The International Association for the Proper ties of Water and Steam - iapws2019
←
→
Page content transcription
If your browser does not render page correctly, please read the page content below
The I nter nati o nal Asso ciatio n for the Pro per ti es o f Water and Ste am 2019 Annual Meeting September 29-October 4, 2019 The Banff Centre for Arts and Creativity Banff, Alberta, Canada IAPWS Symposium Chemistry and Mass Transport for Steam Generation and Injection Processes Wednesday October 2nd, 2019 • Banff Centre for Arts and Creativity • Banff, Alberta, Canada The Canadian National Committee of IAPWS greatly appreciates the support of our sponsors and supporting partners. IAPWS 2019 Sponsors IAPWS 2019 Supporting Partners Official Canadian Partner Organization of National Research Council of Canada (NRC) overseeing the management of Canadian National Committee (CNC) of IAPWS
1.0 Symposium Opening 9:00 – 9:10 1.1 Introductory Remarks Jan Hrubý, IAPWS President, Institute of Thermomechanics of the Czech Academy of Sciences, Czech Republic Helmholtz Lecture & Award Presentation: Surface Tension of Supercooled Water, Seawater Václav Vinš, Institute of Thermomechanics of the Czech 9:10 – 9:55 1.2 and Aqueous Binaries at Low Temperatures Academy of Sciences, Czech Republic including Metastable Supercooled Region William Cook, Canadian National Committee of IAPWS, 9:55 – 10:00 1.3 Welcome to IAPWS and the IAPWS Symposium University of New Brunswick, Canada 2.0 Equations-of State for Water and Aqueous Fluid Mixtures Progress in Modeling Thermophysical Properties Allan Harvey, National Institute of Standards and 10:00 – 10:25 2.1 for H2O and D2O Technology, USA 10:25 – 10:50 Coffee Break 10:50 – 11:15 2.2 Development of Equations of State for Seawater Rich Pawlowicz, University of British Columbia, Canada 3.0 Oil and Gas (steam injection, amine-based gas processing, sour-gas fluids) 11:15 – 11:40 3.1 Water Issues/Solutions in Oil & Gas – Once Through Basil Perdicakis, Suncor Steam Generator R&D Overview in Alberta Sean Sanders, University of Alberta, Canada 11:40 – 12:05 3.2 Water Content of Sour Gases Rob Marriott, University of Calgary, Canada 12:05 – 12:30 3.3 Small Modular Reactors for Oil Extraction Processes Craig Stuart, Canadian Nuclear Laboratories, Canada 12:30 – 13:30 Lunch (provided) 4.0 Modelling Hydrothermal Fluids for Nuclear, Thermal and Oil & Gas Applications 13:30 – 13:55 4.1 Modeling Phase and Chemical Equilibria for Carbon Capture, Transportation and Storage Andre Anderko, OLI Systems Inc., USA Speciation of Boric Acid, Borate and Polyborates under PWR Primary Coolant Conditions by AC 13:55 – 14:20 4.2 Peter Tremaine, University of Guelph, Canada Conductivity and Raman Spectroscopy: Implications for Modelling Coolant Chemistry and Boron Hideout Case Study - OLI Warm Lime Softening: Subodh Peramanu, Canadian Natural Resources Limited, 14:20 – 14:45 4.3 Lime and Magox Silicate Reactions Modelling Canada 14:45 – 15:00 Coffee Break 5.0 Film Forming Substances (FFS) for Power Cycle Applications 15:00 – 15:25 5.1 Assessment of FFS Technology Stephen Shulder, EPRI, USA 15:25 – 15.50 5.2 FFS Application for Nuclear Systems Jörg Fandrich, Framatome, Germany 15:50– 16:15 5.3 FFS for Steam Cycle Applications Ivan Morales, Integrated Sustainability, USA 16:15 – 16:30 5.4 Symposium Closing Discussion All Close of IAPWS Symposium
IAPWS Symposium Speakers Jan Hrubý Jan Hrubý received his Ph.D. from the Czech Academy of Sciences in 1988. From 1994-1995 he was a postdoctoral fellow at the Max-Planck Institut for Biophysical Chemistry, Department of Kinetics of Nucleation) in Göttingen, Germany and from 1999-2000 was a postdoctoral fellow at the Technical University Eindhoven, Department of Applied Physics in Eindhoven, The Netherlands. He is an external lecturer of thermodynamics and thermophysical properties at the University of Liberec and Czech Technical University and is Head of the Department of Thermodynamics at the Institute of Thermomechanics of the Czech Academy of Sciences. His