Hi ixchawla!
This subject really interests me. In fact I am doing a process simulation for one of our new gas platform design job at this very moment of time. I just wanna share the idea and knowledge that I had gathered. Feel free for you guys to criticise and comment.
Yes, HYSYS so far so good. The Hydrate Formation Utility simulate to you the incipient of the solid formation point for hydrates. The model for the prediction of the formation are based on the fundamental thermodynamic principles and it also use the stream properties that has been generated by your selected EOS. This model can be applied to various compositions and extreme operating condition with a greater degree of reliability than any one could expect with empirical expressions or charts.
But the most important thing is I hope you know that Hydrate Formation prediction is restricted to only Peng-robinson and Soave-Redlich-Kwong EOS.
As far as I am concerns, the only requirement for hydrate formation is that
some water must be present (be it in HC vapor phase or HC condensed phase) with hydrate forming components. As we all know the simplest definition for hydrates is a clathrate compound which has an ice-like structure that mixes HC gases and free water, in which the HC gas molecules are trapped inside the framewrok of cages of water molecules. Therefore, the hydrate forming components are those molecules that small enough to fit in the cavities formed by the lattice structure of the host molecules which in this case is WATER. These molecules are like low MW paraffinic HC up to n-butane, some olefins and some smaller non-HC molecules such as CO2, N2 and H2S.
If you are using HYSYS ver 3.0 (the latest so far.. might be),the Hydrate Formation Utility has been improved to give user more control over their hydrate calculation model. If your stream do not have any water, the Assume Free Water model is automatically used in the simulation even you have set to other model in the Hydrate formation utility box.
Just check
it might helpful but its only gives you the very basic idea of what hydrate is.
Stay cool!