5.13 and a tubing size of 2 3/8”.
1200
Flowline ID = 2.5"
1100
1000
Flowline ID = 2"
900
Liquid Production Rate, bpd
800
Slope, bbl/MMscf
700
600
Slope = 535
Tubing Size = 2 7/8"
500 Injection Pressure = 1,000 psi
Separator Pressure = 100 psi
400
300
200
100
0
0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6
Fig. 5.37
Gas Lift Performance Curves and their derivatives
for the well in Example 5.13 and a tubing size of 2 7/8”.
5.1 INTRODUCTION
When dealing with several wells placed on continuous flow gas lift, the objectives of
optimization must be modified, as compared to the principles discussed so far. In such
cases, the system parameters used in the optimization procedures described previously
(tubing and flowline sizes, compressor pressures) have already been selected and cannot
be changed easily. These parameters being set (hopefully at their optimum values), the
operator’s aim is now to reach optimum utilization of the injection gas volume at
his/her disposal. As discussed before in conjunction with the Gas Lift Performance
Curves, different wells respond differently to the injection of the same amount of lift
gas. It is now the designer’s responsibility to allocate the total available gas volume to
the individual wells in a fashion to achieve the maximum possible profit that comes
from the sale of the oil produced.
As before, two situations can occur in the oil field: (a) an unlimited supply of lift gas
may be available, or (b) lift gas availability may be limited by some constraint. The two
cases require different approaches and the results of the optimization will be different as
well.
For unlimited gas availability, the total gas volume used for gas lifting is not
constrained so every well can receive the amount of gas ensuring the maximum of
profit derived from it. As discussed before, this situation occurs at a gas injection rate
where the slope of the Gas Lift Performance Curve equals the Economic Slope,
calculated from the actual values of the specific incomes and costs. Therefore,
optimization of continuous flow gas lifting for a number of wells with an unlimited gas
availability is defined as producing every well at its most economic liquid rate. In such
cases, field-wide total gas requirement equals the sum of each well’s injection rate
belonging to its economic liquid production rate.
In case the amount of gas available for gas lifting is limited, the objective of
optimization is modified. Because total gas injection volume is known, compression
costs are thus defined and fixed so optimization should aim at providing the maximum
of oil production from the wells. The background theory of the optimization process to
be followed is illustrated below.
Take two wells, the performance curves of which are given in Fig. 5.40. The points
belonging to their Economic Slopes are indicated by the points labeled “Unlimited” and
define the optimum liquid and gas rates for an unlimited supply of lift gas. The two
wells’ combined liquid production is 1,559 bpd, total gas injection volume is
1.89 MMscf/d. Now assume that lift gas volume is limited to 1.5 MMscf/d and an
optimum allocation of that total volume is desired. Suppose that the wells currently
operate as indicated by the points designated “Initial” on their performance curves. Their
combined injection rate, of course, equals the amount available (1.5 MMscf/d) and they
1100
here.
Slope, bbl/MMscf
1000
The above logic, if applied to more than
900
800
two wells will give similar final results. This
700
leads to a general conclusion on how lift gas
600 Slope1 should be allocated to a group of wells if the
500 Slope2 total gas volume is limited. The rule, first
400 given by Simmons [ 22, 23 ], is called the
300
“Equal Slopes” method and says that
200
0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 optimum gas lifting requires two conditions
Number of Steps to be met: the slopes at the operating point on
Fig. 5.41 each well’s Gas Lift Performance Curve
Total liquid rate from two sample wells must be identical while the total gas
in the function of iteration steps.
6.1 INTRODUCTION
The basic mechanism of unloading a continuous flow gas lift well is illustrated in
Figs. 5.47 and 48. These figures show a well with a semi-closed installation and three
gas lift valves, out of which the two upper ones are unloading valves, whereas the
bottom one is the operating valve. Due to the usually high formation pressure, the well’s
tubing and annulus is almost completely filled up with a kill fluid. As soon as injection
gas pressure is applied to the casinghead, a gradual transfer of the fluids from the
annulus to the tubing string is taking place through the open gas lift valves. As seen in
Part A in Fig. 5.47, all valves are open because of the high pressure acting on them,
consisting of the gas pressure plus the hydrostatic pressure of the liquid column. Kill
fluid is U-tubed by the injection pressure into the tubing and up to the surface. Because
of the high pressure exerted on the well bottom, no pressure drawdown across the
formation occurs and all the fluid produced to the surface comes from the annulus.
