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GAS PRODUCTION FROM METHANE HYDRATES IN a DUAL WELLBORE SYSTEM

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GAS PRODUCTION FROM METHANE HYDRATES IN A DUAL WELLBORE SYSTEM Matilda Loh (B.Eng (Hons)) A THESIS SUBMITTED FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT OF CIVIL AND ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERING NATIONAL UNIVERSITY OF SINGAPORE 2013 ii DECLARATION I hereby declare that this thesis is my original work and it has been written by me in its entirety. I have duly acknowledged all the sources of information which have been used in the thesis. This thesis has also not been submitted for any degree in any university previously. __________________ Matilda Loh 16 September 2013 iii “Every aspect of nature may be approached by poetry or experiment as well as by reason, and indeed such is the usual order in history.” - C. Truesdell, 1984 iv Abstract Natural gas hydrates are nonstoichiometric solid crystalline compounds that form when methane or some other gases combine with water at high pressure and low temperature conditions. It is found in many parts of the world, particularly in deep water marine sediments and near the surface in Arctic permafrost regions. This research is important as there is a tremendous amount of methane gas believed to be trapped in nature by hydrates deposits and it is estimated that the worldwide amount of contained gas in hydrates may surpass the total conventional gas reserve by an order of magnitude. This makes them an attractive potential source of energy for the near future. The current challenges in gas hydrates research is to inventory this vast resource and explore safe and economical methods of developing it. In order to produce the gas from hydrates, an in-situ phase change in the form of a dissociation process must occur. The dissociation can be carried out by a variety of methods such as heating, depressurisation or chemical injections to destabilize the hydrates such that they dissociate into water and gas. At the National University of Singapore (NUS), a hydrate rig capable of carrying out controlled dissociation has been built and commissioned. A previous study conducted at NUS has demonstrated that a combination of heating and depressurisation on a single wellbore production scheme is more efficient than depressurisation alone. In this study, experimental work was continued on the hydrate rig to explore the feasibility of a dual wellbore production scheme where heating and depressurisation were conducted on separate wellbores. This study was divided into two parts. In the first part of this study, the phase boundary of methane hydrates, an important physical v property separating the stable methane hydrates from its constituents, was investigated in both purewater and seawater conditions. This was because phase boundaries allow a better prediction of the stability conditions of hydrates given a particular pressure or temperature, but the existing phase boundaries in literature were limited in their pressure range especially at the upper limits. The purewater and seawater hydrate phase boundaries were determined experimentally by a novel controlled dissociation method developed in this study and it provided results for a wide continuous pressure range from 2 MPa to 17 MPa rather than discrete points commonly obtained through conventional methods. Furthermore, the upper pressure limit of the phase boundary of seawater hydrates was expanded from 11 MPa in literature to 17 MPa in this study. The temperature search method was then used to independently validate the phase boundaries obtained using the controlled dissociation method at various equilibrium points. In the second part of this study, the work on gas production was extended and the feasibility of improving gas production from hydrates using a dual wellbore system was explored. Dual wellbore systems are common practice in the petroleum industry but novel in hydrate production. The drawback with combining heating and depressurisation on a single wellbore is that the production fluids are flowing upstream against the dissipating heat from the wellbore and this forced convection might slow down the dissociation process. Hence, the hydrate rig was modified from a single wellbore in the cylindrical axis to a dual wellbore setup. By carrying out depressurisation and heating on separate wellbores, the forced convection of the pore fluids can be used more optimally to transfer energy into the dissociating region. Gas production tests were carried out using the dual wellbore system with different combinations of pressure and temperature at the depressurisation and heating vi wellbores respectively. The experiment results showed that both increased depressurisation and heating led to a greater amount of gas produced. However, a production scheme with a higher depressurisation compared to a lower one at the same wellbore heating was generally more energy efficient, while higher wellbore temperature at the same depressurisation resulted in more gas produced but no improvement in efficiency. vii Acknowledgments I used to think that working on a thesis is a solitary affair. I could not be more wrong. Although the actual execution required much tenacity and self-discipline, many have aided the process. I am most grateful to my supervisor, Professor Andrew Palmer, for giving me the endless opportunities, pushing me beyond my limits, encouraging me to think independently and critically, and sharing his wisdom on science, mankind and politics. Working with him has been some of the most academically stimulating years of my life. I also wish to thank Professor Tan Thiam Soon and Professor Khoo Boo Cheong for allowing me to work on the hydrates project and the opportunities to attend and learn from conferences and workshops overseas, which have greatly helped me on this steep learning curve. I am also grateful to Professor Phoon Kok Kwang and his wife for the unconventional wisdom and whimsical take on life. Special thanks go out to Dr. Elliot Law, for proof reading this thesis and patient advice in helping me to make this thesis flow. More importantly, thank you for your friendship. To the friends I have made at NUS- Dr. Tho Kee Kiat, Dr. Simon Falser, Dr. Matthias Stein, Hendrik Tjiawi, Zheng Jiexin, Xie Peng and the many others whose names I would have missed out- thank you for the academic sharing, especially at our weekly ‘Oppenheimers’. viii My time in NUS would not have been as memorable and eventful without Faizal Zulkelfi, Yannick Ng and Too Jun Lin. We took a leap of faith by being the few who stayed on after our undergraduate years and I thoroughly enjoyed our many meals, laughter and of course, our lightsaber moments. Thank you for helping me to discover the inner geek in me and for being some of the best dude friends one can ask for. To Adeline Ee and Shaun Choo- we met by chance through music, by it was by choice that we continued hanging out. Thank you for the unceasing encouragement, fun and fellowship and for letting me rediscover the joys of piano again. To my very good friends through the years: Ellie Chua, Ong Shui Ying, Esther Goh, Alicia Cheah, Kang Zi Han, Brandon and Samantha Chin, Magdalen Ng, Dominic Cooray, Paul Chen, Carmelita Leow, Jared Wong, Kelvin Seet, Marianne Tan, Aaron Leng, Lydia Goh, Trina Tan, Rachel Soh, Frances Joseph, Fiona Yeo, Melissa Gomes, Jacqueline Donner, Teo Ee Wei, Majella Woo, Edris Boey, Michael Wee, Daryl Yee. I have much to say to each of you but for now, thank you for helping me to endure the tough days and celebrate the good ones. Finally, thanks to my parents and my siblings, Moses and Majella, last on the list but first in my thoughts, for bearing with me all these years and making me who I am today. ix Simply & impossibly: For my family, who never gave up on me & For Mimmo, who taught me much about life, love, friendship and goodbyes. x Contents Abstract ........................................................................................................................... iv   Acknowledgments ......................................................................................................... vii   Contents ........................................................................................................................... x   List of tables.................................................................................................................. xiii   List of figures ................................................................................................................ xiv   1   Introduction ............................................................................................................... 1   1.1   Background .............................................................................................................. 1   1.2   Structure of Gas Hydrates ........................................................................................ 3   1.3   Classification of Gas Hydrates................................................................................. 5   1.3.1   Technical vs Natural Gas Hydrates ....................................................................... 5   1.3.2   Classes of Hydrate Reservoirs .............................................................................. 7   1.4   Stability of Gas Hydrates ......................................................................................... 9   1.4.1   Stability regions for onshore- and offshore hydrates .......................................... 12   1.4.2   Hydrate Dissociation Mechanisms ...................................................................... 15   1.5   Hydrates as an Energy Source ............................................................................... 16   1.6   Gas Production of Methane Hydrates .................................................................... 17   1.7   Objective and Scope of Study ................................................................................ 19   2   Experimental Setup ................................................................................................ 22   2.1   Introduction ............................................................................................................ 22   2.2   NUS Hydrate Testing Rig ...................................................................................... 25   2.3   Internal Components .............................................................................................. 27   2.3.1   Pressure Vessel.................................................................................................... 27   2.3.2   Wellbores ............................................................................................................ 28   2.3.3   Thermocouples and Pressure Gauges.................................................................. 30   2.4   External Components ............................................................................................. 32   2.4.1   Gas Supply .......................................................................................................... 32   2.4.2   Cooling System ................................................................................................... 32   2.4.3   Pressure Regulator .............................................................................................. 33   2.4.4   Measurement of Produced Gas ........................................................................... 34   2.4.5   Data Acquisition System ..................................................................................... 35   xi 3   Methane Hydrate Phase Equilibria ....................................................................... 37   3.1   Introduction ............................................................................................................ 37   3.2   Methodology .......................................................................................................... 39   3.2.1   Apparatus ............................................................................................................ 39   3.2.2   Hydrate Formation .............................................................................................. 40   3.2.3   Dissociation along the phase boundary method .................................................. 43   3.2.4   Sample Properties................................................................................................ 44   3.3   Phase Boundary for Purewater Methane Hydrates ................................................ 46   3.4   Phase Boundary for Seawater Methane Hydrates .................................................. 48   3.5   Kinetics of Dissociation Process ............................................................................ 49   3.6   Verification of Phase Boundaries .......................................................................... 53   3.6.1   Temperature Search Method ............................................................................... 53   3.6.2   Equilibrium Points for Freshwater Hydrates....................................................... 55   3.6.3   Equilibrium Points for Seawater Hydrates .......................................................... 59   3.7   Comparison of Phase Boundaries .......................................................................... 61   3.8   Conclusion ............................................................................................................. 64   4   Gas Production from Dual Wellbore System ....................................................... 65   4.1   Introduction ............................................................................................................ 65   4.2   Test Procedures ...................................................................................................... 66   4.2.1   Test Setup ............................................................................................................ 66   4.2.2   Representative Test ............................................................................................. 68   4.2.3   Sample Parameters .............................................................................................. 70   4.3   Gas Produced in Purewater Hydrates .................................................................... 73   4.3.1   Effects of Temperature ........................................................................................ 73   4.3.2   Effects of Pressure............................................................................................... 76   4.4   Forced Convection and Dissociation Drive ........................................................... 79   4.5   Gas Recovery Factor .............................................................................................. 87   4.6   Energy Yield .......................................................................................................... 89   4.7   Results for Seawater Hydrates ............................................................................... 92   4.8   Comparison between Production of Purewater- and Seawater Hydrates .............. 95   4.9   Comparison to Single-Wellbore Scheme ............................................................... 96   4.10   Conclusion ........................................................................................................... 98   5   Conclusions and Future Work ............................................................................. 100   5.1   Key Findings ........................................................................................................ 100   5.2   Limitations and Outlook ...................................................................................... 102   5.2.1   Wellbore spacing ............................................................................................... 102   xii 5.2.2   Numerical modelling ......................................................................................... 103   5.2.3   Hydraulic fracturing of hydrates ....................................................................... 104   References .................................................................................................................... 106   Appendix A – Publications ......................................................................................... 111   xiii List of tables Table 1-1: International activities on gas hydrate research and development (Demirbas, 2010)................................................................................................... 3   Table 2-1: Coordinates of the location of thermocouples embedded in the sample. ...... 31   Table 2-2: Modules of data logger .................................................................................. 36   Table 3-1: Locations of the thermocouples within the tested samples. .......................... 40   Table 3-2: Sample properties and testing boundary conditions. ..................................... 45   Table 3-3: Summary of equilibrium pressure- and temperature data from the "temperature search" method and the predicted equilibrium temperatures from the phase boundary equations 3.1 and 3.2. ................................................. 61   Table 4-1: Summary of the properties of purewater- and seawater hydrates used in the gas production tests. .................................................................................. 72   Table 4-2: Water- and gas produced during the 90-minute production for each test expressed in standard litres, the total volume of gas contained in the hydrates and the percentage of gas recovered from the production tests. ........... 88   Table 4-3: Equations and input parameters used in the calculation of the input energy (adapted from (Falser, 2012)).................................................................. 89   Table 4-4: Comparison of energy for the various production schemes. ......................... 91   Table 4-5: Gas recovery factors and net energy gain of seawater hydrates tests. .......... 95   xiv List of figures Figure 1.1: Structure of a typical gas hydrate molecule, with the larger gas molecules encapsulated by the smaller water molecules (modified from Sloan and Koh (2008)). ......................................................................................... 4   Figure 1.2: Photo of a plugged pipeline (adapted from Baker Hughes) (left) and natural hydrates discovered by divers in the Gulf of Mexico (right) (adapted from NETL). ........................................................................................... 6   Figure 1.3: Global distribution of gas hydrates (adapted from USGS (2013)). Areas in purple are where gas hydrate samples have been taken while areas in red are estimates of where they may be. .................................................. 7   Figure 1.4: Schematic of the three main classes of natural gas hydrates accumulations. ....................................................................................................... 8   Figure 1.5: A schematic of a phase equilibrium diagram separating the stable hydrates from its constituents of gas and water. ................................................... 9   Figure 1.6: Functions for the phase equilibria of methane hydrates established over the past two decades by Kwon et al. (2008), Selim and Sloan (1989) and Makogon (1997). .......................................................................................... 10   Figure 1.7: Discrete phase equilibria data points for methane hydrates in purewater. Data obtained from Deaton and Frost Jr (1946), McLeod Jr and Campbell (1961), Jhaveri and Robinson (1965), Galloway et al. (1970), Verma (1974), De Roo et al. (1983) and Mohammadi et al. (2005). .................. 11   Figure 1.8: Discrete phase equilibria points and numerical models for methane hydrates formed in seawater (Dickens and Quinby-Hunt, 1994, De Roo et al., 1983, Duan and Sun, 2006, Maekawa, 2001). .............................................. 