expertise is thermodynamics, heat and mass transfer, thermophysical properties of fluids, equations of state, phase transitions, nucleation, experimental methods, design of experimental devices, correlation of experimental data. Václav Vinš Václav Vinš received his Ph.D. at the Czech Technical University in Prague in 2010. For more than eight years, he collaborated with the CERN laboratory on the design of cooling circuits for particle detectors. Since 2008, he works at the Institute of Thermomechanics of the Czech Academy of Sciences at the Thermodynamics department led by Jan Hrubý. Václav Vinš serves as a head of one of four laboratories there since 2012. His main research topics are closely related to IAPWS and include investigation of supercooled aqueous systems (especially measurement of surface tension and density) and modeling of gas hydrates – together with the Ruhr-Universität Bochum and the Technische Universität Dresden. Research on gas hydrates was initiated by the Young Scientist IAPWS Project in 2011. Allan Harvey Allan Harvey earned a B.S. in chemical engineering from the University of Missouri at Rolla (now Missouri University of Science and Technology) and a Ph.D. in chemical engineering from the University of California at Berkeley. Since 1994, he has been with the National Institute of Standards and Technology in Boulder, Colorado, where he is a Chemical Engineer in the Applied Chemicals and Materials Division. His work at NIST focuses on modeling thermophysical properties of pure fluids and mixtures, with an emphasis on aqueous systems and systems of importance for metrology. Dr. Harvey has also served since 2011 as the Chair of the IAPWS Working Group on Thermophysical Properties of Water and Steam. Rich Pawlowicz Trained in Engineering, Math, and Ocean Physics at Queen’s University, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Rich’s main research interests are in small-scale geophysical fluid processes, the development of new observational tools for ocean studies, and the oceanography of the NE Pacific. A participant in the development of the Thermodynamic Equation of Seawater 2010 (TEOS-10), Rich is currently chairman of the Joint SCOR/IAPSO/IAPWS Committee on the Properties of Seawater (also known as JCS). Basil Perdicakis Basil Perdicakis is a Technology Advisor with Suncor. He has over 12 years of work experience in the oil sands industry in operations, engineering, and technology development roles. Basil has previously been employed by Bantrel and Statoil. He holds a BSc in Chemical Engineering from the University of Calgary and a PhD in Chemical Engineering from the University of Waterloo. Sean Sanders Dr. Sean Sanders is an award-winning educator and researcher whose scientific interests intersect with his concern for the environmental aspects of resource extraction. After completing his PhD at the University of Alberta, Sanders joined Syncrude Canada Ltd. and held a number of technical and leadership positions within the company’s Research and Operations’ divisions. He joined the University of Alberta’s Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering in 2006 and has held the NSERC Industrial Research Chair in Pipeline Transport Processes since 2008. In 2012, he received the Alberta Science and Technology (ASTech) Award for Innovation in Oil Sands Research for his work in developing oil sands mining and extraction processes that use less energy and water. Rob Marriott Dr. Marriott is an experimental thermodynamicist with research interests in high-pressure sour gas properties and applied sulfur chemistry. His group focuses on optimizing gas conditioning in the presence of H2S, bulk fluid separation by ionic liquids, high-pressure water-hydrocarbon solution chemistry (including hydrates) and fundamental properties of elemental sulfur under industrial conditions. The research is carried out adjacent to the Alberta Sulphur Research Ltd. laboratories at the University Research Centre (URC) and in many cases complement ASRL’s Core Research Program.
