Methane Hydrate-Bearing Sand - An Energy Resource?

Author(s):  
Thi Xiu Le ◽  
Anh Minh Tang ◽  
Patrick Aimedieu ◽  
Michel Bornert ◽  
Baptiste Chabot ◽  
...  
Author(s):  
Yosuke Matsukuma ◽  
Masaki Minemoto ◽  
Yutaka Abe

From the view point of effective use of energy resources and reduction of greenhouse gases, methane hydrate has received considerable attention as a promising alternative energy resource. It is important to study effective recovery system of the methane hydrate, since it exists on the seabed at a depth of more than 1000m. The hot water injection method has been proposed as a promising methane hydrate recovery system. In this method, hot water is injected into methane hydrate layer through a pipe, and then molten methane is recovered. In this study, as the first step of the numerical analysis of the multiphase flow through complex boundary changing geometry, a new technique to generate a deformable solid boundary is proposed based on the lattice gas automata method. By using this technique, fundamental numerical simulations are demonstrated for the immiscible two-component flow in two-dimensional systems. Comparisons between simulation and experimental results clarified that the present technique is applicable to the flow of hot water and liquid methane and the disassociation of methane hydrate wall.


2010 ◽  
Vol 1262 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jing-Yin Chen ◽  
Choong-Shik Yoo

AbstractUnderstanding the high-pressure kinetics associated with the formation of methane hydrates is critical to the practical use of the most abundant energy resource on earth. In this study, we have studied, for the first time, the compression rate dependence on the formation of methane hydrates under pressures, using dynamic-Diamond Anvil Cell (d-DAC) coupled with a high-speed microphotography and a confocal micro-Raman spectroscopy. The time-resolved optical images and Raman spectra indicate that the pressure-induced formation of methane hydrate depends on the compression rate and the peak pressure. At the compression rate of around 5 to 10 GPa/s, methane hydrate phase II (MH-II) forms from super-compressed water within the stability field of ice VI between 0.9 GPa and 2.0 GPa. This is due to a relatively slow rate of the hydrate formation below 0.9 GPa and a relatively fast rate of the water solidification above 2.0 GPa. The fact that methane hydrate forms from super-compressed water underscores a diffusion-controlled growth, which accelerates with pressure because of the enhanced miscibility between methane and super-compressed water.


2021 ◽  
Vol 333 ◽  
pp. 02007
Author(s):  
Yusuke Takahashi ◽  
Ryosuke Ezure ◽  
Shun Takano ◽  
Hiroyuki Komatsu ◽  
Kazuaki Yamagiwa ◽  
...  

We are focusing on the practical use of methane hydrate. For recovery and use of it as an energy resource, it is necessary to consider the possibility of clogging in the recovery pipe due to the rehydration of bubbles. The purpose of this research was to observe experimentally and evaluate theoretically the decomposition behavior of hydrate sedimentary layer and the rising behavior of bubbles generated by hydrate decomposition. Chlorodifluoromethane was used as a low pressure model gas of methane. Hydrate sedimentary layer was produced by cooling and pressurizing water in countercurrent contact with gas using a hydrate formation recovery device. The recovered hydrate was decomposed by the heating or depressurization method, without flowing water. Two theoretical rising velocities were derived from the theoretical value with using the Navier-Stokes equation or the values in consideration of the bubble shape and hydrate film existence. The experimental rising velocities of small spherical bubbles radius agreed well with the theoretical value by the Navier-Stokes equation. The relatively large elliptical bubbles showed a behavior close to the theoretical value of bubble with hydrate film. Under the pressure and temperature conditions closer to the hydrate equilibrium line, almost no generated bubbles could be identified visually.


1996 ◽  
Vol 112 (14) ◽  
pp. 993-1004 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hideo KOBAYASHI

Author(s):  
L Chen ◽  
H Yamada ◽  
Y Kanda ◽  
H Sasaki ◽  
J Okajima ◽  
...  