Injection pressure continuously depresses the liquid level in the annulus until the first
valve is uncovered when it starts to inject gas, since the valve is still open. Part B of
Fig. 5.47 shows Valve #1 to inject gas into the tubing string and aerating the liquid
column above the valve setting depth. Due to the injection of gas through the valve,
tubing pressure at the first valve level starts to decrease and reaches a stabilized low
value corresponding to the injected gas-liquid ratio. Since the tubing and the annulus
volumes of the well are interconnected through the still-open lower valves, the pressure
and consequently the liquid level must drop in the annulus as well. As a result, the
annulus liquid level continuously drops while gas is injected through Valve #1.
Gas injection through Valve #1, as described above, decreases the tubing pressure to a
stabilized value and the annulus liquid level drops to a corresponding stable depth.
Valve #2 was run just above this stabilized level, allowing it to be uncovered and to start
injecting gas. (Part C) This is a critical moment in the unloading process because two
valves admit gas to the tubing string and the upper one has to be closed to meet the two
crucial objectives of the unloading procedure. These are (a) to move the point of gas
injection down to the operating valve, and (b) to ensure a single-point gas injection. The
proper design and setting of the unloading valves guarantees that Valve #1 will close just
after injection through Valve #2 has begun. With Valve #1 closed, gas is injected
through the second valve alone, as shown in Part D in Fig. 5.48. This kind of injection
transfer to a lower valve can be ascertained by a number of ways, most of which will be
detailed later.
Valve #2, being the sole point of gas injection, brings about a decrease in tubing
pressure at its setting depth which, in turn, forces the liquid level in the annulus to drop
further. As before, liquid level in the annulus stabilizes and, assuming a correct design of
the unloading valve string, Valve #3 is situated just above this stable liquid level. Since it
was open from the beginning of the unloading operation, as soon as it is uncovered,
Valve #3 starts to inject gas into the tubing. (Part E) Note that this is the operating gas
lift valve and it is imperative that Valve #2 be forced to close just after injection has
started through the third valve. By this time the objectives of the unloading process have
been met, as gas injection takes place through Valve #3 only, see Part F.
At one point during the unloading process, flowing bottomhole pressure drops below
the formation pressure and inflow to the well from the formation starts. From that
moment on, the well starts to produce well fluids to the surface, in addition to the kill
fluid from the annulus. Due to the transfer of the injection point to the lower valves,
flowing bottomhole pressure decreases and well inflow increases. At the end of the
unloading sequence, no more kill fluid is transferred from the annulus and the well
produces a stable liquid rate from the formation with gas injection stabilized at
Valve #3, which is the operating gas lift valve.
The main objectives of unloading valve string design, also called valve spacing, are:
WHP
pinj Pressure
valves near the expected operating
injection point are spaced with a constant
vertical distance between them. This Δp op.
Well Depth
Pressure Traverse
determination of the injection Above Injection
point is desired,
• The normal spacing procedure ΔL
gives unloading valves too closely
spaced near the injection point, or Operating Valve Depth
• The maximum possible liquid rate
Bracketing
Envelope
FBHP
Pressure Traverse
desired by moving the injection Below Injection
The design of an unloading valve string involves two broad phases: (1) first the
running depths of the individual valves are determined, then (2) the settings (port size,
bellows charge pressure, spring force, etc.) of each valve in the string are calculated so
that the valves will operate properly. This order is dictated by the fact that valve settings
are affected by the pressures and the temperature valid at the depth of each valve. Proper
design results in a perfect unloading of the installation which means that:
• Gas injection is consecutively transferred from the top valve to those below,
• Each unloading valve closes and ceases to inject gas after the valve below has
started to inject,
• The point of gas injection is successfully transferred to the operating valve that
ensures continuous operation, and
• All unloading valves remain closed while normal production through the
operating valve takes place.
There is a great multitude of valve spacing procedures developed over the years by
different manufacturers of gas lift equipment. Most of them were specifically elaborated
for a given type of gas lift valve but all have a common objective of providing an
undisturbed unloading sequence. One way of their classification may be based on the
reliability of input data which may be complete and reliable, or limited and unreliable. In
case all necessary well data are available, the required point of gas injection can very
accurately be determined and an unloading valve string reaching down to the depth of
gas injection can properly be designed. The main requirements are the knowledge of
inflow performance data, the use of accurate multiphase vertical and horizontal pressure
drop correlations, and the exact prediction of flowing temperatures, to name the most
important items only.