IAPWS Symposium Speakers Craig Stuart Dr. Craig Stuart holds a PhD in Radiation Chemistry from the University of Leeds in the UK and has worked at the Chalk River laboratories of Canadian Nuclear Laboratories (formerly Atomic Energy of Canada) since 1995. Craig has studied radiation chemistry as applied to reactor coolant systems for over 25 years from the fundamentals of reaction mechanisms and kinetics through to providing applied solutions on-site to nuclear reactor operators. Craig is the Chemistry Working Group Leader of the CANDU Owners Group (COG). Andre Anderko Andre Anderko is the Chief Technology Officer of OLI Systems. Andre’s activities at OLI focus on thermodynamic and transport properties of electrolyte and nonelectrolyte systems and modeling of aqueous corrosion of metals. He has authored more than 130 papers, one book, and four book chapters. He has received the Helmholtz Award of the International Association for the Properties of Water and Steam (2000), the R&D100 Award for the Corrosion Analyzer software (2007) and two Bengough Awards of the Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining (2006, 2011). Andre is a Fellow of NACE International. Peter Tremaine Dr. Peter Tremaine FCIC holds the NSERC/UNENE Senior Industrial Research Chair in High Temperature Aqueous Chemistry at the University of Guelph, and former Dean of the College of Physical and Engineering Science (2001-2006). Before moving to Guelph, he was Head, Department of Chemistry at Memorial University of Newfoundland; Manager of the AOSTRA In Situ Oil Sands Research Program at the Alberta Research Council; and Research Officer at Atomic Energy of Canada Ltd. Tremaine’s research is centered on the use of small-scale flow techniques for high-precision measurements on the properties of aqueous chemistry at very high temperatures and pressures. He supervises a group of ~10 students and postdoctoral fellows, and is an Honorary Fellow and former President of IAPWS. Subodh Peramanu Dr. Subodh Peramanu has more than 20 years of experience in process modelling, simulation, engineering, economics, and technology development for bitumen upgrading, and SAGD processes including oil treating, de-oiling, water treatment and stream generation. He has published technical papers on various topics including flow instabilities, multicomponent mass transfer, flow meter uncertainties, bitumen characterization, asphaltene solubility, and steam generator scaling, efficiency and optimization. Currently he is working as a process and technology specialist with Canadian Natural Resources Limited. He is also a steering committee member of Canada’s Oil Sands Innovation Alliance (COSIA) to improve the environmental performance of Oil Sands industries. He holds a Bachelor in chemical engineering from IICT, Mumbai, India, Master’s degree from IIT, Kanpur, India, and PhD from University of Calgary, Canada. Stephen Shulder Steve Shulder is the program manager for EPRI’s Boiler and Turbine Steam and Cycle Chemistry dealing with steam/water cycle steam chemistry in conventional fossil and combined cycle plants. He has worked in power chemistry and environmental programs for over 40 years. Before joining EPRI, he was an associate for Structural Integrity, supervising engineer at Constellation Energy, chemist at Delmarva Power and environmental scientist for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Steve received a MS degree from Penn State University in environmental engineering and BS degree from Rutgers University in environmental chemistry. He is a member of the Power Plant and Environmental Chemistry Committee and ASME Research Committee on Properties of Water and Steam. Jörg Fandrich Jörg Fandrich (M.S., Nuclear Physics, Technical University Dresden, Germany) works as Fellow Expert for Framatome GmbH. He has led the Power Plant Chemistry Consulting Group within the department of Chemistry Services at the Framatome GmbH head office in Erlangen, Germany for nearly ten years. Since 1986, he has worked in the field of power plant chemistry for several companies, at both nuclear and fossil power plants. His main field of experience is special issues of PWR chemistry (primary and secondary side), including the development of related monitoring and diagnostic systems. In this sector, Jörg Fandrich owns several patents and has published diverse technical articles. His more than thirty years of experience also covers specific questions related to the commissioning of nuclear power plants with pressurized water reactors of different designs. Ivan Morales Ivan Morales is Water Manager for Integrated Sustainability, located in Houston. He holds over 20 years of experience across a variety of different industries, including Oil Refinery, Upstream Oil Extraction, Power Generation, Brewery, and Food Beverage. Ivan has worked in four different countries and is knowledgeable of the business market for the oil and gas industry within Canada, United States of America, Mexico, and Venezuela. He continues to serve as Executive Committee member with the International Water Conference, where he has been presenting two papers, multiple discussion papers, and leadership role within the event.
You can also read