Energies ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (10) ◽  
pp. 1939 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yu-Chien Chien ◽  
Derek Dunn-Rankin

This research studies the structure of flames that use laboratory-produced methane hydrates as fuel, specifically for the purpose of identifying their key combustion characteristics. Combustion of a methane hydrate involves multiple phase changes, as large quantities of solid clathrate transform into fuel gas, water vapor, and liquid water during burning. With its unique and stable fuel energy storage capability, studies in combustion are focused on the potential usage of hydrates as an alternative fuel source or on their fire safety. Considering methane hydrate as a conventional combustion energy resource and studying hydrate combustion using canonical experimental configurations or methodology are challenges. This paper presents methane hydrate flame geometries from the time they can be ignited through their extinguishment. Ignition and burning behavior depend on the hydrate initial temperature and whether the clathrates are chunks or monolithic shapes. These behaviors are the subject of this research. Physical properties that affect methane hydrate in burning can include packing density, clathrate fraction, and surface area. Each of these modifies the time or the temperature needed to ignite the hydrate flames as well as their subsequent burning rate, thus every effort is made to keep consistent samples. Visualization methods used in combustion help identify flame characteristics, including pure flame images that give reaction zone size and shape and hydrate flame spectra to identify important species. The results help describe links between hydrate fuel characteristics and their resulting flames.


Geophysics ◽  
1997 ◽  
Vol 62 (1) ◽  
pp. 63-74 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Nigel Edwards

Methane hydrates are solid, nonstoichiometric mixtures of water and the gas methane. They occur worldwide in sediment beneath the sea floor, and estimates of the total mass available there exceed [Formula: see text]. Since each volume of hydrate can yield up to 164 volumes of gas, offshore methane hydrate is recognized as a very important natural energy resource. The depth extent and stability of the hydrate zone is governed by the phase diagram for mixtures of methane and hydrate and determined by ambient pressures and temperatures. In sea depths greater than about 300 m, the pressure is high enough and the temperature low enough for hydrate to occur at the seafloor. The fraction of hydrate in the sediment usually increases with increasing depth. The base of the hydrate zone is a phase boundary between solid hydrate and free gas and water. Its depth is determined principally by the value of the geothermal gradient. It stands out on seismic sections as a bright reflection. The diffuse upper boundary is not as well marked so that the total mass of hydrate is not determined easily by seismic alone. The addition of electrical data, collected with a seafloor transient electric dipole‐dipole system, can aid in the evaluation of the resource. Methane hydrate, like ice, is electrically insulating. Deposits of hydrate in porous sediment cause an increase in the formation resistivity. The data consist of measurements of the time taken for an electrical disturbance to diffuse from the transmitting dipole to the receiving dipole. The traveltime is related simply to the resistivity: the higher the resistivity, the shorter the traveltime. A sounding curve may be obtained by measuring traveltimes as a function of the separation between the dipoles and interpreted in terms of the variation of porosity with depth. Two exploration scenarios are investigated through numerical modeling. In the first, a very simple example illustrating some of the fundamental characteristics of the electrical response, most of the properties of the section including the probable, regional thickness of the hydrate zone (200 m) are assumed known from seismic and spot drilling. The amount of hydrate in the available pore space is the only free parameter. Hydrate content expressed as a percentage may be determined to about ±ε given a measurement of traveltime at just one separation (800 m) to ε%. The rule holds over the complete range of anticipated hydrate content values. In the second example, less information is assumed available a priori and the complementary electrical survey is required to find both the thickness and the hydrate content in a hydrate zone about 200 m thick beneath the sea floor containing 20 and 40% hydrate in the available pore space, respectively. A linear eigenfunction analysis reveals that for these two models, the total mass of hydrate, the product of hydrate content and thickness, may be estimated to an accuracy of about 3ε% given measurements of traveltime to an accuracy of ε% over a range of separations from 100 to 1300 m. The value of the electrical information depends directly on the accuracy to which transient arrivals can be measured on the sea floor in water depths exceeding 300 m over a separation of the order of a kilometer, the error parameter ε. While results of appropriate surveys, or even noise measurements, have not been published in the open literature, surveys on a smaller 100 m scale have been conducted by my group. Based on these data, I suggest that the value of ε may be of the order of 3%.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document