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Clathrate hydrate

Clathrate hydrates, or gas hydrates, clathrates, or hydrates, are crystalline water-based solids physically resembling ice, in which small non-polar molecules (typically gases) or polar molecules with large hydrophobic moieties are trapped inside "cages" of hydrogen bonded, frozen water molecules.[1][2] In other words, clathrate hydrates are clathrate compounds in which the host molecule is water and the guest molecule is typically a gas or liquid. Without the support of the trapped molecules, the lattice structure of hydrate clathrates would collapse into conventional ice crystal structure or liquid water. Most low molecular weight gases, including O2, H2, N2, CO2, CH4, H2S, Ar, Kr, and Xe, as well as some higher hydrocarbons and freons, will form hydrates at suitable temperatures and pressures. Clathrate hydrates are not officially chemical compounds, as the enclathrated guest molecules are never bonded to the lattice. The formation and decomposition of clathrate hydrates are first order phase transitions, not chemical reactions. Their detailed formation and decomposition mechanisms on a molecular level are still not well understood.[3][4][5] Clathrate hydrates were first documented in 1810 by Sir Humphry Davy who found that water was a primary component of what was earlier thought to be solidified chlorine.[6][7]

Methane clathrate block embedded in the sediment of hydrate ridge, off Oregon, USA

Clathrates have been found to occur naturally in large quantities. Around 6.4 trillion (6.4×1012) tonnes of methane is trapped in deposits of methane clathrate on the deep ocean floor.[8] Such deposits can be found on the Norwegian continental shelf in the northern headwall flank of the Storegga Slide. Clathrates can also exist as permafrost, as at the Mallik gas hydrate site in the Mackenzie Delta of northwestern Canadian Arctic. These natural gas hydrates are seen as a potentially vast energy resource and several countries have dedicated national programs to develop this energy resource.[9] Clathrate hydrate has also been of great interest as technology enabler for many applications like seawater desalination,[10] gas storage,[11] carbon dioxide capture & storage,[12] cooling medium for data centre[13] and district cooling etc. Hydrocarbon clathrates cause problems for the petroleum industry, because they can form inside gas pipelines, often resulting in obstructions. Deep sea deposition of carbon dioxide clathrate has been proposed as a method to remove this greenhouse gas from the atmosphere and control climate change. Clathrates are suspected to occur in large quantities on some outer planets, moons and trans-Neptunian objects, binding gas at fairly high temperatures.[14]

Structure edit

 
Cages building the different gas hydrate structures

Gas hydrates usually form two crystallographic cubic structures: structure (Type) I (named sI) and structure (Type) II (named sII)[15] of space groups   and   respectively. A third hexagonal structure of space group   may also be observed (Type H).[16]

The unit cell of Type I consists of 46 water molecules, forming two types of cages – small and large. The unit cell contains two small cages and six large ones. The small cage has the shape of a pentagonal dodecahedron (512) (which is not a regular dodecahedron) and the large one that of a tetradecahedron, specifically a hexagonal truncated trapezohedron (51262). Together, they form a version of the Weaire–Phelan structure. Typical guests forming Type I hydrates are CO2 in carbon dioxide clathrate and CH4 in methane clathrate.

The unit cell of Type II consists of 136 water molecules, again forming two types of cages – small and large. In this case there are sixteen small cages and eight large ones in the unit cell. The small cage again has the shape of a pentagonal dodecahedron (512), but the large one is a hexadecahedron (51264). Type II hydrates are formed by gases like O2 and N2.

The unit cell of Type H consists of 34 water molecules, forming three types of cages – two small ones of different types, and one "huge". In this case, the unit cell consists of three small cages of type 512, two small ones of type 435663 and one huge of type 51268. The formation of Type H requires the cooperation of two guest gases (large and small) to be stable. It is the large cavity that allows structure H hydrates to fit in large molecules (e.g. butane, hydrocarbons), given the presence of other smaller help gases to fill and support the remaining cavities. Structure H hydrates were suggested to exist in the Gulf of Mexico. Thermogenically produced supplies of heavy hydrocarbons are common there.