12   Figure 1.9: Stability of gas hydrate occurrence zones onshore (above) and in deep ocean sediments (bottom) (Kvenvolden, 1988). ................................................. 13   Figure 1.10: Stability conditions for gas hydrate deposits worldwide with various gas composition (Makogon, 2010). ..................................................................... 14   Figure 1.11: Hydrate dissociation mechanisms - the addition of chemical inhibitors, thermal stimulation, depressurisation or a combination. ................... 15   Figure 1.12: The first burning hydrate in NUS. Also known as “burning ice”, hydrate burns stealthily until all the methane gas trapped within has been used up. ............................................................................................................... 16   Figure 1.13: Schematic of the second production test at the Mallik field. Hydrate dissociation was carried out by depressurisation. Water is pumped out to depressurise the system (adapted from MH21). .................................................. 18   Figure 1.14: Layout of the production tests in Nankai Trough, Japan (adapted from JOGMEC). .................................................................................................. 19   xv Figure 2.1 (a): Initial hydrate formation equilibrium cell and (b) Rocking cell for hydrate equilibrium (Deaton and Frost Jr, 1946). ............................................... 23   Figure 2.2: The NUS hydrate testing rig built and commissioned in 2010. The figure on the right includes the air-conditioning unit installed to maintain the environment temperature............................................................................... 26   Figure 2.3: Schematic of the modified hydrate testing apparatus at NUS. ..................... 26   Figure 2.4: Cross section of the pressure vessel modified to incorporate dual wellbores. ............................................................................................................ 28   Figure 2.5: The heating wellbore (top) and the production wellbore (bottom) used to dissociate the hydrates. ................................................................................... 29   Figure 2.6: The piston plate being supported by a tripod leg above the lower flange of the pressure vessel. The flexible hose connects from the production wellbore to the bottom of the vessel. ................................................ 30   Figure 2.7: Location of the thermocouples inside the pressure vessel, marked with a yellow ‘x’. ........................................................................................................ 31   Figure 2.8: Water-bath circulating monopropylene glycol around the pressure vessel to regulate the temperature during testing. ............................................... 33   Figure 2.9: Backpressure regulator used to control the wellbore pressure (adapted from Falser (2012)). ............................................................................................ 33   Figure 2.10: Schematic of the water displacement unit used to quantify the amount of produced gas (adapted from Falser (2012)). ...................................... 35   Figure 3.1: Cross section of the hydrate-bearing sediment with labelled thermocouples inside the pressure vessel around the single wellbore in the cylindrical axis. ................................................................................................... 40   Figure 3.2: Schematic showing the various stages of the dissociation along the phase boundary.................................................................................................... 44   Figure 3.3: Pressure- Temperature history of a representative test, providing the lower boundary for the phase equilibria data. ..................................................... 46   Figure 3.4: Methane hydrate dissociation experiments in freshwater over a pressure range of 3.5 – 17.9 MPa (Test 2), 2.3 – 8 MPa (Test 1) and a temperature range of 272 – 290 K....................................................................... 47   Figure 3.5: Methane hydrate dissociation experiments in seawater (3.03 wt-% NaCl) over a pressure range of 11 – 17 MPa (Test 3), 7.5 – 11 MPa (Test 4) and 4.5 – 6 MPa (Test 5) and a temperature range of 277 – 289 K. ............... 48   Figure 3.6: Pore pressure evolution (top) and accumulated gas volume in litre at standard conditions [SL] (bottom) for Test 2 (freshwater). The vertical dashed lines in this figure and in Figure 3.7 represent where dissociation has been completed. ............................................................................................ 51   Figure 3.7: Temperature histories during the dissociation Test 2 at the locations listed in Table 1. .................................................................................................. 52   Figure 3.8: Schematic diagram of apparatus used in the "Temperature Search" method to obtain equilibrium points. C1 to C4 represent the location of the thermocouples in the vessel. ............................................................................... 55   xvi Figure 3.9: Typical gas release measurement curve along with the temperature profiles during hydrate dissociation at 3.1 MPa with a driving force of 4.0 K. Hydrate equilibrium point was found to be 275.0 K at 3.1 MPa. .................. 56   Figure 3.10: Typical gas release measurement curve along with the temperature profiles during hydrate dissociation at 4.8 MPa with a driving force of 4.0 K. Hydrate equilibrium point was found to be 279.5 K at 4.8 MPa. .................. 57   Figure 3.11: Two equilibrium points (3.1 MPa, 275K and 4.8 MPa, 279.5K) found using the temperature-search method alongside the phase boundary obtained using controlled dissociation for purewater methane hydrates. The error bars for the two equilibrium points are shown as ‘+’ symbols in the figure. ............................................................................................................ 59   Figure 3.12: Two equilibrium points (4.2 MPa, 277.25 K and 8.0 MPa, 283.05 K) found using the temperature-search method alongside the phase boundary obtained using controlled dissociation for seawater methane hydrates. The error bars for the two equilibrium points are shown as ‘+’ symbols in the figure. .................................................................................................................. 60   Figure 3.13: Reference phase boundary data for purewater methane hydrates and -models compared to equation (3.2).................................................................... 62   Figure 3.14: Reference phase boundary data for seawater methane hydrates and models compared to equation (3.3) (Dickens and Quinby-Hunt, 1994, De Roo et al., 1983, Duan and Sun, 2006, Maekawa, 2001) .................................... 62   Figure 3.15: Comparison of methane hydrate phase boundaries obtained for freshwater- and seawater systems. ...................................................................... 63   Figure 4.1: Schematic of the dual wellbore system, with resistivity heating on the left and depressurisation on the right. ................................................................. 67   Figure 4.2: Representative test (with ΔP6 +ΔT15 for purewater hydrates chosen) of the pore pressure evolution (top) and the corresponding gas volume (bottom) collected during the 90-minute production test. ................................... 69   Figure 4.3: Experimental matrix of the different combinations of wellbore pressures and heating temperatures with respect to the phase boundary. ........... 71   Figure 4.4: Pore pressure developments (top) with a production pressure of 6 MPa while the heating wellbore is increased to 15˚C or 25˚C and the corresponding gas volume collected (bottom). ................................................... 74   Figure 4.5: Pore pressure developments (top) with a production pressure of 4 MPa with no wellbore heating and heating wellbore to 15˚C or 25˚C, and the corresponding gas volume collected (bottom). ............................................. 75   Figure 4.6: Pore pressure development (top) with different production pressures of 4 and 6 MPa and wellbore heating to 15˚C, and the corresponding gas volume collected (bottom). ................................................................................. 77   Figure 4.7: Pore pressure developments (top) with different production pressures of 4 and 6 MPa and wellbore heating to 25˚C, and the corresponding gas volume collected (bottom). ................................................................................. 78   Figure 4.8: Schematic of forced convection during dissociation. ................................... 80   xvii Figure 4.9: Temperature histories of ΔP4 (top figure), ΔP4+ΔT15 (middle figure) and ΔP4+ΔT25 (bottom figure). The dashed line in each figure represents the equilibrium temperature of methane hydrates, Teqm. ..................................... 82   Figure 4.10: Temperature differences at the heating wellbore on the left and the production wellbore on the right for ΔP4+ΔT15 and ΔP4+ΔT25, resulting in a temperature gradient between the two wellbores. ............................................ 84   Figure 4.11: Temperature histories of ΔP6+ΔT15 (top figure) and ΔP6+ΔT25 (bottom figure). The dashed line in each figure represents the equilibrium temperature of methane hydrates, Teqm................................................................ 85   Figure 4.12: The different temperatures at the heating wellbore on the left and the production wellbore on the right for ΔP6+ΔT15 and ΔP6+ΔT25, resulting in a temperature gradient between the two wellbores. ............................................ 86   Figure 4.13: Pore pressure development during the production of the seawater hydrates tests (top) and the top volume of methane gas collected (bottom). ...... 93   Figure 4.14: Comparison of recovery factor and net energy between purewaterand seawater methane hydrates. .......................................................................... 96   Figure 4.15: Comparison of recovery factor and net energy gain with the single wellbore scheme. ................................................................................................. 97   Figure 5.1: Restrictions of wellbore spacing in the pressure vessel. ............................ 103   Figure 5.2: Illustration of hydraulic fracturing of hydrates for vertical (left) and horizontal (right) drilling wells. ........................................................................ 104   1. INTRODUCTION 1 1 Introduction Clathrate hydrates, more commonly referred to as gas hydrates, are solid crystalline compounds made up of gaseous and water molecules. Found abundantly in the permafrost and in the oceans, they are the largest source of hydrocarbons in the world with the potential to provide an enormous amount of natural gas for commercial consumption and have been an area of active research in the oil and gas industry since the 1930s. In this chapter, an introduction to the gas hydrates will be given as well as the motivation and scope of this work. Finally, the organization of the thesis will be laid out. 1.1 Background Discovered by the English chemist, Sir Humphrey Davy in 1810 (Faraday and Davy, 1823), natural gas hydrates started playing a significant role in oil and gas research when Hammerschmidt (1934) discovered hydrates plugging and blocking fluid flow in oil- and gas pipelines, which showed hydrates to be practically important. Since then, a considerable amount of research on their physical nature and various properties has evolved. Milestones in hydrate studies include: - Thermodynamic inhibitors (Hammerschmidt, 1934, Anderson and Prausnitz, 1986) which help to prevent hydrate formation in pipelines and industrial equipment, - Two-phase hydrate equilibria (Sloan et al., 1987), which provides a better understanding of the conditions that gas hydrates are stable compared to the 1. INTRODUCTION 2 conditions under which they will decompose back into their constituents of gas and water, - Calorimetric studies of hydrates (Handa, 1988) which are needed to estimate the energy needed for hydrate decomposition, - Hydrate formation and decomposition methods (Bishnoi and Natarajan, 1996) and in the last two decades, methods to dissociate and produce the gas from hydrates have proliferated (Moridis et al., 2009, Schicks et al., 2011) to meet the increasing needs of the world’s energy supply. Over the past two decades, gas hydrate research and development have become national interests in several countries and this is summarized in Table 1-1. Most of these countries have gas hydrate reserves surrounding their countries and are exploring alternative sources of energy and gearing towards viable and economical technologies of producing the gas trapped within the hydrates since gas hydrates may constitute a future source of natural gas. In particular, for Japan, which imports 84 per cent of her energy, the ability to harness the estimated 39 trillion cubic metres of gas from methane hydrates in her surrounding waters- sufficient for 10 years of consumption, would be a huge boost for her domestic energy supplies, especially after the earthquakes and tsunami of 2011 incapacitated part of their nuclear power plants and led the Japanese government to be under intense pressure to develop alternative sources of energy. 1. INTRODUCTION 3 Table 1-1: International activities on gas hydrate research and development (Demirbas, 2010). Country National Gas Hydrate Programmes in Place Since Japan 1995 India 1996 The United States of America 1999 (second programme) 1.2 Germany 2000 South Korea 2001 China 2001 Structure of Gas Hydrates Natural gas hydrates are formed when molecules of water or ice come into contact with gas molecules under high pressure- and low temperature conditions. In a typical structure of a gas hydrate molecule, the water molecules- often known as the host molecules and held together by strong hydrogen bonds- form a cage and encapsulate the gas molecules, often referred to as guest molecules. Figure 1.1 shows the structure of a gas hydrate molecule. Weak van der Waals’ forces between them stabilize the water and gas molecules in the hydrates. 1. INTRODUCTION 4 Figure 1.1: Structure of a typical gas hydrate molecule, with the larger gas molecules encapsulated by the smaller water molecules (modified from Sloan and Koh (2008)). Although there are more than 130 compounds that can form clathrate hydrates with water molecules, methane hydrates are the most commonly occurring hydrate in nature and the amount of methane potentially trapped in methane hydrates may be significant. When the cages encapsulating the gas molecules are broken during dissociation, each cubic metre of a methane hydrate releases approximately 164 cubic metres of methane and 0.8 cubic metres of water (Makogon, 2010) under standard temperature- and pressure (STP) conditions. Indeed, in addition to them being exceptional gas storage hosts there is an overwhelming abundance of methane contained in methane hydrates around the world. Thus, methane hydrates would be the focus of research in this work. Methane hydrates can be formed when methane gas comes into contact with water in the liquid state or gas state as long as the temperature- and pressure conditions are suitable, which will be explained in section 1.4. The formation reactions of methane hydrate are best represented by Makogon (1997) in the following equations: 𝐶𝐻! + 𝑛𝐻! 𝑂 ↔ 𝐶𝐻! . 𝑛𝐻! 𝑂 + Δ𝐻!                                               (methane) (water) (methane hydrate) (1.1)   𝐶𝐻! + 𝑛𝐻! 𝑂 ↔ 𝐶𝐻! . 𝑛𝐻! 𝑂 + Δ𝐻!                                               (methane) (ice) (methane hydrate) (1.2)   1. INTRODUCTION 5 where n is the hydration number, which is the number of water molecules per guest, and ranges from 5.77 to 7.4 with n = 6 being the average value corresponding to hydrates going into complete hydration (Sloan and Koh, 2007). Hydrate formation is an exothermic reaction and releases heat as bonds are formed, which are ΔH1 and ΔH2 in the forward reactions of equations (1.1) and (1.2) respectively. The backward reaction describes the endothermic dissociation process, which absorbs heat to break the hydrogen bonds and weak Van der Waals’ forces. To form hydrates between methane gas and liquid water, the enthalpy of fusion, ΔH1, is 54.2 kJ/mol and that of methane gas and ice, ΔH2, is 18.1 kJ/mol (Carroll, 2009). 1.3 Classification of Gas Hydrates Hydrates can be categorized into various types, classes and structures and these differences would result in varying properties between them. The ability to identify which categories a particular gas hydrate falls under makes the investigation of their properties more straightforward. 1.3.1 Technical vs Natural Gas Hydrates In the context of the petroleum industry, hydrates can be divided into two categories. Firstly, there are the technical hydrates, which can spontaneously form in pipelines, risers and flow lines. These hydrates clog the equipment and in turn reduce the flow rates. It becomes a flow assurance issue and treating it would be costly. On average, the petroleum industry spends around one billion US dollars yearly to treat flow assurance problems caused by hydrates (Makogon, 2010). The photo on the left of Figure 1.2 shows a technical hydrate in a plugged pipeline. 1. INTRODUCTION 6   Figure 1.2: Photo of a plugged pipeline (adapted from Baker Hughes) (left) and natural hydrates discovered by divers in the Gulf of Mexico (right) (adapted from NETL). Secondly, there are the natural gas hydrates, which can be found both onshore (beneath the permafrost, mostly in high latitudes such as the Arctic) and offshore (in deep water marine sediments) since these are regions with conditions suitable for hydrates to be stable in. It appears that hydrates in nature are visibly ubiquitous, as the occurrence of hydrates are probable whenever gas and water molecules contact each other at low temperature and elevated pressures (Sloan and Koh, 2007). To date, about 97% of natural gas hydrates are located offshore and only 3% onshore. As seen in Figure 1.3, hydrates are found in- and around virtually every continent. The promising regions are the Nankai Trough in Japan, the Messoyakha field in Siberia, Eileen in Alaska, Mallik site in Canada’s Mackenzie Delta and the Tiger Shark in the Gulf of Mexico. The largest outcrop of natural gas hydrate documented in the Gulf of Mexico, measuring 6 x 2 x 1.5 m- this can be seen on the right photo of Figure 1.2.   1. INTRODUCTION 7 Figure 1.3: Global distribution of gas hydrates (adapted from USGS (2013)). Areas in purple are where gas hydrate samples have been taken while areas in red are estimates of where they may be. 1.3.2 Classes of Hydrate Reservoirs Natural gas hydrate accumulations can be divided into three common classes, according to Moridis and Collett (2004): Class 1: hydrate-bearing layer with an underlying two-phase zone which contains mobile gas and liquid water. Class 2: hydrate-bearing layer with an underlying zone of mobile water. Class 3: hydrate-bearing layer with the absence of underlying zones of mobile fluids. A schematic of the three main classes are given in Figure 1.4. This simple classification is relatively valuable in deciding the choice of production method used. 1. INTRODUCTION Class 1 Hydrate-bearing layer (HBL) 8 Class 2 Class 3 Hydrate-bearing layer (HBL) Hydrate-bearing layer (HBL) Gas Water Water Figure 1.4: Schematic of the three main classes of natural gas hydrates accumulations. Although there is limited literature available as interest in this area has only recently begun, adequate progress has been achieved from numerical studies of various classes to recognize that depressurisation is the most appropriate and straightforward method suited for Class 1 deposits due to the swift response of the hydrate-bearing layer to the propagating pressure wave (Moridis et al., 2007). Additionally, the bottom of the hydrate-bearing layer coincides with the bottom of the region in which hydrates remain stable in, requiring only minute changes in temperature and pressure to induce dissociation (Moridis and Collett, 2003). For Class 2 and 3 deposits, the effectiveness of simple depressurisation becomes restricted as the hydrate-bearing layer could be entirely within the region in which hydrates remain stable in and thus, the production targets are less well defined than for that of Class 1 and a combination of methods have to be employed. However, the most desirable hydrate deposits around the world such as the Nankai Trough, Mallik site in the Mackenzie Delta and the Eileen in the Alaskan North slope exist as Class 3 sediments, which are also known for their high hydrate concentration. As such, the focus of this research would be on the Class 3 hydrate deposits and their production behaviour. 