研发/创新

就像甲烷雷达一样:LongPath 获得 1.89 亿美元贷款,用于在美国油田建设大型激光塔网络

初创公司 LongPath Technologies 已获得有条件联邦融资,用于在美国多个州安装 1,000 座甲烷检测塔。

jpt_24_hero_longpath_甲烷_激光.JPG
一座配备新兴激光技术的 50 英尺高的塔很快将在美国安装 1,000 多座塔,作为庞大的甲烷探测阵列的一部分。
来源:长径科技

在美国能源部 (DOE) 本月授予的 1.89 亿美元有条件贷款的支持下,LongPath Technologies 将在美国三个主要石油和天然气盆地建立一个由 1,000 个实时甲烷监测站组成的庞大网络。

该项目名为“主动排放监控系统”,采用荣获诺贝尔奖的激光技术,目标覆盖 2500 万英亩(超过 3600 平方英里),横跨二叠纪盆地、丹佛-朱尔斯堡盆地和阿纳达科盆地。

其结果将是一个监测网络,包括科罗拉多州、堪萨斯州、俄克拉荷马州、新墨西哥州、北达科他州和德克萨斯州的大片石油和天然气国家。LongPath 表示,如果贷款的全部条件得到满足,其监控网络可能会扩大到 24,000 平方英里。

实现这样的规模依赖于说服足够多的运营商付费订阅以接入网络,该网络每 2 小时更新一次。如果发生这种情况,LongPath 认为其多态激光塔阵列将帮助美国陆上生产商捕获相当于 6 mtpa CO 2的逃逸甲烷排放量。

LongPath 首席财务官萨姆·卡明斯 (Sam Cummings) 在一份有关贷款授予的声明中表示,该技术有望“为排放检测、定位和量化制定新标准”。

他补充道,“凭借我们严格准确的实时甲烷监测系统,我们不仅在理论上提出解决方案,而且还积极实施可扩展且有效的方法来应对紧迫的环境挑战。”

美国能源部有条件融资的条款可能包括某些技术、法律、商业、合同和其他未指定的绩效指标。

jpt_24_longpath_laser2.JPG
据称,这种激光的灵敏度比基于航空和卫星的甲烷检测技术灵敏 10 至 1,000 倍。
资料来源:LongPath Technologies。

排放气象雷达

LongPath 于 2017 年在科罗拉多州博尔德成立,开发了一种类似于气象雷达的排放物。

模块化站包括一座 50 英尺高的塔,塔顶有一束不可见的“人眼安全”激光束,可连续扫描近 8 平方英里的区域,以检测、定位和量化不同的排放源。LongPath 报告的检测底限为 0.06 千克/小时,这意味着即使是相对微小的泄漏也可以检测到并快速响应。

美国能源部在贷款公告中指出,如今许多监测工作仍然依赖于天桥或地面气体成像摄像机,这在计算石油和天然气设施所有排放的能力方面留下了“巨大差距”。美国能源部表示,这会导致泄漏数周、数月或无限期地被忽视。

美国能源部在一份声明中表示,“这一点尤其正确,因为排放是间歇性的,只有持续监测才能可靠地检测到此类排放源。”

LongPath 希望通过其技术填补这一空白,据称该技术可将检测能力提高十倍,并将测量精度提高至点传感器的三倍。

LongPath表示,自2020年开始商业运营以来,其石油和天然气资产覆盖面积已扩大至超过100平方英里。

该技术不仅吸引了 Diamondback Energy 和 ConocoPhillips 等大型页岩油生产商,还促使后者从 LongPath 去年 8 月的融资中筹集的 29.5 美元中​​投资了 700 万美元。其他石油和天然气投资者包括中游运营商 Williams Companies 和压力泵提供商 ProFrac。

jpt24_laser_beam_path_longpath.JPG
资料来源:LongPath Technologies。

LongPath的独创性也使其在2022年SPE创业大赛上获得了“最佳展示奖”的最高荣誉。该大赛每年举办一次,旨在评选上游行业最有前途的新技术开发人员。

推动这一切的是一种新兴的光谱学形式,即激光频率梳,它的发明者德国的西奥多·亨施 (Theodore H讦nsch) 和美国的约翰·霍尔 (John Hall) 于 2005 年荣获物理学诺贝尔奖。他们的突破涉及创建一种激光器,这种激光器不是发出一束光,而是能够发出数十万个单独波长的光,这些光具有被称为“梳齿”的不同元素。

