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Modeling and characterizing the thermal and kinetic behavior of methane hydrate dissociation in sandy porous media

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  • Liao, Youqiang
  • Zheng, Junjie
  • Wang, Zhiyuan
  • Sun, Baojiang
  • Sun, Xiaohui
  • Linga, Praveen

Abstract

Methane hydrates (MHs) are deemed to be a potential energy source to meet the overwhelmingly growing demand for natural gas. The production of MHs involves many controlling processes such as heat transfer, fluid dynamics and hydrate reaction kinetics. Local thermal equilibrium (LTE) between solid and fluid phases was typically assumed when modeling the hydrate production, however, in many cases the local thermal non-equilibrium (LTNE) caused by the complex heat transfer processes at the pore scale cannot be neglected. In this work, a LTNE model was adopted to reflect the multiple heat transfer forms associated with hydrate dissociation and gas-liquid flow, particularly the solid-fluid interfacial convective heat transfer and the Joule-Thomson effect. The LTNE phenomenon and Joule-Thomson effect were hinted by a hydrate dissociation experiment carried out for model verification. The results show that the average estimation errors of temperature, cumulative gas and water production profiles between experiment and LTNE model were 7.70%, 6.63% and 4.02%, respectively, which are considerably better than those of the traditional LTE model (16.44%, 11.74% and 10.89%, respectively). A tenfold increase of interfacial convective heat transfer coefficient could reduce the local solid-fluid temperature difference by about 78.5%. A special focus was given to the Joule-Thomson effect which seemed to have less impact at the experimental condition in this work but become more significant when the gas saturation exceeds 40%. This work could add further insights into the thermal performance during hydrate dissociation in porous media, help to reveal the thermo-kinetic relationship at the pore scale and provide a more accurate estimation of the hydrate dissociation dynamics. It could be potentially employed to optimize the methane hydrate production strategies, minimize the risk of hydrate re-formation and maximize the overall energy recovery efficiency.

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  • Liao, Youqiang & Zheng, Junjie & Wang, Zhiyuan & Sun, Baojiang & Sun, Xiaohui & Linga, Praveen, 2022. "Modeling and characterizing the thermal and kinetic behavior of methane hydrate dissociation in sandy porous media," Applied Energy, Elsevier, vol. 312(C).
  • Handle: RePEc:eee:appene:v:312:y:2022:i:c:s0306261922002513
    DOI: 10.1016/j.apenergy.2022.118804
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    2. Guan, Dawei & Qu, Aoxing & Gao, Peng & Fan, Qi & Li, Qingping & Zhang, Lunxiang & Zhao, Jiafei & Song, Yongchen & Yang, Lei, 2023. "Improved temperature distribution upon varying gas producing channel in gas hydrate reservoir: Insights from the Joule-Thomson effect," Applied Energy, Elsevier, vol. 348(C).
    3. Xie, Dongzhou & Wang, Tongtao & Li, Long & Guo, Kai & Ben, Jianhua & Wang, Duocai & Chai, Guoxing, 2023. "Modeling debrining of an energy storage salt cavern considering the effects of temperature," Energy, Elsevier, vol. 282(C).
    4. Chen, Xuyue & Du, Xu & Yang, Jin & Gao, Deli & Zou, Yiqi & He, Qinyi, 2022. "Developing offshore natural gas hydrate from existing oil & gas platform based on a novel multilateral wells system: Depressurization combined with thermal flooding by utilizing geothermal heat from e," Energy, Elsevier, vol. 258(C).
    5. Yang, Mingjun & Wang, Xinru & Pang, Weixin & Li, Kehan & Yu, Tao & Chen, Bingbing & Song, Yongchen, 2023. "The inhibit behavior of fluids migration on gas hydrate re-formation in depressurized-decomposed-reservoir," Energy, Elsevier, vol. 282(C).
    6. Kwanghee Jeong & Bruce W. E. Norris & Eric F. May & Zachary M. Aman, 2023. "Hydrate Formation from Joule Thomson Expansion Using a Single Pass Flowloop," Energies, MDPI, vol. 16(22), pages 1-16, November.

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