1. INTRODUCTION 1.4 9 Stability of Gas Hydrates Recovering cores from hydrate reservoirs is an expensive and tedious process and the hydrates will likely decompose back into its constituents of water and gas if not properly stored when they are brought up to the surface, unlike other subsurface materials, which do not change in state. It is for this reason that hydrate deposits are difficult to study and as a result, artificial hydrates are formed in the laboratory to investigate their properties. Thus, one of the most fundamentally important properties that need to be understood would be the stability of gas hydrates. As mentioned in section 1.3.1, hydrate formation and dissociation are pressure- and temperature dependent processes and the stability of gas hydrates is controlled by four simultaneous conditions and within one region: presence of gas, water, high pressure and low temperature. A phase equilibrium curve, seen in Figure 1.5, separates the stable gas hydrates from their decomposed states of water and gas. This phase equilibrium curve allows researchers to estimate the pressure- and temperature conditions in which hydrates can be formed. Figure 1.5: A schematic of a phase equilibrium diagram separating the stable hydrates from its constituents of gas and water. 1. INTRODUCTION 10 In the past two decades, only three functions for the phase equilibrium of methane hydrates (or the phase boundary) have been established numerically and these are shown in Figure 1.6. Numerical results obtained by various codes still show discrepancies around the phase boundary conditions (Anderson, 2008), particularly in the upper- and lower boundaries. 25 20 Kwon et al. (2008) Selim and Sloan (1989) Makogon (1997) Pressure [MPa] 15 10 5 0 272 274 276 278 280 282 284 286 288 290 292 Temperature [K] Figure 1.6: Functions for the phase equilibria of methane hydrates established over the past two decades by Kwon et al. (2008), Selim and Sloan (1989) and Makogon (1997). Experimentally, only discrete points on the phase equilibrium curve have been determined, some of which are presented in Figure 1.7. However, there have not been experiments conducted to find a continuous range of data for the phase equilibrium curve, which might be more succinct than locating individual points. 1. INTRODUCTION 11 25 Deaton and Frost (1946) McLeod and Campbell (1961) 20 Jhaveri and Robinson (1965) Galloway et al. (1970) Verma (1974) Pressure [MPa] 15 deRoo et al. (1983) Mohammaadi et al. (2005) 10 5 0 273 275 277 279 281 283 285 287 289 291 293 Temperature [K] Figure 1.7: Discrete phase equilibria data points for methane hydrates in purewater. Data obtained from Deaton and Frost Jr (1946), McLeod Jr and Campbell (1961), Jhaveri and Robinson (1965), Galloway et al. (1970), Verma (1974), De Roo et al. (1983) and Mohammadi et al. (2005). The numerical functions describing the phase boundary and the discrete equilibrium points that have hitherto been discussed are all for methane hydrates formed in purewater. Few studies have been conducted on hydrates formed in seawater, which are no doubt equally as important as methane hydrates are almost always found in oceanic conditions. As seen in Figure 1.8, the available data on methane hydrates formed in seawater are limited and confined to a pressure range of less than 10 MPa. A wider range of pressure- and temperature conditions for methane hydrates formed in seawater would be necessary for determining their stability zone. 1. INTRODUCTION 12 25 Dickens and Quinby-Hunt (1994) 20 Maekawa (2001) Dholabhai et al. (1991) Pressure [MPa] De Roo et al. (1983) model Duan and Sun (2006) model 15 10 5 0 274 276 278 280 282 284 286 288 290 292 Temperature [K] Figure 1.8: Discrete phase equilibria points and numerical models for methane hydrates formed in seawater (Dickens and Quinby-Hunt, 1994, De Roo et al., 1983, Duan and Sun, 2006, Maekawa, 2001). 1.4.1 Stability regions for onshore- and offshore hydrates The different stability regions for onshore- and offshore gas hydrates can be observed in Figure 1.9. Although the figure depicts a much greater depth of below 1200 metres where hydrates can be stable, in offshore environments, hydrates are generally stable in water depths greater than 600 metres, subjected to seafloor temperatures and compositions of gas (Milkov and Sassen, 2002). In the Arctic regions, where temperatures can reach as low as -1.7°C, hydrates can be found in shallower depths of around 250 metres. 1. INTRODUCTION 13 Figure 1.9: Stability of gas hydrate occurrence zones onshore (above) and in deep ocean sediments (bottom) (Kvenvolden, 1988). The thickness of a hydrate deposit can reach 400 to 800 metres (Makogon, 2010), although it is highly probable that only less than 5 per cent of these hydrate deposits contain gas hydrates at saturations of between 40 to 80 per cent, which is the amount of hydrates compared to the total pore volume. In the case of Nankai Trough, out of 505 metres of overall thickness, only 17 metres contain hydrates of satisfactory saturations of between 40 to 80 per cent. 1. INTRODUCTION 14 Figure 1.10: Stability conditions for gas hydrate deposits worldwide with various gas composition (Makogon, 2010). The pressure- and temperature conditions of offshore hydrate deposits worldwide are shown in Figure 1.10. Most of the offshore hydrate deposits are predominantly in the supercooled state- where the temperature of the hydrate-saturated layers is markedly lower than the equilibrium conditions. As they are well within the hydrate stability zones, dissociating them would be challenging, which can be carried out using a few methods described in the following section. 1. INTRODUCTION 15 1.4.2 Hydrate Dissociation Mechanisms To dissociate hydrates, they need to move out of the stability region and this can be done by the four mechanisms described in Figure 1.11. Figure 1.11: Hydrate dissociation mechanisms - the addition of chemical inhibitors, thermal stimulation, depressurisation or a combination. Thermal stimulation is where external heat is supplied to increase the temperature such that it moves out of the stability region. Depressurisation involves lowering the pressure in the hydrate-bearing layer out of the stability zone. The injection of chemical inhibitors such as methanol, glycol or salts shifts the equilibrium curve to the left and enables destabilization to take place easily. Alternatively, a combination of methods can be used. The ability to determine the most suitable dissociation mechanism for a particular reservoir would increase the effectiveness of producing the gas. Although studies are currently ongoing around the world and it is concluded in tests in Mallik that depressurisation is the most suitable approach (Hancock et al., 1. INTRODUCTION 16 2005), previous experimental studies carried out in the National University of Singapore (NUS) suggests otherwise, as will be elaborated in section 1.6. 1.5 Hydrates as an Energy Source Due to the attractive nature of methane hydrates which has a very high concentration of methane gas (when one cubic metres of hydrate is decomposed at STP, about 164 cubic metres of methane gas will be released), the question of harnessing the untapped energy in natural gas hydrates has been ever more intense in recent years and has been the driving force of significant research studies. The attractiveness of gas hydrates is further enhanced by the environmental benefit of using natural gas as a fuel. When dissociated, the hydrate burns stealthily, as seen in Figure 1.12, until all the methane gas trapped within has been used up.   Figure 1.12: The first burning hydrate in NUS. Also known as “burning ice”, hydrate burns stealthily until all the methane gas trapped within has been used up. Though there has never been universally agreed estimates of the in-place amounts of gas trapped within hydrates, the general consensus of researchers in both the eastern (Makogon, 1988, Makogon et al., 2007) and western (Klauda and Sandler, 2005,   1. INTRODUCTION 17 Moridis et al., 2009) hemispheres is that the worldwide amount of contained gas in gas hydrates is vast, and may surpass the total conventional gas reserve/organic carbon combined by an order of magnitude. At present, estimates of the total amount of hydrated gas range between 2.5 x 1015 (Milkov, 2004) to 120 x 1015 cubic metres (Klauda and Sandler, 2005) at STP and even the most conservative estimates may surpass the combined fossil fuel available in the world by a factor of two (Sloan and Koh, 2007). With annual consumption of gas in the world of around 0.3 x 1014 cubic metres (BP, 2012), the amount of gas contained within hydrates can in principle sustain human needs for 4000 years. As such, the potential of gas hydrates as a substantial future energy resource cannot be underestimated and this can also be seen in the changing paradigm worldwide from the assessment of global amounts to production methods. The current challenge is to find safe, economical and efficient ways to develop it. 1.6 Gas Production of Methane Hydrates Till date, there has been no commercial production of gas from methane hydrates as research worldwide is still ongoing to find an efficient and economically feasible development of them. All the production tests carried out have either been experimental or research-based. The first large-scale production tests have been conducted onshore at the Mallik in Canada’s Mackenzie Delta in 2002 (Hancock et al., 2005), where hydrates were dissociated by thermal stimulation of hot water (70°C). Only modest gas flow was achieved. In the second production tests carried out in 2008, the pressure of the hydrate-bearing layer was lowered using a perforated casing. Figure 1.13 shows the depressurisation process at Mallik, where water was pumped out to depressurise the system. Hydrate then dissociated and methane gas 1. INTRODUCTION 18 flowed out through the well. Production lasted for seven days with sustained gas flow to the surface. It was concluded then that depressurisation alone is a more efficient method of production. Figure 1.13: Schematic of the second production test at the Mallik field. Hydrate dissociation was carried out by depressurisation. Water is pumped out to depressurise the system (adapted from MH21). The most recent production tests were carried out in Nankai Trough, Japan in March 2013 and are the world’s first offshore production test (UpstreamOnline, 2013). As the tests have only concluded recently, information surrounding them is currently unavailable except that hydrates were dissociated by depressurisation in 40-metre zone in a radial manner, as depicted in Figure 1.14. With the conclusion of this production test, Japan is targeting its first commercial production of methane hydrates in 2018. If these deposits can be successfully tapped into, methane hydrates could certainly be an energy game changer. However, much still needs to be done before the world can confidently turn to methane hydrates for commercial use. 1. INTRODUCTION 19 Figure 1.14: Layout of the production tests in Nankai Trough, Japan (adapted from JOGMEC). 1.7 Objective and Scope of Study Thus far, the various challenges and potential of natural gas hydrates in the world have been addressed. With the world’s energy supply fast running out, it is pivotal that alternative sources of energy are made available and one of them is be the untapped reserves found in gas hydrates. At the National University of Singapore, research on the gas production of methane hydrates started in 2008 to join in the worldwide efforts working on new technologies and methodologies to produce natural gas from methane hydrate deposits. Over the past few years, a state-of-the-art pressure rig has been built and commissioned to facilitate tests on artificially formed hydrate samples in a single wellbore system. Contrary to the conclusion from the Mallik production tests that depressurisation is 1. INTRODUCTION 20 the most efficient method of extracting gas, it has been suggested from experimental and numerical tests conducted in collaboration with Cambridge University that a combination of depressurisation and heating is a more efficient production scheme (Falser et al., 2012d). However, one shortcoming of the existing production scheme is that as a single wellbore carrying out both depressurisation and heating concurrently, the heat supplied to the dissociation zone has to overcome the forced convection caused by the fluid flowing back to the wellbore. If the forced convection could be turned into an advantage instead, it could improve the heat transfer of the dissociating region. Therefore, it is proposed that dissociation by depressurisation and heating be separated into different wellbores and in doing so, the forced convection through the pore fluid could be employed to supply energy into the dissociating region and in turn improve the efficiency of gas production. Thus, the objective of this thesis is to determine the feasibility of improving gas production from methane hydrates using a dual wellbore system with simultaneous depressurisation and heating. The scope of the thesis are identified as follows: • Modification of the existing hydrate testing rig in the laboratory to incorporate dual wellbores instead of the single wellbore previously in place. • Development of a novel method of determining the phase boundary, an essential physical property of methane hydrates, instead of finding discrete equilibrium points. • Determination of phase boundaries for both purewater- and seawater methane hydrates for a pressure range of 2 MPa to 17 MPa. At present, available data for phase boundary in both purewater and seawater are few and either do not cover a wide range or had impurities added into the hydrates. With 1 MPa 1. INTRODUCTION 21 approximately representing 100 metres of depth, the pressure range covered is believed to be representative of conditions found in methane hydrate zones in permafrost (down to 1100 m) and in marine sediments (down to 1500 m). Having an accurate phase boundary is essential to assess the stability conditions of methane hydrates and in turn aid in the gas production experiments. • Determine if gas production of methane hydrates using a dual wellbore system is more energy-efficient compared to a single wellbore system. Comparison of efficiency and recovery of gas will also be made between purewater- and seawater methane hydrates. The preceding sections in Chapter 1 presented a brief discussion on gas hydrates and the elevated interest in them in the last couple of decades. Chapter 2 describes the existing hydrate testing rig in the laboratory at the National University of Singapore and the modifications carried out on it for the purpose of this study. Chapter 3 contains the experimental work carried out to determine the phase boundaries of both purewater- and seawater methane hydrates using a novel method of dissociating along the phase boundary as well as the significant findings and the development of empirical equations to describe the phase boundaries. Chapter 4 details the experimental work to produce gas in a dual wellbore system at various production pressure and heating temperatures. Both purewater- and seawater methane hydrates are tested. Chapter 5 concludes this thesis and discusses the recommendations for the future of this research work. 2. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP 2 Experimental Setup 2.1 Introduction 22 Since its inception as a worthwhile research area in the early 20th century, apparatus used for the measurement of hydrate properties have been constantly evolving over the years. Deaton and Frost’s hydrate formation equilibrium cell (1946)became the prototype for many others. Figure 2.1(a) shows the basic cell for hydrate formation with the minimal thermocouples and pressure gauges placed throughout the setup to monitor the internal temperature and –pressure respectively while Figure 2.1(b) illustrates a rocking cell to provide vigorous shaking during the experimental run. It is later modified by Katz (1959) to include a glass-viewing panel in the apparatus to allow the visual observation of the hydrate formation and dissociation processes. However, the rupture of the sight glass in the mid-1940s caused the death of a hydrate researcher. Soon after, metal apparatuses were adopted for high-pressure formation. 2. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP 23 Figure 2.1 (a): Initial hydrate formation equilibrium cell and (b) Rocking cell for hydrate equilibrium (Deaton and Frost Jr, 1946). High pressure studies made by Nagata and Kobayashi (1966) and Galloway et al. (1970) led to the development of a high pressure stainless steel cylinder which could be rotated about its axis. Galloway installed steel balls within the cylinder to renew the surface area and bring about the conversion of all water to hydrate. Since then, evolutions on hydrate testing apparatuses have been evolving to enable more sophisticated experiments to be carried out. Since the large-scale gas production tests from hydrate deposits at the site which lasted seven days in 2008 (Hancock et al., 2005), the most recent production tests were carried out in Nankai Trough, Japan, in March 2013 (UpstreamOnline, 2013) for a production period of 14 days and proved to be promising in gearing towards the world’s first commercial production of methane hydrates. 2. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP 24 The properties of gas hydrates are being studied experimentally either by recovering hydrate-bearing cores or by artificially forming hydrates in the laboratory. As the use of recovered hydrate cores have led to unavoidable disturbances of the sample (Kneafsey et al., 2011), dissociation experiments are thus mainly carried out on artificial hydrates formed in the laboratory. Worldwide, the main laboratories that are presently running dissociation tests are the Japanese Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST) laboratory in Sapporo and Tsukuba which performs axial dissociation tests on three setups with diameter x length of 30 x 120 mm, 50 x 150 mm and 50 x 500 mm hydrate samples (Oyama et al., 2009, Ebinuma et al., 2008, Kawamura et al., 2010), the Lawrence Berkeley laboratory where 76 x 267 mm hydrate samples are dissociated axially from an endcap and radially from the outer surface (Seol and Kneafsey, 2009), the Guangzhou Gas Hydrate Research Laboratory which facilitates axial dissociation experiments of 38 x 500 mm samples (Tang et al., 2005) and the Columbia University, which carries out carbon dioxide-replacement experiments on 305 x 914 mm hydrate samples (Zhou et al., 2009). All of the above apparatuses carry out linear dissociation tests on hydrate samples, and mostly with exceptionally small diameters, which makes it difficult to study the genuine dissociation behaviour as the temperature flux from the outer boundary distorts the heat regime within the sample (Falser et al., 2012c). It is only at the Beijing University of Petroleum, the University of Potsdam and more recently, at the National University of Singapore where radial dissociation is being carried out on hydrate samples, which is the dissociation option most favoured. Compared to axial dissociation, radial dissociation minimizes the influence of the boundary conditions on the wall. At present, the German Research Centre for Geosciences in Potsdam has the largest hydrate testing apparatus, with a large 2. