Mini review on environmental issues concerning conventional gas hydrate inhibitors

In the offshore oil and gas fields, the formation of gas hydrates creates critical issues, and these issues or challenges become more pervasive as productive activities proceed to deep sea waters. Further, a number of chemical additives that are used to prevent gas hydrate formation in pipelines pos...

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Veröffentlicht in:Process safety progress 2022-04, Vol.41 (S1), p.S129-S134
Hauptverfasser: Haq, Ihtisham Ul, Qasim, Ali, Lal, Bhajan, Zaini, Dzulkarnain B.
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container_end_page S134
container_issue S1
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container_title Process safety progress
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creator Haq, Ihtisham Ul
Qasim, Ali
Lal, Bhajan
Zaini, Dzulkarnain B.
description In the offshore oil and gas fields, the formation of gas hydrates creates critical issues, and these issues or challenges become more pervasive as productive activities proceed to deep sea waters. Further, a number of chemical additives that are used to prevent gas hydrate formation in pipelines pose toxicity issues and are harmful to the environment. Commercially available inhibitors such as methanol, glycols, polyvinyl caproclatum (PVCap), and polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP), which are being used for gas hydrate mitigation, have shown toxicity issues such as corrosion and mass loss due to their volatile nature, resulting in their high consumption. Methanol and glycols are identified as thermodynamic hydrate inhibitors (THIs), while PVCap and PVP are classified as low‐dosage hydrate inhibitiors. There has been considerable discussion in the literature on whether to use THIs or low‐dosage gas hydrate inhibitors (LDHIs) but less discussion on their toxicity and harmful effects on the environment. Therefore, in this mini review we intend to throw light on the environmental issues concerning conventional gas hydrate inhibitors used currently.
doi_str_mv 10.1002/prs.12325
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subjects Additives
chemical additives
Deep sea
Dosage
Environmental effects
Gas formation
Gas hydrates
gas hydrates inhibitors
Gas pipelines
Glycols
Hydrates
Inhibitors
low‐dosage gas hydrate inhibitors
Methanol
Offshore engineering
Oil and gas fields
Pipelines
Polyvinylpyrrolidone
thermodynamic gas hydrate inhibitors
Toxicity
title Mini review on environmental issues concerning conventional gas hydrate inhibitors
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