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E-raamat: Clathrate Hydrates of Natural Gases

(Colorado School of Mines, Golden, USA), (Colorado School of Mines, Golden, CO, USA)
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  • Sari: Chemical Industries
  • Ilmumisaeg: 07-Sep-2007
  • Kirjastus: CRC Press Inc
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781420008494
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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Sari: Chemical Industries
  • Ilmumisaeg: 07-Sep-2007
  • Kirjastus: CRC Press Inc
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781420008494
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Hydrate research has expanded substantially over the past decade, resulting in more than 4,000 hydrate-related publications. Collating this vast amount of information into one source, Clathrate Hydrates of Natural Gases, Third Edition presents a thoroughly updated, authoritative, and comprehensive description of all major aspects of natural gas clathrate hydrates.

Whats New in the Third Edition?

This new edition of a bestseller offers updated information on the clathrate hydrate compounds discovered in the past decade, provides a balance between experimental and theoretical perspectives, and incorporates two software programs that can be downloaded from the CRC press website. It also presents case studies on low dosage hydrate inhibitor prevention and hydrate drilling in nature, phase equilibrium data and kinetic models, and descriptions of the paradigm change in flow assurance to risk management. Other new material discusses the paradigm transition from hydrate reservoir assessment to reservoir production and summarizes the in situ conditions for hydrates in the permafrost and oceans.

With this modern account of clathrate hydrates, you will acquire a fresh perspective on both new and old theories and data, hopefully leading you to pursue exciting research directions and practical applications.

Arvustused

"This updated, third edition of Clathrate Hydrates of Natural Gases, is a comprehensive volume that is aimed at readers from both industry and academia. As such it provides a source for readers of all levels of previous exposure to this fascinating subject . . . I would say that this book is very thorough and indeed educational."

Peter Licence, School of Chemistry, University of Nottingham, in Fuel, April 2008