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP 25 reservoir simulator (LARS) with an internal volume of 425 litres planned for pilot plant scale tests on production of hydrates and CH4-CO2 exchange (Beeskow-Strauch et al., 2013, Schicks et al., 2013). However, the setups described above carry out dissociation solely by depressurisation. 2.2 NUS Hydrate Testing Rig The hydrate testing rig at the National University of Singapore (NUS) was designed and built in 2010 and is the first methane hydrate apparatus worldwide which allows dissociation by a combination of depressurisation and electrical heating in the same wellbore (Falser et al., 2012c). In the initial setup, the dissociation process was carried out from a single wellbore at the cylindrical axis of the vessel. With a wellbore in place, line dissociation (dissociation radially along the centralised rod) was carried out. A major advantage of line dissociation is that the results are pertinent to two varying field applications- gas production from vertical wellbores and also to site investigation of hydrate sediments by a downhole probe. The alternative of carrying out point dissociation by heating with a cone-tip instead was not used, as the spherical dissociation would become a three-dimensional problem. In this research work, the testing apparatus was modified to incorporate two wellbores- one of which is for electrical heating and another for production. As described in Chapter 1, the purpose of separating the dissociation mechanism into separate wellbores is to make use of the forced convection through the pore fluid to increase the energy supply into the dissociation zone. This extends the previous work on gas production in a single wellbore and investigates how convection can be improved in a dual wellbore production scheme. Figure 2.2 and Figure 2.3 show the overview and schematic of the modified hydrate rig. A detailed description of the 2. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP 26 hydrate testing rig at NUS can be found in Falser et al. (2012c), but the main components along with the modifications done to the rig will be explained in the following sections. airconditioning unit   Figure 2.2: The NUS hydrate testing rig built and commissioned in 2010. The figure on the right includes the air-conditioning unit installed to maintain the environment temperature. Figure 2.3: Schematic of the modified hydrate testing apparatus at NUS.   2. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP 2.3 27 Internal Components 2.3.1 Pressure Vessel The central piece of apparatus is the stainless steel (SS316) pressure vessel which hydrate-bearing sediments were formed in. Structural integrity and leak-tightness were crucial due to the use of flammable gas and high pressure and the flange thickness was designed using the ASME 2007-VIII code. With an internal diameter and height of 180 mm and 220 mm respectively, it has a capacity of 5.7 litres (0.0057 m3). The vessel has a design pressure of 15 MPa and a design temperature operating range of -5 to 60°C. Figure 2.4 is a cross-section of the modified pressure vessel, incorporating the heating wellbore on the left and the depressurising wellbore, which is also the production wellbore, on the right. 2. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP 28 Figure 2.4: Cross section of the pressure vessel modified to incorporate dual wellbores. To prevent sand from leaking out of the pressure vessel, a 30-mm porous stone is embedded between the flange and the top of the sample, in addition to a rubber ring around the piston plate supporting the dual wellbores. 2.3.2 Wellbores As a combination of depressurisation and electrical heating is used on separate wellbores, Figure 2.5 shows the two pipes of diameter 10 mm used in the pressure vessel. As shown in Figure 2.4, the wellbores are 60 mm apart. 2. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP 29 Figure 2.5: The heating wellbore (top) and the production wellbore (bottom) used to dissociate the hydrates. The heating wellbore is used to carry out electrical heating to dissociate the hydrates. Heat is supplied to this wellbore through a Nichrome 240 Ω resistivity-heating rod in the wellbore. The temperature is regulated by a solid state relay and runs on a 60 V DC current, which allows temperatures of up to 60°C to be reached. The production wellbore contains perforations 1mm in diameter, which are evenly spaced at 10 mm apart throughout its length. During production, pore fluids are removed through the perforations and a fine copper mesh wrapped around the production wellbore prevents sand from entering the perforations. The dual wellbores are threaded into a piston plate, which is supported by a tripod, shown in Figure 2.6. A flexible high-pressure hose connects from the production wellbore to the bottom of the pressure vessel where the produced water and gas will flow through. 2. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP 30 Figure 2.6: The piston plate being supported by a tripod leg above the lower flange of the pressure vessel. The flexible hose connects from the production wellbore to the bottom of the vessel. 2.3.3 Thermocouples and Pressure Gauges To monitor the temperature changes during testing, six k-type thermocouples are positioned in various locations of the pressure vessel. As the two wellbores are no longer in the cylindrical axis, the challenge is to find the ideal radial points to place the thermocouples in a way that manages to capture the temperature changes due to the combined effects of heat and depressurisation on the separate wellbores. As such, a thermocouple is placed on each of the wellbore and the other four are spaced out in the vicinity between the two wellbores in order to lie between the different possible isotherms that could develop during dissociation. All the thermocouples are being placed in the same radial plane slightly halfway from the bottom of the pressure 2. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP 31 vessel. Table 2-1 and Figure 2.7 show the location of the thermocouples within the sample. Table 2-1: Coordinates of the location of thermocouples embedded in the sample. Thermocouple Coordinates (x,y) T1 (-3, 0) (at heating wellbore) T2 (3, 0) (at production wellbore) T3 (-5, 1.5) T4 (1, 3) T5 (0, 5.5) T6 (14, 4)   Figure 2.7: Location of the thermocouples inside the pressure vessel, marked with a yellow ‘x’. 2. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP 32 To monitor the pressure of the system during the setup and the throughout the experiment, pressure gauges are located at the top of the vessel at the T-junction and at the side of the vessel, as seen in Figure 2.4. 2.4 External Components 2.4.1 Gas Supply In the gas supply system, methane and nitrogen gas are stored at 20 MPa in 65-litre standard cylinders and enclosed in a flammable box. Nitrogen gas is used prior to the actual hydrate testing to test for gas leaks along the gas pipes. To achieve a good control of the gas pressures supplied to the pressure vessel, pressurized air valves (PAVs) are used. 2.4.2 Cooling System Throughout the test, the temperature is kept constant by the circulation of monopropylene glycol around the vessel walls and an air-conditioned enclosure around the pressure vessel (Figure 2.2). The temperature of the monopropylene glycol is controlled and changed by the water bath (MRC WBL-200), seen in Figure 2.8, with a capacity of 19.4 litres and a maximum fluid-circulation rate of 27 litres/min. With a temperature range of -30˚C to 100˚C, it runs on a PID temperature control and a PT-100Ω temperature sensor. The air-conditioning system works with a cooling capacity of 3.5 kW and has an open type compressor, a 500 kg evaporator, a 750 kg water condenser and a 1000 kg cooling tower. All of these are necessary to ensure that the temperature of the hydrate sample during testing will not be affected by external heat fluxes. 2. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP 33 Figure 2.8: Water-bath circulating monopropylene glycol around the pressure vessel to regulate the temperature during testing. 2.4.3 Pressure Regulator During the production test, where the wellbore pressure is reduced to its production pressure, it is crucial that the pressure can be kept constant over the duration of production. A spring-loaded backpressure regulator, the green cylindrical knob beside the pressure gauge in Figure 2.9, placed outside the pressure vessel enables that possibility. Figure 2.9: Backpressure regulator used to control the wellbore pressure (adapted from Falser (2012)). Used alongside a pressure gauge, the pressure is reduced by turning the knob on the regulator until the required pressure is reached. If the pressure on the upstream end 2. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP 34 (i.e. from the production wellbore) is above the set pressure, the pore fluid is able to pass through the regulator until the system is in equilibrium. However, it should be noted that the integrity of the regulator is compromised when sand begins to clog around the O-ring, which causes the pressure can leak. Thus, it is necessary to thoroughly clean the regulator after each test. 2.4.4 Measurement of Produced Gas To quantify the amount gas produced during dissociation, the volume of gas produced has to be measured. This is done by a water-displacement unit that is connected to the pressure vessel. A cylindrical tank of height 2.5 metres and diameter 30 cm is completely filled with water before the gas is allowed to enter through the inlet at the top (see Figure 2.10). The gas and water that are produced from the wellbore first pass through a gravity separator, which retains the pore fluid. The gas then enters the tank at the inlet and displaces the water and the water collected at the outlet is measured on a balance. 2. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP 35 Figure 2.10: Schematic of the water displacement unit used to quantify the amount of produced gas (adapted from Falser (2012)). For this given displacement unit, the gas volume can be calculated by equation (2.1): Vgas = Vw (0.0134*Vw + 2.0218) Where Vgas Vwater (2.1) is the volume of gas dissociated from the hydrate samples [SL] is the volume of water displaced [SL] Upon the completion of an experiment, the extracted methane gas trapped in the tank is released into the environment while the water is being replaced in preparation for the next run. 2.4.5 Data Acquisition System The various data acquired from the pressure gauges and thermocouples during the experiment are linked to a National Instruments NI-CR10-9074 data logger. This 400 2. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP 36 MHz data–logger captured data on a real-time basis and consisted of the following modules: Table 2-2: Modules of data logger Module Code Function NI 9474 A digital output module to operate and control valves NI9203 An analogue 4-20 mA input module for pressure transducer NI 9213 A module for thermocouple NI 9263 A module for heat control The commercial software LabVIEW 9.1 is used in the management and control of the data and signal processing. 3. METHANE HYDRATE PHASE EQUILIBRIA 37 3 Methane Hydrate Phase Equilibria 3.1 Introduction As described in Chapter 1, methane hydrates make up the vast majority of hydrates in nature. There are many properties of hydrate-bearing sediments that are currently being studied and some of these include the thermal properties, permeability, electrical conductivity and permittivity, elastic P- and S wave velocities, shear strength and volume changes resulting from hydrate dissociation. The interdependencies of the various properties are critically essential in predicting and quantifying responses of hydrate-bearing sediments to mechanical-, thermal- or chemical boundary conditions changes and they can be used to optimise recovery techniques for extracting methane from hydrate-bearing sediments or sequestering carbon dioxide in gas hydrates (Waite et al., 2009). An important property of methane hydrates that was explored in this study is the phase boundary of methane hydrates. The phase boundary separates the conditions of pressure and temperature in which a gas hydrate can exist in a stable form from the conditions in which it will be dissociated back into water and gas. Accurate phase boundaries are essential in both experimental and numerical studies on the properties of gas hydrate-bearing sediment. Hydrates are encountered from the seabed until depths of down to several hundred metres and as they are meta-stable, they dissociate back to their constituents of gas and water if their high pressure- and low temperature stability conditions are disturbed. This dissociation may weaken seabed severely and pose geohazard risks. In particular, if the hydrate layer happens to be on a sloped 3. METHANE HYDRATE PHASE EQUILIBRIA 38 seabed, uncontrolled dissociation will cause the soil layer to lose its shear strength and it will begin to slide. Therefore, it is important to know accurately the local pressureand temperature condition at which dissociation is taking place. In this region, seabed hydrates have been encountered at offshore Sabah, Malaysia, where hydrates jeopardised cementing operations when they began to dissociate due to the cement’s hydrate heat (Kenneth et al., 2004). A phase boundary for hydrates formed in seawater would enable the development of engineering solutions for safer operations carried out in hydrate-bearing seabed where pressure-temperature conditions are close to the phase boundary. Previous studies on the phase boundary of methane hydrate in seawater have been conducted to establish the fundamental conditions under which methane hydrate remains stable in an oceanic environment. However, a limited range of pressure conditions were covered in these studies, mainly between 3 MPa and 10 MPa (Dickens and Quinby-Hunt, 1994), or else had ethylene glycol (Mohammadi and Richon, 2009) in the aqueous solution, which results in a shift in the phase boundary of methane hydrates and thus provides an inaccurate assessment of the actual phase boundary under seawater conditions. Although experimental studies by Jager and Sloan (2001) have provided pressure and temperature equilibrium data of up to 70 MPa, the salt content found in the solution had a concentration of 6 to 26 wt%, which is markedly higher than the average salt content of seawater, which typically lies between 3 to 4 wt% (Perlman, 2013, Anthoni, 2006). The salt content in seawater might result in slower formation of hydrates and alter the phase boundary, as the stronger bonds of water with salt ions tend to inhibit hydrate formation. In Sloan and Koh (2007), it is noted that another secondary effect of having a salt content is a 3. METHANE HYDRATE PHASE EQUILIBRIA 39 decrease in the solubility of potential hydrate guest molecules in water, known as “salting-out”. The objective of this chapter is thus to determine the methane hydrate phase boundary for pressures of up to 17 MPa in purewater and seawater. This pressure range is believed to be representative of conditions found in methane hydrate zones in permafrost (down to 1100 m) and in marine sediments (down to 1500 m) (Kvenvolden, 1988, Moridis, 2010). A novel method to determine the phase boundary of methane hydrates through controlled depressurisation is presented in this chapter where phase boundary carrying a continuous pressure and temperature ranges are covered. 3.2 Methodology 3.2.1 Apparatus Experiments were carried out on an existing methane hydrate setup in the NUS laboratory, similar to the experimental setup detailed in Chapter 2 except for a few key differences, which will be highlighted in this section. Essentially, the single wellbore system was used to form the cylindrical sand samples with a diameter of 180 mm and an internal height of 225 mm. This was so as only depressurisation was carried out to obtain the phase boundaries and a single wellbore in the cylindrical axis allowed uniform dissociation radially. Another difference from the setup described in Chapter 2 was the location of the thermocouples. Figure 3.1 shows a cross section of the sample. A pore pressure range of up to 17 MPa was utilised to study the phase boundary. 3. METHANE HYDRATE PHASE EQUILIBRIA 40 Figure 3.1: Cross section of the hydrate-bearing sediment with labelled thermocouples inside the pressure vessel around the single wellbore in the cylindrical axis. The temperature and pressure histories during the experiments were measured using six k-type thermocouples (listed in Table 3-1) and pressure transducers located at the top of the vessel. The temperature of the samples was regulated by a combination of monopropylene glycol circulated through a cooling jacket around the pressure vessel and an air-conditioned enclosure in which the pressure vessel was set up in. Table 3-1: Locations of the thermocouples within the tested samples. Thermocouple T1 T2 T3 T4 T5 T6 Radial distance from centre of wellbore [mm] 5 (at wellbore) 20 35 50 70 90 (at the wall) 3.2.2 Hydrate Formation Natural gas hydrates have been studied in different ways, by downhole testing on site (Falser et al., 2012b), by recovering and analysing cores from these locations 3. METHANE HYDRATE PHASE EQUILIBRIA 41 (Schultheiss et al., 2009), or by artificially forming hydrate-bearing sediments in the laboratory (Linga et al., 2009a, Linga et al., 2009b, Haligva et al., 2010, Kneafsey et al., 2007). In situ testing requires drilling operations and detailed data acquisition in remote locations and is therefore hugely expensive. Because of the pressure and temperature stability conditions, cores containing hydrates are almost impossible to recover without a significant degree of disturbance to the sample, (Kneafsey et al., 2011, Kneafsey et al., 2007) and heterogeneities complicate their analysis further. On the other hand, testing hydrate samples formed artificially enables an analysis on homogeneous samples with known properties in controlled conditions. In this study, hydrates were artificially formed in Toyoura silica sand, with a particle diameter of 0.1 - 0.3 mm. In order to maximize the range of pressure that can be achieved during dissociation to obtain the phase boundary, they were formed at a pressure of around 17 MPa, which is near the maximum design pressure of the pressure vessel and at a temperature of around 1ºC into the stable region. The hydrates are later dissociated in a controlled manner in order to determine the phase boundary. Two different sets of tests were carried out for the formation and dissociation of methane hydrates in freshwater and seawater. The composition of the seawater used is 1.67 wt-% sodium chloride and 0.25 wt-% sodium sulphate, similar to the salt content of seawaters around the world (Anthoni, 2006). Purewater- and seawater hydrates were formed by the water excess method, in which a known amount of introduced gas determines the hydrate saturation after its complete reaction with the unlimited pore water (Falser, 2012). In this method, sand was compacted into the pressure vessel, and a vertical effective stress of around 2.4 MPa was applied. The sample was next pressurized with methane up to a pressure which corresponded to the saturation of hydrate when all the gas was converted to hydrates. 3. METHANE HYDRATE PHASE EQUILIBRIA 42 The pressure was then increased to around 15 MPa by injecting water, while the temperature was lowered and maintained at 3°C using the water bath. The methane gas and water inlets are shown in Figure 2.4. During the hydrate formation process, the pressure was maintained constant by intermittent water injections. This method resulted in pore-filling, fully water-saturated hydrate samples (Priest et al., 2009) a composition close to most hydrates found in nature. The pressure of methane, PCH4, that was required to obtain the saturation of 0.4 (methane hydrates filling 40% of the pore volume) is calculated using the PengRobinson equation of state (1976): 𝑃!"