In most situations, however, a complete data set required for a proper unloading valve
string design is either unavailable or some important pieces of data (formation pressure,
water cut, etc) are changing rapidly in the life of the well. All these conditions lead to an
unreliable and/or undefined point of gas injection and to severe difficulties in valve
spacing calculations. Since most gas lift installations fall into this category, special valve
spacing procedures had to be developed to accommodate such conditions. These designs
aim at providing an unloading valve string that can lift the desired liquid rate from any
valve in the unloading string. An unloading valve string designed this way provides the
flexibility needed for moving the actual gas injection point up or down the hole to suit
changing well conditions.
6.4.1 IPO VALVES
One of the basic requirements of a successful unloading sequence is that any valve
should close as the next lower valve starts to inject gas. Differently stated, the closing
pressures of the valves in the string must decrease with well depth so that upper valves
close successively. As described in the section on gas lift valve mechanics
(Section 3.2.2), the closing injection pressure of an unbalanced IPO valve at valve
setting depth is equal to its dome charge pressure and is found from the known actual
injection and production pressures as given below (see Eq. 3.20):
depth. Δp
valve
5. The setting depths of the remaining unloading valves are found similarly to the
second valve, only an additional pressure drop of PD is taken for each valve. The
following universal formula can be applied to find the depth increment for the nth
valve:
pinj − p p (n ) − L(n − 1) grad g − Δpvalve − (n − 1) PD
ΔLn = 5.24
grad u − grad g
DESCRIPTION
Fig. B-1 is a chart of calculated pressure gradients in a static gas column vs. surface pressure. The
annulus temperature is assumed to change with well depth as shown in the figure. Gas deviation is
properly accounted for.
EXAMPLE PROBLEM
Find the gas column pressure at the depth of 4,500 ft if gas specific gravity equals 0.75 and the
surface pressure is 800 psia.
SOLUTION
From Fig. B-1, gas gradient in the annulus is 25 psi/1,000 ft. Gas column pressure is thus
800 + 4.5 25 = 811.3 psia.
100
Gas Sp.Gr. = 0.95
95
90
Assumed Temperature
T = 70 F + Depth * 1.6 F/100 ft
85
0.9
80
75
70
65
Pressure Gradient, psi/1,000 ft
60 0.8
55
50
45 0.7
40
35 0.6
30
25
20
15
10
0
1000
1100
1200
1300
1400
300
400
500
600
700
800
900
Fig. B-1
APPENDIX D
DESCRIPTION
Figs. D-1 and D-2 show the variation of dome charge pressure with valve temperature
for nitrogen gas charged gas lift valves.
EXAMPLE PROBLEM
Find the gas lift valve’s dome charge pressure at a valve temperature of 200 °F if the
valve was charged with nitrogen gas to a pressure of 800 psig. Charging temperature was
60 °F.
SOLUTION
Using Fig. D-1, and reading the vertical pressure scale at the intersection of a vertical
line drawn at 800 psig dome pressure and the valve temperature of 200 °F, the actual
dome pressure is found as 1,040 psig.
400
1700
360
1600
320
1500
280
1400 240
Nitrogen Dome Charge Pressure at Valve Temperature, psig
1300 200
160
1200
120
1100
80
1000
900
800
700
600
500
400
300
200
200 300 400 500 600 700 800 900 1000
Fig. D-1
2700 200
2600
2500 160
2400
2300 120
Nitrogen Dome Charge Pressure at Valve Temperature, psig
2200
2100 80
2000
1900
1800
1700
1600
1500
1400
1300
1200
1100
1000
1000 1100 1200 1300 1400 1500 1600 1700 1800 1900 2000
Fig. D-2
DESCRIPTION
Figs. E-1 to E-6 allow the calculation of static gas column pressures for different
injection gas gravities.
EXAMPLE PROBLEM
Find the gas lift valve’s surface opening pressure if the downhole opening pressure is
1,100 psig at the depth of 6,500 ft. The injection gas specific gravity is 0.7.
SOLUTION
Using Fig. E-3 and starting from a downhole pressure of 1,100 psig, a horizontal line
is drawn to the intersection with the 6,500 ft depth line. The surface pressure is read as
918 psig.
