Physical Parameters Controlling Gas Hydrate Stability
and
Distribution on the North
Slope
, Alaska
Timothy S. Collett
The natural gas hydrate stability
field and its controlling factors on the
North
Slope
have been evaluated as part of the U.S. Geological Survey-U.S.
Department of Energy worldwide gas hydrate assessment program. Gas hydrates
exist under relatively limited conditions of pressure and temperature, the
hydrate
stability
field, which must be evaluated along with other factors prior
to volumetric assessment. Our North
Slope
studies suggest that the gas hydrate
stability
field is controlled primarily by subsurface temperatures and gas
chemistry. Other factors, such as pore-pressure variations, pore-fluid salinity,
and reservoir-rock grain size, appear to have little effect on the gas hydrate
stability
field.
Data necessary to determine the distribution of the gas hydrate stability
field are difficult to obtain. Subsurface-temperature data come from 46
high-resolution equilibrated well-bore surveys and from estimates based on
identification of the base of ice-bearing permafrost in 98 other wells.
Geothermal gradients in ice-bearing permafrost range from 1.55°C/100 m in the
East Bay State-1 well to 4.46°C/100 m in Fish Creek-1. Methane is the dominant
species of gas in the near-surface (0-1500 m) sediment, on the basis of mud log
gas-chromatograph data. However, because nitrogen was detected in several
analyses of recovered gas hydrate and drill cuttings, several different gas
mixtures other than pure methane were assumed in the
stability
calculations.
Formation water samples and ell log calculations indicate low pore-fluid
salinities, ranging from 0.5 to 18.1 ppt. The maximum recorded salinity would
suppress methane hydrate
stability
temperatures by approximately 1.0°C. Pressure
data, obtained from drill-stem testing and well log calculations, indicate a
hydrostatic pore-pressure gradient (9.795 kPa/m or 0.433 psi/ft) within the
near-surface sediments, thus having no abnormal effect on gas hydrate
stability
.
The effect of sediment grain size on gas hydrate
stability
is very difficult to
evaluate. In the near-surface coarse sand and gravel of the Prudhoe Bay area,
grain size has little or no effect. However, in the more clay-rich sedimentary
rocks near Harrison Bay, gas hydrate
stability
conditions are depressed by
several degrees Celsius.
Our analysis indicates that the methane hydrate stability
field is areally
extensive beneath the coastal plain province; thicknesses greater than 1,000 m
have been calculated in the Prudhoe Bay area. Limiting thermal conditions,
however, preclude the occurrence of gas hydrates in the north-central part of
the National Petroleum Reserve in Alaska and in the foothills east of Umiat.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #91038©1987 AAPG Annual Convention, Los Angeles, California, June 7-10, 1987.