4.7 Article

Memory effect of CO2-hydrate formation in porous media

Journal

FUEL
Volume 299, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.fuel.2021.120922

Keywords

Memory effect; Hydrate formation; Hydrate growth modes; Porous media; Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR)

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41872123, 51991365]
  2. China Geological Survey Project [DD20190232]

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Monitoring the formation process of CO2 hydrate in sandstone cores revealed a memory effect, with secondary synthesis showing significantly higher rates and saturation levels compared to primary synthesis. This memory effect is attributed to changes in water molecular structure and the different pore occupation models during primary and secondary synthesis.
Understanding the mechanism of synthesis and dissociation of gas hydrate in porous medium is of great significance for selecting appropriate depressurization strategy during the hydrate production. Based on a selfdesigned nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) experimental set-up, this study monitored in-real-time the formation process of CO2 hydrate in a sandstone core plug, and investigated the formation mechanism of CO2 hydrate under memory effect. For the same sample with the same initial water saturation, the average formation rate of the secondary synthesis is 9 times higher than that of the primary synthesis, and the final hydrate saturation of the secondary synthesis is 2 times higher than that of the primary synthesis, which indicate the existence of memory effect during multicycle of synthesis processes. To explain the memory effect mechanism, we assume that after a synthesis/decomposition cycle process, some water molecular with normal chain structure transferred into dissociated water having residual cage structure that is favorable for hydrate formation. Moreover, the synthesized CO2 hydrate mainly occupy small pores with a 'filling model' during the primary synthesis process, whereas they enter both small and large pores with a 'coating model' during the secondary synthesis process. For the pore filling model in the primary synthesis, the earlier formed CO2 hydrate in large pores can prevent the water in small pores participating in the formation of CO2 hydrate, and this blocking effect cannot be found for coating model in the second synthesis.

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