! =   𝑅𝑇 𝑎𝛼 − !   𝑉! − 𝑏 𝑉! + 2𝑏𝑉! − 𝑏 ! (3.1)   where (Setzmann and Wagner, 1991, Lin and Chao, 1984):                          𝑎 = 0.45724𝑅! 𝑇!!   𝑃!                          𝑏 = 0.07780𝑅𝑇!   𝑃!                          𝛼 = 1 + 0.37464 + 1.54226𝜔 − 0.26992𝜔! 1 − 𝑇!!.!                          𝑇! = !   𝑉! 𝑇                    ;            𝑉! = 𝑇! 𝑛!!! PCH4 is the pressure of methane gas required [MPa] R is the universal gas constant (8.314x 106 m3MPa/(mol K)) T is the actual temperature inside the sample [K] Tc is the critical temperature of methane (190.6 K) Pc is the critical pressure of methane (4.656 MPa) ω is the acentric factor of methane (0.0108) 3. METHANE HYDRATE PHASE EQUILIBRIA Vp is the pore volume [m3] nCH4 is the number of moles of methane [-] 43 3.2.3 Dissociation along the phase boundary method The principle of the dissociation process adopted in this study is depressurisation along the methane hydrate phase boundary. Hydrates have been formed in the manner discussed in the previous section. Thereafter, the temperature was increased to a point near the phase boundary at constant pressure by increasing the temperature of the water bath, shown by the transition from Points 1 to 2 on the hypothetical phase boundary in Figure 3.2. It is noted that at this temperature, hydrates are still in the stable region and hence there was no dissociation observed during this step. For both the purewater and seawater experiments, the highest initial temperature chosen was 290 K. Any temperature higher would result in premature dissociation, as it would be out of the stability region. The system was then depressurised by carefully draining out the pore water using needle valve connected to the bottom of the depressurisation wellbore as shown in Figure 2.4, during which the temperature remained unchanged (Points 2-3) until the onset of the dissociation process started. The pressure at which the temperature began to decrease marked the start of the dissociation process. The temperature data in the phase boundary is that of thermocouple T1 during dissociation, which is the wellbore temperature. 3. METHANE HYDRATE PHASE EQUILIBRIA 44 20 1 Temperature increase x 2 x Depress. x3 Pressure [MPa] 15 10 Dissociation along the phase boundary 5 4 5 0 270 275 Complete dissociation 280 285 290 295 Temperature [K] Figure 3.2: Schematic showing the various stages of the dissociation along the phase boundary. Concurrently, the dissociated gas was collected, signifying hydrate dissociation. The dissociation temperature decreased with decreasing pressure (as can be seen between Points 3-4), and therefore the depressurisation rate must be controlled carefully. Upon the completion of dissociation, the pressure-temperature began to taper off (Point 5) from the exponential curve, where temperature now increases instead of decreases with decreasing pressure. The entire procedure is then repeated to obtain another segment in the phase boundary. The mechanism underlying this principle will be discussed in section 3.5. 3.2.4 Sample Properties With the dissociation method described above, five different tests were carried outtwo for purewater hydrates and three of which for seawater hydrates. Table 3-2 gives an overview of the boundary conditions of the individual tests. 3. METHANE HYDRATE PHASE EQUILIBRIA 45 Table 3-2: Sample properties and testing boundary conditions. Test 1(fresh) 2 (fresh) 3 (saline) 4 (saline) 5 (saline) Initial temperature T0 [K] 283.7 290.4 289.4 285.5 280.7 Initial pressure P0 [MPa] 14.6 15.0 15.8 16.4 15.7 Hydrate saturation Sh [-] 40% 40% 42% 40% 40% Porosity n [-] 0.40 0.39 0.38 0.40 0.40 0 2.4 2.4 2.4 2.4 Sample Volume [dm3] 5.52 5.75 5.75 5.75 5.65 Depressurisation [MPa/min] 1.1 0.8 - 2 1.5 2.2 3.5 0.0093 0.0093 3.03 3.03 3.03 Effective stress σ’ [MPa] rate Pore-water salinity [%] Using Test 1 as the representative case, the temperature was increased to 284 K and the pressure was vented to 8 MPa. Following that, dissociation began as the pressure was carefully released by the needle valve. As dissociation is an endothermic process, temperature decreases as well while the pressure drops. The temperature- and pressure conditions were closely monitored. After 20 minutes of depressurisation, the temperature tapered off at 2.4 MPa, signifying the end of the dissociation process. Figure 3.3 shows the phase boundary obtained in the representative test, which, in one single run, covered the pressure range of 2.4 MPa to 8 MPa. 3. METHANE HYDRATE PHASE EQUILIBRIA 46 14 12 Test 1- Representative test Pressure [MPa] 10 8 6 4 2 0 270 275 280 285 Temperature [K] Figure 3.3: Pressure- Temperature history of a representative test, providing the lower boundary for the phase equilibria data. 3.3 Phase Boundary for Purewater Methane Hydrates With the dissociation procedure as described in section 3.2.3, two sets of dissociation experiments of methane hydrates in porous media formed in purewater. A phase boundary covering the pressure- and temperature ranges of 2 MPa to 17 MPa and 273 K to 290 K respectively was obtained, and is shown in Figure 3.4: 3. METHANE HYDRATE PHASE EQUILIBRIA 47 25 Test 1 (experimental data, freshwater) 20 Test 2 (experimental data, freshwater) Predicted line (equation 3.2) Pressure [MPa] 15 10 5 0 270 272 274 276 278 280 282 284 286 288 290 292 Temperature [K] Figure 3.4: Methane hydrate dissociation experiments in freshwater over a pressure range of 3.5 – 17.9 MPa (Test 2), 2.3 – 8 MPa (Test 1) and a temperature range of 272 – 290 K. From the obtained experimental phase boundary data, the following empirical phase boundary equation for methane hydrate in porous media was found: 𝑃!" = 1 + 1.66  exp(0.1342𝑇!" )   (3.2) where the temperature Teq and the pressure Peq are expressed in ºC and MPa respectively. The data fit of the empirical equation (3.2) is also presented in Figure 3.4 and it fits the experimental phase boundary well. 3. METHANE HYDRATE PHASE EQUILIBRIA 3.4 48 Phase Boundary for Seawater Methane Hydrates Similarly, dissociation experiments of methane hydrates in seawater led to a phase boundary covering pressure- and temperature ranges of 6 MPa to 18 MPa and 273 to 289 K respectively, as shown in Figure 3.5: 25 Test 3 (experimental data, seawater) Test 4 (experimental data, seawater) 20 Test 5 (experimental data, seawater) Pressure [MPa] Predicted line (equation 3.3) 15 10 5 0 270 272 274 276 278 280 282 284 286 288 290 292 Temperature [K] Figure 3.5: Methane hydrate dissociation experiments in seawater (3.03 wt-% NaCl) over a pressure range of 11 – 17 MPa (Test 3), 7.5 – 11 MPa (Test 4) and 4.5 – 6 MPa (Test 5) and a temperature range of 277 – 289 K. The experimental phase boundary can be described by the following empirical equation: 𝑃!",!%!"#$ = 1.3 + 1.66  exp(0.141𝑇!" )   (3.3) where the temperature Teq and the pressure Peq are expressed in ºC and MPa respectively. The empirical data fit in equation (3.3) is shown as a dashed line in Figure 3.5. 3. METHANE HYDRATE PHASE EQUILIBRIA 3.5 49 Kinetics of Dissociation Process Thermodynamic processes during the depressurisation govern the method used to determine hydrate phase boundaries. The kinetics underlying the controlled dissociation process described in section 3.2.3 will be explained here. Dissociation begins in the vicinity of the miniature wellbore at the sample’s centre as this is where the system is being depressurised. The energy consumption rate of that volume greatly exceeds the heat energy transfer across its interface, caused by an evolving temperature gradient between the dissociating volume and the constant temperature at the pressure vessel’s wall. This process can be represented by the simple relationship: 1 𝑑𝐸!"#$%&'( 1 𝑑 ! 𝐸!"##$%&' − ≫   𝑑𝑉 𝑑𝑡 𝑑𝐴 𝑑𝑟. 𝑑𝑡 (3.4) 1 𝑑𝐸!"#$%&'( 1 −  ~   𝜌 Δ𝐻   𝑑𝑉 𝑑𝑡 𝑑𝑡 !" !"## (3.5) 1 𝑑 ! 𝐸!"##$%&' 1 1 𝑑𝑇  ~   𝑞!!  ~ 𝑘!   𝑑𝐴 𝑑𝑟. 𝑑𝑡 𝑑𝑟 𝑑𝑟 𝑑𝑟 (3.6) where Econsumed is the energy consumed during dissociation [J] Esupplied is the energy supplied from the outer boundary [J] V is the unit volume of the sample in the vessel [m3] t is the unit time [s] A is the unit area [m2] r is the radial distance from the centre of the wellbore [m] T is the temperature of the supplied heat [K] ρMH is the density of methane hydrates [kg/m3] q’c is the heat transfer coefficient [W/m/K] kb is the bulk thermal conductivity of hydrates (2.59 W/mK) ΔHdiss is the dissociation enthalpy (54.2 kJ/mol CH4) 3. METHANE HYDRATE PHASE EQUILIBRIA 50 where the terms on the left of condition (3.4) represent the volumetric energy consumption rate during dissociation per unit volume and the terms on the right represent the heat flux into the volume per unit area. The heat transfer processes within the sample have a conductive- and a convective component of the gas/water pore fluid, which makes an accurate assessment impractical. The heat flux into the sample from its outer impermeable boundary, however, is purely conductive. The different terms in condition (3.4) are compared for the representative test 1 and similar results are obtained for all five tests. The condition can be checked by deriving the dissociation rate from the gas extraction and the heat flux from the temperature profile. The bottom diagram in Figure 3.6 shows the accumulated gas volume dissociated from the hydrate sample as the pressure is reduced from 19 MPa to atmospheric pressure, as seen in the pressure evolution in the top diagram. Within 14.7 min, about 150 litres of methane at standard conditions are recovered from the dissociating hydrate sample. Approximating the energy consumption with a constant dissociation enthalpy ΔHd of 54.2 kJ/(mol CH4) (Handa, 1986), the dissociation process requires 510 W averaged over the same period. The maximum energy supplied into the sample corresponds to the greatest temperature gradient of 11 K/distance between thermocouples one and six at 14.7 min, represented by the dotted line in Figure 3.7. The bulk thermal conductivity kb for stable hydrate samples with the same properties has previously been measured as 2.59 W/mK (Falser et al., 2012a). The theoretical maximum heat conduction is therefore calculated as 66 W. This shows that the energy consumption rate is about one order of magnitude larger than the maximum rate heat energy is conducted into the dissociating zone. The dissociation process is therefore forced to obtain the remaining energy from the specific heat of the sediment and the pore water, which in turn leads 3. METHANE HYDRATE PHASE EQUILIBRIA 51 to the temperature decrease along the hydrate’s phase boundary. This simplified comparison shows that the dissociation behaviour at the sample’s centre is genuine and not governed by the heat transferred into it. 20 18 Pressure [MPa] 16 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 -2 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 time [min] 14 16 18 20 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 time [min] 14 16 18 20 180 160 140 Vgas [SL] 120 100 80 60 40 20 0 -2 Figure 3.6: Pore pressure evolution (top) and accumulated gas volume in litre at standard conditions [SL] (bottom) for Test 2 (freshwater). The vertical dashed lines in this figure and in Figure 3.7 represent where dissociation has been completed. Condition (3.4) is valid in the range (a) in Figure 3.7, where the temperatures initially throughout the sample and later at the sample’s centre remain governed by the endothermic dissociation. The reversal point at 14.7 min coincides with the cessation of gas extraction shown in Figure 3.6 (bottom). This indicates the completion of dissociation, and so the left term in condition (3.4) approaches zero, which makes the heat regime in the sample governed by the energy supplied externally (section (b) in Figure 3.7). 3. METHANE HYDRATE PHASE EQUILIBRIA 52 292 (a) 290 (b) 288 T6 Temperature [K] 286 284 T5 282 280 278 T3 T4 276 T2 274 272 0 10 20 T1 30 time [min] 40 50 60 Figure 3.7: Temperature histories during the dissociation Test 2 at the locations listed in Table 1. The condition (3.4) can be achieved by controlling the depressurisation rate in such a way that the temperature within the sample continues to decrease uniformly along the phase boundary. The high degree of non-linearity of the methane hydrate phase boundary suggests that at higher pressures the endothermic effect during depressurisation is less marked than it is at lower pressures. This indicates that the depressurisation rate should be increased at lower pressures, in order to compensate for the increasing temperature gradients within the sample. That can be checked by comparing the depressurisation rates for the seawater tests (Table 3-2) and observing that the rate increases from 1.5 MPa/min to 3.5 MPa/min from Test 3 to Test 5 as the range of pressure and -temperature obtained in the runs decreases. 3. METHANE HYDRATE PHASE EQUILIBRIA 3.6 53 Verification of Phase Boundaries 3.6.1 Temperature Search Method As the novel dissociation along the phase boundary method has never been used to find the phase boundary, an independent verification method was conducted with a separate set of experiments using the “temperature search” method, to determine two hydrate equilibrium conditions for the freshwater and seawater systems respectively. In this method, the objective was to ascertain the equilibrium temperature at which methane hydrates in porous media dissociate at a constant experimental pressure (Dholabhai et al., 1991). This pressure-temperature point at equilibrium corresponds to a point on the phase boundary. While the first method of finding the phase boundary resulted in a continuous range, the temperature search method provided discrete equilibrium points. Four equilibrium points were obtained- two of which were from purewater methane hydrates and the other two were from seawater methane hydrates- and they were compared with the phase boundaries found earlier. Hydrate Formation Hydrates were formed in a cylindrical vessel with an internal diameter and height of 10 cm and 15 cm respectively, and a volume of 1240 cm3. Omega copper-constantan thermocouples with an uncertainty of 0.1 K were used for temperature measurements, with one thermocouple located in the gas phase and three thermocouples embedded in the silica sand bed (C1-C3) at varying depths from the bottom of the vessel. A control valve (Fisher Baumann) coupled with a PID controller enabled the dissociation to be carried out at constant pressure (Babu, 2012). Figure 3.8 shows a cross section of the reactor with the location of the thermocouples. 3. METHANE HYDRATE PHASE EQUILIBRIA 54 The formation temperature and pressure conditions are between 274 to 277 K and 8 to 10 MPa respectively. 634 g of fully water saturated silica sand, the same sand as has been used in the previous experiments used to determine the phase boundaries, filled up a third of the pressure vessel. The desired experimental hydrate formation pressure was then applied and the temperature was allowed to cool and reach the formation temperature, where it was maintained by a water bath. The entire hydrate formation experiment was allowed to continue until there was no further drop in the reactor pressure. Hydrate Dissociation Upon complete formation, the pressure in the reactor was reduced to the desired pressure (for which the equilibrium temperature was to be determined) by carefully venting out the free methane gas. When the temperature and pressure had stabilized at the experimental pressure, the hydrate sample temperature was increased by around 5 K from the formation temperature by raising the temperature of the water bath while keeping the pressure constant. This marks the start of the dissociation experiment. The hydrate sample will dissociate when the temperature in the reactor reaches the dissociation point corresponding to the desired pressure. Because hydrate dissociation is endothermic, there will be a deviation in the temperature-time histories of the water bath and the thermocouples located close to the dissociation region. The equilibrium temperature can be obtained by comparing the temperature-time histories of the heating curve and the various thermocouples embedded in the bed. 55 20 3. METHANE HYDRATE PHASE EQUILIBRIA 5 80 100 C4 20 C1 Methane hydrate bearing sand 12 13 38 25 13 50 C3 13 C2 12 100 Figure 3.8: Schematic diagram of apparatus used in the "Temperature Search" method to obtain equilibrium points. C1 to C4 represent the location of the thermocouples in the vessel. 3.6.2 Equilibrium Points for Freshwater Hydrates The temperature evolution and methane recovery history of the first test obtained by the temperature search method are shown in Figure 3.9. 3. METHANE HYDRATE PHASE EQUILIBRIA 56 1.4 Water bath 278 Gas 1.2 C3 1.0 Gas recovered C1 276 0.8 0.8 278 0.6 0.6 277 275 276 0.4 0.4 275 Deviation in temperature 274 0 100 200 0.2 274 0.2 273 273 Methane recovered [mol] C2 [K] Temperature [K] 277 0 20 300 Time [min] 40 60 [min] 400 80 500 0.0 100 0.0 600 Figure 3.9: Typical gas release measurement curve along with the temperature profiles during hydrate dissociation at 3.1 MPa with a driving force of 4.0 K. Hydrate equilibrium point was found to be 275.0 K at 3.1 MPa. As seen in the figure, the temperature profile of the water bath represents the heating curve. The temperature evolution in the gas phase (as shown by thermocouple C4) follows that of the of the water bath. The temperature increase measured by the thermocouples inside the sand bed of the reactor (C1-C3) flattens out at a particular temperature, which is caused by the heat-absorbing hydrate dissociation. As there is a phase change when hydrates dissociate from their solid state into their constituents of gas and water, the temperature stabilize until dissociation is completed. This point in the figure is the equilibrium temperature for the pressure at which the dissociation takes place. For Test 1, the equilibrium temperature was found to be 275.0 K at 3.1 MPa. The deviation in the temperature profiles can clearly be seen in Figure 3.9 (C1, C2, C3). When the temperature exceeds 275.0 K, hydrates start to decompose. Since 3. METHANE HYDRATE PHASE EQUILIBRIA 57 the reactor pressure was maintained at a constant pressure of 3.1 MPa, the excess gas was collected by a reservoir. This point is also marked by the increase in the methane gas recovery at 275.0 K as shown in the figure. When the temperature exceeds the equilibrium point, the temperature profiles for the three thermocouples located in the bed begin to deviate from heating curve (water bath temperature). This is because the temperature at a particular location depends upon the heat absorbed for hydrate dissociation in that location and the heat supplied by the water bath. The balance of this heat transfer determines the thermocouple responses at a particular location. All the thermocouples will reach the same temperature upon complete dissociation. Test 2 was conducted to determine the equilibrium temperature at a pressure of 4.8 MPa, and that was found to be 279.5 K. The temperature-time history of Test 2 is shown in Figure 3.10. 282 Temperature (K) 281 0.08 280 282 0.08 0.06 281 279 0.06 280 279 278 0.04 Bath 278 C1 277 C2 C3 276 0 Gas Gas recovered 277 276 0 50 0.02 0.04 0.02 Methane Recovery (mol) 0.10 0.00 10 100 20 30 40 50 0.00 150 200 Time (min) Figure 3.10: Typical gas release measurement curve along with the temperature profiles during hydrate dissociation at 4.8 MPa with a driving force of 4.0 K. Hydrate equilibrium point was found to be 279.5 K at 4.8 MPa. 3. METHANE HYDRATE PHASE EQUILIBRIA 58 The two discrete equilibrium points obtained in the temperature search method (3.1 MPa, 275K and 4.8 MPa, 279.5K) are incorporated alongside the phase boundary for methane hydrates in purewater obtained earlier. While a pressure range of up to 17 MPa was obtained for the phase boundary, for the verification equilibrium data, the two points chosen were in the lower boundary and below 10 MPa as the design pressure of the vessel described in Figure 3.8 is 10 MPa. As seen in Figure 3.11, the two independent equilibrium points obtained using this temperature search method agree with the phase boundary for freshwater hydrates determined by controlled depressurisation. This proves the accuracy of the method adopted in this study to obtain the phase boundary of methane hydrates, where a continuous range of equilibrium data is obtained in a single test through controlled dissociation along the phase boundary. On the other hand, numerous tests need to be carried out using the temperature search method in order to obtain the same range of the phase boundary. 