Offshore field experiments with in-situ burning of oil: Emissions and burn efficiency

被引:21
|
作者
Faksness, Liv-Guri [1 ]
Leirvik, Frode [1 ]
Taban, Ingrid C. [3 ]
Engen, Frode [3 ]
Jensen, Hans, V [3 ]
Holbu, Jan Willie [2 ]
Dolva, Hilde [2 ]
Bratveit, Magne [4 ]
机构
[1] SINTEF Ocean AS, NO-7465 Trondheim, Norway
[2] Norwegian Coastal Adm, NO-3187 Horten, Norway
[3] Norwegian Clean Seas Assoc Operating Co, NO-4068 Stavanger, Norway
[4] Univ Bergen, NO-5020 Bergen, Norway
关键词
Emissions; Oil spill; In situ burn; Burn efficiency; Soot; RESIDUE; WATER;
D O I
10.1016/j.envres.2021.112419
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
In situ burning (ISB) is an oil spill response technique including ignition and burning to remove oil on the water surface. The technique rapidly and effectively removes large portions of the oil. However, the combustion process causes a large smoke plume and leaves a viscous residue in the water. During six large-scale experimental burns in the North Sea in 2018 and 2019, the smoke plume, released oil and contained residues were analysed. The objectives were to document the content of particles and gases in the smoke plume, properties of both the released oils and residues, and the effectiveness of the burns. Oseberg crude oil, Ultra Low Sulphur Fuel Oil (ULSFO), Intermediate Fuel Oil (IFO180) and Marine Gas Oil (MGO) were released into a fire-boom and ignited. Particles and gases in the smoke plume were monitored using drones with several sensors. Soot particle monitoring indicated that more than 90% of the particles produced during the burns were <1 mu m. Soot fallout was mainly limited to visible smoke, and the particle concentration was highest directly under the smoke plume and declined with distance from the burn. Gas monitoring in the smoke indicated low concentrations of SO2 and NOX (<2 ppm), and the concentrations of CO2 and CO were within air quality standards. Black Carbon produced relative to the amount of oil burned was 10-18%. The burn efficiency varied and were estimated to 80-91% for Oseberg, >90% for MGO, and <60% for both ULSFO and IFO180. The present paper addresses the results of the smoke plume monitoring, properties of the ISB residues and the burn efficiency.
引用
收藏
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Alteration of Heavy Oil Properties under In-Situ Combustion: A Field Study
    Zhao, R. B.
    Xia, X. T.
    Luo, W. W.
    Shi, Y. L.
    Diao, C. J.
    ENERGY & FUELS, 2015, 29 (10) : 6839 - 6848
  • [42] Preliminary Study of In-Situ Combustion in Heavy Oil Field in The North of Thailand
    Chaipornkaew, Metsai
    Wongrattapitak, Kantapong
    Chantarataneewat, Wiwan
    Boontaeng, Thanapong
    Opdal, Svein Tore
    Maneeintr, Kreangkrai
    INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON EARTH SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY PROCEEDINGS, 2013, 6 : 326 - 334
  • [43] Optimization Design and Analysis of Polymer High Efficiency Mixer in Offshore Oil Field
    Shu, Zheng
    Zhu, Shijie
    Zhang, Jian
    Zhao, Wensen
    Ye, Zhongbin
    PROCESSES, 2020, 8 (01)
  • [44] Injection energy utilization efficiency and production performance of oil shale in-situ exploitation
    Shi, Yu
    Zhang, Yulong
    Song, Xianzhi
    Cui, Qiliang
    Lei, Zhihong
    Song, Guofeng
    ENERGY, 2023, 263
  • [45] FIELD EXPERIMENTS ON APPLICATION OF NEUTRON-ACTIVATION TECHNIQUES TO IN-SITU BOREHOLE ANALYSIS
    LANDSTRO.O
    KOSKI, K
    CHRISTEL.R
    GEOEXPLORATION, 1972, 10 (01): : 23 - &
  • [46] Measuring ignitability for in situ burning of oil spills weathered under Arctic conditions: From laboratory studies to large-scale field experiments
    Fritt-Rasmussen, Janne
    Brandvik, Per Johan
    MARINE POLLUTION BULLETIN, 2011, 62 (08) : 1780 - 1785
  • [47] Numerical verification of in-situ heavy oil upgrading experiments and thermal processes for enhanced recovery
    Bueno, Nicolas
    Mejia, Juan M.
    FUEL, 2022, 313
  • [48] Evaluation of the applicability of in-situ combustion in a heavy oil carbonate field with high initial oil saturation
    Popov, Evgeny
    Askarova, Aysylu
    Mukhametdinova, Aliya
    Maksakov, Kirill
    Usachev, Gennadiy
    Darishchev, Viktor
    Mehta , Sudarshan A.
    Cheremisin, Alexey
    JOURNAL OF PETROLEUM SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING, 2021, 207
  • [49] Dispersion modeling of particulate matter from the in-situ burning of spilled oil in the northwest Arctic area of Canada
    Wang, Zheng
    An, Chunjiang
    Lee, Kenneth
    Owens, Edward
    Boufadel, Michel
    Feng, Qi
    JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT, 2022, 301
  • [50] Aerial application of herding agents to advance in-situ burning for oil spill response in the Arctic: A pilot study
    Aggarwal, Srijan
    Schnabel, William
    Buist, Ian
    Garron, Jessica
    Bullock, Robin
    Perkins, Robert
    Potter, Steve
    Cooper, David
    COLD REGIONS SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, 2017, 135 : 97 - 104