Apparent
Viscosity Measurements in the Quantification
of Gas Hydrate Slurry Transportability with Anti-Agglomerants in Multiphase
Systems with and without Wax
posted on 2024-08-26, 16:04authored byGustavo
A. Barrientos Sandoval, Conrado Chiarello, Amadeu K. Sum, Khalid Mateen, Annie Fidel-Dufour, Thierry Palermo
Gas hydrate management with the application
of antiagglomerants
to produce a transportable hydrate slurry is a strategy that requires
well-defined knowledge of the fluid and suspension properties to ensure
low/no risk for disruptions to the production of hydrocarbon fluids.
One of the key properties in transportability is the apparent and
relative viscosity of the hydrate slurry, which can be used to assess
the flowability in flowlines. Here, experimental measurements of the
apparent viscosity of well-defined hydrate slurries (homogeneous finely
dispersed suspension of solids) were obtained from two independent
testing setups (rheometer and rock-flow cell) covering a range of
water cuts (10–60%) for systems without and with wax (2 and
5 wt %). Hydrates were formed from a gas mixture, mineral oil, water,
and a commercial anti-agglomerant chemical. Apparent viscosities were
measured before and after hydrate formation, yielding relative viscosities
that exponentially increase with the solid content and precipitated
wax having a significant impact on the slurry apparent viscosity.
The measured relative viscosity data are consistent with well-known
suspension models by using the water fraction (and wax) as the effective
solid fraction, as opposed to the water conversion to hydrate or hydrate
fraction, for systems using anti-agglomerants yielding homogeneous
suspension of solids.