Abstract

Natural gas hydrate (NGH) is a promising alternative energy resource, whereas marine NGH exploitation suffers from various potential geo-environmental concerns. The existence of a production wellbore not only provides channel for gas extraction, but also causes specific boundary conditions for the occurrence of geo-environmental risks. Almost all kinds of geo-environmental risks during NGH production initiate from time-dependent deformation of the near-wellbore strata. In this paper, the pressuremeter test (PMT) method was firstly introduced to investigate the lateral creep behaviors of the NGH-bearing sediment. The PMT probe was used to apply outwards lateral stress onto the hydrate-bearing sediment to simulate the horizontal stress state of the near-wellbore reservoir during drilling, completion, and/or hydraulic fracturing, during which the pressure inside the wellbore is higher than the reservoirs static pressure. The results indicated that the decelerated creep accounts for more than 70% of the lateral strain before the effective stress reaches the long-term strength. The hardening modulus of the sediment was proven to be increased from the magnitude of ∼102 MPa–∼103 MPa, when the hydrate saturation increases from 2.2% to 50.0%. The PMT creep test results can be used for interpretation of the in-situ horizontal stress and geomechanical parameters such as pro-plastic pressure and ultimate pressure. Based on the fact that PMT test results complies with the previous results from other techniques, a field-applicable PMT technique for NGH reservoir test is suggested to be developed in future study, and a systematic hypothesis and workflow for NGH reservoir modelling is also proposed in this study.

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