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Erik C. Anders1 and Martin Rothfuss2
Search and Discovery Article #40428 (2009)
Posted June 19, 2009
*Adapted from expanded abstract prepared for AAPG International Conference and Exhibition, Cape Town, South Africa, October 26-29, 2008. Numbers in brackets refer to references below.
1LKM, Technische Universtät Berlin, Berlin, Germany
2Consultant, Clausthal-Zellerfeld, Germany ([email protected] )
During the last few years,
pressure
coring has become an
indispensable part of offshore gas hydrate expeditions, e.g. in the United States, Canada, India, China and South Korea. The tools used have been developed within the
European research project HYACE and HYACINTH; continuous improvements on the
prototypes lead to great successes and make the tools more and more reliable.
The depressurization during conventional coring will change a lot of properties of the core. This holds true for gas hydrates which will decompose rapidly but also for many other properties like equilibrium of gases, fluids and solids, phase boundaries, wettability, integrity of the mechanical structure, etc.
The investigation of the pressurized cores with various measurements like X-ray, gamma ray, and p-wave, revealed numerous details of gas hydrates which have been unknown before and can't be obtained with non-pressurized cores.
Now it is time to make
pressure
coring tools accessible to other
scientists who work in the field of
pressure
related phenomena. Possible
applications include, but are not limited to oil and gas exploration in shales
and other tight formations, conventional oil and gas exploration with
pressure
related phenomena, CO2-sequestration, coalbed methane, and
microbiology of the deep lithosphere.
For the new applications the system will consist of the
pressure
coring tool which is deployed on a wire through the main drill string, a
transfers system which allows retrieval of the core from the autoclave section
of the corer without loss of
pressure
, a sub-sampling system which allows
cutting and transfer of smaller core sub-samples into especially designed
investigation chambers, and storage chambers for long term storage of the
pressurized cores.
uThe HYACE/HYACINTH uMeasurements and Experiments on uPotential Future Developments and Applications of
uThe HYACE/HYACINTH uMeasurements and Experiments on uPotential Future Developments and Applications of
uThe HYACE/HYACINTH uMeasurements and Experiments on uPotential Future Developments and Applications of
uThe HYACE/HYACINTH uMeasurements and Experiments on uPotential Future Developments and Applications of
uThe HYACE/HYACINTH uMeasurements and Experiments on uPotential Future Developments and Applications of
uThe HYACE/HYACINTH uMeasurements and Experiments on uPotential Future Developments and Applications of
uThe HYACE/HYACINTH uMeasurements and Experiments on uPotential Future Developments and Applications of
uThe HYACE/HYACINTH uMeasurements and Experiments on uPotential Future Developments and Applications of
uThe HYACE/HYACINTH uMeasurements and Experiments on uPotential Future Developments and Applications of
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In
the following we present a brief outline of the history of
The recovery of cores from boreholes nowadays is a standard operation in oil & gas exploration, geotechnical survey, and scientific drilling both offshore and on land. The cores provide valuable data for engineers and scientists; however, the main disadvantage of this type of coring is that the cores are no longer in the same condition as deep in the sediment.
A core recovered from the depth is disturbed mechanically as a result of the coring process. The temperature has changed and most important the lithostatic and hydrostatic pressures are released during the retrieval of the core.
As a result mechanical, physical, and chemical properties as well as living conditions for microorganisms of the deep biosphere are significantly altered. The changes include the equilibrium of gases, fluids and solids, phase boundaries, wettability, solubility of gases and solids, and the integrity of the mechanical structure. Scientists try to take this into account when they analyse the cores in their laboratories; however, it is not always possible to deduce the original conditions from the available data.
The shortcomings of the usual coring technologies especially apply to two fields of research which have come into the focus of the scientific community worldwide: gas hydrates and the deep biosphere.
Gas
hydrates (mainly methane hydrates) have been found in the seabed of the
continental margins all around the world. They contain vast amounts of
hydrocarbons which make them a possible energy resource. They are stable only
under relatively high
The
deep biosphere accounts for perhaps 10% of the total global biomass and in
layers of several hundred meters of sediment may contain more than 50% of the
global bacterial biomass. Thus they may play an important role in the global
cycling of elements. Obligate barophilic bacteria need high
For
this reason
The
HYACE/HYACINTH
The most successful tools today are the suite of tools developed within the EU funded projects HYACE (Hydrate Autoclave Coring Equipment) [2] and HYACINTH (Deployment of HYACE tools In New Tests on Hydrates) between 1997 and 2005. These projects were mainly a collaboration between the Technical Universities of Berlin and Clausthal, the Cardiff University, and the industrial partners Fugro and Geotek Ltd.
