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Protection in the deep sea

Sea oil production is becoming increasingly difficult. Companies have to go deeper and deeper to the seabed to find this valuable commodity and technology has to keep pace with these developments. This is why floating platforms are used in addition to the platforms that sit on the seabed. Flexible pipelines are laid instead of rigid steel pipelines. These pipelines have to be protected on the outside against corrosion through seawater and on the inside against corrosion from oil, gas, and water. And the deeper the producers go, the more important it is to have lightweight pipes as well. This is where VESTAMID® NRG from Evonik Industries can provide assistance.

The pulley towers 14 meters above the ship's deck. The ship is in the North Sea heading towards Scotland. When they reach the Scottish coast, workers will unwind and lay twelve kilometers of the thick piping. The pipelines will then transport oil from the seabed from a floating platform. As the more readily accessible oil fields in the sea dry up one by one, many oil companies are now pumping oil from the deep oceans through flexible pipelines.
The pulley towers 14 meters above the ship's deck. The ship is in the North Sea heading towards Scotland. When they reach the Scottish coast, workers will unwind and lay twelve kilometers of the thick piping. The pipelines will then transport oil from the seabed from a floating platform. As the more readily accessible oil fields in the sea dry up one by one, many oil companies are now pumping oil from the deep oceans through flexible pipelines.

Reliable protection from inside and outside

The flexible pipelines have a shell that is at least six centimeters thick. It consists of at least eight layers. Some of these are steel, others polymer VESTAMID® NRG. The steel layers are mainly used for reinforcement. The polymer ensures that the pipelines don't leak. The material is not affected by saltwater or the chemical compounds in the oil. This is how the inner layer of VESTAMID® NRG transports the crude oil safely in the up to 350 millimeter thick pipelines. From the outside, another layer of the polymer protects the steel from rusting due to the seawater. Pipes with VESTAMID® NRG are not only used in the North Sea, but also, for example, off the Brazilian coast, in West Africa, and Australia.

Wellstream in Newcastle in the UK is an important producer of flexible pipelines and is a partner of Evonik. "Producing kilometerlong stable polymer pipes isn't easy," says Business Manager Andreas Dowe from Evonik. When the large pipelines are being produced, the polyamide that is melted on must still be very rigid, otherwise it could easily flow away. "Evonik has developed a special process that ensures sufficient rigidity to enable production," explains Dowe.

The deeper the wells are, the more the weight of the pipelines plays a role. The flexible pipelines made from steel and VESTAMID® NRG are in use for wells at depths of up to 2,500 meters. If they are any deeper, the pipelines become too heavy. For oil production in extreme depths of more than 2,500 meters, Evonik has developed a lighter composite pipe in collaboration with pipeline producer Airborne from the Netherlands. It consists entirely of VESTAMID® NRG and is reinforced with glass fiber. Next year, Malaysian mineral oil company PETRONAS will lay its offshore pipelines completely without steel.

In the applied technology laboratory at Evonik in Marl (Germany): Chemical laboratory technician Karsten Hinnah removes a round metal container from a furnace. It contains white polymer tubes and disks: test specimens made from VESTAMID® NRG. The experts simulate prolonged stress on the polymer at high temperatures in the furnace. Hinnah takes the polymer specimens to the tensile stress testing machine, where they will be subjected to stress until they split. In this way, the experts can see whether the polyamide has remained stable despite the stress.

Adapted for many different uses

"We put the polymer through its paces in numerous tests," reports Hinnah. For example, the experts simulate the pressures and temperatures experienced in an oil field in a test rig they built themselves. The test results are also an important basis for what is known as a "lifetime model." Since all oil fields are different, the pipes are tailored to suit the respective site. This takes account of the operating temperature and the different chemical compositions of the crude oil, for example. Every tailored pipe has a lifetime model: It shows in detail what condition the pipe has in certain situations and when it has to be maintained. This guarantees protection on the high seas.

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