Gas production from methane hydrates upon thermal stimulation; an analytical study employing radial coordinates

In this study, a radial analytical model for methane hydrate dissociation upon thermal stimulation in porous media considering the effect of wellbore structure has been developed. The analytical approach is based on a similarity solution employing a moving boundary separating the dissociated and und...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Roostaie, M., Leonenko, Y.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: arXiv 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.1912.12149
https://arxiv.org/abs/1912.12149
Description
Summary:In this study, a radial analytical model for methane hydrate dissociation upon thermal stimulation in porous media considering the effect of wellbore structure has been developed. The analytical approach is based on a similarity solution employing a moving boundary separating the dissociated and undissociated zones. Two different heat sources are considered: i) line heat source; and ii) wellbore heat source with specific thickness consisting of casing, gravel, and cement. The temperature and pressure distributions, dissociation rate, and energy efficiency considering various initial and boundary conditions, and reservoir properties are investigated. Direct heat transfer from the heat source to the reservoir without considering the heat conduction in the wellbore thickness causes higher the dissociation rate and gas production in the line heat source model compared to the wellbore heating model. Increasing the heat source temperature or decreasing its pressure increases gas production. However, employing them simultaneously results in greater gas production but reduces energy efficiency. The dissociation rate has direct relation with porosity, thermal diffusivities, and thermal conductivities of the reservoir, but is not dependent on the reservoirs permeability.