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Ramin Khodafarin,RIPI,NIOC

8/9/2006

Learning Objectives:

What are Gas Hydrates?


The necessary conditions for Gas Hydrate formation
Different Gas Hydrate structures
Interesting properties of Gas Hydrates
How can we benefit from gas hydrate technology?
How can we avoid hydrate problems?

Ramin Khodafarin,RIPI,NIOC

8/9/2006

Hydrates:
In general sense:

Hydrate is a compound containing water

Ramin Khodafarin,RIPI,NIOC

8/9/2006

What are Gas Hydrates?

Crystalline solids wherein guest (generally gas)


molecules are trapped in cages formed from hydrogen
bonded water molecules (host)
They are formed as a result of physical combination
of Water and Gas molecules
Unlike inorganic hydrates (e.g., CuSO4.5H2O) the
ratio between water and gas is not constant

Ramin Khodafarin,RIPI,NIOC

8/9/2006

Hydrates Definition

Natural gas hydrates are ice-like structures composed


of water and natural gas molecules. Under favorable
conditions of high pressure and low temperature,
water molecules form cages which encapsulate gas
molecules inside a hydrogen-bonded solid lattice

Ramin Khodafarin,RIPI,NIOC

8/9/2006

Methane Hydrate Molecular


Structure

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8/9/2006

WATER
and Periodic Table
6A
O
S
Se
Te

Ramin Khodafarin,RIPI,NIOC

H2X
Water
Hydrogen Sulfide
Hydrogen Selenide
Hydrogen Telluride

8/9/2006

Water
and Unusual Properties
Boiling Point
Enthalpy of Vaporization
Expanding upon freezing

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8/9/2006

Hydrogen Bond

Essentially an electrostatic attraction between the


molecules
Only 5-10% as strong as a covalent bond, but this is
still strong enough to explain the properties

Ramin Khodafarin,RIPI,NIOC

8/9/2006

Hydrates

It is a result of the hydrogen bond that water can


form hydrates

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Historical Perspective
1810
Sir Humphrey Davy discovers chlorine hydrate.
1888
Villard measured hydrates of CH4, C2H6, C2H4,C2H2, and N2O
1930's Hammerschmidt determines hydrates are blocking gas lines, and
investigates inhibitor gases.
1940's Soviets hypothesize the existence of natural methane hydrates in cold
northern climates
1960's Molecular structure of hydrate is determined. Soviets recognize
methane hydrate as a possible energy source, discover and
produce the first major hydrate deposit in permafrost.
1970's A bottom simulating reflector is drilled and is found to be associated
with the base of hydrate stability.
1990's Initial characterization and quantification of methane hydrate
deposits in deep water.
2000
Efforts to quantify location and abundance of hydrates begin. Largescale efforts to exploit hydrates as fuel begin.

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8/9/2006

Gas Hydrate formation

The necessary conditions:


Sufficient amount of water (not too much and not
too little)
Hydrate former (N2, H2S, CO2, C1, C2, C3, iC4)
Right combination of Temperature and Pressure
(Low T and High P)

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Gas Hydrate formation

Improvement by:
Turbulence
High Velocity
Agitation

Nucleation Sites
Free Water

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Elements Necessary for Hydrate


Formation
Hydrate

Natural
Gas

Water
High
Press.
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Low
Temp.
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Crystal Structure

Guest (gas molecules)


Houst (water molecules)
Cavities

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Known Structures

Structure I
Forms from small molecules, C1, C2, CO2, etc.
The main structure in natural gas hydrates

Structure II
When intermediate size molecules exist,C3, C4
Forms in most oil and gas systems

Structure H
Discovered in 1987
Need very large molecules, C6H12, C7H14
Unlikely to form in real systems
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Structure I

Cubic unit cell (a=12 A)


2 small cages and 6 large cages

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Structure II

Cubic unit cell (a=17.3 A)


16 small cages and 8 large cages

Ramin Khodafarin,RIPI,NIOC

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Structure I

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Structure I & II
The three types of cavities present in Structure I and II
methane hydrates.

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Hydrate Structures

512 62

512 64

512
Structure I

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Structure II

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Structure H

Hexagonal (a=12.26 A, c=10.17A)


3 small cages and 2 medium cages 1 large cages

Ramin Khodafarin,RIPI,NIOC

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Structure H
The two types of cavities unique to Structure H
methane hydrates.

