Litcius/Paper detail

Gas hydrate in-situ formation and dissociation in clayey-silt sediments: An investigation by low-field NMR

Xiaoxiao Sun, Xuwen Qin, Hongfeng Lu, Jingli Wang, Jianchun Xu, Zijie Ning

2020Energy Exploration & Exploitation20 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The hydrate reservoir in the Shenhu Area of the South China Sea is a typical clayey-silt porous media with high clay mineral content and poor cementation, in which gas hydrate formation and dissociation characteristics are unclear. In this study, the CO 2 hydrate saturation, growth rate, and permeability were studied in sandstone, artificial samples, and clayey-silt sediments using a custom-built measurement apparatus based on the low-field NMR technique. Results show that the T 2 spectra amplitudes decrease with the hydrate formation and increase with the dissociation process. For the artificial samples and Shenhu sediments, the CO 2 hydrate occupies larger pores first and the homogeneity of the sandstone pores becomes poor. Meanwhile, compared with the clayey-silt sediments, CO 2 hydrate is easier to form and with higher hydrate saturation for the sandstone and artificial samples. In hydrate dissociation process, there exists a protection mechanism, i.e. the dissociation near the center of hydrates grain is suppressed when gas pressure drops suddenly and quickly. For permeability of those samples, it decreased with hydrate forms, and increases with hydrate dissociation. Meanwhile, with the same hydrate saturation, permeability is higher in hydrate formation than in dissociation.

Topics & Concepts

HydrateSiltClathrate hydrateCementation (geology)Dissociation (chemistry)Saturation (graph theory)GeologyMineralogyClay mineralsPermeability (electromagnetism)ChemistryMaterials scienceGeomorphologyCementComposite materialOrganic chemistryMembraneBiochemistryMathematicsCombinatoricsMethane Hydrates and Related PhenomenaHydrocarbon exploration and reservoir analysisNMR spectroscopy and applications