Depressurization-Induced Gas Production From Class-1 Hydrate Deposits

2007 ◽  
Vol 10 (05) ◽  
pp. 458-481 ◽  
Author(s):  
George J. Moridis ◽  
Michael Brendon Kowalsky ◽  
Karsten Pruess

Summary Class 1 hydrate deposits are characterized by a hydrate-bearing layer underlain by a two-phase zone involving mobile gas. Two kinds of deposits are investigated. The first involves water and hydrate in the hydrate zone (Class 1W), while the second involves gas and hydrate (Class 1G). We introduce new models to describe the effect of the presence of hydrates on the wettability properties of porous media. We determine that large volumes of gas can be readily produced at high rates for long times from Class 1 gas-hydrate accumulations by means of depressurization-induced dissociation using conventional technology. Dissociation in Class 1W deposits proceeds in distinct stages, while it is continuous in Class 1G deposits. To avoid blockage caused by hydrate formation in the vicinity of the well, wellbore heating is a necessity in production from Class 1 hydrates. Class 1W hydrates are shown to contribute up to 65% of the production rate and up to 45% of the cumulative volume of produced gas; the corresponding numbers for Class 1G hydrates are 75% and 54%. Production from both Class 1W and Class 1G deposits leads to the emergence of a second dissociation front (in addition to the original ascending hydrate interface) that forms at the top of the hydrate interval and advances downward. In both kinds of deposits, capillary pressure effects lead to hydrate lensing (i.e., the emergence of distinct banded structures of alternating high/low hydrate saturation, which form channels and shells and have a significant effect on production). Introduction Background. Gas hydrates are solid crystalline compounds in which gas molecules (referred to as guests) are lodged within the lattices of ice crystals (called hosts). Gas-hydrate deposits occur in two distinctly different geologic settings where the necessary favorable thermodynamic conditions exist for their formation and stability: in the permafrost and in deep ocean sediments. Because of different formation processes, these two types of accumulations have distinctly different attributes. Although there has been no systematic effort to map and evaluate this resource, and current estimates vary widely the consensus is that the worldwide quantity of hydrocarbon-gas hydrates is vast (Sloan 1998). Even the most conservative estimate surpasses by a factor of two the energy content of the total fossil-fuel reserves recoverable by conventional methods. The sheer magnitude of this resource commands attention as a potential energy resource, even if only a limited number of hydrate deposits are attractive production targets and/or only a fraction of the trapped gas may be recoverable. As current energy economics make gas production from unconventional resources increasingly appealing (or, at a minimum, less prohibitive), the potential of hydrate accumulations clearly demands technical and economic evaluation. The attractiveness of hydrates is further augmented by the environmental desirability of gas (as opposed to solid and liquid) fuels. Gas from hydrates is produced by inducing dissociation by one of the following three main methods (Sloan 1998) (or combinations thereof):depressurization, which involves pressure lowering below the equilibrium hydration pressure at the prevailing temperature;thermal stimulation, in which the temperature is raised above the equilibrium hydration temperature at the prevailing pressure; andthe use of hydration inhibitors (such as salts and alcohols).

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jongwon Jung ◽  
Jaeeun Ryou ◽  
Joo Yong Lee ◽  
Riyadh I AI-Raoush ◽  
Khalid Alshibli ◽  
...  

<p>Gas hydrates are potential energy resources which can be formed at low temperature and high pressure. The number of recoverable gas hydrates are limited due to the specific temperature, pressure conditions and technical limitations of gas production. Various production methods have been studied around the world to overcome these technical limitations. Gas production methods from gas hydrates are divided into methods of dissociating gas hydrates and non-dissociating gas hydrates. The dissociation methods including depressurization method, thermal injection method, and chemical inhibitor injection method can decrease in effective stress of the ground due to phase conversion. On the other hand, CH<sub>4</sub>-CO<sub>2 </sub>replacement method is geomechanically stable because it does not dissociate gas hydrates. Also, CH<sub>4</sub>-CO<sub>2 </sub>replacement method has the advantage of sequestering carbon dioxide while producing methane. However, CH<sub>4</sub>-CO<sub>2</sub> replacement method has the disadvantage such as low production efficiency and understanding kinetics of gas production. In this study, soaking, gas permeability of gas hydrate layer and hydrate saturation are considered in order to promote the production efficiency of CH<sub>4</sub>-CO<sub>2</sub> replacement method. Results show that production efficiency increases with the number of soaking process, the higher gas permeability and hydrate saturation. According to the experimental results in this study, the production efficiency can be increased by considering the soaking time, procedure and selecting the proper gas hydrates site.</p><p>Acknowledgement</p><p>This work is supported by the Korea Agency for Infrastructure Technology Advancement(KAIA) grant funded by the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport (Grant 20CTAP-C152100-02). Also, it is supported by partial funding from NPRP grant # NPRP8-594-2-244 from the Qatar national research fund (a member of Qatar Foundation) and  the Ministry of Trade, Industry, and Energy (MOTIE) through the Project “Gas Hydrate Exploration and Production Study (20-1143)” under the management of the Gas Hydrate Research and Development Organization (GHDO) of Korea and the Korea Institute of Geoscience and Mineral Resources (KIGAM).</p>