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Double gas hydrates (SH)


Very Large molecules (such as C7H14) with small
molecules (such as C1, C2, CO2, and N2) may form
structure H hydrates.
Large cages are mainly filled with very large
molecules, while small molecules will occupy small
and medium size cages.
When structure II hydrate formers are present (e.g.
C3, i-C4, c-C5, and benzene), structure II is
generally more stable than structure H
For some binary systems (e.g. C1/ i-C5) structure H,
in particular at higher temperatures.
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Geometry of Hydrate Cavities


I

II

II

Cavity size

small

medium

small

large

small

huge

huge

Cavity shape

round

oblate

round

round

round

oblate

oblate

Cavity description

512

51262

512

51264

512

51268

51268

Number/unit cell

16

Average radius (A)

3.91

4.33

3.902

4.683

3.91

5.71

5.71

Real size of CH4

88.6%

75.7%

88.9%

67.5%

88.6%

Coordination No.

20

24

20

28

20

36

36

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8/9/2006

Types of Hydrates
Structure

Structure

II

Compound

Small
cavities

Large
cavities

Small
cavities

Large
cavities

C1

C2

C3

iC4

nC4

CO2

N2

H2S

O2

Ar

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Ramin Khodafarin,RIPI,NIOC

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Structures of gas hydrates

Structure I(a) and II(b) form with relatively small guests, e.q.,
methane, ethane, nitrogene, etc.
Structure I and II contains 48 and 136 water molecules,
respectively.
Structure H(c) is only known to form with at least one small guest
(i.e., methane) and one large guest, e.q., cyclooctane,
methylcylcohexane, etc.
Ramin Khodafarin,RIPI,NIOC

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Where can they form?

Hydrates
Pressure
No Hydrates
Temperature
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Gas Hydrate auto clave

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Please press a key.

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Where Gas Hydrate is found?

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Natural Gas Hydrate on the


Sea Floor

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Storage Capacity of Hydrates

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Gas Hydrates; friend or foe?


Can cause Problems
Source of Energy
CO2 Sequestration

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8/9/2006

Gas Hydrates
is one of the problems in
Production(Offshore drilling operations))
Processing facilities (separators, Valves, Heat
exchangers , etc.)
Transportation (offshore and onshore Pipeline)
Sediments (permafrost regions and subsea sediments)

Ramin Khodafarin,RIPI,NIOC

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8/9/2006

Natural Gas Transportation

CNG

Compressed Natural Gas

GTL

Gas-to-Liquid

GTW

Gas-to-Wire (DC and AC)

LNG

Liqufied Natural Gas

NGH

Natural Gas Hydrate

ANG

Absorbed Natural Gas

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8/9/2006

Which one is the BEST way?

Ramin Khodafarin,RIPI,NIOC

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8/9/2006

10.0

LNG

Capacity (BCM/year)

PIPE

1.0

ALL

CNG, GTW, NGH

0.1
100

1000

GTL

10000

Distance (km)

Ramin Khodafarin,RIPI,NIOC

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8/9/2006

Alternative Methods for


Storing
Solid(Crystal)

Ramin Khodafarin,RIPI,NIOC

Slurry

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Ramin Khodafarin,RIPI,NIOC

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8/9/2006

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8/9/2006

Ramin Khodafarin,RIPI,NIOC

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CO2 Deep-sea Storage


Technology

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Hydrate Prevention

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8/9/2006

Natural Gas Hydrates Problem


(P, T)

Water + Hydrocarbon

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NGH

8/9/2006

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8/9/2006

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Formation of a hydrate plugs in


a Pipeline and its hazards

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8/9/2006

Remove one of the components


needed for hydrates to form
Hydrate

Natural
Gas

Water
High
Press.
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Low
Temp.
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Thermodynamic Hydrate
Inhibitors

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Thermodynamic Inhibitors

Salts
Alcohols
Glycols

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Low-Dosage Inhibitors

Kinetic Inhibitors (KIs)


Crystal Growth Inhibitors
Anti-Agglomerants (Aas)

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Kinetic Inhibitors

Kinetic Inhibitors X
KIs delay the nucleation and growth of hydrate
crystals for substantial periods of time.

XX
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Kinetic Inhibition

Hydrate

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Hydrate

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Anti-Agglomerants

Anti-Agglomerants X
AAs prevent agglomeration of hydrate crystals.
Crystal reach critical radius and are transported as a
slurry.

Ramin Khodafarin,RIPI,NIOC

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NGH
as a future source of energy

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