Solaris 的创新有助于减少竣工停机时间

Solaris 的新型电动搅拌机比传统同类搅拌机具有更长的正常运行时间,而移动斗式提升机则加快了沙子输送过程

Solaris 的新型电动搅拌机比传统同类产品具有更长的正常运行时间,而移动斗式提升机则加快了沙子输送过程(来源:Solaris)

缩短完井时间推动了整个过程的创新,索拉里斯油田基础设施已将其创新工程重点转向移动、储存和混合沙子。

“我们正在努力做的是帮助我们的客户提高效率,”Solaris 工程副总裁 Scott Lambert 说。

但许多因素都会导致非生产时间 (NPT),包括搅拌机维修以及将沙子从卡车转移到储存筒仓的效率低下。

兰伯特说,Solaris 希望找到更多方法来减少设备和沙子缺乏带来的 NPT。

因此,Solaris 开发了“autoBlend”,这是一款具有良好正常运行时间记录的集成电动搅拌机,以及“top Fill”斗式提升机,用于将沙子输送到每个公司的垂直筒仓中。

“这推动了电动搅拌机行业的发展。” 蒂·迪·迪奥斯科特·兰伯特 (Solaris)

兰伯特说:“电动搅拌机行业受到了推动。”

他说,这是因为由柴油发动机驱动的传统搅拌机很容易出现导致 NPT 的问题。问题包括发动机、电机和液压故障。

Lambert 表示,AutoBlend 的电气设计意味着机械部件更加简单,因为不需要传动线路、齿轮箱和其他组件。

“这确实简化了搅拌机本身的事情,”他说。

精简搅拌机

搅拌机可由柴油发电机、天然气或现场天然气提供动力。

AutoBlend 设计在搅拌机外部放置了一个电子室,其中装有控制器、大功率开关设备和电机驱动器。

“将搅拌机精简为搅拌机的功能。混合水和沙子,”兰伯特说。

由于 AutoBlend 设计为与 Solaris 立式砂仓配合使用,因此搅拌机不需要砂螺杆或料斗。该搅拌机具有三个桶,由该公司的六罐筒仓设计提供支持。

“您不必保持料斗装满。我们的 250 万磅存储系统就是我们的料斗,”兰伯特说。

他说,如果没有砂螺丝,就不用担心轴承损坏。

事实上,砂螺丝是搅拌机 NPT 的主要原因之一,他说。

由于搅拌机问题非常常见,操作员在一台搅拌机泵送时让多台搅拌机处于待命状态的情况并不少见。

他说,这些搅拌机比以往任何时候都更加努力地工作,因为以前一年抽出的总量现在可能在水平钻井而不是垂直钻井的情况下只需一个月就可以抽出。

“现在的压裂设备比 90 年代甚至 2000 年代初要困难得多,”兰伯特说。

Lambert 表示,AutoBlend 现已推出约 18 个月,每月与 AutoBlend 相关的停机时间只有个位数小时。

“我们在采用过程中遇到了一些阻力,就像我们在储存沙子时遇到的阻力一样,”他说。

阻力来自于压力泵客户已经拥有搅拌机这一事实。而且,如果客户拥有三到四个搅拌机来支持每个压裂船队,“就会在这些搅拌机上投入大量资金,”兰伯特说。

他说 Solaris 理解这种阻力,但也看到了 AutoBlend 的价值。它可以租赁的方式提供。

“每四台搅拌机工作,我们就需要一台在现场备用,但这是我们的责任。” 客户不必为此付费,”他说。

Solaris 的创新有助于减少竣工停机时间
Solaris 开发了 AutoBlend 和 Top Fill 斗式提升机,用于将沙子输送到每个公司的垂直筒仓中。(来源:Solaris)

从二叠纪装载到落基山脉

兰伯特说,现在可以使用 Solaris 的 Top Fill 移动斗式提升机来填充六罐筒仓系统,这种方法可以节省时间和金钱。

面临的挑战是如何在不使用长传送带的情况下将沙子从底部拖车运送到 50 英尺筒仓的顶部。

“如果筒仓高 50 英尺,则需要一条 100 英尺长的传送带从地面对其进行喂料。它占用了很多空间,”兰伯特说。

使用顶部填充升降机,底部拖车可以在短短四分钟内卸载 55,000 磅的有效负载。

“如果卡车排好队,我们可以比将沙子运送到搅拌机的速度更快地将沙子运送到沙仓,”兰伯特说。“这是一款真正节省空间的设备。” 它非常紧凑。”

Solaris 的第一台顶部填充装置于 2022 年 1 月问世。目前已生产 20 多台,在德克萨斯州南部、二叠纪盆地、怀俄明州和落基山脉运行,Solaris 计划在 2023 年建设计划中生产更多顶部填充装置。

