Open Discussion on Fittings Used in Subsea Applications - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Open Discussion on Fittings Used in Subsea Applications

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Open Discussion on Fittings Used in Subsea Applications Standards and Future Challenges COIN Soap Box Meeting #4 (SBM#4) Presented by Mark Holder – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Open Discussion on Fittings Used in Subsea Applications


1
Open Discussion on Fittings Used in Subsea
Applications Standards and Future Challenges
  • COIN Soap Box Meeting 4 (SBM4)
  • Presented by Mark Holder

2
Fittings Considerations for Subsea Equipment
  • There are many considerations to keep in mind
    when determining which fitting to use. Questions
    to keep in mind in the determination are as
    follows
  • Is the fitting exposed to ambient sea water
    conditions or dielectric service such as in a
    SCM?
  • Is the maximum operating temperature at or
    below 140F?
  • Is the fitting tied into the cathodic
    protection system?
  • Is the service condition driven by NACE
    MR0175/ISO 15156 (exposed or potentially exposed
    to wellbore condition)?
  • Is the fitting required to be rated to the RWP
    of the tree?

3
Other Considerations
  • There are other considerations that must be
    evaluated in the selection of fittings. These
    include
  • Are there customer expectations for the
    fittings such as test ports verifying the makeup?
    (example tubing hanger fittings)
  • Are there fitting requirements defined within
    the customer specification such as anti
    back-off , anti vibration or metal to metal?
  • If a fitting is specified by the customer, is
    it qualified and to what requirements? (PTI, Well
    Dynamics, Butech, Nova, Production Quest, etc)
  • Do the other items in the circuit have
    consistent ports or connections? (Hot stab
    receptacles, needle valves, etc)
  • Are there interface requirements/constraints
    which may prohibit a fitting?
  • Are there standard practices in installation
    that have been defined and accepted?
  • What tubing is to be used to interface the
    fitting (tube material, hardness, etc)?

4
Which Fitting?
  • With all of the fitting manufacturers and types
    of fittings and interfaces availablehow do we
    chose the best fitting for the application?
  • We need to look at the fittings with their pros
    and cons, review the application to determine
    the requirement of the fitting, what fittings
    have been qualified to meet the applications,
    field and rework considerations, etc.
  • This is not an easy task!

5
Common Problems To Fittings
  • Fittings have common problems that we must
    evaluate. These problems include
  • Proper make-up and installation customers are
    specifying welded connections more frequently as
    the techniques used to inspect mechanically
    attached fittings is lacking. There appears to
    be a lack of trust in how fittings are installed.
  • Lack of adequate length of tube insertion into
    compression style fittings
  • Under or over tightened causing the tube to
    slip or threaded connections to back off
  • Cone and threaded fittings have inherent issues
  • Taper must be machined properly (angle and
    surface finish)
  • Alignment of the tube cone to the sealing cone
    may be difficult with heavier walled tubes
  • Anti vibration fittings must be used as the
    standard gland fittings are poor when it comes to
    vibration resistance
  • These fittings are labor intensive in the cone
    and thread operation and make up
  • Proper lubricants must be used or the torque
    values specified are invalid
  • Potential for galled threads with some material
    combinations

6
Requirements of Fittings
  • How are fittings qualified and what as an
    industry should we use as a standard?
  • There are a couple of good standards that can
    certainly apply to the qualification of a
    fitting. Two such standards are ASTM F1387 and
    ISO 19879. FMCTI has standardized on the ASTM
    standard as it covers all of the tests identified
    within the ISO document but also includes other
    important tests.
  • FMCTI has also performed a review of the fittings
    materials of construction and identified what the
    material should be as a standard based on service
    conditions. These service conditions take into
    account the circuit (Control Line service,
    Chemical Injection Service, Test Line Service,
    Tubing Hanger Service) as well as the
    considerations presented earlier.
  • Taking all of this into accountwhat do we have?

7
FMCTI Standard Fittings
  • For lower pressure circuits such as for control
    line interface to valves, compensation circuits,
    hot stab interface for lock and unlock of
    connectors, etc limited to the control system
    working pressure of 3,000 to 5,000-PSI (207 to
    345 bar) the 37 degree SAE J514 metal to metal
    sealing JIC interface was selected as the
    standard threaded port and the twin ferrule
    compression fittings were selected for tube
    interface.
  • For higher pressure circuits such as for test
    lines, the medium pressure or high pressure cone
    and thread interface was selected as it too is a
    metal to metal sealing fitting.
  • The requirement for standard fittings is for
    subsea ambient temps and exposure, tied in the CP
    system and has no potential for exposure to
    production or annular fluids or NACE/ISO
    requirement.
  • Some equipment does not however have these
    connections as a standard which introduces
    difficultywe have to adapt.

8
Proper Use and Installation
  • FMCTI recognizes the issues facing everyone with
    regards to fittings. As a result, FMCTI has
    contacted the fitting manufacturers and captured
    their recommended practices for installation,
    their qualification records or statements, the
    OEM catalog of fittings accepted within FMCTI,
    the pressure ratings of the connections present
    for the fittings all in an effort to ensure the
    fittings are used properly and are installed
    correctly.
  • What about the other fittings (which we will call
    specialty fittings)?