The suite of research technologies developed by Technical University Berlin (TUB) and European partners in the EU Projects, as well as continuous improvements of these prototypes were considerably successful and made the tools more and more reliable.
Other
down-hole autoclave coring tools for deep drilling worth mentioning are ODP’s
The
HYACINTH system is the only system with the ability to transfer a core out of
the coring tools autoclave into other
After
the end of the EU project in 2005 the rotary corer and transfer system was
handed over to Fugro BV and Geotek Ltd. Several improvements have been made
as a result of the lessons learned on various projects. The present set of
tools are the coring tools FPC, an improved FRPC (Fugro Rotary
For the time being, the HYACINTH operation sequence requires the following tools and procedures to bring the in situ deep seabed conditions to the controlled situation of the lab where measurements and experiments can be carried out:
Two
types of wireline
Fugro
HYACE Rotary Corer (HRC) [2]: The HYACE rotary corer was developed by the Technical University Berlin and the Technical University Clausthal. The HRC uses an inverse Moineau motor driven by the circulating fluid pumped down the drill pipe to rotate the cutting shoe. Although originally designed for hard lithified material, the tool can now be used with a new designed helical bit (the "Viking") in soft and sticky material as well.
HYACINTH core transfer
In
order to remove the core from the
The
STC, now containing the core at full in situ
PRESS (Pressurized Core Sub-Sampling and Extrusion System) [3, 4, 5] PRESS,
the sub-sampling system developed by TU Berlin, is able to cut contamination
controlled well defined pressurized subsections of adjustable length from
drilled HYACINTH
Storage Chambers
The
HYACINTH storage chamber is a cylindrical
Measurements
and Experiments on
All
HYACINTH
An
impressive example of the distribution of gas hydrate in a
Some X-ray computed tomographic (CT) scans have been made of selected cores which have been brought ashore by means of the HYACINTH storage chambers. The cores were analyzed using equipment in hospitals. An example of cross-sections of X-ray CT data is given in figure 2 [6].
Examples
of the gamma density and P-wave velocity profiles of
The
DeepIsoBUG developed at the Cardiff University uses the sub-samples from the
PRESS system as sterile, anoxic, high
A
device capable of making physical measurements on a natural core held under
in situ
Potential
Future Developments and Applications of
The
entire system will consist of a rotary
The new features of the tools to be developed include:
·
There
is a growing demand for · Not only in gas hydrate research but also in other fields, such as paleoceanography and microbiology scientists aim at depths deeper than 2500 m below sea level resulting in operating pressures beyond 250 bars. ·
Moreover,
a · However, autoclaves suitable to resist pressures like this require new design principles in terms of geometry and material.
Core Length:
Versatility:
Instrumentation - Measurement – Monitoring:
Easier handling, faster redressing after deployment, increased safety, reliability:
Contamination:
The
proposed construction concept aims for a routine industrial
Future
applications include, but are not limited to:
This
article is a "call for collaboration" to all those currently
working in the fields of research mentioned above or other fields where it
might be useful to investigate cores under in situ
[1]
Schultheiss, P.J., T.J.G. Francis, M. M. Holland, J.A. Roberts, H. Amann,
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[3] Müller, W.H., E. Anders, and H. Amann, 2006, In-situ Sampling, Transfer and Investigation Methods in Scientific Drilling: Technology Progress Report from IODP Leg 311, Cascadia and Beyond; Poster presentation, IODP-ICDP Kolloquium, Greifswald, March 27-29, 2006; Abstract, p. 94-95.
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R.J., D. Martin, W.H. Müller, E. Anders, H. Amann, X. Wang, and K. Dotchev,
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Parkes,
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and K. Dotchev, 2008, Technology for High-
[6] Holland, M.E., P.J. Schultheiss, J.A. Roberts, and M. Druce, 2008, Observed Gas Hydrate Morphologies in Marine Sediments: in Proceedings of the 6th International Conference on Gas Hydrates (ICGH 2008), Vancouver, British Columbia, CANADA, July 6-10, 2008.
[7]
Schultheiss, P.J., M.E. Holland, and G.D. Humphrey, 2008, Borehole
[8]
Schultheiss, P.J., M.E. Holland, J.A. Roberts, M. Druce, and G.D. Humphrey, 2008,
[9] Yun, T., G. Narsilio, J.
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