A General Correlation For Predicting The Suppression of Hydrate Dissociation Temperature in The Presence of Thermodynamic Inhibitors
A General Correlation For Predicting The Suppression of Hydrate Dissociation Temperature in The Presence of Thermodynamic Inhibitors
A General Correlation For Predicting The Suppression of Hydrate Dissociation Temperature in The Presence of Thermodynamic Inhibitors
www.elsevier.com/locate/petrol
Abstract
Thermodynamic inhibitors can be used in avoiding gas hydrate problems in natural gas and oil production and transportation. A new correlation for predicting the suppression of the hydrate dissociation temperature of various petroleum fluids in
the presence of different thermodynamic inhibitors (e.g., electrolytes and organic inhibitors) is presented. The correlation, which
can be applied to drilling and reservoir fluids, requires inhibitor concentration, pressure of the system and, if known, the
dissociation pressure of the fluid in the presence of distilled water at 273.15 K.
The correlation has been developed using hydrate phase boundaries for methane and seven natural gases in the presence of
various single inhibitors generated by a well-proven comprehensive thermodynamic model. It covers nine electrolyte solutions
and six organic inhibitors, which may be available and/or added to the reservoir and drilling fluids. The developed correlation is
generic and could be easily extended to other salts and organic inhibitors.
D 2005 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Keywords: Gas hydrate; Suppression temperature; Inhibition effect; Salt; Organic inhibitor; Correlation
1. Introduction
* Corresponding author. Tel.: +44 131 451 3672; fax: +44 131
451 3127.
E-mail address: bahman.tohidi@pet.hw.ac.uk (B. Tohidi).
1
Present address: DONG E&P (Danish Oil and Natural Gas),
DONG, Agern Alle 24-26, 2970 Hoersholm, Denmark.
2
Present address: NIOC R&D, No. 27, Keshavarz Boulvar,
Valiasr Square, Tehran, Iran.
0920-4105/$ - see front matter D 2005 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
doi:10.1016/j.petrol.2005.04.002
K.K. stergaard et al. / Journal of Petroleum Science and Engineering 48 (2005) 7080
3
A free copy of the spreadsheet is available at the Hydrate
Groups website: www.pet.hw.ac.uk/research/hydrate.
71
72
K.K. stergaard et al. / Journal of Petroleum Science and Engineering 48 (2005) 7080
100
Distilled Water
Mud A
Mud B
Mud C
Mud D
P/MPa
15.5 K @ 15 MPA
Mud C
10
12 K @ 5.5 MPA
Mud C
1
268
273
278
283
288
293
T/K
Fig. 1. Effect of pressure on the inhibition effect of inhibitors in drilling fluids on methane hydrates.
P/MPa
C1
10
1
267
NG
272
277
282
287
292
T/K
Fig. 2. Inhibition effect of a drilling fluid on hydrate of methane and natural gas.
K.K. stergaard et al. / Journal of Petroleum Science and Engineering 48 (2005) 7080
hydrate). The hydrate phase boundaries were previously measured in this laboratory. The effect of pressure, as
discussed in the previous section, is obvious. Furthermore, at a given pressure, the temperature suppression
by the drilling fluid is different for methane hydrates
compared to hydrates formed from natural gas. For
example, at 5.5 MPa, the DT in the presence of mud
1 is 13 K for the natural gas but 14.3 K for methane.
This effect has not been considered by any of the
available correlations.
2.3. Effect of inhibitor
According to the available correlations, the hydrate
inhibition characteristics of organic inhibitors (e.g.,
methanol and glycol) is independent of the type of
inhibitor at similar molar concentrations. This is a
reasonable assumption at low inhibitor concentrations
as there is a negligible difference between different
inhibitors, but as the concentration increases notable
differences in the degree of suppression by different
inhibitors become apparent. This is illustrated in
Fig. 3 where the temperature suppression of methane
hydrate formation is shown at 14.66 MPa for methanol and ethylene glycol. The constant pressure experimental data have been extracted from (Ng et al.,
1987; Robinson and Ng, 1986; Ng and Robinson,
1985). As seen in the figure, at inhibitor concentrations below about 10 mol%, the degree of inhibition
25
Methanol (Ng & Robinson, 1985; Robinson & Ng, 1986)
Ethylene glycol, (Robinson & Ng, 1986)
20
dT/K
15
10
5
P = 14.66 MPa
0
0
73
10
15
20
25
mole%
Fig. 3. Inhibition of methane hydrates at 14.66 MPa by methanol and ethylene glycol.
