Zhigang Ye , Lujun Wang , Bin Zhu , Haibing Shao , Wenjie Xu , Yunmin Chen
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Natural gas hydrates have attracted many attentions recently as a promising energy, the exploitation of which will cause complicated multifield coupled behavior of hydrate-bearing sediments. As sediments usually vary from tens to hundreds of meters, the gravity effect on gas-liquid migration and soil deformation may not be completely ignored. This paper develops a new thermo-hydro-chemo-mechanical model to investigate the sediment behavior during the hydrate dissociation. The equations of gas-liquid migration are numerical solved with explicit incorporation of hydrate dissociation process. The numerical stability and efficiency have been improved by expanding the Taylor series of the source terms and making the first-order approximation. Furtherly, pre-calculation procedures have been considered to obtain the initial state of field variables. Pilot-scale model results show that the gas-liquid migration, soil deformation and NGH dissociation are accelerated when the gravity effect is present. During the exploitation, a dissociation front can be observed, and gas-liquid migration and hydrate dissociation dominate the process alternatively, leading to first decrease and subsequent increase of gas saturation and continuous rise of liquid saturation. Moreover, it is inferred that marginal enhancement of gas production can be achieved with the increase of wellbore lengths, but it should not exceed 75% of the reservoir thickness.
期刊介绍:
The objective of the Journal of Natural Gas Science & Engineering is to bridge the gap between the engineering and the science of natural gas by publishing explicitly written articles intelligible to scientists and engineers working in any field of natural gas science and engineering from the reservoir to the market.
An attempt is made in all issues to balance the subject matter and to appeal to a broad readership. The Journal of Natural Gas Science & Engineering covers the fields of natural gas exploration, production, processing and transmission in its broadest possible sense. Topics include: origin and accumulation of natural gas; natural gas geochemistry; gas-reservoir engineering; well logging, testing and evaluation; mathematical modelling; enhanced gas recovery; thermodynamics and phase behaviour, gas-reservoir modelling and simulation; natural gas production engineering; primary and enhanced production from unconventional gas resources, subsurface issues related to coalbed methane, tight gas, shale gas, and hydrate production, formation evaluation; exploration methods, multiphase flow and flow assurance issues, novel processing (e.g., subsea) techniques, raw gas transmission methods, gas processing/LNG technologies, sales gas transmission and storage. The Journal of Natural Gas Science & Engineering will also focus on economical, environmental, management and safety issues related to natural gas production, processing and transportation.