A process for treating produced water to generate high pressure steam.
Produced water from heavy oil recovery operations is treated by first
removing oil and grease. Feedwater is then acidified and steam stripped
to remove alkalinity and dissolved non-condensable gases. Pretreated
produced water is then fed to an evaporator. Up to 95% or more of the
pretreated produced water stream is evaporated to produce (1) a
distillate having a trace amount of residual solutes therein, and (2)
evaporator blowdown containing substantially all solutes from the
produced water feed. The distillate may be directly used, or polished to
remove the trace residual solutes before being fed to a steam generator.
Steam generation in a packaged boiler, such as a water tube boiler having
a steam drum and a mud drum with water cooled combustion chamber walls,
produces 100 % quality high pressure steam for down-hole use.