Conventional offshore production tests of methane hydrates in unconsolidated sediments repeatedly fail due to geomechanical collapse, sand production, and unstable two-phase flow behavior during dissociation. This master compendium introduces Hydra-Flux, a conceptual modular architecture that proposes an integrated architecture that treats hydrate production primarily as a controlled geomechanical process: rather than extracting gas while attempting to preserve a fragile matrix, the approach aims to manage the effective-stress path, maintain operational pressure balance, and—where feasible—implement progressive volume replacement to mitigate collapse and subsidence.The architecture is expressed as a staged operational sequence (T0–T4) supported by material and monitoring modules: clay conditioning (cation exchange), controlled dissociation via thermal–saline gradients (optionally CO₂-enhanced), conformance and phase separation (plugs/foams/gels), dense displacement slurries, and long-term sealing via geopolymerization and/or in-situ mineralization. The document explicitly differentiates reservoir archetype variants: chimney/massive systems (gravity-favorable), layered sands (lateral sweep with mandatory sand control and conformance), diffuse ultra-tight clays (requiring an explicit T0x “Connectivity Creation” module prior to dissociation), fractured/anisotropic systems (short-circuit mitigation), and permafrost/arctic envelopes (thermal and infrastructure constraints).All quantitative values are presented as hypothesis-level design envelopes. The document provides a module-by-module validation roadmap and a risk/fallback framing intended to support institutional testing and calibrated multiphysics modeling.
Hydra Flux Research (Wed,) studied this question.