Offshore de-oiling installations are facing an increasing challenge with regards to removing oil residuals from produced water prior to discharge into the ocean. The de-oiling of produced water is initially achieved in the primary separation processes using gravity-based multi-phase separators, which can effectively handle large amounts of oil-well fluids but may struggle with the efficient separation of small dispersed oil particles. Thereby hydrocyclone systems are commonly employed in the downstream Produced Water Treatment (PWT) process for further reducing the oil concentration in the produced water before it can be discharged into the ocean. The popularity of hydrocyclone technology in the offshore oil and gas industry is mainly due to its rugged design and low maintenance requirements. However, to operate and control this type of system in an efficient way is far less simple, and alternatively this task imposes a number of key control challenges. Specifically, there is much research to be performed in the direction of dynamic modeling and control of de-oiling hydrocyclone systems. The current solutions rely heavily on empirical trial-and-error approaches. This paper gives a brief review of current hydrocyclone control solutions and the remaining challenges and includes some of our recent work in this topic and ends with a motivation for future work.
This paper contributes to the understanding of competition and industry evolution by analyzing how submarket dynamics and agency influence the development of the emerging industrial field of Danish offshore wind energy. We argue that industry evolution is sensitive to the balance between integration, overlap and disintegration across submarkets. This balance depends on how strategic intent and behavior influence submarket dynamics, leading to the conclusion that effects of agency and managerial intent should play a more prominent role in studies of industry evolution.
In this paper, the nonlinear interaction of regular water waves propagating over a fixed and submerged circular cylinder is numerically studied. At the structure’s lee side, the free surface profile experiences strong nonlinear deformation where the superharmonic free wave generated can be significant and is superposed on the transmitted wave. The wave profile then becomes asymmetric and skewed and may eventually reach the point of physical wave breaking. The governing equation and boundary conditions of this wave–structure interaction problem are formulated using both the fully nonlinear and the weak-scatterer theory. The corresponding boundary value problem is numerically solved by the immersed-boundary adaptive harmonic polynomial cell solver. In this study, a pragmatic wave-breaking suppression model is incorporated into the original solver. Both the harmonic free wave amplitudes at the structure’s lee side and the harmonic vertical forces on the cylinder are studied. The simulated harmonic wave amplitudes are compared to other published experiments and theoretical data. In general, good agreement is achieved. The effects of the incorporated wave-breaking suppression model on the simulated results are discussed. In our study, the incorporation of the pragmatic wave-breaking suppression model successfully extends the capabilities of the original fully nonlinear immersed-boundary adaptive harmonic polynomial cell solver.
This paper examines the stability of a weak island namely Sumbawa-Lombok of Indonesian grid, interconnected with two infeed HVDC links facilitating 2 x 120 MW power transfer from Sumba and Flores Island. Through power flow, short circuit, small signal stability, resonance stability, and transient stability analyses, it is demonstrated that the existing infrastructure fails to support such transfer due to voltage drops, overloading, and stability limitations. Upgrading to 150 kV and its subsequent component resolves the small-signal and transient stability constraint as its grid strength is increasing. The current findings underscore that the primary limitation lies in the grid's infrastructure, not in dynamic or control constraints. The current result establishes the need for strategic grid reinforcements to support HVDC integration in weak systems and sets the stage for future research on optimizing the extent of such reinforcements.
Climate change is affecting the oceans with increased sea levels, ocean acidification and extreme weather affecting coastal ecosystems. This necessitates a new model for climate and marine law, because existing law and policy are insufficient to tackle adaptation and mitigation impacts upon the marine environment. Presently, we do not know what it takes to integrate and balance climate legislation and governance when faced with unknown problems. The concept of Blue Economy is new and originates from the United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development. This chapter explores how one can best build new knowledge that can integrate climate law and marine governance. It does so by proposing the creation of a nexus between ecosystem-based regulations and marine spatial planning in order to create a new paradigm for effective and inclusive Blue Economy, using a systemic multi-regulatory framework (Global, Regional and National).
This paper investigates the challenges associated with remote harmonic compensation in offshore wind power plants through long cables and transformers. The interaction between the grid network and the wind power plant network can lead to the amplification of certain harmonics and potentially resonant conditions. Hence, the plant developer is required to maintain the harmonic distortion at the point of common coupling within the planning level limits using harmonic compensation, which is usually done by static filters. In this paper an active damping compensation strategy with a STATCOM using emulation of using emulation of resistance at the harmonic frequencies of concern is analyzed. Finally the results are demonstrated using time domain simulations in PSCAD.
When an offshore wind power plant is connected to the grid, there is a risk of amplification of certain harmonics and appearance resonances at the point of connection due to the interaction between the grid network and the wind power plant network. Hence, the plant developer is obliged to maintain the harmonic distortion at the point of common coupling within the planning level limits using harmonic compensation, which is usually done by passive filters. In this paper a novel active harmonic compensation technique using voltage feedback from a non-local bus has been proposed and analyzed. Its effectiveness has been demonstrated through real time simulations on a test system model.
The share of renewables in the power system is increasing rapidly. Large offshore wind power plants (OWPPs) are developed at a high pace and conventional fossil fuel-based plants are decommissioned. If the OWPP gets islanded due to any contingency or in the event of a blackout, the whole OWPP will be shutdown. This paper proposes a STATCOM with a battery storage that is located at the point of common connection to an OWPP to enable OWPP energization from a fully discharged state to operate in islanded mode. The STATCOM functionality provides fast and dynamic reactive power management and the battery unit provides active power balancing capability to regulate the frequency in the island. The concept is demonstrated through time-domain simulations on an OWPP model in PSCAD. The results confirm the technical feasibility of the system.
The share of renewables in the power system is increasing rapidly. Large offshore wind power plants (OWPPs) are developed at a high pace and conventional fossil fuel-based plants are decommissioned. Consequently, there will be a risk of insufficient amount of power plants providing black start functionality for system restoration after a black out. This paper proposes a STATCOM with a battery energy storage that is located at the point of common connection to an OWPP that together can provide a reliable black start service to the power grid. The concept is demonstrated by using time domain simulations in PSCAD. The STATCOM functionality provides fast and dynamic reactive power management and the battery unit provides active power balancing capability to maintain the frequency within a tolerable range specified by the system operator. The simulation results fulfill the success criteria for the black start and confirm its feasibility for practical implementation.
Due to the presence of long high voltage cable networks, and power transformers for the grid connection, the offshore wind power plants (OWPPs) are susceptible to harmonic distortion and resonances. The grid connection of OWPP should not cause the harmonic distortion beyond the permissible limits at the point of common coupling (PCC). The resonance conditions should be avoided in all cases.
This paper describes the harmonic analysis techniques applied on an OWPP network model. A method is proposed to estimate the harmonic current compensation from a shunt-connected active power filter to mitigate the harmonic voltage distortion at the PCC. Finally, the harmonic distortions in the compensated and the uncompensated systems are compared to demonstrate the effectiveness of the compensation.