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Handbook for Remote Terminal Units (RTUs)
Oil & Gas
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1 Siemens in the Oil and Gas Industry ...........................................................................1
2 Upstream, midstream & downstream ..........................................................................3
2.1 Upstream.................................................................................................................. 3 2.2 Midstream ................................................................................................................ 4 2.3 Downstream ............................................................................................................. 4
3 SCADA, RTU, DCS .........................................................................................................5
3.1 Supervisory Control and Data Acquisition (SCADA)................................................ 5 3.2 Remote Terminal Unit (RTU) ................................................................................... 6 3.3 Distributed Control System (DCS) ........................................................................... 7 3.4 Overview SCADA, RTU and DCS............................................................................ 7
4 Background information ...............................................................................................8
4.1 SCADA / RTU vs. DCS ............................................................................................ 8 4.2 Telecontrol system / SCADA and RTU .................................................................... 9
5 RTU Applications .........................................................................................................10
5.1 RTU in the sector Oil and Gas ............................................................................... 11 5.2 Further applications regarding the neighboring sectors power, water and
wastewater facilities............................................................................................... 13 5.3 General requirements ............................................................................................ 14 5.4 Specific requirements............................................................................................. 14
6 Glossary........................................................................................................................15
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1 Siemens in the Oil and Gas Industry
For the Oil & Gas and Petrochemical Industry Siemens dedicates two sectors (Energy and Industry) with one face to the customer. We strive to be a strategic partner for end customers, EPCs and OEMs in a long-term relationship. With our process know-how, technological solutions, plant operating solutions and commercial responsibility we reduce the risks and the time it takes to complete the projects.
Siemens among the world´s leading electrical engineering and electronics companies:
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With Centers of Competence, Regional Business Centers and local offices all over the world and especially in the cities where the decisions in Oil&Gas are made such as Houston, London, Oslo, Moscow, Abu Dhabi, Beijing, Kuala Lumpur and Singapore we provide international project support.
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Gas
Oil
Upstream Downstream Midstream
2 Upstream, midstream & downstream
The process of getting natural gas or crude oil out of the ground, and to its final destination to be used, is a complicated one. It consists mostly of 3 parts: upstream, midstream and downstream.
2.1 Upstream
“Upstream” (Transport & Storage) consists mainly of the following items:
• Exploration:
Exploration outlines how natural gas or crude oil is found, and how companies decide where to drill wells for it.
• Extraction
Extraction focuses on the drilling process, and how natural gas / crude oil is brought from its underground reservoirs to the surface.
• Production
Production discusses what happens once the well is drilled; including the processing of gas / oil once it is brought out from underground.
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2.2 Midstream
“Midstream”, it consists mainly of the following items:
• Transport:
The transport outlines how the resource is transported from the wellhead and processing plant, using the extensive network of pipelines from country to country.
• Storage:
The Storage describes the storage of oil / gas, how it is accomplished, and why it is necessary.
2.3 Downstream
“Downstream” consists mainly of the following items:
• Processing / Refining
This item deals with all processes which are necessary to achieve the final or intermediate
product to be sold on the market. E.g. refining of crude oil or conditioning of gas.
• Distribution
The Distribution focuses on the delivery of the resource from the major pipelines to the end users, whoever they may be.
• Marketing
Marketing discusses the role that the oil / gas marketers play in getting the resource from the wellhead to the end user.
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3 SCADA, RTU, DCS
3.1 Supervisory Control and Data Acquisition (SCADA)
A SCADA system includes input/output signal hardware, controllers, Human Machine Interface (HMI), networks, communication, database and (application) software.
SCADA is a central system that monitors and controls typically a system spread out over a long distance. The bulk of the site control is actually performed automatically by a Remote Terminal Unit (RTU) or by a Programmable Logic Controller (PLC).
The SCADA system for an oil or gas pipeline typically reads the measured values such as
temperature pressure flow level
and monitors the correct operation of the system. If necessary it sends commands (e.g. for opening / closing of valves) or setpoints (e.g. for pump / compressor control) to the connected process controllers (RTU / PLC / DCS).
The SCADA system may allow an operator to change the control set point for the flow, and will allow any alarm conditions such as loss of flow or high temperature to be recorded and displayed. The feedback control loop is closed through the RTU or PLC; the SCADA system monitors the overall performance of that loop.
Data acquisition begins at the RTU or PLC level and includes meter readings and equipment statuses that are communicated to SCADA as required. Data is then compiled and formatted in such a way that a control room operator using the HMI can make appropriate supervisory decisions that may be required to adjust or over-ride normal RTU / PLC controls. Data may also be collected in an archive, often built on a commodity Database Management System, to allow trending and other analytical work.
SCADA systems typically implement a distributed database, commonly referred to as a tag database, which contains data elements called tags or points. A point represents a single input or output value monitored or controlled by the system. Points can be either "hard" or "soft". A hard point is representative of an actual input or output connected to the system, while a soft point represents the result of logic and math operations applied to other hard and soft points. Most implementations conceptually remove this distinction by making every property a "soft" point (expression) that can equal a single "hard" point in the simplest case. Point values are normally stored as value-timestamp combinations; the value and the timestamp when the value was recorded or calculated. A series of value-timestamp combinations is the history of that point. It's also common to store additional metadata with tags such as: path to field device and PLC register, design time comments, and even alarming information.
An important part of most SCADA implementations are alarms. An alarm is a digital status point that has either the value NORMAL or ALARM. Alarms can be created in such a way that when their requirements are met, they are activated. An example of an alarm is an
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open/close valve not reaching the defined end position. The SCADA operator's attention is drawn to that part of the system requiring attention by the alarm. In important cases, emails and text messages can be sent along with an alarm activation alerting managers along with the SCADA operator.