Preface xix
Authors xxv
Overview and Historical Perspective
1(44)
Hydrates as a Laboratory Curiosity
1(8)
Hydrates of Hydrocarbons Distinguished from Inorganic Hydrates and Ice
5(1)
Methods to Determine the Hydrate Composition
5(1)
Phase Diagrams Provide Hydrate Classification
6(3)
Hydrates in the Natural Gas Industry
9(13)
Initial Experiments on Natural Gas Hydrates
9(2)
Initial Correlation of Hydrate Phase Equilibria
11(1)
Hydrate Crystal Structures and Hydrate Type Definitions
11(3)
Basis for Current Thermodynamic Models
14(2)
Time-Dependent Studies of Hydrates
16(3)
Work to Enable Gas Production, Transport, and Processing
19(1)
Hydrates in Mass and Energy Storage and Separation
20(2)
Hydrates as an Energy Resource
22(5)
In Situ Hydrates
23(3)
Investigations Related to Hydrate Exploration and Recovery
26(1)
Environmental Aspects of Hydrates
27(1)
Safety Aspects of Hydrates
27(1)
Relationship of This
Chapter to Those That Follow
28(17)
References
29(16)
Molecular Structures and Similarities to Ice
45(68)
Crystal Structures of Ice Ih and Natural Gas Hydrates
46(46)
Ice, Water, Hydrogen Bonds, and Clusters
46(1)
Ice and Bjerrum defects
46(3)
The water molecule
49(1)
Hydrogen bonds
49(1)
Hydrogen bonds cause unusual water, ice, and hydrate properties
50(2)
Pentamers and hexamers
52(1)
Hydrate Crystalline Cavities and Structures
53(1)
The cavities in hydrates
53(6)
Hydrate crystal cells---structures I, II, and H
59(13)
Characteristics of Guest Molecules
72(1)
Chemical nature of guest molecules
72(1)
Geometry of the guest molecules
73(12)
Filling the hydrate cages
85(6)
Summary Statements for Hydrate Structure
91(1)
Comparison of Properties of Hydrates and Ice
92(10)
Spectroscopic Implications
93(2)
Mechanical Properties
95(1)
Mechanical strength
95(1)
Elastic properties
96(1)
Thermal Properties
97(1)
Thermal conductivity of hydrates
97(4)
Thermal expansion of hydrates and ice
101(1)
The What and the How of Hydrate Structures
102(11)
References
102(11)
Hydrate Formation and Dissociation Processes
113(76)
Hydrate Nucleation
116(34)
Knowledge Base for Hydrate Nucleation
117(1)
Key properties of supercooled water
117(2)
Solubility of natural gases in water
119(2)
Nucleation theory for ice and hydrates
121(8)
Site of hydrate nucleation
129(1)
Conceptual Picture of Hydrate Nucleation at the Molecular Level
130(1)
Labile cluster nucleation hypothesis
131(3)
Nucleation at the interface hypothesis
134(1)
Local structuring nucleation hypothesis
135(3)
Stochastic Nature of Heterogeneous Nucleation
138(4)
Correlations of the Nucleation Process
142(1)
Driving force of nucleation
143(4)
The ``Memory Effect'' Phenomenon
147(2)
State-of-the-Art for Hydrate Nucleation
149(1)
Hydrate Growth
150(26)
Conceptual Picture of Growth at the Molecular Level
150(1)
Crystal growth molecular concepts
150(2)
The boundary layer
152(3)
Hydrate Crystal Growth Processes
155(1)
Single crystal growth
155(1)
Hydrate film/shell growth at the water-hydrocarbon interface
156(10)
Crystal growth with interfacial agitation
166(1)
Growth of metastable phases
167(1)
Correlations of the Growth Process
168(1)
Growth kinetics---the Englezos---Bishnoi model
169(2)
Mass transfer---the Skovborg---Rasmussen model
171(1)
Heat transfer models
172(4)
State-of-the-Art for Hydrate Growth
176(1)
Hydrate Dissociation
176(4)
Conceptual Picture of Hydrate Dissociation
176(1)
Correlations of Hydrate Dissociation
177(2)
Anomalous Self-Preservation
179(1)
State-of-the-Art for Hydrate Dissociation
180(1)
Summary
180(9)
References
181(8)
Estimation Techniques for Phase Equilibria of Natural Gas Hydrates
189(68)
Introduction
189(7)
Hydrate Phase Diagrams for Water + Hydrocarbon Systems
196(12)
Pressure---Temperature Diagrams of the CH4 + H2O (or N2 + H2O) System
197(3)
Systems (e.g., H2O + C2H6, C3H8, or i-C4H10) with Upper Quadruple Points
200(1)
Pressure---Temperature Diagrams for Multicomponent Natural Gas Systems
201(1)
Pressure---Temperature Diagrams for Systems with Inhibitors
202(1)
Temperature---Composition Diagrams for Methane + Water
202(3)
Solubility of Gases Near Hydrate Formation Conditions
205(1)
