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The response of temperature and pressure of hydrate reservoirs in the first gas hydrate production test in South China Sea.

Authors :
Qin, Xuwen
Liang, Qianyong
Ye, Jianliang
Yang, Lin
Qiu, Haijun
Xie, Wenwei
Liang, Jinqiang
Lu, Jin'an
Lu, Cheng
Lu, Hailong
Ma, Baojin
Kuang, Zenggui
Wei, Jiangong
Lu, Hongfeng
Kou, Beibei
Source :
Applied Energy. Nov2020, Vol. 278, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

• The gas production from hydrate dissociation accounting for about 85%. • Analysis of the radius of the hydrate dissociation area in this production test. • Five-year prediction of long-term influence radius of pressure drop. • Exploration of favorable areas for the formation of secondary hydrates. • Analysis of the response of pressure and temperature of hydrate reservoirs. The first offshore natural gas hydrate production test of China in 2017 has proved the feasibility of hydrate exploitation from clayey-silt reservoirs, which possesses the highest reservoirs than other types of hydrate resources. However, owing to the absence of monitoring wells in this production test, the hydrate dissociation behavior cannot be analyzed through pressure and temperature changes of hydrate reservoirs. This paper focuses on the simulation study on the detailed response of the temperature and pore pressure of hydrate reservoirs of Well SHSC-4 during the gas production by depressurization. Meanwhile, it highlights the analysis of favorable areas for the formation of secondary hydrates and the influence of the secondary hydrates on pressure and temperature field of hydrate reservoirs. The simulation results indicate that in the first 60 days, the hydrate reservoirs feature a dissociation radius of about 5 m, and the gas production from hydrate dissociation accounts for about 85%. After 1 year, 2 years and 5 years of hydrate exploitation, the influence radius of low-pressure area (<10 MPa) is 15 m, 16 m and 17 m, respectively, suggesting that the hydrate reservoirs have higher gas production efficiency in the first year. Furthermore, the temperature and pressure of hydrate reservoirs are not favorable to the formation of secondary hydrates in the first 60 days. In long-term production, secondary hydrates are mainly formed at hydrate dissociation front. This can increase the pore pressure and further decrease the effective stress in the local areas of hydrate reservoirs, thus affecting mechanical stability of the local hydrate reservoirs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03062619
Volume :
278
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Applied Energy
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
147202904
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apenergy.2020.115649