Components of a SCADA system are:
Multiple RTUs or outstations Main/Sub Control Center Communication infrastructure
3.2 Remote Terminal Unit (RTU)
The RTU connects to physical equipment, and reads status data such as the open/closed status from a valve, reads measurements such as pressure, flow, voltage or current. By sending signals to equipment the RTU can control equipment, such as opening or closing a valve, or setting the speed of a pump.
EngineeringStation Operator
Station
Control Center
ApplicationPrinter
Server
RTU 1 RTU 2
WAN
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The RTU can read digital status data or analogue measurement data, and send out digital commands or analogue setpoints.
3.3 Distributed Control System (DCS)
A Distributed Control System (DCS) controls a process or any kind of dynamic system at one plant, in which the controller elements are not central in location but are distributed throughout the system with each component / sub-system connected to a controller. Typically, the entire system is networked for communication and monitoring.
Distributed control systems (DCSs) are used to monitor and control distributed equipment with human intervention.
The processor (which is a part of the controller) receives information from input modules and sends information to output modules. The input modules receive information from sensors in the process and output modules transmit signals / commands to the actors in the field.
3.4 Overview SCADA, RTU and DCS
Example: Typical automation hierarchy and communication structure for transmission pipelines.
Compressor / Pump
Station
TankFarm
CustodyTransferStation
Metering Station Block
Line Valve
SIPLUS RIC PCS7, S7-400 FH
Operator Station 1 Engineering
StationNetwork Control
Station Operator Station 2
SCADA Server
Communication Fibre Optic Transmission
RTU PCS7, S7-400 FH
DCS
SCADA Server SCADA
Server
EngineeringStation
Operator Station 1
Operator Station 2 Main
ControlCenter
Sub ControlCenter
SIMATIC/SIPLUS S7-300 and SINAUT or
SIPLUS RIC S7-300
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4 Background information
To ensure that the station functions reliably, the automation system must acquire and evaluate numerous single information items even during normal operation. In the event of a fault, additional information is required to diagnose the problem quickly.
4.1 SCADA / RTU vs. DCS Different processes require different architectures, topologies and solutions. Based on that either SCADA / RTU or DCS is used.
Features wide area local slow process fast process lots of simple outstations automated substations Process image up to server Process image in AS “real time data base” Function blocks, CFC Redundancy up to server Redundancy in AS
Communication WAN Bus RTU protocol Ethernet slow (kbit/s) fast (Gbit/s) various and complex transparent Unstable, communication failures stable event driven polling mode time stamping, data buffer only alarm indications timed
Solution
SIPLUS RIC SIPLUS extreme
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4.2 Telecontrol system / SCADA and RTU
Connection to a control center:
Serial via RS232 to external modem Leased Line Dial Up GPRS
Fibre Optic, Redundant, Ring structure possible Ethernet via RJ-45 connector
Control Center
WAN
• • •
WAN
CPCPCPCP
• • •
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5 RTU Applications
The communication backbone (fibre optic cable) can transfer such as
Operational Data (pressure, temperature, valve position) from the RTU Voice over IP Video Data
to a Control Center. Voice and Video is directly connected to a switch on the backbone. This solution can be used in cases where
• distributed processes have to be monitored and controlled, • functions previously available at the higher control level are distributed or
implemented on site, • stringent dielectric strength and electromagnetic compatibility requirements
must be met, • a real-time-capable system is required, • noise immunity is very important.
The System performs the following tasks:
• Remote indication • Monitoring • Safe Remote/local control • Processing of measured and metered values
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5.1 RTU in the sector Oil and Gas RTUs are used for
• Monitoring and control of valve stations • Communication for compressor stations • Flow calculations at metering station sites • Supervisory and automation of
Gas wells Oil wells Injection sites of gas or water
• Tank farms
Example: Oil Well
Example: RTU concept for wellheads
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Example: Valve Stations/ Metering Stations along pipelines
Example: RTU concept for valve stations along pipelines
M M
MMMM M M M
8...32 km 5...20 miles
Transmission Pipeline
Control Center
RTU 1 RTU 2 RTU 3 RTU 4 RTU 5
RTU 6 WAN
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5.2 Further applications regarding the neighboring sectors power, water and wastewater facilities • Automation of process and potable water wells • Monitoring of rain basins • Control of pump stations • Supervision of auxiliaries
Example: Water Injection
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5.3 General requirements
• Operation over a wide temperature range • Norm-compatible protocols, interoperability • Low power consumption • Rugged, field-ready construction • Field-side surge protection • Local storage of monitored, measured and calculated data • Expandable hardware and software • Broad communications capabilities; Reports-by-Exception • High levels of data security
5.4 Specific requirements Monitoring
0 – 16 DI for block valve positions, level alarms, scraper detection, etc. 8 – 16 AI for pressures, temperatures, flows AGA 3 for flows Local storage for test data
time series of AI data test duration approx. 1 day data sampling in 2 – 30 secs intervals
Control
few automation functions max. 2 control loops (production flow, lift injection flow) 0 – 16 DO for block valves control
ESD (Emergency Shutdown)
close safety valve in case of emergency (e.g. pipeline leakage) software solution or hardwired solution depending on requirements
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6 Glossary
AS Automation System BLV Block Line Valve CFC Continuous Function Chart DCS Distributed Control System ESD Emergency Shutdown MCC Main Control Center OS Operator Station PLC Programmable Logical Control RTU Remote Terminal Unit SCADA Supervisory Control and Data Acquisition SCC Sub Control Center VoIP Voice over IP WAN Wide Area Network