Abstract

Coalbed methane thermodynamic extraction, as an emerging ECBM recovery method, can effectively improve gas recovery rates. And clarifying methane diffusion and migration law in coal under thermal stimulation is crucial for the selection of its process parameters. Based on laboratory methane adsorption-release experiments, the evolution law of methane diffusion characteristics with temperature and pressure was studied, and the control mechanism of heat-dependent methane diffusion behavior was explored. The results show that both thermal stimulation and high adsorption pressure accelerated the methane diffusion rate in coal. Adsorption pressure had little effect on methane diffusion percentage, but thermal stimulation promoted a significant increase in diffusion percentage and improved the net methane yield. The influence mechanisms of adsorption pressure and thermal stimulation on methane diffusion characteristics are elucidated in relation to the amount and proportion of methane-activated molecules in the diffusion process. The constant diffusion coefficient of methane is heat-dependent, based on which a diffusion model is derived to accurately predict the methane release process in coal. Additionally, temperature has a more important effect on transient diffusion coefficient than pressure. Thermal stimulation leads to a net increase rather than a decrease in diffusion coefficient in the early diffusion stages and can also accelerate the attenuation of diffusion coefficient, with this intensifying effect becoming more pronounced at higher temperatures. The research results can provide some reference for the determination of coal seam gas content and the selection of heat injection process parameters.

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