Permeability variation and anisotropy of gas hydrate-bearing pressure-core sediments recovered from the Krishna-Godavari Basin, offshore India

被引:117
|
作者
Yoneda, Jun [1 ]
Oshima, Motoi [1 ]
Kida, Masato [1 ]
Kato, Akira [1 ]
Konno, Yoshihiro [1 ,5 ]
Jin, Yusuke [1 ]
Jang, Junbong [2 ]
Waite, William F. [2 ]
Kumar, Pushpendra [3 ]
Tenma, Norio [4 ]
机构
[1] Natl Inst Adv Ind Sci & Technol, Environm & Energy Dept, Res Inst Energy Frontier, Methane Hydrate Prod Technol Res Grp, Sapporo, Hokkaido, Japan
[2] US Geol Survey, Woods Hole, MA 02543 USA
[3] Oil & Nat Gas Corp, Mumbai, Maharashtra, India
[4] AIST, Environm & Energy Dept, Res Inst Energy Frontier, Tsukuba, Ibaraki, Japan
[5] Univ Tokyo, Dept Ocean Technol Policy & Environm, Tokyo, Japan
关键词
Methane hydrate; Triaxial test; Permeability; Anisotropy; Pressure core; NGHP-02; STRATIGRAPHIC TEST WELL; POROUS-MEDIA; HYDRAULIC PERMEABILITY; NANKAI TROUGH; ACCUMULATION; EVOLUTION; VELOCITY; DEPOSIT; SANDS; NMR;
D O I
10.1016/j.marpetgeo.2018.07.006
中图分类号
P [天文学、地球科学];
学科分类号
07 ;
摘要
Permeability measurements were conducted on gas hydrate-bearing pressure-core sediments recovered from the Krishna-Godavari Basin during India's National Gas Hydrate Program Expedition 02. Pressure cores collected in the deep seabed of the Indian Ocean were cut and stored under high pressure and low temperature on the D/V Chikyu using pressure core analyzing tools. A total of 25,1.2-m storage chambers were transferred to Japan from India for pressure core studies using pressure-core analysis tools at the National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology. The sediment core's pressure and temperature were maintained within the hydrate stability conditions during the entire process of transfer and loading into a triaxial testing apparatus called TACIT to preserve the hydrate, which can simulate the in-situ effective stress state under triaxial conditions. The hydrate saturation of the samples was in the range of 50-90%. It was found that the initial effective water permeability was in range of 0.01 mD to tens of mD, depending on the hydrate saturation and the mean particle size of the host sediment. The hydrate pore space morphology is also a critical factor, and results suggest hydrates are forming in the pore centers of sand grains as pore filling, but also as a sediment grain coating. In a first for gas hydrate-bearing pressure cores, the permeability anisotropy was established via vertical and horizontal flow tests combined with a pore fluid flow simulation. The horizontal/vertical permeability ratio was found to be 4. Additionally, the effective stress dependency of permeability was investigated by performing flow tests at different effective stresses. Due to decreasing porosity and particle crushing, the permeability dropped by approximately 90% for an effective stress increase of 10 MPa.
引用
收藏
页码:524 / 536
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Consolidation and hardening behavior of hydrate-bearing pressure-core sediments recovered from the Krishna-Godavari Basin, offshore India
    Yoneda, Jun
    Oshima, Motoi
    Kida, Masato
    Kato, Akira
    Konno, Yoshihiro
    Jin, Yusuke
    Tenma, Norio
    [J]. MARINE AND PETROLEUM GEOLOGY, 2019, 108 : 512 - 523
  • [2] Evaluation of failure modes and undrained shear strength by cone penetrometer for Natural Gas hydrate-bearing pressure-core sediment samples recovered from the Krishna-Godavari Basin, offshore India
    Kato, Akira
    Konno, Yoshihiro
    Yoneda, Jun
    Kida, Masato
    Oshima, Motoi
    Jin, Yusuke
    Nagao, Jiro
    Tenma, Norio
    [J]. MARINE AND PETROLEUM GEOLOGY, 2019, 108 : 502 - 511
  • [3] Lithological properties of natural gas hydrate-bearing sediments in pressure-cores recovered from the Krishna-Godavari Basin
    Oshima, Motoi
    Suzuki, Kiyofumi
    Yoneda, Jun
    Kato, Akira
    Kida, Masato
    Konno, Yoshihiro
    Muraoka, Michihiro
    Jin, Yusuke
    Nagao, Jiro
    Tenma, Norio
    [J]. MARINE AND PETROLEUM GEOLOGY, 2019, 108 : 439 - 470
  • [4] Permeability estimation of gas hydrate-bearing sediments from well log data in the Krishna-Godavari basin
    Begum, Seema
    Satyavani, Nittala
    [J]. ACTA GEOPHYSICA, 2022, 70 (04) : 1473 - 1490
  • [5] Thermal properties of highly saturated methane hydrate-bearing sediments recovered from the Krishna-Godavari Basin
    Muraoka, Michihiro
    Ohtake, Michika
    Susuki, Naoko
    Morita, Hiromitsu
    Oshima, Motoi
    Yamamoto, Yoshitaka
    [J]. MARINE AND PETROLEUM GEOLOGY, 2019, 108 : 321 - 331
  • [6] Pore pressure prediction in gas-hydrate bearing sediments of Krishna-Godavari basin, India
    Singha, Dip Kumar
    Chatterjee, Rima
    Sen, Mrinal K.
    Sain, Kalachand
    [J]. MARINE GEOLOGY, 2014, 357 : 1 - 11
  • [7] Pore pressure prediction in gas-hydrate bearing sediments of Krishna-Godavari basin, India
    Singha, Dip Kumar
    Chatterjee, Rima
    Sen, Mrinal K.
    Sain, Kalachand
    [J]. Marine Geology, 2014, 357 : 1 - 11
  • [8] Pore pressure prediction in gas-hydrate bearing sediments of Krishna-Godavari basin, India
    [J]. Chatterjee, R. (rima_c_99@yahoo.com), 1600, Elsevier B.V., Netherlands (357):
  • [9] Pressure core analysis of geomechanical and fluid flow properties of seals associated with gas hydrate-bearing reservoirs in the Krishna-Godavari Basin, offshore India
    Jang, Junbong
    Dai, Sheng
    Yoneda, Jun
    Waite, William F.
    Stern, Laura A.
    Boze, Lee-Gray
    Collett, Timothy S.
    Kumar, Pushpendra
    [J]. MARINE AND PETROLEUM GEOLOGY, 2019, 108 : 537 - 550
  • [10] Hydrate-Bearing Sediments from the Krishna-Godavari Basin: Physical Characterization, Pressure Core Testing, and Scaled Production Monitoring
    Yun, Tae Sup
    Fratta, Dante
    Santamarina, J. Carlos
    [J]. ENERGY & FUELS, 2010, 24 (11) : 5972 - 5983