Pressure---Temperature Diagrams for Structure H Systems
205(3)
Three-Phase (LW-H-V) Equilibrium Calculations
208(18)
The Gas Gravity Method
209(3)
Hydrate limits to gas expansion through a valve
212(3)
The Distribution Coefficient (Kvsi-Value) Method
215(11)
Quadruple Points and Equilibrium of Three Condensed Phases (LW-H-LHC)
226(3)
The Location of the Quadruple Points
226(1)
Condensed Three-Phase Equilibrium
227(2)
Effect of Thermodynamic Inhibitors on Hydrate Formation
229(7)
Hydrate Inhibition via Alcohols and Glycols
231(3)
Hydrate Inhibition Using Salts
234(2)
Two-Phase Equilibrium: Hydrates with One Other Phase
236(4)
Water Content of Vapor in Equilibrium with Hydrate
237(2)
Water Content of Liquid Hydrocarbon in Equilibrium with Hydrates
239(1)
Methane Content of Water in Equilibrium with Hydrates
240(1)
Hydrate Enthalpy and Hydration Number from Phase Equilibrium
240(12)
The Clausius-Clapeyron Equation and Hydrate Equilibrium
241(2)
Enthalpy of dissociation and cavity occupation
243(3)
Determination of the Hydration Number
246(1)
Using the Clapeyron equation to obtain hydration number
247(3)
Hydration numbers by the Miller and Strong method
250(2)
Summary and Relationship to
Chapters Which Follow
252(5)
References
252(5)
A Statistical Thermodynamic Approach to Hydrate Phase Equilibria
257(62)
Introduction and Overview
257(1)
Statistical Thermodynamics of Hydrate Equilibria
258(38)
Grand Canonical Partition Function for Water
259(4)
The Chemical Potential of Water in Hydrates
263(7)
The Langmuir Adsorption Analogy
270(2)
Relating the Langmuir Constant to Cell Potential Parameters
272(5)
Activity Coefficient for Water in the Hydrate
277(4)
Defining the Hydrate Fugacity and Reference Parameters
281(4)
The Gibbs Free Energy Method
285(6)
Accuracy of CSMGem Compared to Commercial Hydrate Frograms
291(2)
Ab Initio Methods and the van der Waals and Platteeuw Method
293(3)
Application of the Method to Analyze Systems of Methane + Ethane + Propane
296(11)
Pure Hydrate Phase Equilibria
296(3)
Binary Hydrate Phase Equilibria
299(1)
Methane + propane hydrates
299(1)
Methane + ethane hydrates
299(3)
Ethane + propane hydrates
302(3)
Ternary hydrate phase equilibria and industrial application
305(2)
Computer Simulation: Another Microscopic---Macroscopic Bridge
307(6)
Basic Techniques of Monte Carlo and Molecular Dynamics Simulation
308(1)
Molecular dynamics
309(1)
Monte Carlo
310(1)
What Has Been Learned from Molecular Simulation?
311(2)
Chapter Summary and Relationship to Following
Chapters
313(6)
References
314(5)
Experimental Methods and Measurements of Hydrate Properties
319(218)
Experimental Apparatuses and Methods for Macroscopic Measurements
320(22)
Measurement Methods for Hydrate Phase Equilibria and Kinetics
320(7)
Principles of equilibrium apparatus development
327(1)
Apparatuses for use above the ice point
328(6)
Apparatus for use below the ice point
334(1)
Apparatuses for two-phase equilibria
335(1)
Flow loops for hydrate formation kinetics
335(2)
Methods for Measurement of Thermal Properties
337(1)
Heat capacity and heat of dissociation methods
338(3)
Methods for thermal conductivity measurements
341(1)
Measurements of the Hydrate Phase
342(16)
Mesoscopic Measurements of the Hydrate Phase
342(4)
Molecular-Level Measurements of the Hydrate Phase
346(3)
Diffraction methods
349(1)
Spectroscopic methods
350(8)
Data for Natural Gas Hydrate Phase Equilibria and Thermal Properties
358(165)
Phase Equilibria Data
358(1)
Equilibria of simple natural gas components
358(34)
Equilibria of binary guest mixtures
392(48)
Equilibria of ternary guest mixtures
440(8)
Equilibria of multicomponent guest mixtures
448(13)
Equilibria with inhibitors
461(58)
Thermal Property Data
519(1)
Heat capacity and heat of dissociation
519(4)
Summary and Relationship to
Chapters that Follow
523(14)
References
523(14)
Hydrates in the Earth
537(106)
Introduction and Overview
537(2)
The Paradigm Is Changing from Assessment of Amount to Production of Gas
539(11)
Extent of the Occurrence of In Situ Gas Hydrates
539(11)
Sediments with Hydrates Typically Have Low Contents of Biogenic Methane
