M Fahed Aziz Qureshi

Email Address
chemfaq@nus.edu.sg


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COLLEGE OF DESIGN & ENG
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ENGINEERING
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Publication Search Results

Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
  • Publication
    Experimentally measured methane hydrate phase equilibria and ionic liquids inhibition performance in Qatar’s seawater
    (Nature Research, 2020) Qureshi, M.F.; Khraisheh, M.; AlMomani, F.; CHEMICAL & BIOMOLECULAR ENGINEERING
    Qatar has the third-largest natural gas reserves in the world and is the second largest Liquefied natural gas (LNG) exporter in the world. These reserves are mainly located in its offshore North Field where the gas is extracted, transported to the onshore units, and is converted to LNG for international export. The formation of natural gas hydrates in the offshore subsea lines can cause unwanted blockages and hinder the smooth supply of gas supply from offshore to onshore units. In the present work, the formation and dissociation of methane gas hydrates have been studied in the ultra pure water system (UPW), artificial seawater (ASW), and Qatar seawater (QSW) at different conditions (4–10 MPa) using standard rocking cell rig. The naturally occurring seawater was collected from Ras Laffan seacoast located in Doha, Qatar. The seawater sample was examined for elemental analysis (SO4, Cl, Na, Ca, Mg, K, and Fe) using inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectroscopy (ICP-AES) technique and its other properties like density, electrical conductivity, and pH were also measured. The experimental results show that the CH4 pure water HLVE curve is suppressed by about 3 K in Qatar seawater and 2 K in artificial seawater. The hydrate inhibition strength of the Ionic liquids (ILs) salts 3-Ethyl-1-methyl-1H-imidazol-3-ium methane-sulfonate [C7H14N2O3S] and 3-Ethyl-1-methyl-1H-imidazol-3-ium dicyanoazanide [C8H11N5] was evaluated in both the ultra pure water and Qatar seawater systems. Their performance was compared with methanol and other ILs salts reported in the literature. The selected ILs exhibited poor hydrate inhibition effect in the ultra pure water systems, but they show a noticeable thermodynamic and kinetic hydrate inhibition effect in the Qatar seawater system. The computational 3D molecular models of ILs and methanol were generated to cognize the plausible hydrate inhibition mechanism in the presence of these inhibitors. © 2020, The Author(s).
  • Publication
    Effect of drill pipe orbital motion on non-Newtonian fluid flow in an eccentric wellbore: a study with computational fluid dynamics
    (Springer Science and Business Media Deutschland GmbH, 2021-12-04) Ferroudji, Hicham; Hadjadj, Ahmed; Ofei, Titus Ntow; Gajbhiye, Rahul Narayanrao; Rahman, Mohammad Azizur; Qureshi, M. Fahed; CHEMICAL & BIOMOLECULAR ENGINEERING
    To ensure an effective drilling operation of an explored well, the associated hydraulics program should be established carefully based on the correct prediction of a drilling fluid’s pressure drop and velocity field. For that, the impact of the drill string orbital motion should be considered by drilling engineers since it has an important influence on the flow of drilling fluid and cuttings transport process. In the present investigation, the finite volume method coupled with the sliding mesh approach is used to analyze the influence of the inner cylinder orbital motion on the flow of a power-law fluid (Ostwald-de Waele) in an annular geometry. The findings indicate that the orbital motion positively affects the homogeneity of the power-law axial velocity through the entire eccentric annulus; however, this impact diminishes as the diameter ratio increases. In addition, higher torque is induced when the orbital motion occurs, especially for high values of eccentricity and diameter ratio; nonetheless, a slight decrease in torque is recorded when the fluid velocity increases. © 2021, The Author(s).