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Black Sea hydrate production value and options for clean energy production

Natural gas hydrates of Bulgaria and Romania in the Black Sea have been subject to studies by several European research projects. The current understanding of the hydrate distribution, and the total amounts of hydrate in the region, makes it interesting to evaluate in terms of commercial potential....

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Autores principales: Kvamme, Bjørn, Vasilev, Atanas
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Royal Society of Chemistry 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10333814/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37441039
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d3ra03774f
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author Kvamme, Bjørn
Vasilev, Atanas
author_facet Kvamme, Bjørn
Vasilev, Atanas
author_sort Kvamme, Bjørn
collection PubMed
description Natural gas hydrates of Bulgaria and Romania in the Black Sea have been subject to studies by several European research projects. The current understanding of the hydrate distribution, and the total amounts of hydrate in the region, makes it interesting to evaluate in terms of commercial potential. In this study, we have evaluated some well-known hydrate production methods. Thermal stimulation and adding chemicals are considered as not economically feasible. Pressure reduction may not be efficient due to the endothermic dissociation of hydrates and long-term cooling of the sediments. Chemical work due to pressure reduction is an additional mechanism but is too slow to be commercially feasible. Adding CO(2)/N(2), however, has a dual value. In the future, CO(2) can be stored at a price proportional to a CO(2) tax. This is deducted from the value of the released natural gas. The maximum addition of N(2) is around 30 mol% of the CO(2)/N(2) mixture. A minor addition (in the order of 1 mol%) of CH(4) increases the stability of the hydrate created from the injection gas. The maximum N(2) amount is dictated by the demand for the creation of a new hydrate from injection gas but also the need for sufficient heat release from this hydrate formation to dissociate the in situ CH(4) hydrates. An additional additive is needed to accelerate the formation of hydrate from injection gas while at the same time reducing the creation of blocking hydrate films. Based on reasonable assumptions and approximations as used in a verified kinetic model it is found that CH(4)/CO(2) swapping is a feasible method for Black Sea hydrates. It is also argued that the technology is essentially conventional petroleum technology combined with learning from projects on aquifer storage of CO(2), and a thermodynamic approach for design of appropriate injection gas. It is also argued that the CH(4)/CO(2) swap can be combined with well-known technology for steam cracking of produced hydrocarbons to H(2) and CO(2) (for re-injection).
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spelling pubmed-103338142023-07-12 Black Sea hydrate production value and options for clean energy production Kvamme, Bjørn Vasilev, Atanas RSC Adv Chemistry Natural gas hydrates of Bulgaria and Romania in the Black Sea have been subject to studies by several European research projects. The current understanding of the hydrate distribution, and the total amounts of hydrate in the region, makes it interesting to evaluate in terms of commercial potential. In this study, we have evaluated some well-known hydrate production methods. Thermal stimulation and adding chemicals are considered as not economically feasible. Pressure reduction may not be efficient due to the endothermic dissociation of hydrates and long-term cooling of the sediments. Chemical work due to pressure reduction is an additional mechanism but is too slow to be commercially feasible. Adding CO(2)/N(2), however, has a dual value. In the future, CO(2) can be stored at a price proportional to a CO(2) tax. This is deducted from the value of the released natural gas. The maximum addition of N(2) is around 30 mol% of the CO(2)/N(2) mixture. A minor addition (in the order of 1 mol%) of CH(4) increases the stability of the hydrate created from the injection gas. The maximum N(2) amount is dictated by the demand for the creation of a new hydrate from injection gas but also the need for sufficient heat release from this hydrate formation to dissociate the in situ CH(4) hydrates. An additional additive is needed to accelerate the formation of hydrate from injection gas while at the same time reducing the creation of blocking hydrate films. Based on reasonable assumptions and approximations as used in a verified kinetic model it is found that CH(4)/CO(2) swapping is a feasible method for Black Sea hydrates. It is also argued that the technology is essentially conventional petroleum technology combined with learning from projects on aquifer storage of CO(2), and a thermodynamic approach for design of appropriate injection gas. It is also argued that the CH(4)/CO(2) swap can be combined with well-known technology for steam cracking of produced hydrocarbons to H(2) and CO(2) (for re-injection). The Royal Society of Chemistry 2023-07-11 /pmc/articles/PMC10333814/ /pubmed/37441039 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d3ra03774f Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Kvamme, Bjørn
Vasilev, Atanas
Black Sea hydrate production value and options for clean energy production
title Black Sea hydrate production value and options for clean energy production
title_full Black Sea hydrate production value and options for clean energy production
title_fullStr Black Sea hydrate production value and options for clean energy production
title_full_unstemmed Black Sea hydrate production value and options for clean energy production
title_short Black Sea hydrate production value and options for clean energy production
title_sort black sea hydrate production value and options for clean energy production
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10333814/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37441039
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d3ra03774f
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