CHOKE VALVE

1.Introduction

Choke valve, sometimes also known as ‘choker valve’ is a type of control valve, mostly used in oil and gas production wells to control the flow of well fluids being produced. Another purpose that the choke valves serve is to kill the pressure from the reservoir and to regulate the downstream pressure in the flowlines.

Choke valves allow fluid flow through a very small opening, designed to kill the reservoir pressure while regulating the well production. The reservoir fluids can contain sand particles. Hence the choke valves are usually designed to handle an erosive service.

                     Typical Choke valve Cross- Section

 

Applications of Choke Valves

Choke valves are found in a variety of applications. Some of the common uses of choke valves are:

Production well heads

For gas reinjection in the Christmas tree

In surface and sub-sea manifolds to handle mixtures of crude, gas, water, and sand in various chemical industries.

To handle Steam and CO2 in various petrochemical plants.

In drilling mud and hydraulic fracturing applications for oil and gas industries.

Oil and gas reserves.

Flowlines with very high operating pressure requirements.

Cementing and acidizing lines.

Oil and gas production platforms.

FPSO loading vessels.

 

Types of Choke Valves

Depending on the function of the choke valves they are classified into two groups. They are:

Regulating choke valves and

Non-regulating choke valves.

 

Regulating Choke Valves

This type of choke valve acts as a flow control valve. These valves are capable of maintaining steady production levels in production headers and flowlines. It is an automatic valve where an electric signal from the panel controls the opening of the valve.

 

Non-regulating Choke Valves

Non-regulating choke valves act as an On-Off valve. The opening of these types of choke valves is designed in such a way that it can remove pressure when in fully open condition. As the name suggests, they do not regulate or control the flow.

 

Depending on the orifice sizes, there are two types of choke valves:

  • Positive Choke valve having a fixed orifice size
  • Adjustable choke valves with a variable orifice size with an external adjustment device to vary the orifice size.

 

Depending on the design and construction of the choke valves they are grouped into the following types:

  • Needle and Seat Choke valve: simple design of positive choke with a cone-shaped plug, rising stem, and handwheel.
  • Plug and Cage choke valve: complex design with ported cages arranged to provide a great combination of flow and control capability.

 

The Port cage of the choked valve can be of various types like:

 

  • 4-port cage: Used for well-site separators and line heaters.
  • Multi-ported cage: for high pressure drop critical applications.
  • Plug and cage design: for high capacity applications.

 

Choke Design

To make better use of the gas for natural gas lift and to control the bottom hole pressure for recovery reasons, chokes hold back pressure on a flowing well. With decreasing hydrostatic head, the gas expands rapidly in vertical pipe flow, and the liquid moves in slugs through the tubing. This causes the potential gas lift energy to be rapidly lost. In turn, the liquids fall back and begin to accumulate over the perforations. These accumulating liquids hold back pressure on the formation. When enough liquids accumulate, the well may “die” and quit flowing.

 

The choke holds this backpressure by restricting the flow opening at the wellhead. The uncontrolled expansion and rise of the gas are restricted by the backpressure. It thus helps keep the gas dispersed in the liquids on the way up the tubing.

 

Chokes may have a variable or a set opening. The set openings, known as “beans,” are short flow tubes. They graduated in 1/64ths of an inch. Common flow sizes are about 8 through more than 20 (in 64ths) for small to moderate rate gas wells.

 

Depending on the reservoir pressure, tubing size, amount of gas, and the amount and density of liquids, the size of the choke varies. To allow quick resetting, variable chokes may use an increasing width slot design. They are useful on well-cleanups following stimulation where choke size can vary over the course of a single day. They can also be used for periodic liquid unloading that necessitates frequent choke size changes.

 

Choke valve Symbols

Chokes valves are usually denoted by the following symbol in P&IDs.

Functions of a Choke Valve

A choke valve mainly performs the following three main functions:

 

  • Changing the flow rate by controlling the choke cross-section.
  • Loading resistance, and
  • Pressure buffering by hindering the fluid flow to a certain extent.

 

Working Principle of a Choke Valve

The main purpose of a choke valve is to restrict the flow through the valve to have the desired flow rate. This is achieved by reducing the flow area through the valve body. The adjustable choke valves control the flow rate by adjusting the stem and seat combination. The handwheel can be turned to set the orifice size and flow coefficient which in turn produces the required flow rate. In the case of positive choke valves, a fixed flow rate is achieved through the use of a choke bean.

 

Advantages of Choke Valves

Choke valves are widely used in oil and gas production facilities because of their reliability and safe handling of high operating pressures. The main advantages of choke valves are:

  • High reliability
  • High rangeability
  • Controlled erosion
  • Low noise
  • The ability of pressure balancing
  • Accurate flow rate adjustment
  • Long service life