Abstract

Hydrate reservoirs with underlying gas show significant potential for commercial exploitation. An experimental apparatus capable of applying confining pressure and axial pressure was built to simulate the accumulation and dissociation of naturally occurring marine hydrate and a novel method for synthesizing hydrate reservoirs with underlying gas was proposed. With the formed methane hydrate-bearing coarse sediment (HBCS) with underlying gas, hydrate dissociation experiments via depressurization under constrained conditions were carried out at different HBCS proportions. The characteristics of heat transfer and dual-gas co-production during the exploitation of hydrate reservoir at various HBCS proportions were presented. Due to the influence of hydrate decomposition, the diverging temperature variations of the underlying layer and upper HBCS layer were observed at HBCS proportions of 0.21, 0.48, and 0.77. The negative effect of the outside pressure on gas production was not observed in our experimental conditions owing to the adopted coarse quartz sand deposits. The final produced gas volume increases with the HBCS proportion increasing. The produced gas percentage is negative or positive related to the HBCS proportions respectively with the extended production time. In addition, the different production behavior of the underlying gas and hydrate decomposed gas may induce the unexpected exploitation accidents such as blowouts resulting from unstable gas production rate. These findings guide the design of exploitation scheme for reservoirs with different HBCS distribution. And an exploitation method by setting the production well in the underlying gas layer/underlying sediment layer with free gas is then proposed, which can inhibit hydrate reformation and ice generation and improve the production well stability during the hydrate exploitation process.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call