240 likes | 396 Vues
Injection of CO 2 for Recovery of Methane from Gas Hydrate Reservoirs. Jan – Dec, 2006 University of Alaska – Fairbanks Pacific Northwest National Laboratory British Petroleum Exploration Alaska. Objectives.
E N D
Injection of CO2 for Recovery of Methane from Gas Hydrate Reservoirs Jan – Dec, 2006 University of Alaska – Fairbanks Pacific Northwest National Laboratory British Petroleum Exploration Alaska
Objectives • A better understanding of formation kinetics and thermodynamics of CH4, CO2, and CH4-CO2 mixed gas hydrates in porous media • To study CO2 injection dynamics in gas hydrate bearing sediments • Build an analytical model in order to calculate hydrate equilibrium in porous medium
Tasks • Conduct the proof-of-principle experiments • Injection Dynamics of CO2 in Gas Hydrate Bearing Sediments • Reservoir Modeling
Tasks Completed • Development of Pore Freezing Model to predict hydrate saturation in porous medium • Extension of Pore Freezing Model to predict mixed hydrate saturation in porous medium • Extension of UAF-HYD module to predict hydrate equilibrium in the porous medium • Simulation study to determine the role of capillary pressure in producing methane from hydrates • Simulation study to determine the optimum CO2 concentration in CO2-H2O micro-emulsion
Tasks Completed • 5 conference papers presented • 1 Poster presented at 2006 AADE conference, Houston, Texas (April’06) • 1 journal paper submitted • 5 MS thesis defended
Reservoir Modeling • Pore freezing model • Predicts Hydrate Saturation • Main feature- Consideration of salting out phenomenon • Involves calculation of equilibrium conditions for hydrates
Hydrate Saturation Prediction Results • Prediction of CH4 hydrate saturation
Hydrate Equilibrium Prediction • Hydrate Equilibrium in porous medium • Far different from that in bulk hydrate equilibrium • Changes due to interaction of chemical components with pore walls and due to energy required to maintain capillary equilibrium • Important to predict for any study involving hydrates in natural sediments
Results for CH4 hydrate equilibrium in pore of radius 300 Ao
Effect of Capillary Pressure on Hydrate Recovery • Contradictory opinions on its role in hydrate recovery • Function of wetting phase saturation • Calculated by van Genuchten principle • STOMP simulator used for studying the effect for various reservoirs with different soil characteristics • sandstone, sand, loam, silt loam and clay reservoirs considered
Results • Capillary pressure profile in reservoir
Results • CH4 recovery after thermal stimulation
Reservoir Simulation • Objective • To study injection dynamics of CO2 in hydrate bearing sediments • To study effect of concentration of CO2-microemulsion on hydrate recovery at various injection temperatures • To study the feasibility of injection of CO2-microemulsion for CH4 recovery from hydrate reservoir on Alaska North Slope (Mt. Elbert site located within Milne Point Unit )
Numerical Simulations: 2-D Horizontal System: 10 x 10 x 1 Grid Schematic representation of 2-D Reservoir Model • System Parameters: • Effective Porosity = 36% • Permeability: • x-direction = 400 md • y-direction = 200 md • Initial Conditions: • Hydrate Saturation (variable) System Temperature = 40C • Pressure in the System = 6 MPa
Methane recovery as a function of Micro-emulsion temperature at different concentrations
Effect of injection temperature and CO2 slurry concentration on CH4 recovery: Surface Plot
Energy Efficiency Calculations • Analyze the effectiveness of CO2-microemulsion injection technique vs. Thermal Stimulation method. • Calculate the total energy requirement • Calculate the energy efficiency
Heat added to reservoir for producing 1 kg of CH4 under different production schemes
Conclusions • The hydrates are formed at higher pressure in porous medium for a given temperature and at lower temperature for a given pressure than those in bulk medium • Capillary pressure has significant effect on methane recovery for different soils and it should be considered in hydrate recovery • The simulation study showed that a micro-emulsion with 30% CO2 concentration will be a good choice for reservoirs with hydrate saturation < 50%
Conclusions • If the initial hydrate saturation is in the range of 55% to 75%, a 50% CO2 micro-emulsion injection may be a good choice . • CO2-microemulsion injection for methane recovery from a reservoir with high hydrate saturation may not be a good choice due to the low effective permeability. • It is found that the energy requirement for a gas hydrate reservoir by CO2 microemulsion injection is about 1/10th of that required by thermal stimulation method.
Acknowledgement We gratefully acknowledge the financial support from AEDTL/NETL/DOE