9
FMCTI Specialty Fittings
  • Specialty fittings are those that are exposed to
    elevated temperatures, have the potential for
    exposure to production or annular fluids, or are
    installed in systems that lack cathodic
    protection, etc. These fittings typically have
    material of construction changes required to meet
    the service conditions.
  • These fittings require greater scrutiny, for
    example those used in tubing hangers. Materials
    of construction review is required for
    temperature and/or level of exposure. Service
    conditions define the level of qualification
    required to ensure the fitting meets design life
    criteria. Accessibility and installation may
    also pose a problem if a condition should arise
    in testing.

10
Specialty Fittings
  • Specialty fittings can be as simple as an alloy
    625 compression fitting (for elevated temperature
    or lack of CP) or as complex as a fitting used in
    a tubing hanger with test ports and multiple
    seals.
  • Tubing hanger fittings pose some interesting
    challenges. The fitting materials are required
    to be NACE/ISO compliant which typically are
    lower hardness materials but are required to bite
    or seal on tubing. The preferred method of
    interface to the tube is via swaging as it is
    quick and simple. The issue is twofold. The
    tube has to be NACE/ISO compliant, have thin
    enough wall to be swaged and yet thick enough to
    maintain the pressure. In most cases, this means
    the tubing used does not maintain the same safety
    factors applied to the industry tubes such as
    ASME B31.3 (41) and/or reaching the hardness
    limits with higher strength materials. The
    ferrules used to bite on the tubes are meant to
    be higher in hardness to ensure the ferrules bite
    into the tubes and do not deform around the tube
    but again may be limited due to NACE/ISO.

11
Specialty Fittings cont.
  • Not to be negative, but to open the discussion
  • The ferrules used by companies manufacturing
    tubing hanger fittings in most cases are not of
    their design but of companies such as Swagelok.
    This means they are manufacturing a fitting body
    and using another companies ferrules. Swagelok
    does not condone using their ferrules nor do they
    warrant to the pressures indicated indicating
    that the pressure rating limit is to the ASME
    B31.3 rating of the tube. Discussions with
    Parker and Swagelok in development of these
    fittings have not so far been very productive.
  • This requires the fittings manufacturers to fully
    warrant their products inclusive of other
    companies components. When you ask these same
    companies how they have qualified their fitting
    designs, you get mixed results. Remember, these
    companies did not establish the original ferrule
    to body design and have re-engineered the
    interface.
  • What do we do?

12
Future Challenges
  • Fittings and fitting interfaces are reaching a
    critical point. We as an industry have yet to
    define a fitting that everyone is comfortable
    with either in performance or in installation.
    This applies to both low and higher pressure
    applications. Because we have reached this point
    with limited solutions, some customers have
    imposed welding as a solution using RT as a
    criteria with which to grade the weld. This may
    not be possible for tubing hanger interface.
    Field maintenance and repair then becomes a
    challenge potentially requiring re-weld and NDE
    in environments that do not support or allow
    these activities
  • For 20K applicationswhere do we go from here?
    Do we use cone and thread HP connections? Will
    the tubing support this downhole?

13
Potential Solutions
  • FMCTI has been evaluating different fittings and
    connection methods in an effort to not only meet
    requirements but to provide a solution that is
    efficient and easy to install, has a way to
    measure the installation to ensure it has been
    assembled properly and is robust to meet the
    future demands.
  • The SAE J518 code 62 4-bolt flange is being
    investigated for the lower pressure (6KSI or
    less) circuits such as for control and
    compensation circuits. The code 62 flange has an
    extensive history on heavy machinery and is
    extremely rugged in design. Incorporation of a
    metallic seal would alleviate any concerns for
    elevated temperatures or other issues in the use
    of elastomers if needed. It requires torque of 4
    bolts which can be measured, not questioning the
    tube interface as it can be welded.
  • There are still challenges with OEM providers
    meeting this interface

14
Potential Solutions cont.
  • For higher pressure applications, FMCTI is
    evaluating permanent solutions which are not
    defined as welded. These permanent solutions
    could be shaped memory alloys, swaging fittings
    such as Parkers Phastite and Tube-Macs
    Pyplokor other fittings as they are being
    developed. All fittings reviewed to date have
    pros and cons which is why a clear winner
    hasnt been established. We may be in a
    situation where we need to determine what the
    market is willing to tolerate in light of the
    current problems we face with fittings. There
    may not be a perfect fitting out there for every
    applications which means
  • What are we willing to accept?

15
Open Discussion
  • Can we drive establishing a standard in
    interfaces similar to what ISO 13628-8/API 17H is
    doing with ROV tooling?
  • What performance criteria do we establish or
    accept as a standard in evaluating a fittings
    performance?
  • How do we better communicate or relay information
    with regards to fittings across the industry so
    we all benefit from the experiences?
  • Have painful or costly experiences driven the
    market to define the requirements we see in
    specifications today or is it a case of a
    consultant or consulting group making their
    recommendations to better leverage their
    position?
  • IDEAS?
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