3. METHANE HYDRATE PHASE EQUILIBRIA 59 25 Test 1 (experimental data, freshwater) Test 2 (experimental data, freshwater) 20 Predicted line (equation 3.2) Equilibrium Points (temperature search method) Pressure [MPa] 15 10 5 0 270 272 274 276 278 280 282 284 286 288 290 292 Temperature [K] Figure 3.11: Two equilibrium points (3.1 MPa, 275K and 4.8 MPa, 279.5K) found using the temperature-search method alongside the phase boundary obtained using controlled dissociation for purewater methane hydrates. The error bars for the two equilibrium points are shown as ‘+’ symbols in the figure. 3.6.3 Equilibrium Points for Seawater Hydrates Similarly, two equilibrium points were independently determined using the temperature search method for seawater hydrates at pressures of 4.2 and 8.0 MPa. These are found to be in good agreement with the phase boundary experiments, as shown in Figure 3.12. 3. METHANE HYDRATE PHASE EQUILIBRIA 60 25 Test 3 (experim ental data, seawater) Test 4 (experim ental data, seawater) Test 5 (experim ental data, seawater) 20 Predicted line (equation 3.3) Pressure [MPa] Equilibrium Points (tem perature search m ethod) 15 10 5 0 270 272 274 276 278 280 282 284 286 288 290 292 Temperature [K] Figure 3.12: Two equilibrium points (4.2 MPa, 277.25 K and 8.0 MPa, 283.05 K) found using the temperature-search method alongside the phase boundary obtained using controlled dissociation for seawater methane hydrates. The error bars for the two equilibrium points are shown as ‘+’ symbols in the figure. Table 3-3 summarizes the equilibrium points found in this study using the temperature search method in porous media as well as the predicted equilibrium temperatures from the phase boundary equations for purewater- and seawater hydrates respectively. The equilibrium points experimentally found using the ‘temperature search’ method validated that the phase boundaries obtained earlier were accurate and may be used to predict the stability conditions of purewater and seawater hydrates given a particular pressure or temperature. 3. METHANE HYDRATE PHASE EQUILIBRIA 61 Table 3-3: Summary of equilibrium pressure- and temperature data from the "temperature search" method and the predicted equilibrium temperatures from the phase boundary equations 3.1 and 3.2. System Methane-Purewater Methane-Seawater 3.7 Pexp [MPa] Temperature [K] Experimental Predicted 3.1 275.0 274.9 4.8 279.5 279.3 4.2 277.3 277.1 8.0 283.1 283.0 Comparison of Phase Boundaries Phase equilibria data shown alongside gathered by various groups in the past four decades gave a good agreement with the phase boundary found in this study for purewater methane hydrates (Figure 3.13) and for seawater methane hydrates (Figure 3.14) respectively. 3. METHANE HYDRATE PHASE EQUILIBRIA 62 30 Deaton and Frost (1946) McLeod and Campbell (1961) Jhaveri and Robinson (1965) 25 Gallow ay et al. (1970) Verma (1974) deRoo et al. (1983) Pressure [MPa] 20 Adisasmito et al. (1991) Nakamura et al. (2003) Mohammaadi et al. (2005) 15 Makogon (1997) Selim and Sloan (1989) Kw on et al. (2008) this study 10 5 0 273 275 277 279 281 283 285 287 Temperature [K] 289 291 293 295 Figure 3.13: Reference phase boundary data for purewater methane hydrates and models compared to equation (3.2). 25 Dickens and Quinby-Hunt (1994) Maekaw a (2001) 20 Dholabhai et al. (1991) Pressure [MPa] De Roo et al. (1983) model Duan and Sun (2006) model this study 15 10 5 0 274 276 278 280 282 284 Temperature [K] 286 288 290 292 Figure 3.14: Reference phase boundary data for seawater methane hydrates and models compared to equation (3.3) (Dickens and Quinby-Hunt, 1994, De Roo et al., 1983, Duan and Sun, 2006, Maekawa, 2001) 3. METHANE HYDRATE PHASE EQUILIBRIA 63 A relative shift between the purewater- and seawater phase boundaries is observed, as seen in Figure 3.15. The dissociation temperature of the seawater system has an average offset of -0.87 K in the lower region of the phase boundary and -0.92 K in the upper region of the phase boundary compared to the freshwater system. This is caused by the presence of salt, which acts as a thermodynamic inhibitor and causes the dissociation temperature to be depressed by a small amount compared to the purewater system. Previous studies carried out by Dickens (1994) showed an offset of approximately -1.1 K compared to the purewater system. 25 20 Predicted line (seawater) Pressure [MPa] Predicted line (freshwater) ΔT=0.92 K 15 10 ΔT=0.87 K 5 0 270 272 274 276 278 280 282 284 286 288 290 292 Temperature [K] Figure 3.15: Comparison of methane hydrate phase boundaries obtained for freshwater- and seawater systems. 3. METHANE HYDRATE PHASE EQUILIBRIA 3.8 64 Conclusion A novel method to determine the hydrate phase boundary in porous media by controlled dissociation has been studied. Methane hydrate-bearing sediment samples were dissociated by controlled dissociation from a high pressure along the phase boundary. This provided a range along the phase boundary instead of discrete points used in literature to determine the phase boundary. The accuracy of this method was validated independently by the temperature search method at different points of the phase boundaries, which gave discrete equilibrium points. By conducting dissociation experiments with this new method, the phase boundary of seawater hydrates (3 wt% NaCl) has been expanded from the current upper pressure limit of 11 MPa to 17 MPa. For both purewater- and seawater methane hydrates, empirical equations have been found to describe the phase boundaries of each system respectively. This provides an efficient methodology to accurately assess hydrate stability in varying conditions. 4. GAS PRODUCTION FROM DUAL WELLBORE SYSTEM 4 Gas Production from Dual Wellbore System 4.1 Introduction 65 One of the most important challenges in today’s world is the ability to supply energy for the growing needs of the world. One possible solution is to tap into the tremendous potential that methane hydrates have as an alternative energy source. With Japan’s state-run JOGMEC successfully attaining the world’s first gas extraction from offshore methane hydrate deposits and commercial production aimed within the next six years (Lamonica, 2013), the need to explore efficient dissociation processes for gas production becomes increasingly important. Initially, it was believed that the most efficient method to produce gas from hydrates is depressurisation alone, as the full-scale tests in Mallik, Canada have shown. However, previous work carried out in the National University of Singapore (NUS) on a single wellbore production scheme have suggested that a dissociation scheme combining depressurisation and wellbore heating proved to be a more efficient method for extracting gas from hydrates (Falser, 2012). Compared to sole depressurisation, where the hydrate bearing sediments’ specific heat is used up very rapidly resulting in heat having to be transferred in from the surroundings, the novel production scheme on average increased the gas production by 3.6 times at the same wellbore pressure of 6 MPa. One shortcoming of the single wellbore scheme is that the heat supplied to the dissociation zone is purely by conduction through the sediment (Falser, 2012) against the forced convection caused by the pore fluid flowing back to the wellbore. 4. GAS PRODUCTION FROM DUAL WELLBORE SYSTEM 66 Therefore, in this chapter, the work on gas production will be extended to investigate how heat transfer can be improved using a dual wellbore production scheme. In a dual wellbore scheme, where electrical heating is carried out on one wellbore and depressurisation on another, the forced convection could be beneficial instead. This is because the forced convection through the pore fluid could be employed to supply energy into the dissociation zone. Although dual wellbore systems have been an established practice in the petroleum industry, where one wellbore is used for extraction while the other for water injection, such a system would be the first of its kind in the hydrate gas production tests. Different gas production temperature and -pressure conditions will be studied to see their effects on the efficiency of gas production and energy yield during the process. 4.2 Test Procedures In this section, the test setup will be explained, followed by a representative test to describe the outcome of the production tests. The sample properties and parameters will then be shown. 4.2.1 Test Setup Figure 4.1 is a schematic of the dual wellbore system, where electrical heating is carried out on the left wellbore and depressurisation takes place on the right wellbore, which is also the production wellbore. 4. GAS PRODUCTION FROM DUAL WELLBORE SYSTEM 67 Figure 4.1: Schematic of the dual wellbore system, with resistivity heating on the left and depressurisation on the right. The temperature at the heating wellbore was controlled electrically by a solid-state relay, with a 60 V direct current going into a 240 Ω 15 W heater. The pressure at the wellbore was controlled by a spring-loaded regulator valve. The temperature around the perimeter of the vessel (environment temperature) was kept constant throughout the production tests by the water bath circulating glycol. The pressure- and temperature data, placed in the vessels at the locations mentioned in Chapter 2, were recorded in National Instruments LabVIEW. Similar to the tests to obtain the phase boundary of methane hydrates described in Section 3.2.2, the hydrates were artificially formed in the vessel at a constant pressure of 15 MPa and a temperature of 3˚C. Completion formation of methane hydrates took an average of 65-70 hours. This was indicated by the pressure staying constant (or declining by less than 0.1 MPa) and a constant temperature despite the pressure increase in the water, signifying that there was no more free gas in the system. If there were free gas present, by definition of the ideal gas law (PV= nRT), an increase in 4. GAS PRODUCTION FROM DUAL WELLBORE SYSTEM 68 pressure would consequentially result in the increase in temperature as the volume is constant. After hydrates have been formed, dissociation began by depressurizing on one miniature wellbore and resistivity heating on the other wellbore. Methane gas produced was channeled to a gas-water separator as shown in Chapter 2, and the volume of gas collected was determined from the volume of water displaced during equation (2.1). Each production test was run for 90 minutes. This took place after the pressure was reduced to the required bottom hole pressure (BHP). Thereafter, the wellbore pressure was maintained during the production with minute fluctuations from the wellbore stimulations throughout the tests. 4.2.2 Representative Test Figure 4.2 shows the pore pressure development and volume of methane gas collected during a 90-minute production test for a representative case. For this case, the pressure at the depressurisation wellbore was reduced to 6 MPa while the temperature at the heating wellbore was increased to 15 ˚C. 4. GAS PRODUCTION FROM DUAL WELLBORE SYSTEM 69 ΔP +ΔT 6 15 Pressure [MPa] 15 10 5 0 -10 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 50 60 70 80 90 Time [min] 80 Volume of Gas [SL] 60 40 20 0 -10 0 10 20 30 40 Time[min] Figure 4.2: Representative test (with ΔP6 +ΔT15 for purewater hydrates chosen) of the pore pressure evolution (top) and the corresponding gas volume (bottom) collected during the 90-minute production test. The pressure was maintained at a constant value to ensure that the amount of produced gas only comes from the said BHP and not a range of pressures. As seen in the Figure 4.2 (bottom), as soon as the pressure at the depressurisation wellbore was reduced to 6 MPa (at time=0), production began and the volume of gas collected increased. The non-linear increase in gas volume was due to intermittent production rates. Occasionally, production was impeded due to blockages at the wellbore. Hence, the production was slightly stimulated at the needle valve to ensure a continuity of production and that the pressure at the production wellbore did not rise above the production pressure of 6 MPa. This resulted in the sudden slight increase in volume of gas collected seen at the 20th, 30th and 75th minutes. However, it was by no means an 4. GAS PRODUCTION FROM DUAL WELLBORE SYSTEM 70 artificial production of gas as if left untouched, the pressure in the vessel will rise above 6 MPa. Based on the pore pressure and gas volume data, the gas recovery and energy yield can be calculated, which will then be compared amongst the samples with different parameters. 4.2.3 Sample Parameters For the single wellbore tests (Falser, 2012), it was found that a combination of depressurisation to 6 MPa and a simultaneous wellbore heating to 15˚C led to the greatest gas production efficiency. All the tests were carried out on methane hydrates formed in pure water. The same conditions will be used for comparison in the dual wellbore tests (with one wellbore depressurised to 6 MPa while the temperature of the other wellbore is increased to 15˚C) and the tests will be further extended to include: i) A greater range of depressurisation (ΔP) ii) Increased wellbore heating (ΔT) iii) Seawater hydrates Hydrates for all the gas production tests were formed in similar fashion as described in section 3.2.2 using the water excess method. The effects of the various production scenarios of depressurisation and heating will be investigated. Seven different hydrate production tests were carried out, five of which on purewater hydrates and two on seawater hydrates. They are categorised as follows: i) Purewater hydrates - ΔP6 + ΔT15 depressurisation to 6 MPa BHP and heating from 7°C to 15˚C - ΔP6 + ΔT25 depressurisation to 6 MPa BHP and heating from 7°C to 25˚C - ΔP4 + ΔT15 depressurisation to 4 MPa BHP and heating from 7°C to 15˚C 4. GAS PRODUCTION FROM DUAL WELLBORE SYSTEM 71 - ΔP4 + ΔT25 depressurisation to 4 MPa BHP and heating from 7°C to 15˚C - ΔP4 sole depressurisation to 4 MPa BHP ii) Seawater hydrates - ΔP6 + ΔT15 depressurisation to 6 MPa BHP and heating from 7°C to 15˚C - ΔP6 + ΔT25 depressurisation to 6 MPa BHP and heating from 7°C to 25˚C An experimental matrix showing the combinations of wellbore pressure and heating temperature with respect to the phase boundary is shown in Figure 4.3. For simplicity, only the phase boundary for methane hydrates formed in purewater in Chapter 3 is shown here. 18 16 Starting Conditions: 14 MPa, 276 K 14 Phase Boundary of Methane Hydrate Pressure [MPa] 12 10 8 ΔP +ΔT 6 15 ΔP +ΔT 6 25 ΔP +ΔT 4 15 ΔP +ΔT 4 25 6 4 ΔP 4 2 0 270 275 280 285 290 295 300 Temperature [K] Figure 4.3: Experimental matrix of the different combinations of wellbore pressures and heating temperatures with respect to the phase boundary. As far as possible, the testing conditions such as the hydrate saturation and porosity of each run were simulated to be as close to that in the α – field in the Nankai Trough of Japan (Kurihara et al., 2005, Kurihara et al., 2008). This is so as the most attractive hydrate deposits exist as class 3 sediments in Nankai Trough, Mallik and the Alaskan 4. GAS PRODUCTION FROM DUAL WELLBORE SYSTEM 72 North Slope and they should remain the main research subject. Table 4-1 summarises the samples’ properties and testing conditions. Table 4-1: Summary of the properties of purewater- and seawater hydrates used in the gas production tests. ΔP4+ΔT15 ΔP4+ΔT25 ΔP4   Initial sample height [cm] 22.1 22.1 22.1 22.1 22.1 22.1 22.1 Porosity φ [-] 0.398 0.395 0.392 0.434 0.392 0.381 0.410 Hydrate saturation Sh [-] 0.4 0.4 0.4 0.4 0.4 0.41 0.36 Initial pressure P0 [MPa] 13.5 14.1 14.7 14.6 13.6 14.1 13.5 Bottom hole pressure BHP [MPa] 6.08 6.04 4.00 4.24 4.11 5.80 5.85 Heating temperature [K] 288.15 298.15 - 288.15 298.15 Environ. Temperature [K] 280 280 280 280 280 280 280 Depress. rate dP/dt [MPa/min] 1.72 0.70 1.32 0.98 1.45 0.85 1.08 288.15 298.15 ΔP6+ΔT25 ΔP6+ΔT25 Seawater Hydrates ΔP6+ΔT15 Test Purewater Hydrates   ΔP6+ΔT15 - In the subsequent sections, the produced gas data will be shown the discussed and the seven sets of experiments are colour-coded in the figures accordingly: For purewater hydrates, ΔP6 +ΔT15 will be represented by red lines, ΔP6 +ΔT25 (blue lines), ΔP4 +ΔT15 (green lines), ΔP4 +ΔT25 (yellow lines), ΔP4 (orange lines). And for seawater 4. GAS PRODUCTION FROM DUAL WELLBORE SYSTEM 73 hydrates, ΔP6 +ΔT15 will be represented by brown lines and ΔP6 +ΔT25 by black lines. These will be consistent in all figures. 4.3 Gas Produced in Purewater Hydrates From the 90-minute production tests, the effects of varying wellbore pressure and temperature on the gas produced are distinct. Firstly, the effects of the heating wellbore temperature are compared- heating to 15˚C or 25˚C while the pressure at the production wellbore remains the same. Next, the effects of production pressure are compared- depressurisation of the production wellbore to a bottom-hole pressure of either 4 MPa or 6 MPa while keeping the heating temperature constant. The gas recovery factors, which are a measure of the amount of gas produced relative to the initial amount of gas contained in the hydrates, for the purewater hydrates tests will then be presented. 4.3.1 Effects of Temperature Figure 4.4 shows the pressure-time histories at the production wellbore and the corresponding volume of gas collected during the 90-minute production tests for cases of ΔP6 +ΔT15 and ΔP6 +ΔT25, where production pressure was 6 MPa and temperature increase was up to 15˚C and 25˚C respectively, and the corresponding gas volume collected. The pressure at the production wellbore was maintained as constant as possible, at 4 MPa or 6MPa depending on the sample, as the volume of gas produced/collected increased. As mentioned in Section 4.2.2, the intermittent sudden increases in gas produced throughout the production tests were due to the stimulations (slight adjustments to the pressure regulator) to maintain the production pressure. 