550(16)
Generation of Gases for Hydrate Formation
551(4)
The SMI, the Hydrate Upper Boundary, and the SMI Rule-of-Ten
555(2)
Mechanisms for Generation of Hydrates
557(1)
Hydrate formation in the two-phase region
558(2)
Models for in situ hydrate formation
560(6)
Sediment Lithology and Fluid Flow Are Major Controls on Hydrate Deposition
566(1)
Remote Methods Enable an Estimation of the Extent of a Hydrated Reservoir
566(10)
The Hydrate Pressure-Temperature Stability Envelope
567(4)
Seismic Velocity Techniques and Bottom Simulating Reflections
571(4)
Methane Solubility Further Limits the Hydrate Occurrence
575(1)
Drilling Logs and/Coring Provide Improved Assessments of Hydrated Gas Amounts
576(7)
Open Hole Well Logs
577(1)
Evidence of Hydrates in Cores
578(4)
Combining Laboratory and Field Experiments
582(1)
Hydrate Reservoir Models Indicate Key Variables for Methane Production
583(4)
Future Hydrated Gas Production Trends Are from the Permafrost to the Ocean
587(2)
Hydrates Play a Part in Climate Change and Geohazards
589(39)
Case Study 1: Leg 164 in the Blake-Bahama Ridge (Hydrate Assessment)
592(2)
Site 994
594(3)
Site 995
597(1)
Site 997
598(1)
Common features
598(1)
Case Study 2: Hydrate Ridge (Hydrate Assessment)
599(2)
Near surface hydrates: the chemosynthetic community and chemoherms
601(3)
Deeper hydrates at Southern Hydrate Ridge: characterization and assessment
604(1)
Logs and remote sensing
605(2)
Coring and direct evidence
607(1)
The lessons of Hydrate Ridge
608(1)
Case Study 3: Messoyakha (Hydrate Production in Permafrost)
609(7)
Case Study 4: Mallik 2002 (Hydrate Production in Permafrost)
616(1)
Background of the Mallik 2002 well
617(1)
Overview of the Mallik 2002 well
618(2)
Well logs in Mallik 2002
620(1)
Pressure stimulation tests in the 5L-38 well
620(1)
The Thermal stimulation test in Mallik 5L-38
621(4)
Modeling gas production from hydrates
625(3)
Summary
628(15)
References
629(14)
Hydrates in Production, Processing, and Transportation
643(42)
Introduction
644(1)
How Do Hydrate Plugs Form in Industrial Equipment?
644(12)
Case Study 1: Hydrate Prevention in a Deepwater Gas Pipeline
645(2)
Case Study 2: Hydrates Prevention via Combination of Methods
647(1)
Burying the pipeline
648(1)
Line burial with wellhead heat addition
649(1)
Burial, heat addition, and insulation
649(1)
Methanol addition alternative
650(1)
Case Study 3: Hydrate Formation via Expansion through Valves or Restrictions
651(2)
Conceptual Overview: Hydrate Plug Formation in Oil-Dominated Systems
653(1)
Conceptual Overview: Hydrate Formation in Gas-Dominated Systems
654(2)
How Are Hydrate Plug Formations Prevented?
656(13)
Case Study 4: Thermodynamic Inhibition Canyon Express and Ormen Lange Flowlines
656(2)
Case Study 5: Under-Inhibition by Methanol in a Gas Line
658(1)
Kinetic Hydrate Inhibition
659(3)
Antiagglomerant means of preventing hydrate plugs
662(6)
Case Study 6: AAs are a Major Hydrate Plug Prevention Tool
668(1)
How Is a Hydrate Plug Dissociated?
669(7)
Case Study 7: Gulf of Mexico Plug Removal in Gas Export Line
675(1)
Safety and Hydrate Plug Removal
676(2)
Case Study 8: Hydrate Plug Incident Resulting in Loss of Life
677(1)
Applications to Gas Transport and Storage
678(1)
Summary of Hydrates in Flow Assurance and Transportation
679(6)
References
679(6)
Appendix A CSMGem Example Problems
685(8)
Introduction
685(1)
Example Problems
686(1)
Setting up the Natural Gas Example
686(1)
Incipient Hydrate Formation Conditions
686(2)
Plotting a 2-Phase VLE Curve
688(1)
Adding Hydrate Inhibitor
688(2)
Adding Hydrate Inhibitor Solutions
690(1)
Expansion Across a Valve
690(1)
Expansion Across a Valve Solutions
691(1)
Real Life Situation
691(2)
Appendix B CSMPlug Example Problems
693(10)
Introduction
693(1)
Example Problem for One-Sided Dissociation
693(1)
ISD Solutions
694(1)
Example Problem for Two-Sided Dissociation
695(2)
2SD Solution
697(1)
Example Problem for Safety Simulator
697(1)
Safety Simulator Solutions
698(1)
Example Problem for Electrical Heating
699(1)
Electrical Heating Solutions
699(4)
Index 703


Carolyn A. Koh, E. Dendy Sloan Jr., Carolyn A. Koh