14,000
13,000
1300
12,000
Gas Sp. Gr. = 0.6 11,000
10,000
9,000
1200 8,000
7,000
6,000
5,000
1100 4,000
3,000
2,000
1,000
1000
Downhole Pressure, psig
900
800
700
600
500
400
400 500 600 700 800 900 1000
Fig. E-1
2700 14,000
13,000
Gas Sp. Gr. = 0.6
12,000
2600
11,000
2500 10,000
9,000
2400 8,000
7,000
2300 6,000
5,000
2200 4,000
3,000
2100 2,000
Downhole Pressure, psig
1,000
2000
1900
1800
1700
1600
1500
1400
1300
1200
1100
1000
1000 1100 1200 1300 1400 1500 1600 1700 1800 1900 2000
Fig. E-2
14,000
1400 13,000
11,000
10,000
1300
9,000
8,000
7,000
1200
6,000
5,000
4,000
1100
3,000
2,000
Downhole Pressure, psig
1,000
1000
900
800
700
600
500
400
400 500 600 700 800 900 1000
Fig. E-3
14,000
2900
13,000
2800 12,000
Gas Sp. Gr. = 0.7 11,000
2700
10,000
2600 9,000
8,000
2500
7,000
2400 6,000
5,000
2300
4,000
2200 3,000
Downhole Pressure, psig
2,000
2100
1,000
2000
1900
1800
1700
1600
1500
1400
1300
1200
1100
1000
1000 1100 1200 1300 1400 1500 1600 1700 1800 1900 2000
Fig. E-4
14,000
13,000
1500
12,000
Gas Sp. Gr. = 0.8
11,000
1400 10,000
9,000
8,000
1300
7,000
6,000
1200 5,000
4,000
3,000
Downhole Pressure, psig
1100
2,000
1,000
1000
900
800
700
600
500
400
400 500 600 700 800 900 1000
Fig. E-5
14,000
3200
Gas Sp. Gr. = 0.8 13,000
3100
12,000
3000
11,000
2900
10,000
2800 9,000
2700 8,000
2600 7,000
6,000
2500
5,000
Downhole Pressure, psig
2400
4,000
2300
3,000
2200
2,000
2100 1,000
2000
1900
1800
1700
1600
1500
1400
1300
1200
1100
1000
1000 1100 1200 1300 1400 1500 1600 1700 1800 1900 2000
Fig. E-6
DESCRIPTION
Tables F-1 to F-4 contain mechanical data of gas lift valves available from two
leading manufacturers.
McMurry-Macco
Conventional Gas Lift Valves
PROBLEMS PAGE 1
Gas Lift Design and Analysis Gabor Takacs, PhD
Instructor
Class Problem Assignment
Subject : Gas Lift Valve Mechanics Class Problem # 1
Problem Statement :
An unbalanced gas lift valve’s surface closing pressure was found as 750 psi. Calculate
its TRO (test rack opening) pressure if the valve is at 7,500 ft where the flowing
temperature is 160°F. The lift gas is Sp.Gr. = 0.6 gravity and the valve is a CAMCO J-20
with a ¼” port.
Instructions:
Use Fig. E-1 and Fig. D-1 in the Appendices to find the closing pressure at depth and
the dome charge pressure at surface, respectively.
Solution:
PAGE 2 PROBLEMS
Gas Lift Design and Analysis Gabor Takacs, PhD
Instructor
Class Problem Assignment
Subject : Gas Lift Valve Mechanics Class Problem # 2
Problem Statement :
Determine a CAMCO J-40 valve’s production pressure effect (PPE) and spread at two
production pressures of 400 psi and 0 psi, if the valve has a ¼” port. Flowing
temperature at valve setting depth is 140°F, and the TRO (test rack opening) pressure of
the valve is 800 psi.
Instructions:
First find the valve’s PPEF from Appendix F.
Then calculate the charge pressure at shop conditions and at the setting depth, use
Fig. D-1 in the Appendices.
Solution:
PROBLEMS PAGE 3
Gas Lift Design and Analysis Gabor Takacs, PhD
Instructor
Class Problem Assignment
Subject : Basic Design for Continuous Flow Gas Lifting Class Problem # 9
Problem Statement :
Determine the points of gas injection, if three operating pressures are available, 600 psi,
800 psi, and 1,000 psi. Well data are given below. Estimate the injection gas
requirements for the cases studied. A gradient curve sheet and a tracing paper are
supplied.
Instructions :
First draw the static liquid gradient below the point of gas injection.
Then draw the static gas pressure lines for the different injection pressures. Use Fig. B-1
in the Appendices to find the pressure increase due to gas column height.
Injection points for the various surface operating pressures are found from the graph you
prepare.
Finally, use the pressure gradient curve sheet to estimate required injection gas-liquid
ratios.
Solution:
PAGE 4 PROBLEMS
PROBLEMS PAGE 5
Gas Lift Design and Analysis Gabor Takacs, PhD
Instructor
Class Problem Assignment
Subject : Production Rate Calculation for Unlimited Gas Rate Class Problem # 10
Problem Statement :
Find the well’s gas lifted liquid rate if the wellhead pressure is 400 psi, injection pressure
is 900 psi, and there is an unlimited supply of lift gas. All other data are given below.