4. GAS PRODUCTION FROM DUAL WELLBORE SYSTEM 74 Depressurization to 6 MPa Pressure [MPa] 15 10 ΔP +ΔT 6 15 5 ΔP +ΔT 6 25 0 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 Time [min] 80 ΔP +ΔT 6 25 Volume of Gas [SL] 60 ΔP +ΔT 6 15 40 20 0 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 Time [min] Figure 4.4: Pore pressure developments (top) with a production pressure of 6 MPa while the heating wellbore is increased to 15˚C or 25˚C and the corresponding gas volume collected (bottom). The production rate, i.e. the gradient of the volume of gas produced-time history plots, for the case of ΔP6 +ΔT15 began was faster than ΔP6 +ΔT25. This was likely due to the initial depressurisation rate for the case of ΔP6 +ΔT15, which was considerably higher compared to that for ΔP6 +ΔT25, as seen in the production wellbore pressuretime histories plot before t=0. Subsequently, the production rate for the case of ΔP6 +ΔT25 with higher heating wellbore temperature is greater than that for the case of ΔP6 +ΔT15. The temperature increase of 10˚C gave a 13% increase in the volume of gas produced at the end of the 90-minute production run. 4. GAS PRODUCTION FROM DUAL WELLBORE SYSTEM 75 Depressurization to 4 MPa Pressure [MPa] 15 10 ΔP +ΔT 4 15 5 ΔP +ΔT 4 25 ΔP 4 0 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 Time [min] 180 ΔP +ΔT 4 15 Volume of Gas [SL] 150 ΔP +ΔT 4 25 120 90 ΔP 60 4 30 0 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 Time [min] Figure 4.5: Pore pressure developments (top) with a production pressure of 4 MPa with no wellbore heating and heating wellbore to 15˚C or 25˚C, and the corresponding gas volume collected (bottom). The same results are presented for the cases with pressure of 4 MPa BHP at the production wellbore with various heating temperatures at the heating wellbore (ΔP4, ΔP4 +ΔT15 and ΔP4 +ΔT25) in Figure 4.5. Again, the slight fluctuations, particularly at the 35th- and 62nd- minute of ΔP4 +ΔT25 and ΔP4 +ΔT15 respectively, were due to the stimulations to maintain the production pressure at 4 MPa. As seen in Figure 4.5, compared to production with no wellbore heating (ΔP4), the effect of increased temperature (ΔP4 +ΔT15 and ΔP4 +ΔT25) led to an almost 40% increase in the volume of gas produced at the end of the 90-minute run. Although the initial production rate for ΔP4 +ΔT25 was higher compared to ΔP4 +ΔT15, its production rate began to decline after the 40th minute while ΔP4 +ΔT15 continued to increase. As a result, the volume of 4. GAS PRODUCTION FROM DUAL WELLBORE SYSTEM 76 gas produced at the end of 90 minutes was higher for ΔP4 +ΔT15 compared to that for ΔP4 +ΔT25. This was most probably due to the production pressure for ΔP4 +ΔT15 dropping to slightly below 4 MPa after the 62nd minute, as seen in the top diagram of Figure 4.5, resulting in an increased production at a slightly lower pressure of around 3.7 MPa. On the other hand, the production pressure for ΔP4 +ΔT25 remained constant at 4 MPa till the end of production. Hence, if the production pressure remained constant at 4 MPa in both cases, ΔP4 +ΔT25 with higher wellbore temperature compared to ΔP4 +ΔT15 would have resulted in higher volume of gas produced at the end of the 90-minute production run. 4.3.2 Effects of Pressure Comparing the production scenarios of the tests with identical heating wellbore temperature but varying production pressure, Figure 4.6 and Figure 4.7 show the cases for production pressures of 4 MPa- and 6 MPa with heating to 15˚C and 25˚C respectively. 4. GAS PRODUCTION FROM DUAL WELLBORE SYSTEM 77 Heating to 15°C Pressure [MPa] 15 10 ΔP +ΔT 6 15 5 ΔP +ΔT 4 15 0 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 Time [min] 180 ΔP +ΔT 4 15 Volume of Gas [SL] 150 120 90 ΔP +ΔT 6 15 60 30 0 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 Time [min] Figure 4.6: Pore pressure development (top) with different production pressures of 4 and 6 MPa and wellbore heating to 15˚C, and the corresponding gas volume collected (bottom). 4. GAS PRODUCTION FROM DUAL WELLBORE SYSTEM 78 Heating to 25°C Pressure [MPa] 15 10 ΔP +ΔT 6 25 5 ΔP +ΔT 4 25 0 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 Time [min] 180 Volume of Gas [SL] 150 ΔP +ΔT 4 25 120 90 60 ΔP +ΔT 6 25 30 0 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 Time [min] Figure 4.7: Pore pressure developments (top) with different production pressures of 4 and 6 MPa and wellbore heating to 25˚C, and the corresponding gas volume collected (bottom). It is evident from the figures that the difference in production wellbore pressure can make a significant difference in the volume of gas produced within the same production period. In the two sets of scenarios compared above, temperatures of the heating wellbore were identical at 15˚C and 25˚C respectively while the pressures at the production wellbore were varied by 2 MPa. For cases with heating wellbore temperature of 15˚C, the volume of gas produced at the end of the 90-minute production run was increased by approximately 2.5 folds when the pressure at the production wellbore was lowered by 2 MPa as shown in Figure 4.6. For cases with heating wellbore temperature of 25˚C, the volume of gas produced at the end of the 90-minute production run was increased by approximately two times when the 4. GAS PRODUCTION FROM DUAL WELLBORE SYSTEM 79 pressure at the production wellbore was lowered by 2 MPa as shown in Figure 4.7. Hence, these results show that a 2 MPa reduction in the production pressure significantly increases the volume of gas produced. A difference of 2 MPa would correspond to around 200 metres of depth of water, and the increased pressure gradient could improve the efficiency of production within the same amount of production time. 4.4 Forced Convection and Dissociation Drive One of the attractions of a dual wellbore system is putting the forced convection caused by the pore fluid flowing back to the wellbore to advantage. During dissociation, the simultaneous heating and depressurisation on separate wellbores results in two dissociation fronts, as seen in Figure 4.8. Moreover, the temperature gradient between the two wellbores forces the pore fluid to flow from the heating wellbore towards the depressurisation wellbore and accelerate dissociation at this region. 4. GAS PRODUCTION FROM DUAL WELLBORE SYSTEM 80 Figure 4.8: Schematic of forced convection during dissociation. The heat equation for convection can be defined as: 𝑞 =   ℎ! 𝐴𝑑𝑇   (4.1) where q is the heat transferred per unit time [W] A is the heat transfer area of the surface [m2] hc is the convective heat transfer coefficient of the process (forced convection of water= 50~10,000 W/m2K) dT is the temperature difference = Theating - Teqm [K] 4. GAS PRODUCTION FROM DUAL WELLBORE SYSTEM 81 The most practical and straightforward way to explain the variation in the forced convection and thus the volume of gas produced for different combinations of production wellbore pressure and heating wellbore temperature would be the dissociation drive, which is the driving force bringing about the dissociation. This is illustrated using the temperature histories of the various tests. Figure 4.9 shows the temperature evolutions during the 90-minute production period for depressurisation to 4 MPa BHP conditions. The equilibrium temperatures, Teqm, in the figures are calculated using the empirical phase boundary equation 3.2 found earlier and the pressure-time histories shown in section 4.3. 4. GAS PRODUCTION FROM DUAL WELLBORE SYSTEM 82 ΔP4 Temperature [K] 300 290 Teqm 280 270 0 10 20 T1-6 30 40 50 Time [min] 60 70 80 90 ΔP4+ΔT15 Temperature [K] 300 T1 290 Teqm T3 280 T4 T2,5,6 270 0 10 20 30 40 50 Time [min] ΔP4+ΔT25 60 70 80 90 Temperature [K] 300 T1 295 290 T3,4 285 280 275 T2,5,6 Teqm 0 10 20 30 40 50 Time [min] 60 70 80 90 Figure 4.9: Temperature histories of ΔP4 (top figure), ΔP4+ΔT15 (middle figure) and ΔP4+ΔT25 (bottom figure). The dashed line in each figure represents the equilibrium temperature of methane hydrates, Teqm. For the sample subjected to depressurisation alone with no heating, as in the case of ΔP4 in Figure 4.9, the main dissociation drive was the pressure reduction from 15 MPa to 4 MPa and this led to a difference between the equilibrium temperature and the sediment’s temperature to be a maximum of 2 K. In such a scenario, the only dissociation front would be at the depressurisation wellbore, as seen in the schematic 4. GAS PRODUCTION FROM DUAL WELLBORE SYSTEM 83 in Figure 4.8. Thus, the forced convection from the heating wellbore was not employed and the only energy used for dissociation of the hydrates came from the depressurisation. This reinforces the finding that with sole depressurisation, little heat energy can be obtained from the sediment and there exists only a small temperature gradient between the heating wellbore and the outer-boundary temperature (Falser, 2012). For the case of ΔP4+ΔT15, there is a significantly higher temperature gradient than ΔP4, giving rise to a higher dissociation drive. To compare the production scenarios of ΔP4+ΔT15 and ΔP4+ΔT25, the temperature gradient is used. When the production pressure was 4 MPa, this resulted in an equilibrium temperature of 4.5°C as calculated from the phase boundary equation (3.2). As seen in Figure 4.10, the temperature gradient between the two wellbores, dT, is significantly steeper for wellbore heating at 25°C than at 15°C, giving rise to a greater convection and heat transfer from the heating wellbore to the production wellbore. With a higher energy drive transferring more heat into the dissociating zone, this explains why ΔP4+ΔT25 would technically enable a higher recovery of gas produced than ΔP4+ΔT15. 4. GAS PRODUCTION FROM DUAL WELLBORE SYSTEM 84 300 T = 298 K (25°C) ΔP +ΔT heat 4 15 ΔP +ΔT 4 295 25 290 Temperature [K] T = 288 K (15°C) heat 285 280 T = 277 K eqm 275 Production We llbore H e a ting We llbore 270 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 Distance from edge of vessel [cm] Figure 4.10: Temperature differences at the heating wellbore on the left and the production wellbore on the right for ΔP4+ΔT15 and ΔP4+ΔT25, resulting in a temperature gradient between the two wellbores. Similarly, for the tests with production pressure of 6 MPa, Figure 4.11 shows the temperature evolutions during the 90-minute production. The equilibrium temperatures, Teqm, in both figures are calculated using the empirical phase boundary equation 3.2 found earlier and the pressure-time histories shown in section 4.3. 4. GAS PRODUCTION FROM DUAL WELLBORE SYSTEM 85 ΔP6+ΔT15 300 Temperature [K] 295 290 285 T1 T3 Teqm T4 280 275 T2,5,6 0 10 20 30 40 50 Time [min] 60 70 80 90 ΔP6+ΔT25 300 T1 Temperature [K] 295 T3 290 T4 285 T5 Teqm 280 275 T2,6 0 10 20 30 40 50 Time [min] 60 70 80 90 Figure 4.11: Temperature histories of ΔP6+ΔT15 (top figure) and ΔP6+ΔT25 (bottom figure). The dashed line in each figure represents the equilibrium temperature of methane hydrates, Teqm. When the production pressure was 6 MPa, this resulted in an equilibrium temperature of around 8°C as calculated from the phase boundary equation (3.2). At the heating wellbore, the heating temperature was chosen to be either 15°C or 25°C. Figure 4.12 shows the location of the two wellbores in the vessel and their respective temperatures during the production test conditions of 6 MPa. 4. GAS PRODUCTION FROM DUAL WELLBORE SYSTEM 86 300 T ΔP +ΔT = 298 K (25°C) heat 6 15 ΔP +ΔT 6 295 25 290 Temperature [K] T = 288 K (15°C) heat 285 T = 281 K eqm 280 275 Production We llbore H e a ting We llbore 270 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 Distance from edge of vessel [cm] Figure 4.12: The different temperatures at the heating wellbore on the left and the production wellbore on the right for ΔP6+ΔT15 and ΔP6+ΔT25, resulting in a temperature gradient between the two wellbores. In ΔP6+ΔT15, the heat flux from the heating wellbore led to a much larger dissociation drive with more heat being supplied to the dissociating region and this led to varying temperature differences throughout the formation. In ΔP6+ΔT25, the temperatures at the start of production were already at 288 K (for the heater wellbore) and above their initial temperatures at heating to 25°C took a much longer time of 45 minutes on average compared to the five minutes it took for the heater to reach 15°C. The temperatures in the vicinity of the heater wellbore (T35) progressively deviated from the equilibrium temperature while that of the depressurisation wellbore (T2 and T6) remained close to the equilibrium temperature as production took place. This is sensible as the dual wellbore enabled the heater to transmit heat via forced convection through the pore fluid into the dissociating zone on the other wellbore, giving rise to an increased production. 4. GAS PRODUCTION FROM DUAL WELLBORE SYSTEM 87 Comparing the effects of the different production pressures of 4 MPa and 6 MPa, in ΔP4+ΔT15, there is a higher energy drive compared to ΔP6+ΔT15 as a larger pressure reduction to 4 MPa BHP resulted in a lower equilibrium temperature even though the heating conditions remained unchanged, with the heating wellbore increasing the temperature to 15°C in both tests. As seen in Figure 4.10, the temperature gradient between the wellbores is much steeper when producing at 4 MPa compared to 6 MPa with the same heating wellbore temperature (Figure 4.12) and this increases the convection and heat transfer. This meant that there is higher heat flux between the two wellbores in ΔP4+ΔT15 and induced an increased production of almost 2-fold as the forced convection from the heater to the dissociating zone through pore fluid occurred more rapidly. Similarly, in ΔP4+ΔT25, there is a much higher energy drive due to the larger pressure reduction, which resulted in an increased production compared to ΔP6+ΔT25. 4.5 Gas Recovery Factor With the depressurisation and heating from different wellbores simultaneously driving the dissociation, the water- and gas volumes produced during the 90 minutes for the purewater hydrates tests are summarised in Table 4-2. The water produced is converted into the volume of gas produced through the correlation described in Chapter 2. The gas recovery factor is calculated as shown in 4.2.2. The total volume of gas contained, Vtotal of gas, is found from the initial saturation. With the volume of methane gas collected, the gas recovery factor was calculated using the following equation: 𝐺𝑎𝑠  𝑅𝑒𝑐𝑜𝑣𝑒𝑟𝑦  𝑓𝑎𝑐𝑡𝑜𝑟=   𝑃𝑟𝑜𝑑𝑢𝑐𝑒𝑑  𝐺𝑎𝑠   𝜂!"! ×𝑉!"#,!"# ×𝑇!"#,!"# /𝑇!"#,!"!# 4. GAS PRODUCTION FROM DUAL WELLBORE SYSTEM 88 where ηCH4 is the initial amount of methane gas based on the saturation Vgas,stp is the volume of 1 mole of gas at STP (22.4 L) Tgas,stp is the temperature of gas at STP (273.15K) Tgas,init is the initial temperature of the gas [K] Table 4-2: Water- and gas produced during the 90-minute production for each test expressed in standard litres, the total volume of gas contained in the hydrates and the percentage of gas recovered from the production tests. Purewater Hydrates Test ΔP6+ΔT15 ΔP6+ΔT25 ΔP4+ΔT15 ΔP4+ΔT25 ΔP4 Water produced [SL] 0.76 0.60 0.40 0.84 1.52 Gas produced [SL] 64.7 74.7 143.4 133.9 85.5 Vtotal of gas contained [SL] 145.8 144.3 146.3 159.8 144.8 Gas Recovery factor [%] 44.9 52.2 98.3 84.3 59.0 Almost all the methane gas contained within the hydrates in ΔP4 + ΔT15 and ΔP4 + ΔT25 was recovered within the 90 minutes as the gas recovery factors were above 80%. This indicates that by lowering the wellbore pressure to 4 MPa, gas production is much optimised compared to producing at 6 MPa, which will require a fairly longer production time to completely recover the methane gas within. In a commercial aspect, an efficient production scenario would aid the operators in harnessing the methane gas and having practical knowledge of recovery factors for various combinations of depressurisation- and heating conditions would be useful. 4. GAS PRODUCTION FROM DUAL WELLBORE SYSTEM 4.6 89 Energy Yield The results shown thus far indicate that greater depressurisation and higher temperature at the production and heating wellbores respectively result in higher volume of gas produced. However, the conditions that lead to higher volume of gas produced may not necessarily be the most energy efficient. It is possible that a production scheme which results in the highest volume of gas produced consumes the most amount of energy to maintain the dissociation drive throughout, which makes it energy inefficient. It is therefore essential to compare the amount of energy gained from the produced gas versus the amount of energy used during production for the various production tests. As hydrate dissociation is an endothermic process, it requires energy. This is provided in the form of the pumping energy to maintain the pressure during production, Ep, and the energy required for heating, Eh. The energy gain would come from the produced gas, which can be acquired from the calorific value of methane at 39.68 kJ/SL. The method used to compute the input energy Ep and Eh are adapted from that of Falser’s single-wellbore scheme (2012) and summarised as follows: Table 4-3: Equations and input parameters used in the calculation of the input energy (adapted from (Falser, 2012)). Pump Energy, Ep [kJ] Heating Energy, Eh [kJ] Water influx, Q [mD/s] 𝑄= 𝐸! = 𝑄∆𝑃 𝜂! 𝐸! = 𝑉! 𝑅𝜂! (𝑃! − 𝑃!" )𝑘! 2𝜋 𝑟 𝜇   ln(𝑟 ! ) !" 4. GAS PRODUCTION FROM DUAL WELLBORE SYSTEM Static- and hydraulic head, ΔP [Pa] Well depth, z [m] 90 ∆𝑃 = 128  𝑧𝜇𝑄 𝜋𝐷!! 1000 Pressure of reservoir, P∞ [MPa] 10 Initial permeability, k0 [-] 0.4 Diameter of Toyoura Sand [mm] 0.1-0.4 Wellbore radius, rwb [mm] 5 P-unaffected radius, r∞ [m] 10 Perforation length [m] 0.18 Production tubing, Di [mm] 8 Viscosity of water, µ [Pa s] 0.0013 Efficiency of pump, ηp [-] 0.4 Efficiency of generator, ηg [-] 0.9 Calorific value of CH4 [kJ/SL] 39.68 Density of water [kg/m3] 1025 Density of seawater [kg/m3] 1300 With these parameters, the input energy during the 90-minute production period to keep the pressure constant and to heat the wellbore to its set temperature is compared to the energy yield, in the form of the produced gas. This is compiled in Table 4-4. 4. GAS PRODUCTION FROM DUAL WELLBORE SYSTEM 91 Table 4-4: Comparison of energy for the various production schemes.   Test   Purewater Hydrates ΔP6+ΔT15   ΔP6+ΔT25   ΔP4+ΔT15   ΔP4+ΔT25   ΔP4   Ep [kJ] -636 -636 -965 -965 -965 Eh [kJ] -68 -180 -68 -180 0 Energy yield [kJ] 2569 2963 5690 5313 3391 Net Energy 1865 2147 4657 4168 2426 72.6 72.5 82.5 78.4 71.5 Gained [kJ] Net Energy Gained [%] Comparing ΔP6+ΔT15 and ΔP6+ΔT25, at a higher production pressure of 6 MPa, increasing the temperature from 15°C to 25°C increases the energy yield by 400 kJ but it does not improve energy efficiency as the net energy gained remains the same at 72%. The additional heat energy from the 10°C difference might have gone into the forced convection process. It can be inferred that depressurisation to a lower wellbore pressure (at the same temperature) to 4 MPa compared to 6 MPa results in a higher energy yield as well as net energy gained. This implies that there is a higher efficiency when production is carried out at a lower wellbore pressure. Taking the three tests of 4 MPa production pressure into consideration, the addition of heat (ΔP4+ΔT15 and ΔP4+ΔT25) increases both the energy yield and –efficiency compared to sole depressurisation (ΔP4) as the 4. GAS PRODUCTION FROM DUAL WELLBORE SYSTEM 92 greater temperature gradient between the two wellbores increases the convection and the dissociation drive. 4.7 Results for Seawater Hydrates The effects of wellbore heating on the production of seawater hydrates are similar to those for purewater hydrates discussed in Sections 4.3 to 4.6. Figure 4.13 shows the pressure-time histories at the production wellbore of the two production tests and the total volume of methane gas collected within 90 minutes. For the case of ΔP6+ΔT15, the quantity of gas produced at the end of the 90-minute production is 55 litres for seawater hydrates, which was only slightly less than that for purewater hydrates at 64 litres. One would expect the total volume of gas produce for the same boundary conditions for purewater and seawater hydrates not to differ by a significant amount as their phase boundaries have an offset of 1.1 K, as seen in section 3.7. As such, the amount of energy needed to dissociate the hydrates would be somewhat similar, given the same depressurisation and heating conditions. 