商业化之路源于霍尔与科罗拉多大学和美国国家标准与技术研究院 (NIST) 的合作,后者的研究人员推进了这项技术。他们的贡献之一是低成本光纤的集成。

这一关键步骤意味着激光频率梳技术可以应用于红外光谱,在红外光谱中可以发现甲烷和其他温室气体分子吸收的光。

原文链接/jpt
R&D/innovation

Like Radar for Methane: LongPath Gets $189 Million Loan To Build Massive Network of Laser Towers in US Oil Patch

Startup company LongPath Technologies has received conditional federal financing to install 1,000 methane detection towers spanning multiple US states.

jpt_24_hero_longpath_methane_laser.JPG
A 50-ft tower equipped with an emerging laser technology will soon be followed by 1,000 more as part of a vast methane detection array in the US.
Source: LongPath Technologies

With the backing of a $189 million conditional loan awarded this month by the US Department of Energy (DOE), LongPath Technologies is set to build a sprawling web of 1,000 real-time methane monitoring stations in three major US oil and gas basins.

The project, called the Active Emissions Overwatch System, leverages a Nobel Prize- winning laser technology and aims to span 25 million acres—or over 3,600 square miles—across the Permian, Denver-Julesburg, and Anadarko basins.

The result will be a monitoring network that includes large swaths of oil and gas country in Colorado, Kansas, Oklahoma, New Mexico, North Dakota, and Texas. If full conditions of the loan are met, LongPath said its monitoring network might expand to as big as 24,000 square miles.

Achieving such scale relies on convincing enough operators to pay for a subscription to tap into the network which is updated as often as once every 2 hours. If that happens, LongPath thinks its multistate array of laser towers will help US onshore producers catch fugitive methane emissions equal to 6 mtpa CO2.

Sam Cummings, chief financial officer for LongPath, said in a statement regarding the loan award that the technology is poised to “set a new standard for emissions detection, localization, and quantification.”

He added, “With our rigorously accurate, real-time methane monitoring system, we are not just theorizing solutions, but actively implementing a scalable and effective approach to a pressing environmental challenge.”

The terms of the DOE’s conditional financing may include certain technical, legal, commercial, contractual, and other unspecified performance metrics.

jpt_24_longpath_laser2.JPG
A laser that is claimed to be 10 to 1,000 times more sensitive than aerial- and satellite-based methane detection technologies.
Source: LongPath Technologies.

A Weather Radar for Emissions

Founded in 2017 in Boulder, Colorado, LongPath developed what has been likened to a weather radar for emissions.

The modular stations involve a 50-ft tower atop of which sits an invisible “eye-safe” laser beam that continuously scans a nearly 8-square-mile-area to detect, locate, and quantify distinct sources of emissions. LongPath reports a detection floor of 0.06 kg/hr which means even relatively tiny leaks can be detected and rapidly responded to.

The DOE noted in its announcement of the loan that many monitoring efforts today still rely on flyovers or on-the-ground gas-imaging cameras which leave “major gaps” in the ability to account for all emissions from oil and gas facilities. The DOE said this leads to leaks going unnoticed for weeks and months, or indefinitely.

“This is particularly true because emissions are intermittent—only continuous monitoring can reliably detect these kinds of emission sources,” the DOE said in a statement.

LongPath is hoping to fill the gap with its technology which it said brings a tenfold increase in detection abilities and up to three times the measurement accuracy of point sensors.

Since starting commercial operations in 2020, LongPath said its area of coverage has grown to more than 100 square miles of oil and gas assets.

The technology has not only attracted big shale producers like Diamondback Energy and ConocoPhillips, but also led the latter to invest $7 million out of the $29.5 LongPath raised in its financing round last August. Other oil and gas investors include midstream operator Williams Companies and pressure pumping provider ProFrac.

jpt24_laser_beam_path_longpath.JPG
Source: LongPath Technologies.

LongPath’s ingenuity also clinched it top honors as “Best in Show” at the 2022 SPE startup competition.Held annually, the competition highlights the most promising new technology developers in the upstream business.

Driving all of this is an emergent form of spectroscopy known as the laser frequency comb which in 2005 earned its inventors, Theodore Hӓnsch of Germany and John Hall of the US, the Noble Prize in physics. Their breakthrough involved the creation of a laser that instead of sending out one beam of light is able to pulse hundreds of thousands of individual wavelengths of lights with distinct elements known as “comb teeth.”

The path to commercialization stems from Hall’s affiliation with the University of Colorado and the National Institutes of Standards and Technology (NIST) whose researchers advanced the technology. Among their contributions was the integration of low-cost fiber optics.

This critical step meant the laser frequency comb technique could be applied to the infrared spectrum which is where one finds the light absorbed by methane and other greenhouse gas molecules.