2016 ◽  
Vol 50 (6) ◽  
pp. 58-68 ◽  
Author(s):  
Narayanaswamy Vedachalam ◽  
Sethuraman Ramesh ◽  
Arunachalam Umapathy ◽  
Gidugu Ananda Ramadass

AbstractNatural gas hydrates are considered to be a strategic unconventional hydrocarbon resource in the Indian energy sector, and thermal stimulation is considered as one of the methods for producing methane from gas hydrate-bearing sediments. This paper discusses the importance of this abundantly available blue economic resource and analyzes the efficiency of methane gas production by circulating hot water in a horizontal well in the fine-grained, clay-rich natural gas hydrate reservoir in the Krishna-Godavari basin of India. Analysis is done using the electrothermal finite element analysis software MagNet-ThermNet and gas hydrate reservoir modeling software TOUGH+HYDRATE with reservoir petrophysical properties as inputs. Energy balance studies indicate that, in the 90% hydrate-saturated reservoir, the theoretical energy conversion ratio is 1:4.9, and for saturations below 20%, the ratio is <1. It is identified that a water flow of 0.2 m3/h at 270°C is required for every 1 m2 of wellhead surface area to dissociate gas hydrates up to a distance of 2.6 m from the well bore within 36 h.


2015 ◽  
Vol 2015 ◽  
pp. 1-5 ◽  
Author(s):  
Florian Stephan Merkel ◽  
Carsten Schmuck ◽  
Heyko Jürgen Schultz ◽  
Timo Alexander Scholz ◽  
Sven Wolinski

Hydrates of natural gases like methane have become subject of great interest over the last few decades, mainly because of their potential as energy resource. The exploitation of these natural gases from gas hydrates is seen as a promising mean to solve future energetic problems. Furthermore, gas hydrates play an important role in gas transportation and gas storage: in pipelines, particularly in tubes and valves, gas hydrates are formed and obstruct the gas flow. This phenomenon is called “plugging” and causes high operational expenditure as well as precarious safety conditions. In this work, research on the formation of gas hydrates under pipeline-like conditions, with the aim to predict induction times as a mean to evaluate the plugging potential, is described.


2008 ◽  
Vol 130 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Uddin ◽  
D. Coombe ◽  
D. Law ◽  
B. Gunter

Numerical modeling of gas hydrates can provide an integrated understanding of the various process mechanisms controlling methane (CH4) production from hydrates and carbon dioxide (CO2) sequestration as a gas hydrate in geologic reservoirs. This work describes a new unified kinetic model which, when coupled with a compositional thermal reservoir simulator, can simulate the dynamics of CH4 and CO2 hydrate formation and decomposition in a geological formation. The kinetic model contains two mass transfer equations: one equation converts gas and water into hydrate and the other equation decomposes hydrate into gas and water. The model structure and parameters were investigated in comparison with a previously published model. The proposed kinetic model was evaluated in two case studies. Case 1 considers a single well within a natural hydrate reservoir for studying the kinetics of CH4 and CO2 hydrate decomposition and formation. A close agreement was achieved between the present numerical simulations and results reported by Hong and Pooladi-Darvish (2003, “A Numerical Study on Gas Production From Formations Containing Gas Hydrates,” Petroleum Society’s Canadian International Petroleum Conference, Calgary, AB, Jun. 10–12, Paper No. 2003-060). Case 2 considers multiple wells within a natural hydrate reservoir for studying the unified kinetic model to demonstrate the feasibility of CO2 sequestration in a natural hydrate reservoir with potential enhancement of CH4 recovery. The model will be applied in future field-scale simulations to predict the dynamics of gas hydrate formation and decomposition processes in actual geological reservoirs.