4. GAS PRODUCTION FROM DUAL WELLBORE SYSTEM 93 Depressurization to 6 MPa (Seawater Hydrates) Pressure [MPa] 15 10 ΔP +ΔT 6 15 5 ΔP +ΔT 6 25 0 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 Time [min] 180 150 Volume of Gas [SL] ΔP +ΔT 6 25 120 90 60 ΔP +ΔT 6 15 30 0 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 Time [min] Figure 4.13: Pore pressure development during the production of the seawater hydrates tests (top) and the top volume of methane gas collected (bottom). However, for seawater hydrates, the volume of gas produced at the end of the 90 minutes of 143 litres for the case of ΔP6+ΔT25 was almost three times that for the case of ΔP6+ΔT15, as shown in Figure 4.13, even though the heating wellbore temperature was only increased by 10°C. Moreover, the volume of gas produced for the case of ΔP6+ΔT25 was almost two times that of its purewater. This seems rather drastic given that the depressurisation and heating conditions were supposedly identical to the corresponding purewater hydrates production test. Nevertheless, it is not physically impossible to achieve that volume of produced gas, which is close to complete recovery of the total amount of gas contained within the vessel. One possible reason for the drastic increase in gas produced is the pressure for ΔP6+ΔT25 was not always 4. GAS PRODUCTION FROM DUAL WELLBORE SYSTEM 94 kept constant at 6 MPa during production. Instead, as shown in Figure 4.13, the pressure reduced linearly with time towards the end of the production to almost 5 MPa. As the pressure of the production wellbore was controlled manually by periodically adjusting the needle valve, it was very likely that the pressure dropped below the intended production pressure of 6 MPa due to over-stimulation of the valve. Since the temperature of the heating wellbore, which is controlled electrically using a solid-state relay, is constant throughout the production process, the drastic increase in the volume of gas produced for this sample may be attributed to the increasing depressurisation during production. As such, it is possible that the 1 MPa drop in BHP led to the huge discrepancy in the amount of gas collected in the seawater ΔP6+ΔT25 production test, with all other conditions being consistent with the purewater ΔP6+ΔT25 test. Accordingly, the water- and gas volumes produced during the 90-minute production tests as well as the net energy gain for the seawater hydrate tests are summarized in Table 4-5. For seawater hydrates, the case of ΔP6+ΔT25 might have yielded an optimistic net energy of 83% but as postulated in the preceding paragraph, the production pressure dropped to 5 MPa, which resulted in a much higher volume of produced gas than if it were produced consistently at 6 MPa. This gave an abnormally high net energy gain that is not a good representative of its intended production conditions of 6 MPa and 25°C. 4. GAS PRODUCTION FROM DUAL WELLBORE SYSTEM 95 Table 4-5: Gas recovery factors and net energy gain of seawater hydrates tests. Seawater Hydrates Test 4.8 ΔP6+ΔT15 ΔP6+ΔT25 Water produced [SL] 3.6 0.82 Gas produced [SL] 55 122.48 Vtotal of gas contained [SL] 152.2 134.6 Gas Recovery factor [%] 38.5 91.6 Ep [kJ]   -636   -965   Eh [kJ]   -68   -180   Energy yield [kJ]   2182   4860   Net Energy Gained [kJ]   1478   4044   Net Energy Gained [%]   67.7   83.2   Comparison between Production of Purewater- and Seawater Hydrates With the purewater- and seawater methane hydrate phase boundaries having an offset of 0.9 K, the energy required to dissociate hydrates under the same wellbore pressureand temperature conditions should not differ much. Compared alongside in Figure 4.14, it can be seen that the recovery factor and net energy for purewater hydrates are both slightly above that of seawater hydrates. 4. GAS PRODUCTION FROM DUAL WELLBORE SYSTEM 80   72.6   70   67.7   60   Purewater  Hydrates   44.9   50   Seawater  Hydrates   38.5   40   96 30   20   10   0   Recovery  Factor  [%]   Net  Energy  [%]   Figure 4.14: Comparison of recovery factor and net energy between purewater- and seawater methane hydrates. As the phase boundary for seawater methane hydrates is above that of purewater methane hydrate, the equilibrium temperature for the same production pressure would be higher for the seawater hydrates than for purewater hydrates. The temperature gradient between the heating and the production wellbores would therefore be slightly less steep for the seawater hydrates, resulting in a lower convection and heat transfer, which explains why the recovery factor and energy yield are slightly below that of purewater hydrates. 4.9 Comparison to Single-Wellbore Scheme One of the objectives of the dual wellbore scheme is to investigate the effects of separating the depressurisation and heating into two wellbores instead of one that was used in Falser’s gas production tests. The recovery factor and net energy gained for ΔP6+ΔT15 in the single wellbore production scheme is compared alongside that of the dual wellbore scheme. This is shown in Figure 4.15. 4. GAS PRODUCTION FROM DUAL WELLBORE SYSTEM 80   97 72.6   70   64   60   50   40   44.9   39.4   30   Recovery   factor  [%]   Net  energy   [%]   20   10   0   ΔP6+ΔT15  (Single  WB)   ΔP6+ΔT15  (Double  WB)   Figure 4.15: Comparison of recovery factor and net energy gain with the single wellbore scheme. It was previously established that a combination of depressurising and heating is a more efficient production scheme than sole depressurisation (Falser et al., 2012d) and this is validated in this set of experiments as well- a sole depressurisation to 4 MPa recovers a lesser volume of gas compared to depressurisation to 4 MPa and heating to 15°C and 25°C (Table 4-2). However, under the same depressurizing- and heating conditions, production with a combination of depressurisation and heating on separate wellbores increases the gas recovery by 5% and has a higher net energy gain of almost 10% compared to a single wellbore system as shown in Figure 4.15. The advantageous use of forced convection to drive more energy into the dissociating zone makes the dual wellbore system an improved method of extracting gas from methane hydrates. The effects of a dual wellbore system might be even more pronounced when used in a field test as it is much easier for the produced fluids to flow towards the production wellbore after having been dissociated by the heating wellbore at a distance away and they are moving with the natural heat flow. In a single wellbore 4. GAS PRODUCTION FROM DUAL WELLBORE SYSTEM 98 system in the field, the produced fluids would be flowing upstream against the dissipating heat from the same wellbore and this would impede dissociation. 4.10 Conclusion The previous methane hydrate experimental work carried out at NUS has been modified and extended from carrying out depressurisation and heating on one single wellbore to separating them into two different wellbores, one of which for depressurisation where the gas produced is extracted and the other for heating only. With a variety of depressurisation conditions to 6 MPa and 4 MPa at the production wellbore and heating conditions to 15°C and 25°C at the heating wellbore, the production tests were carried out for both purewater- and seawater hydrates. The experimental results for the 90-minute production tests showed that the dual wellbore system is a better production scheme compared to the single wellbore system. Additionally, it can also be concluded that i) The varying effects of temperature and pressure affect the performance of the dual wellbore system. With a lower wellbore pressure, the corresponding lower equilibrium temperature would lead to a greater temperature gradient. The same effect of a larger temperature gradient is seen when increasing the temperature of the heating wellbore. This temperature gradient between the two wellbores forces the pore fluid to flow from the heating wellbore towards the depressurisation wellbore and accelerate dissociation at this region. ii) Compared to the single wellbore system, the simultaneous heating and depressurisation in a dual wellbore system results in two dissociation fronts. With a larger dissociation drive, the experiments with depressurisation to 4 MPa wellbore 4. GAS PRODUCTION FROM DUAL WELLBORE SYSTEM 99 pressure resulted in a greater volume of gas produced compared to depressurisation to 6 MPa wellbore pressure. They were also more energy efficient and gave a higher energy yield compared to production at 6 MPa wellbore pressure. Additionally, with production pressure of 4 MPa, almost all the gas contained within the hydrates was recovered within 90 minutes. This might indicate the conditions of 4 MPa and 15/25°C is efficient, not only in increasing the gas production but in reducing the time taken for complete recovery. iii) Gas recovery for purewater and seawater only differed slightly (except for ΔP6+ΔT25, which experienced a minor experimental glitch). This is expected as the phase boundaries for purewater- and seawater hydrates have only an offset of 1.1 K and the required energy to dissociate the hydrates should not vary much. Thus far, only experimental work has been carried out to find an efficient gas production scheme. Additional numerical simulations would aid in a better understanding of the moving dissociation fronts and heat transfer analysis. 5. CONCLUSION 5 100 Conclusions and Future Work The understanding of gas hydrates in the scientific community has risen remarkably in the past decade. The past- and current numerical studies and experiments around the world have provided a major database on their properties and energy potential. In this chapter, the key findings from this research work will be summarized and the future directions of the hydrates project will be highlighted. 5.1 Key Findings In this study, the feasibility of improving gas production from methane hydrates using a dual wellbore system with simultaneous depressurisation and heating is explored. This study is divided into two parts. Firstly, the hydrate phase boundary was experimentally determined. Secondly, gas production tests were performed at different combinations of wellbore heating and depressurisation. In this work, a novel method of experimentally determining the hydrate phase boundary by controlled dissociation was studied. Rather than discrete points that were commonly used in literature, this method provided a range along the phase boundary. To validate this method, a separate method- the temperature search method, was used independently and provided equilibrium points at different points of the phase boundaries that were determined earlier. The experiments were conducted for both purewater and seawater methane hydrates and the pressure limit of seawater hydrates tests was expanded from 11 MPa to 17 MPa. It was found that there exists only a slight offset between the phase boundaries of the two systems. Empirical equations were then found to describe the phase boundaries. This provides an efficient way to 5. CONCLUSION 101 precisely assess the stability conditions of hydrates in purewater and seawater conditions. In the next part of the research, the gas production of methane hydrates was the main focus, with the stability conditions determined from the phase boundaries obtained earlier. To extend the previous methane hydrate gas production tests that have been carried out at NUS, the hydrate rig was modified to incorporate dual wellbores instead of a single wellbore on the cylindrical axis in the pressure vessel. These separate wellbores carried out depressurisation and thermal heating to dissociate the methane hydrates and in turn, the gas produced was extracted and quantified. Similar to the phase boundaries, the production tests were carried out for both purewater- and seawater hydrates and the depressurisation conditions were chosen to be 6 MPa and 4 MPa while the heating conditions were set at 15°C and 25°C. The 90minute production tests showed that there was increased production for production conditions at wellbore pressure of 4 MPa with heating compared to 6 MPa with heating as the forced convection was greater, leading to a higher dissociation drive and ultimately, an increased volume of gas produced. Comparing the effects of temperature, heating to 25°C compared to 15°C with the wellbore pressure led to an increased production as the larger temperature gradient between the two wellbores forces the pore fluid to flow from the heating wellbore towards the depressurisation wellbore and in turn accelerates dissociation. From the energy balance analysis, it was also shown that experiments with depressurisation to 4 MPa were more energy efficient and gave a higher energy yield compared to production at 6 MPa wellbore pressure. Although the results of the dual wellbore system showed a slight improvement in the gas recovery factors as well as the energy efficiency compared to the work carried out 5. CONCLUSION 102 in the single wellbore system, the effects of a dual wellbore system might be more pronounced in the field as it would be laborious for a single wellbore carrying out depressurisation and heating concurrently with the production fluids flowing upstream against the dissipating heat from the wellbore. 5.2 Limitations and Outlook Although it is postulated that the dual wellbore system would be a more efficient system with pronounced effects seen when it is scaled up, there is much more work to be done to fully understand the production system and some of them are discussed in this section. 5.2.1 Wellbore spacing At present, the dual wellbores are spaced 6-cm apart in the 18-cm diameter pressure vessel. This distance was chosen for practical reasons as if placed any further apart, the results may be significantly influenced by the boundary effects since the wellbores would be too close to the perimeter of the pressure vessel, and if placed any nearer, the forced convection of the pore fluids from the heating wellbore towards the production wellbore would be limited to a fixed vicinity and would have minimal influence on the results. Figure 5.1 illustrates the limitations of the wellbore spacing in the pressure vessel. 5. CONCLUSION 103 Figure 5.1: Restrictions of wellbore spacing in the pressure vessel. However, one must not preclude the possibilities that the distance between the wellbores might affect the rate of production and the energy efficiency. In the oil and gas industry, the actual production and injection wells are strategically located depending on the temperature distribution in the well, the rate of heat loss from the well into the formation and other factors (Horne and Shinohara, 1979). A reasonable safe distance between the injection and production wells might be in the range of 500 to 1000 metres, as estimated in a 3-D numerical model by Chetveryk (2000). Although the production of gas hydrate reservoirs vary from the conventional oil reservoirs, the general idea of the effects of the spacing between the wellbores would play an important role and cannot be neglected. Thus, it might be necessary to carry out small-scale production tests with varying wellbore distances, experimentally or numerically, and compare the production efficiency and dissociation drive. 5.2.2 Numerical modelling The focus of this research was purely experimental. However, one limitation was the understanding of the heat transfer during the dissociation process and this was 5. CONCLUSION 104 constrained by having only six thermocouples inside the pressure vessel. Although these six thermocouples provided a general insight into the variations in temperature between and around the two wellbores, a more accurate way of understanding the heat transfer would be with a simple 2-D numerical modelling of the heat distribution during dissociation. This will provide us with isotherms around the wellbores and better placements of the thermocouples such that they coincide with different isotherms. 5.2.3 Hydraulic fracturing of hydrates As the race towards commercialization of the gas production of hydrates continues, various production methods should certainly be explored. 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Testing methane hydrate saturated soil using a line dissociation apparatus, Geotechnical Testing Journal 35 (5), p.827-835 Falser, S., Loh, M., Palmer, A.C., Tan, T.S. (2012). Bulk thermal conductivity of stable and dissociated methane hydrate bearing zones, 22nd International Offshore and Polar Engineering Conference (ISOPE). Rhodes Jun. 17-22 [...]... overwhelming abundance of methane contained in methane hydrates around the world Thus, methane hydrates would be the focus of research in this work Methane hydrates can be formed when methane gas comes into contact with water in the liquid state or gas state as long as the temperature- and pressure conditions are suitable, which will be explained in section 1.4 The formation reactions of methane hydrate are best... of hydrates are probable whenever gas and water molecules contact each other at low temperature and elevated pressures (Sloan and Koh, 2007) To date, about 97% of natural gas hydrates are located offshore and only 3% onshore As seen in Figure 1.3, hydrates are found in- and around virtually every continent The promising regions are the Nankai Trough in Japan, the Messoyakha field in Siberia, Eileen in. .. Introduction Clathrate hydrates, more commonly referred to as gas hydrates, are solid crystalline compounds made up of gaseous and water molecules Found abundantly in the permafrost and in the oceans, they are the largest source of hydrocarbons in the world with the potential to provide an enormous amount of natural gas for commercial consumption and have been an area of active research in the oil and gas industry... INTRODUCTION 3 Table 1-1: International activities on gas hydrate research and development (Demirbas, 2010) Country National Gas Hydrate Programmes in Place Since Japan 1995 India 1996 The United States of America 1999 (second programme) 1.2 Germany 2000 South Korea 2001 China 2001 Structure of Gas Hydrates Natural gas hydrates are formed when molecules of water or ice come into contact with gas molecules... while areas in red are estimates of where they may be 1.3.2 Classes of Hydrate Reservoirs Natural gas hydrate accumulations can be divided into three common classes, according to Moridis and Collett (2004): Class 1: hydrate-bearing layer with an underlying two-phase zone which contains mobile gas and liquid water Class 2: hydrate-bearing layer with an underlying zone of mobile water Class 3: hydrate-bearing... found in oceanic conditions As seen in Figure 1.8, the available data on methane hydrates formed in seawater are limited and confined to a pressure range of less than 10 MPa A wider range of pressure- and temperature conditions for methane hydrates formed in seawater would be necessary for determining their stability zone 1 INTRODUCTION 12 25 Dickens and Quinby-Hunt (1994) 20 Maekawa (2001) Dholabhai... surpass the combined fossil fuel available in the world by a factor of two (Sloan and Koh, 2007) With annual consumption of gas in the world of around 0.3 x 1014 cubic metres (BP, 2012), the amount of gas contained within hydrates can in principle sustain human needs for 4000 years As such, the potential of gas hydrates as a substantial future energy resource cannot be underestimated and this can also... harnessing the untapped energy in natural gas hydrates has been ever more intense in recent years and has been the driving force of significant research studies The attractiveness of gas hydrates is further enhanced by the environmental benefit of using natural gas as a fuel When dissociated, the hydrate burns stealthily, as seen in Figure 1.12, until all the methane gas trapped within has been used up... summarized in Table 1-1 Most of these countries have gas hydrate reserves surrounding their countries and are exploring alternative sources of energy and gearing towards viable and economical technologies of producing the gas trapped within the hydrates since gas hydrates may constitute a future source of natural gas In particular, for Japan, which imports 84 per cent of her energy, the ability to harness... running out, it is pivotal that alternative sources of energy are made available and one of them is be the untapped reserves found in gas hydrates At the National University of Singapore, research on the gas production of methane hydrates started in 2008 to join in the worldwide efforts working on new technologies and methodologies to produce natural gas from methane hydrate deposits Over the past ... energy and gearing towards viable and economical technologies of producing the gas trapped within the hydrates since gas hydrates may constitute a future source of natural gas In particular, for Japan,... phase boundaries for both purewater- and seawater methane hydrates for a pressure range of MPa to 17 MPa At present, available data for phase boundary in both purewater and seawater are few and... molecules, methane hydrates are the most commonly occurring hydrate in nature and the amount of methane potentially trapped in methane hydrates may be significant When the cages encapsulating the gas

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