Summary
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of core samples in laboratory experiments
showed that CO2 storage in gas hydrates formed in porous rock
resulted in the spontaneous production of methane with no associated water
production. The exposure of methane hydrate in the pores to liquid
CO2 resulted in methane production from the hydrate that suggested
the exchange of methane molecules with CO2 molecules within the
hydrate without the addition or subtraction of significant amounts of heat.
Thermodynamic simulations based on Phase Field Theory were in agreement with
these results and predicted similar methane production rates that were observed
in several experiments. MRI-based 3D visualizations of the formation of
hydrates in the porous rock and the methane production improved the
interpretation of the experiments. The sequestration of an important greenhouse
gas while simultaneously producing the freed natural gas offers access to the
significant amounts of energy bound in natural gas hydrates and also offers an
attractive potential for CO2 storage. The potential danger
associated with catastrophic dissociation of hydrate structures in nature and
the corresponding collapse of geological formations is reduced because of the
increased thermodynamic stability of the CO2 hydrate relative to the
natural gas hydrate.
Introduction
The replacement of methane in natural gas hydrates with CO2
presents an attractive scenario of providing a source of abundant natural gas
while establishing a thermodynamically more stable hydrate accumulation.
Natural gas hydrates represent an enormous potential energy source as the total
energy corresponding to natural gas entrapped in hydrate reservoirs is
estimated to be more than twice the energy of all known energy sources of coal,
oil, and gas (Sloan 2003). Thermodynamic stability of the hydrate is sensitive
to local temperature and pressure, but all components in the hydrate have to be
in equilibrium with the surroundings if the hydrate is to be thermodynamically
stable. Natural gas hydrate accumulations are therefore rarely in a state of
complete stability in a strict thermodynamic sense. Typically, the hydrate
associated with fine-grain sediments is trapped between low-permeability layers
that keep the system in a state of very slow dynamics. One concern of hydrate
dissociation, especially near the surface of either submarine or
permafrost-associated deposits, is the potential for the release of methane to
the water column or atmosphere. Methane represents an environmental concern
because it is a more aggressive (~25 times) greenhouse gas than CO2.
A more serious concern is related to the stability of these hydrate formations
and its impact on the surrounding sediments. Changes in local conditions of
temperature, pressure, or surrounding fluids can change the dynamics of the
system and lead to catastrophic dissociation of the hydrates and consequent
sediment instability. The Storegga mudslide in offshore Norway was created by
several catastrophic hydrate dissociations. The largest of these was estimated
to have occurred 7,000 years ago and was believed to have created a massive
tsunami (Dawson et al. 1988). The replacement of natural gas hydrate with
CO2 hydrate has the potential to increase the stability of
hydrate-saturated sediments under near-surface conditions. Hydrocarbon
exploitation in hydrate-bearing regions has the additional challenge to
drilling operations of controlling heat production from drilling and its
potential risk of local hydrate dissociation (Yakushev and Collett 1992).
The molar volume of hydrate is 25–30% greater than the volume of liquid
water under the same temperature-pressure conditions. Any production scenario
for natural gas hydrate that involves significant dissociation of the hydrate
(e.g., pressure depletion) has to account for the release of significant
amounts of water that in turn affects the local mechanical stress on the
reservoir formation. In the worst case, this would lead to local collapse of
the surrounding formation. Natural gas production by CO2 exchange
and sequestration benefits from the observation that there is little or no
associated liquid water production during this process. Production of gas by
hydrate dissociation can produce large volumes of associated water, and can
create a significant environmental problem that would severely limit the
economic potential.
The conversion from methane hydrate to a CO2 hydrate is
thermodynamically favorable in terms of free energy differences, and the phase
transition is coupled to corresponding processes of mass and heat transport.
The essential question is then if it is possible to actually convert methane
hydrate as found in sediments to CO2 hydrate. Experiments that
formed natural gas hydrates in porous sandstone core plugs used MRI to monitor
the dynamics of hydrate formation and reformation. The paper emphasizes the
experimental procedures developed to form the initial natural gas hydrates in
sandstone pores and the subsequent exchange with CO2 while
monitoring the dynamic process with 3D imaging on a sub millimetre scale. The
in-situ imaging illustrates the production of methane from methane hydrate when
exposed to liquid CO2 without any external heating.
© 2008. Society of Petroleum Engineers
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