Molecular dynamics simulations to study the effect of fracturing on the efficiency of CH₄ - CO₂ replacement in hydrates

Thesis (M.S.) University of Alaska Fairbanks, 2018 Feasible techniques for long-term methane production from naturally occurring gas hydrates are being explored in both marine and permafrost geological formations around the world. Most of the deposits are found in low-permeability reservoirs and the...

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Main Author: Akheramka, Aditaya O.
Other Authors: Dandekar, Abhijit, Patil, Shirish, Ahmadi, Mohabbat, Ismail, Ahmed E.
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11122/8642
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spelling ftunivalaska:oai:scholarworks.alaska.edu:11122/8642 2023-05-15T17:12:11+02:00 Molecular dynamics simulations to study the effect of fracturing on the efficiency of CH₄ - CO₂ replacement in hydrates Akheramka, Aditaya O. Dandekar, Abhijit Patil, Shirish Ahmadi, Mohabbat Ismail, Ahmed E. 2018-05 http://hdl.handle.net/11122/8642 en_US eng http://hdl.handle.net/11122/8642 Department of Petroleum Engineering Gas fields Production methods Gas wells Hydraulic fracturing Natural gas Hydrates Methane Thesis ms 2018 ftunivalaska 2023-02-23T21:37:05Z Thesis (M.S.) University of Alaska Fairbanks, 2018 Feasible techniques for long-term methane production from naturally occurring gas hydrates are being explored in both marine and permafrost geological formations around the world. Most of the deposits are found in low-permeability reservoirs and the economic and efficient exploitation of these is an important issue. One of the techniques gaining momentum in recent years is the replacement of CH₄-hydrates with CO₂-hydrates. Studies have been performed, at both laboratory and field based experimental and simulation scale, to evaluate the feasibility of the in situ mass transfer by injecting CO₂ in gaseous, liquid, supercritical and emulsion form. Although thermodynamically feasible, these processes are limited by reaction kinetics and diffusive transport mechanisms. Increasing the permeability and the available surface area can lead to increased heat, mass and pressure transfer across the reservoir. Fracturing technology has been perfected over the years to provide a solution in such low-permeability reservoirs for surface-dependent processes. This work attempts to understand the effects of fracturing technology on the efficiency of this CH₄-CO₂ replacement process. Simulations are performed at the molecular scale to understand the effect of temperature, initial CO₂ concentration and initial surface area on the amount of CH₄ hydrates dissociated. A fully saturated methane hydrate lattice is subjected to a uniaxial tensile loading to validate the elastic mechanical properties and create a fracture opening for CO₂ injection. The Isothermal Young's modulus was found to be very close to literature values and equal to 8.25 GPa at 270 K. Liquid CO₂ molecules were then injected into an artificial fracture cavity, of known surface area, and the system was equilibrated to reach conditions suitable for CH₄ hydrate dissociation and CO₂ hydrate formation. The author finds that as the simulation progresses, CH₄ molecules are released into the cavity and the presence of CO₂ ... Thesis Methane hydrate permafrost Alaska University of Alaska: ScholarWorks@UA Fairbanks
institution Open Polar
collection University of Alaska: ScholarWorks@UA
op_collection_id ftunivalaska
language English
topic Gas fields
Production methods
Gas wells
Hydraulic fracturing
Natural gas
Hydrates
Methane
spellingShingle Gas fields
Production methods
Gas wells
Hydraulic fracturing
Natural gas
Hydrates
Methane
Akheramka, Aditaya O.
Molecular dynamics simulations to study the effect of fracturing on the efficiency of CH₄ - CO₂ replacement in hydrates
topic_facet Gas fields
Production methods
Gas wells
Hydraulic fracturing
Natural gas
Hydrates
Methane
description Thesis (M.S.) University of Alaska Fairbanks, 2018 Feasible techniques for long-term methane production from naturally occurring gas hydrates are being explored in both marine and permafrost geological formations around the world. Most of the deposits are found in low-permeability reservoirs and the economic and efficient exploitation of these is an important issue. One of the techniques gaining momentum in recent years is the replacement of CH₄-hydrates with CO₂-hydrates. Studies have been performed, at both laboratory and field based experimental and simulation scale, to evaluate the feasibility of the in situ mass transfer by injecting CO₂ in gaseous, liquid, supercritical and emulsion form. Although thermodynamically feasible, these processes are limited by reaction kinetics and diffusive transport mechanisms. Increasing the permeability and the available surface area can lead to increased heat, mass and pressure transfer across the reservoir. Fracturing technology has been perfected over the years to provide a solution in such low-permeability reservoirs for surface-dependent processes. This work attempts to understand the effects of fracturing technology on the efficiency of this CH₄-CO₂ replacement process. Simulations are performed at the molecular scale to understand the effect of temperature, initial CO₂ concentration and initial surface area on the amount of CH₄ hydrates dissociated. A fully saturated methane hydrate lattice is subjected to a uniaxial tensile loading to validate the elastic mechanical properties and create a fracture opening for CO₂ injection. The Isothermal Young's modulus was found to be very close to literature values and equal to 8.25 GPa at 270 K. Liquid CO₂ molecules were then injected into an artificial fracture cavity, of known surface area, and the system was equilibrated to reach conditions suitable for CH₄ hydrate dissociation and CO₂ hydrate formation. The author finds that as the simulation progresses, CH₄ molecules are released into the cavity and the presence of CO₂ ...
author2 Dandekar, Abhijit
Patil, Shirish
Ahmadi, Mohabbat
Ismail, Ahmed E.
format Thesis
author Akheramka, Aditaya O.
author_facet Akheramka, Aditaya O.
author_sort Akheramka, Aditaya O.
title Molecular dynamics simulations to study the effect of fracturing on the efficiency of CH₄ - CO₂ replacement in hydrates
title_short Molecular dynamics simulations to study the effect of fracturing on the efficiency of CH₄ - CO₂ replacement in hydrates
title_full Molecular dynamics simulations to study the effect of fracturing on the efficiency of CH₄ - CO₂ replacement in hydrates
title_fullStr Molecular dynamics simulations to study the effect of fracturing on the efficiency of CH₄ - CO₂ replacement in hydrates
title_full_unstemmed Molecular dynamics simulations to study the effect of fracturing on the efficiency of CH₄ - CO₂ replacement in hydrates
title_sort molecular dynamics simulations to study the effect of fracturing on the efficiency of ch₄ - co₂ replacement in hydrates
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/11122/8642
geographic Fairbanks
geographic_facet Fairbanks
genre Methane hydrate
permafrost
Alaska
genre_facet Methane hydrate
permafrost
Alaska
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/11122/8642
Department of Petroleum Engineering
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