Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6683894 | Applied Energy | 2016 | 12 Pages |
Abstract
The effectiveness of the electro-thermal and depressurisation based techniques applied to three marine gas hydrate reservoir settings of India is modeled and simulated using MATLAB and TOUGHÂ +Â HYDRATE reservoir modeling software. The results indicate that the depressurisation technique (with an achievable ÎP of >90Â bar) will be effective in dissociating gas hydrates up to 145Â m from a well bore in the Krishna Godavari (KG) reservoir. The technique when applied to the Andaman and Mahanadi reservoirs is found to produce a maximum ÎP of 64 and 70Â bar against the minimum required threshold of 134 and 152Â bar, and hence, found to be less effective for hydrate dissociation. The in-situ electro-thermal technique will be effective in the KG and Andaman reservoirs; and in the Mahanadi reservoir, if the gas hydrate saturations are >17%. The depressurization technique when applied to a hypothetical sandy reservoir in the KG basin shows that the spatial pressure drop is nearly double that in a clayey setting, which is conducive for hydrate dissociation.
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Authors
N. Vedachalam, S. Ramesh, S. Srinivasalu, G. Rajendran, G.A. Ramadass, M.A. Atmanand,