Journal of Canadian Petroleum Technology
Volume 50,
Number 7/8,
July/August 2011,
pp. 24-33
Summary
Traditional coalbed-methane (CBM) exploitation technologies, including
ordinary drills, enhanced drills, water jets, and hydrofracture in the coalbed,
are widely used in modern coal mining and involve high-pressure water. Because
the CBM-desorption capacity decreases when using high-pressure water, the CBM
output efficiency is lower than expected. To investigate the decrease in CBM
desorption after water injection and the increase in CBM output after
temperature is raised, an experimental system was built to simulate ideal
conditions for one water-injection well per production well. The apparatus
comprised a gas-liquid-injection system, a coal-sample container, a
temperature-control device, a measurement system, and other auxiliary devices.
Experiments on the effects of water injection and temperature on CBM desorption
were carried out. The results revealed that the CBM-desorption capacity mainly
depends on the water-injection pressure at constant temperature. The capacity
decreased by at least 50% at less 2 MPa and became stable if the water pressure
exceeded 8 MPa. Furthermore, the desorption capacity rapidly increased when the
temperature was increased after water injection. Desorption reached a plateau
once the temperature reached the boiling point of water, and the percentage
desorption (PD) at 90°C was greater than that for free broken coal. The results
demonstrate that heated hydrofracture is an effective technology with good
efficiency for CBM exploitation.
© 2011. Society of Petroleum Engineers
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History
- Original manuscript received:
15 December 2010
- Revised manuscript received:
8 April 2011
- Manuscript approved:
19 April 2011
- Published online:
11 July 2011
- Version of record:
14 July 2011