4 research outputs found
Methane gas hydrate effect on sediment acoustic and strength properties
Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2006. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Elsevier B.V. for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Journal of Petroleum Science and Engineering 56 (2007): 127-135, doi:10.1016/j.petrol.2006.02.003.To improve our understanding of the interaction of methane gas hydrate with host
sediment, we studied: (1) the effects of gas hydrate and ice on acoustic velocity in
different sediment types, (2) effect of different hydrate formation mechanisms on
measured acoustic properties (3) dependence of shear strength on pore space contents,
and (4) pore-pressure effects during undrained shear.
A wide range in acoustic p-wave velocities (Vp) were measured in coarse-grained
sediment for different pore space occupants. Vp ranged from less than 1 km/s for gascharged
sediment to 1.77 - 1.94 km/s for water-saturated sediment, 2.91 - 4.00 km/s for
sediment with varying degrees of hydrate saturation, and 3.88 - 4.33 km/s for frozen
sediment. Vp measured in fine-grained sediment containing gas hydrate was substantially
lower (1.97 km/s). Acoustic models based on measured Vp indicate that hydrate which
formed in high gas flux environments can cement coarse-grained sediment, whereas
hydrate formed from methane dissolved in the pore fluid may not.
The presence of gas hydrate and other solid pore-filling material, such as ice,
increased the sediment shear strength. The magnitude of that increase is related to the
amount of hydrate in the pore space and cementation characteristics between the hydrate
and sediment grains. We have found, that for consolidation stresses associated with the
upper several hundred meters of subbottom depth, pore pressures decreased during shear
in coarse-grained sediment containing gas hydrate, whereas pore pressure in fine-grained
sediment typically increased during shear. The presence of free gas in pore spaces
damped pore pressure response during shear and reduced the strengthening effect of gas
hydrate in sands.This
work was supported by the Coastal and Marine Geology, and Energy Programs of the
U.S. Geological Survey and funding was provided by the Gas Hydrate Program of the
U.S. Department of Energy
Handbook of gas hydrate properties and occurrence
This handbook provides data on the resource potential of naturally occurring hydrates, the properties that are needed to evaluate their recovery, and their production potential. The first two chapters give data on the naturally occurring hydrate potential by reviewing published resource estimates and the known and inferred occurrences. The third and fourth chapters review the physical and thermodynamic properties of hydrates, respectively. The thermodynamic properties of hydrates that are discussed include dissociation energies and a simplified method to calculate them; phase diagrams for simple and multi-component gases; the thermal conductivity; and the kinetics of hydrate dissociation. The final chapter evaluates the net energy balance of recovering hydrates and shows that a substantial positive energy balance can theoretically be achieved. The Appendices of the Handbook summarize physical and thermodynamic properties of gases, liquids and solids that can be used in designing and evaluating recovery processes of hydrates. 158 references, 67 figures, 47 tables