Three gradient curve sheets and a tracing paper are supplied.
Instructions :
Assume liquid rates of 1,000, 1,500, and 2,000 bpd and find the respective gas injection
points. Then calculate FBHPs and plot them on a rate – pressure diagram.
The intersection of the Tubing Performance Curve and the IPR curve gives the well’s
liquid rate by gas lift.
Solution:
PAGE 6 PROBLEMS
PROBLEMS PAGE 7
PAGE 8 PROBLEMS
PROBLEMS PAGE 9
PAGE 10 PROBLEMS
Plot the pressures at the Solution Node here
PROBLEMS PAGE 11
Gas Lift Design and Analysis Gabor Takacs, PhD
Instructor
Class Problem Assignment
Subject : Optimization of a Single Well on Continuous Flow Class Problem # 14
Problem Statement:
Select the optimum parameters of a continuous flow gas lifted well for the conditions of
an example oil field. Field and predicted production data are given on the next sheet.
Assume existing compressors and use available tubing sizes, wellhead pressures and
surface injection gas lift pressures:
Make the necessary computer runs and present your calculated results on an MS Excel
chart. Give your proposal for the optimum combination of the above parameters, based
on the required lift gas rates.
Instructions
First prepare a data file based on given field and well data. Use the computer program
CONTDAT for this purpose.
Then use the data file just developed and find the gas lift requirements by using a
selected multiphase vertical flow correlation in the program CONTLIFT.
Finally, plot your results on a chart that you develop in MS Excel to show the effects of
tubing size, wellhead pressure, and surface operating pressure on the lift gas
requirements.
PAGE 12 PROBLEMS
OIL WELL DATA
FOR USE IN PROGRAM CONTLIFT
Common Data for All Wells
PROBLEMS PAGE 13
Gas Lift Design and Analysis Gabor Takacs, PhD
Instructor
Class Problem Assignment
Subject : Lift Gas Allocation, Unlimited Gas Availability Class Problem # 15
Problem Statement:
Find the optimum gas allocation of lift gas to three wells if there is no limitation on the
amount of available gas. Data of the three wells’ Gas Lift Performance Curves are given
below. The wells make no water and gas compression costs are $300/MMscf, the profit
on oil being $2/bbl. Plotting paper is provided.
Calculate the maximum of the combined liquid production from the wells and the lift gas
volume necessary. Compare the results of the liquid and gas rates you found for optimum
conditions.
Instructions
First plot the Performance Curves then their Slopes, after differentiating the third-order
polynomials.
PAGE 14 PROBLEMS
PROBLEMS PAGE 15
Gas Lift Design and Analysis Gabor Takacs, PhD
Instructor
Class Problem Assignment
Subject : Valve Spacing w. Constant Pressure Drop per Valve Class Problem # 16
Problem Statement:
Design an unloading valve string for the well given below placed on continuous flow gas
lift, using a constant pressure drop per valve method. Safety factor (PD) should be
25 psi, and use a pressure drop of 30psi across the CAMCO J-40 valves.
Tubing size = 2 7/8” Wellhead Pressure = 100 psi
Required Liquid Rate = 800 bpd Surface Injection Pressure = 1,000 psi
Perforation Depth = 7,000’ Lift Gas Gravity = 0.65
Formation Temp. = 150 F Load Fluid Gradient = 0.468 psi/ft
Wellhead Temp. = 100 F Operating GLR = 3,000 scf/bbl
A gradient curve sheet and plotting paper are provided.
Instructions
First find the tubing pressure traverse for the actual conditions from the gradient curve
sheet by filling out the table below.
Depth 0 1,000 2,000 3,000 4,000 5,000 6,000 7,000
Press. 100
Then plot the above data on your sheet and perform the graphical determination of valve
setting depths.
Size the bottom valve based on the required gas injection rate, using Fig. C-2.
Finally, calculate valve setting data.
Solution
Dome Charge
Valve Valve Port R Valve Valve Prod Injection Press. Press. TRO
at at
Number Type Size Depth Temp. Press. Press. Depth Surface
- - in ft F psi psi psi psi psi
1 J-40
2 J-40
3 J-40
4 J-40
5 J-40
6 J-40
7 J-40
8 J-40
PAGE 16 PROBLEMS
PROBLEMS PAGE 17
PAGE 18 PROBLEMS