当 Solaris 考虑顶部装载湿沙的可能性时,随着最后一英里的沙子输送变得越来越重要,顶部填充的开发开始了。

Top Fill 每天都在移动普通的干压裂砂,“但我们现在用湿砂进行测试,”兰伯特说。

原文链接/hartenergy

Solaris' Innovations Help Reduce Completions Downtime

Solaris’ new electrical blender has higher up time than its traditional counterparts, while a mobile bucket elevator speeds up the sand delivery process

Solaris’ new electrical blender has higher up time than its traditional counterparts, while a mobile bucket elevator speeds up the sand delivery process (Source: Solaris)

Cutting the time to complete wells has driven innovation throughout the process, and Solaris Oilfield Infrastructure has turned its inventive engineering focus toward moving, storing and blending sand.

“What we’re trying to do is help our customers be more efficient,” said Scott Lambert, vice president of engineering at Solaris.

But a host of factors can contribute to nonproductive time (NPT), including blender repair and inefficiencies in transferring sand from trucks into storage silos.

Solaris wanted to find more ways to reduce NPT from equipment and a lack of sand, Lambert said.

So, Solaris developed the “AutoBlend,” which is an integrated electric blender with a solid uptime record and the “Top Fill” bucket elevator for transferring sand into each company’s vertical silos.

“There’s been a push in the industry for electric blenders.” ⁠—Scott Lambert, Solaris

“There’s been a push in the industry for electric blenders,” Lambert said.

That is because conventional blenders powered by diesel engines are prone to issues that cause NPT, he said. Problems include engine, motor and hydraulic failures.

Lambert said the AutoBlend’s electrical design means the mechanical parts are simpler because drive lines, gear boxes and other components are not required.

“It really simplifies things on the blender itself,” he said.

Stripped down blender

The blender can be powered by a diesel generator, natural gas or field gas.

The AutoBlend design places an electronics room outside the blender that houses the controls, the high-power switchgear and drives for the motor.

“We stripped down the blender to what a blender does. Blend water and sand,” Lambert said.

And because the AutoBlend was designed to operate in conjunction with Solaris’ vertical sand silos, the blender does not require sand screws or a hopper. The blender has three tubs, which is supported by the company’s six-pack silo design.

“You don’t have to keep the hopper full. Our 2.5 million-pound storage system, that is our hopper,” Lambert said.

And without the presence of sand screws, there is no worry about bearings going bad, he said.

In fact, sand screws are one of the leading causes of NPT for blenders, he said.

And because of how common blender problems are, it is not uncommon for operators to have multiple blenders on standby while one blender is pumping.

These blenders are working harder than ever, he said, because the total volumes previously pumped in a year may now be pumped in just a month with wells drilled horizontally rather than vertically, he said.

“It’s much harder on frac equipment now than it was in the ’90s or even the early 2000s,” Lambert said.

AutoBlend has been available now for about 18 months, and down time related to the AutoBlend has been in single-digit hours per month, Lambert said.

“We’ve faced some headwinds in adoption, much like we did when the sand storage happened,” he said.

The pushback comes from the fact that pressure pumping customers already own blenders. And, if a customer has three to four blenders supporting every frac fleet, “a lot of capital is invested in those blenders,” Lambert said.

He said Solaris understands the pushback, but also sees the value of the AutoBlend. It is available on a lease basis.

“For every four blenders working, we want one spare in the field but that’s on us. The customer is not having to pay for that,” he said.

Solaris’ Innovations Help Reduce Completions Downtime
Solaris developed the AutoBlend and the Top Fill bucket elevator for transferring sand into each company’s vertical silos. (Source: Solaris)

Loading up from Permian to Rockies

The six-pack silo system can now be filled using Solaris’ Top Fill mobile bucket elevator, and the method saves time and money, Lambert said.

The challenge is how to get sand from bottom-drop trailers up to the top of a 50-foot silo without using long conveyor belts.

“If the silo is 50 feet tall, you’ve got a 100-foot-long conveyor belt feeding it from the ground. It takes up a lot of space,” Lambert said.

Bottom-drop trailers can offload 55,000-pound payloads using the Top Fill elevator in just over four minutes.

“If you have the trucks lined up, we can deliver sand into the sand silo faster than the sand is being delivered to the blender,” Lambert said. “It’s a real space-saving piece of equipment. It’s really compact.”

Solaris’ first Top Fill unit came out in January 2022. More than 20 have been manufactured, working in South Texas, the Permian Basin, Wyoming and the Rockies, and Solaris has more Top Fill units planned in its 2023 build program.

Development of the Top Fill started when Solaris considered the possibility of top-loading wet sand as the last mile of sand delivery became increasingly critical.

Top Fill is moving normal dry frac sand every day, “but we’re performing tests with wet sand now,” Lambert said.