Abstract
Natural gas hydrates have garnered widespread attention as a high-quality energy resource. Recent offshore extraction experiences suggest that depressurization is a technically mature and economically viable option. However, challenges such as reservoir temperature reduction, reservoir subsidence, secondary hydrate formation, and insufficient dynamics in later-stage hydrate decomposition still require improvements to the depressurization method. This study, based on field data from Japan's first offshore natural gas hydrate extraction, utilizes a self-developed numerical simulator to model and validate reservoirs at the field scale. Long-term production rate stability, total production, secondary hydrate formation, reservoir subsidence, evolution of permeability, and temperature-pressure paths were analyzed and optimized for the three mainstream depressurization modes: steady depressurization, stepwise depressurization, and cyclic depressurization. The results indicate that, under the condition of equal total work done throughout the entire depressurization process, steady depressurization with an effectively lower depressurization rate is the optimal choice. Cyclic depressurization, due to the formation of secondary hydrates reducing the permeability of certain reservoir zones, adversely affects gas production efficiency during the long-term stable production phase. This study enhances insights into the coupled evolution of multiple physical fields during the depressurization of offshore natural gas hydrates, providing valuable guidance for future on-site extraction plan designs.
Published Version
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