Energies ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (22) ◽  
pp. 7513
Author(s):  
Shilong Shang ◽  
Lijuan Gu ◽  
Hailong Lu

Natural gas hydrate is considered as a potential energy resource. To develop technologies for the exploitation of natural gas hydrate, several field gas production tests have been carried out in permafrost and continental slope sediments. However, the gas production rates in these tests were still limited, and the low permeability of the hydrate-bearing sediments is identified as one of the crucial factors. Artificial fracturing is proposed to promote gas production rate by improving reservoir permeability. In this research, numerical studies about the effect of fracture length and fluid conductivity on production performance were carried out on an artificially fractured Class 3 hydrate reservoir (where the single hydrate zone is surrounded by an overlaying and underlying hydrate-free zone), in which the equivalent conductivity method was applied to depict the artificial fracture. The results show that artificial fracture can enhance gas production by offering an extra fluid flow channel for the migration of gas released from hydrate dissociation. The effect of fracture length on production is closely related to the time frame of production, and gas production improvement by enlarging the fracture length is observed after a certain production duration. Through the production process, secondary hydrate formation is absent in the fracture, and the high conductivity in the fracture is maintained. The results indicate that the increase in fracture conductivity has a limited effect on enhancing gas production.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zheng Liu ◽  
Baojiang Sun ◽  
Zhiyuan Wang ◽  
Jianbo Zhang

Abstract In recent decades, the development of natural gas hydrates has become a research hotspot of scholars all over the world. However, the decomposed gas and water in marine gas hydrate production system may regenerate gas hydrates due to the low-temperature and high-pressure environment in seafloor. In this study, a transient temperature and pressure calculating model was established to predict the risk of hydrate reformation in production pipelines during offshore natural gas hydrate development. Using the proposed model, the region of hydrate reformation in gas hydrate production wells were predicted quantitatively. Meanwhile, the hydrate reformation management strategies through optimization of production design parameters in combination with hydrate inhibitor injection were proposed and discussed in detail. The results indicate that the risk of hydrate reformation is the highest in the drainage pipeline (DP); however, the flow in gas-water mixed transportation and gas production pipelines (MTP and GPP) basically does not satisfy the hydrate formation condition. In the process of production well design, adding additional the EH and ESP can fully eliminate the hydrate reformation risk in the DP without using the hydrate inhibitor.


RSC Advances ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 7 (10) ◽  
pp. 5554-5577 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Yamamoto ◽  
T. Kanno ◽  
X.-X. Wang ◽  
M. Tamaki ◽  
T. Fujii ◽  
...  

As a part of a research program aiming to mobilize marine gas hydrate deposits as an energy resource, the worlds' first gas production attempt was performed in early 2013 in the Daini Atsumi Knoll, Eastern Nankai Trough, off Honshu Island, Japan.


2020 ◽  
Vol 17 (5) ◽  
pp. 1432-1450
Author(s):  
Feridun Esmaeilzadeh ◽  
Nazanin Hamedi ◽  
Dornaz Karimipourfard ◽  
Ali Rasoolzadeh

Abstract Encouraged by the wide spectrum of novel applications of gas hydrates, e.g., energy recovery, gas separation, gas storage, gas transportation, water desalination, and hydrogen hydrate as a green energy resource, as well as CO2 capturing, many scientists have focused their attention on investigating this important phenomenon. Of course, from an engineering viewpoint, the mathematical modeling of gas hydrates is of paramount importance, as anticipation of gas hydrate stability conditions is effective in the design and control of industrial processes. Overall, the thermodynamic modeling of gas hydrate can be tackled as an equilibration of three phases, i.e., liquid, gas, and solid hydrate. The inseparable component in all hydrate systems, water, is highly polar and non-ideal, necessitating the use of more advanced equation of states (EoSs) that take into account more intermolecular forces for thermodynamic modeling of these systems. Motivated by the ever-increasing number of publications on this topic, this study aims to review the application of associating EoSs for the thermodynamic modeling of gas hydrates. Three most important hydrate-based models available in the literature including the van der Waals–Platteeuw (vdW–P) model, Chen–Guo model, and Klauda–Sandler model coupled with CPA and SAFT EoSs were investigated and compared with cubic EoSs. It was concluded that the CPA and SAFT EoSs gave very accurate results for hydrate systems as they take into account the association interactions, which are very crucial in gas hydrate systems in which water, methanol, glycols, and other types of associating compounds are available. Moreover, it was concluded that the CPA EoS is easier to use than the SAFT-type EoSs and our suggestion for the gas hydrate systems is the CPA EoS.


2012 ◽  
Vol 462 ◽  
pp. 221-224 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xian Guo Yang ◽  
Ming Ju Qin

On the worldwide basis, gas hydrate is about two times the total carbon in coal, oil and conventional gas in the world. The enormous size of this resource, if producible to any degree, has significant implication for worldwide clean energy supplies and global environmental issues. This paper deals with the potential of gas hydrates as a source of energy which is widely available in permafrost and oceanic sediments. It discusses methods for gas production from natural gas hydrates. Many questions remain to be answered to determine if any of this potential energy resources technically and economically viable to produce.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document