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K.K. stergaard et al. / Journal of Petroleum Science and Engineering 48 (2005) 7080
NaCl
CaCl2
0.9
degree of ionisation
T = 293.15K
0.8
0.7
0.6
0.5
0.4
0
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
wt%
Fig. 4. Degree of ionisation of NaCl and CaCl2 at 293.15 K as function of concentration.
60
NaCl
50
CaCl2
Methanol
dT/K
40
30
20
10
P = 30 MPa
0
0
0.1
0.2
0.3
0.4
0.5
0.6
x*
Fig. 5. Predicted hydrate temperature suppression of a natural gas by sodium chloride, calcium chloride and methanol as function of inhibitor
mole fraction.
K.K. stergaard et al. / Journal of Petroleum Science and Engineering 48 (2005) 7080
Table 1
Origin of natural gases used in the optimisation of the correlation
NG1
NG2
NG3
NG4
NG5
NG6
NG7
North Sea
Natural Gas
Natural gas
from Alberta
Natural gas
from Alberta
Natural gas
from Louisiana
Natural gas
from Louisiana
Natural gas
Natural gas
75
Table 2
Constants in Eq. (1) for various salts
Constant
NaCl
CaCl2
NaBr
HCOONa
HCOOK
C1
C2
C3
C4
C5
C6
Max. con. (mass%)
Max. con. (mol%)
AAD%a
0.3534
1.375d 10 3
2.433d 10 4
4.056d 10 2
0.7994
2.25d 10 5
26.5
10
1.17
0.194
7.58d 10 3
1.953d 10 4
4.253d 10 2
1.023
2.8d 10 5
40.6
10
1.39
0.419
6.5d 10 3
1.098d 10 4
2.529d 10 2
0.303
2.46d 10 5
38.8
10
1.33
0.605
9.39d 10 3
1.34d 10 5
2.657d 10 2
0.353
2.47d 10 5
29.5
10
1.28
4.43
3.9d 10 2
1.766d 10 3
2.86d 10 3
4.094d 10 2
2.6d 10 5
34.2
10
1.81
Constant
HCOOCs
K2CO3
KBr
KCl
C1
C2
C3
C4
C5
C6
Max. con. (mass%)
Max. con. (mol%)
AAD%a
2.41
2.02 d 10 2
9.81 d 10 4
2.49 d 10 3
3.5524 d 10 2
2.92 d 10 5
52.3
10
1.70
0.1837
5.7 d 10 3
2.551 d 10 4
6.917 d 10 2
1.101
2.71 d 10 5
40.0
8
1.31
0.3406
7.8 d 10 4
8.22 d 10 5
3.014 d 10 2
0.3486
2.3 d 10 5
36.5
8
0.96
0.305
6.77 d 10 4
8.096 d 10 5
3.858 d 10 2
0.714
2.2 d 10 5
31.5
10
1.08
76
K.K. stergaard et al. / Journal of Petroleum Science and Engineering 48 (2005) 7080
Ci
Table 3
Constants in Eq. (1) for various organic inhibitors
Constant
Methanol
Ethanol
Glycerol
C1
0.478
1.118
0.135
C2
7.17 d 10 2 4.48 d 10 3
8.846 d 10 3
5
4
C3
1.44 d 10
6.979 d 10 1.15 d 10 5
C4
2.947 d 10 2 5.85 d 10 3
1.335 d 10 2
C5
0.596
0.225
0.378
C6
3.1 d 10 5
3.4 d 10 5
4.6 d 10 5
Max. con. (mass%) 43.3
31.2
68.6
Max. con. (mol%) 30
15
30
AAD%a
1.22
1.80
4.86
Constant
Ethylene
glycol
C1
C2
C3
C4
C5
C6
Max. con. (mass%)
Max. con. (mol%)
AAD%a
38.93
0.343
0.1964
0.522
3.47 d 10 3 5.81 d 10 3
1.767 d 10 2 2.044 d 10 4 1.393 d 10 4
3.503 d 10 4 1.8 d 10 2
2.855 d 10 2
5.083 d 10 3 0.3346
0.854
2.65 d 10 5
2.74 d 10 5
3.24 d 10 5
59.6
51
59.5
30
15
15
1.29
1.35
1.70
DEG
TEG
K.K. stergaard et al. / Journal of Petroleum Science and Engineering 48 (2005) 7080
77
100
40 mass% TEG
P/MPa
20 mass% TEG
Distilled water
10
1
270
275
280
285
290
295
T/K
Fig. 6. Evaluation of the effect of P 0 term (last term) in Eq. (1) by predicting methane hydrate phase boundary in the presence of various
concentrations of TEG.
