4.7 Article

Molecular insights into methane hydrate growth in the presence of wax molecules

Journal

FUEL
Volume 324, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.fuel.2022.124743

Keywords

Methane hydrate; Wax molecules; Hydrate growth kinetics; Molecular dynamics simulation; Flow assurance

Funding

  1. Beijing Municipal Natural Science Foundation [3192027]
  2. National Natural Science Foun-dation of China [52104069, 51874323, U20B6005]
  3. Science Foundation of China University of Petroleum, Beijing [2462020YXZZ045]
  4. 111 Project [B18054]

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This study investigates the effect of wax molecules on methane hydrate growth in waxy oil-water-hydrate systems using molecular dynamics simulations. The results show that different wax molecular structures have different effects on hydrate growth by adsorbing methane molecules and altering the structure of interface water molecules.
As a key issue emerged in the exploitation of deep-water oil and gas resources, the natural gas hydrates growth kinetics in waxy oil-water systems is still ambiguous. The microscopic mechanism of how wax affects hydrate growth needs to be elucidated. Molecular dynamics simulations were performed to explore the effect of wax molecules on methane hydrate growth in waxy oil-water-hydrate systems. The simulation results indicated that the different growth pathways of methane hydrate with wax molecules should be attributed to the changes in the mass-transfer process of methane molecules and the structural properties of interface water molecules. When n-heptadecane wax molecules (C17H36) were adjacent to oil-water interface, they inhibited hydrate growth by adsorbing methane molecules in the oil phase and preventing methane molecules from migrating to the water phase. The addition of methyl heptadecanoate wax molecules (C18H36O2) extended hydrate growth time to achieve a greater amount of hydrate formation by promoting the conversion of the water film between hydrate phase and oil phase into hydrate. In terms of the influence of wax crystallization, the co-crystallization of C17H36 and C18H36O2 hindered the mass transfer of methane molecules at the oil-water interface, which is due to the free space reduction after wax adsorption and the repulsive force between C18H36O2 and methane molecules, thereby slowing down the growth rate of hydrate. The dispersed C17H36 slowed down hydrate growth rate, while the dispersed C18H36O2 had almost no effect on hydrate growth rate. Thence, the microscopic analysis based on molecular dynamics simulations indicated that the effect of wax molecules on methane hydrate growth was complex, depending on the specific wax molecular structure and content of the wax.

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