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Prediction of phase equilibrium of clathrate hydrates of multicomponent natural gases containing CO2 and H2S
The sour natural gas readily forms hydrates and stays stable at higher temperatures and lower pressures and hence is responsible for plugging, corroding the pipelines and causing other flow assurance-related issues. Predictions of formation and dissociation conditions of these hydrates are necessary...
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Published in: | Journal of petroleum science & engineering 2014-04, Vol.116, p.81-89 |
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Main Authors: | , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | The sour natural gas readily forms hydrates and stays stable at higher temperatures and lower pressures and hence is responsible for plugging, corroding the pipelines and causing other flow assurance-related issues. Predictions of formation and dissociation conditions of these hydrates are necessary in applications for preventing such hazards primarily due to the blockages of pipelines. However, natural gases from the gas reservoirs can have combinations of different concentrations of each of the following constituents, CH4, C2H6, C3H8, C4H10, N2, CO2 and H2S. Presence of high concentrations of CO2 and/or H2S along with other components is often found in natural gas, thereby limiting the accurate functioning of several of the available phase behavior models. The major limitation for their inaccuracy can be attributed to the complexity involving CO2 and H2S in hydrate systems. In this work, a new thermodynamic computing approach is developed for predicting the phase equilibria for hydrates of multicomponent sour natural gases (with CO2 and H2S) from different natural gas systems. The model of Chen and Guo (1998) (Chem. Eng. J., 71, 145, 1998) is extended for the multicomponent sour natural gas hydrate system using the Kihara potential functions to model the guest–host interaction energies. In addition, a semi-empirical form is proposed to calculate the equilibrium hydrate temperature for hydrates of natural gas with and without CO2 and H2S. The developed model is fitted with 12 sets of experimental data on the phase equilibria of sour natural gas hydrate system and found to be satisfactory. The average absolute deviation pressure percentage (AADP%) for most of the cases studied is observed to be well within 10%, thus proving its efficacy. The present model can, therefore, find potential applications for developing mitigation techniques for flow assurance issues and for robust natural gas and hydrate reservoir models containing sour gases.
•Present a review and limitations of models for hydrates of sour natural gases.•Present a model for hydrates of highly sour multicomponent natural gases.•The model uses the Kihara potential functions approach for the case first time.•The model is validated with 12 sets of experimental data.•The average absolute deviation pressure percentage is observed to be less than 10%. |
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ISSN: | 0920-4105 1873-4715 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.petrol.2014.02.018 |