100
P/MPa
Distilled water
11.8 mass% NaCl
21.5 mass% NaCl
Developed correlation
Corr., Hammerschmidt (1934)
Corr., Yousif & Young (1993)
10
1
260
265
270
275
280
285
T/K
Fig. 7. Comparison between available correlations for methane hydrate phase boundaries in the presence of sodium chloride aqueous solutions.
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K.K. stergaard et al. / Journal of Petroleum Science and Engineering 48 (2005) 7080
80
70
23 wt% CaCl2
15 wt% CaCl2
60
Comp. (mole%)
P/MPa
50
40
30
C1:
C2:
C3:
C4:
CO2:
N2:
80.5
10.3
5.0
4.3
1.8
0.1
Pure water
20
10
0
270
275
280
285
290
295
300
305
T/K
Fig. 8. Experimental and predicted hydrate phase boundaries of a natural gas in the presence of CaCl2.
P/MPa
100
10
1
260
265
270
275
280
285
290
T/K
Fig. 9. Experimental and predicted (HWHYD thermodynamic model and the developed empirical correlation) methane hydrate phase
boundaries in the presence of ethylene glycol.
K.K. stergaard et al. / Journal of Petroleum Science and Engineering 48 (2005) 7080
Fig. 9 shows the predictions of the empirical correlation and the HWHYD thermodynamic model, as
well as available experimental data (de Roo et al.,
1983; Robinson and Ng, 1986) for methane hydrate
dissociation conditions in the presence of different
concentrations of ethylene glycol (EG). The good
agreement between the predictions of the developed
empirical correlation with those of the HWHYD thermodynamic model demonstrates the reliability of the
correlation.
5. Conclusions
A generic correlation for predicting the hydrate
stability zone of reservoir and drilling fluids in the
presence of thermodynamic inhibitors (i.e., electrolytes and organic inhibitors) has been developed.
The correlation requires inhibitor concentration, pressure of the system and, if known, the dissociation
pressure of the hydrocarbon fluid in the presence of
distilled water at 273.15 K.
The developed correlation has been validated
against the comprehensive HWHYD thermodynamic
model for various hydrocarbon systems containing
salts or organic inhibitors with typical absolute average
deviation (AAD%) values between 1 and 2 and maximum AAD% of 4.86 for glycerol. In addition, the
correlation has shown superior reliability in comparison with reported correlations in the open literature.
The correlation can be used in hand-held calculators or spreadsheets4 as a tool for estimating hydrate
inhibition effect of thermodynamic inhibitors. It also
can be used to provide a reliable initial guess for more
sophisticated computer programs.
The hydrate stability zone of fluids in the presence
of distilled water, the main requirement of the developed correlation, can be estimated using the available
correlations in the open literature, such as stergaard
et al. (2000). As a result, the hydrate stability zone of
reservoir fluids in the presence or absence of thermodynamic inhibitors could be estimated by coupling the
developed correlation with the above mentioned open
literature correlation.
4
A free copy of the spreadsheet is available at the Hydrate
Groups website: www.pet.hw.ac.uk/research/hydrate.
79
Nomenclature
DT
Suppression of the hydrate dissociation
temperature (in K or 8C)
P
Pressure of the system (in kPa)
W
Concentration of the inhibitor in liquid water
phase (in mass%)
Dissociation pressure of hydrocarbon fluid in
P0
the presence of distilled water at 273.15 K
(kPa)
Ci
Constants given in Tables 2 and 3
DTi,model Suppression of the hydrate dissociation
temperature calculated by the HWHYD
DTi,corr Suppression of the hydrate dissociation
temperature calculated by correlation
AAD% Absolute average percentage deviation
n
Number of data points
Acknowledgments
This work was part of a joint industrial project
funded by ABB Offshore Systems Ltd., the UK Department of Trade and Industry, Petrobras, Shell UK
Exploration and Production, and TOTAL, whose support is gratefully acknowledged.
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