Hydrates in the universe edit

Iro et al.,[17] trying to interpret the nitrogen deficiency in comets, stated most of the conditions for hydrate formation in the protoplanetary nebulae, surrounding the pre-main and main sequence stars were fulfilled, despite the rapid grain growth to metre-scale. The key was to provide enough microscopic ice particles exposed to a gaseous environment. Observations of the radiometric continuum of circumstellar discs around  -Tauri and Herbig Ae/Be stars suggest massive dust disks consisting of millimetre-sized grains, which disappear after several million years (e.g.,[18][19]). A lot of work on detecting water ices in the Universe was done on the Infrared Space Observatory (ISO). For instance, broad emission bands of water ice at 43 and 60 μm were found in the disk of the isolated Herbig Ae/Be star HD 100546 in Musca. The one at 43 μm is much weaker than the one at 60 μm, which means the water ice, is located in the outer parts of the disk at temperatures below 50 K.[20] There is also another broad ice feature between 87 and 90 μm, which is very similar to the one in NGC 6302[21] (the Bug or Butterfly nebula in Scorpius). Crystalline ices were also detected in the proto-planetary disks of ε-Eridani and the isolated Fe star HD 142527[22][23] in Lupus. 90% of the ice in the latter was found crystalline at temperature around 50 K. HST demonstrated that relatively old circumstellar disks, as the one around the 5-million-year-old B9.5Ve[24] Herbig Ae/Be star HD 141569A, are dusty.[25] Li & Lunine[26] found water ice there. Knowing the ices usually exist at the outer parts of the proto-planetary nebulae, Hersant et al.[27] proposed an interpretation of the volatile enrichment, observed in the four giant planets of the Solar System, with respect to the Solar abundances. They assumed the volatiles had been trapped in the form of hydrates and incorporated in the planetesimals flying in the protoplanets' feeding zones.

Kieffer et al. (2006) hypothesized that the geyser activity in the south polar region of Saturn's moon Enceladus originates from clathrate hydrates, where carbon dioxide, methane, and nitrogen are released when exposed to the vacuum of space through the "Tiger Stripe" fractures found in that area.[28] However, subsequent analysis of plume material makes it more likely that the geysers on Enceladus derive from a salty subsurface ocean.[29]

Carbon dioxide clathrate is believed to play a major role in different processes on Mars. Hydrogen clathrate is likely to form in condensation nebulae for gas giants.

Kamata et al.[30] (2019) of the University of Hokkaido have proposed that a thin layer of clathrate hydrates thermally insulates the subsurface ocean of liquid water of Pluto, the existence of which is suggested by data from the New Horizons probe.

Hydrates on Earth edit

Natural gas hydrates edit

Naturally on Earth gas hydrates can be found on the seabed, in ocean sediments,[31] in deep lake sediments (e.g. Lake Baikal), as well as in the permafrost regions. The amount of methane potentially trapped in natural methane hydrate deposits may be significant (1015 to 1017 cubic metres),[32] which makes them of major interest as a potential energy resource. Catastrophic release of methane from the decomposition of such deposits may lead to a global climate change, referred to as the "clathrate gun hypothesis", because CH4 is a more potent greenhouse gas than CO2 (see Atmospheric methane). The fast decomposition of such deposits is considered a geohazard, due to its potential to trigger landslides, earthquakes and tsunamis. However, natural gas hydrates do not contain only methane but also other hydrocarbon gases, as well as H2S and CO2. Air hydrates are frequently observed in polar ice samples.

Pingos are common structures in permafrost regions.[33] Similar structures are found in deep water related to methane vents. Significantly, gas hydrates can even be formed in the absence of a liquid phase. Under that situation, water is dissolved in gas or in liquid hydrocarbon phase.[34]

In 2017, both Japan and China announced that attempts at large-scale resource extraction of methane hydrates from under the seafloor were successful. However, commercial-scale production remains years away.[35][36]

The 2020 Research Fronts report identified gas hydrate accumulation and mining technology as one of the top 10 research fronts in the geosciences.[37]

Gas hydrates in pipelines edit

Thermodynamic conditions favouring hydrate formation are often found in pipelines. This is highly undesirable, because the clathrate crystals might agglomerate and plug the line[38] and cause flow assurance failure and damage valves and instrumentation. The results can range from flow reduction to equipment damage.

Hydrate formation, prevention and mitigation philosophy edit

Hydrates have a strong tendency to agglomerate and to adhere to the pipe wall and thereby plug the pipeline. Once formed, they can be decomposed by increasing the temperature and/or decreasing the pressure. Even under these conditions, the clathrate dissociation is a slow process.

Therefore, preventing hydrate formation appears to be the key to the problem. A hydrate prevention philosophy could typically be based on three levels of security, listed in order of priority:

  1. Avoid operational conditions that might cause formation of hydrates by depressing the hydrate formation temperature using glycol dehydration;
  2. Temporarily change operating conditions in order to avoid hydrate formation;
  3. Prevent formation of hydrates by addition of chemicals that (a) shift the hydrate equilibrium conditions towards lower temperatures and higher pressures or (b) increase hydrate formation time (inhibitors)

The actual philosophy would depend on operational circumstances such as pressure, temperature, type of flow (gas, liquid, presences of water etc.).

Hydrate inhibitors edit

When operating within a set of parameters where hydrates could be formed, there are still ways to avoid their formation. Altering the gas composition by adding chemicals can lower the hydrate formation temperature and/or delay their formation. Two options generally exist:

The most common thermodynamic inhibitors are methanol, monoethylene glycol (MEG), and diethylene glycol (DEG), commonly referred to as glycol. All may be recovered and recirculated, but the economics of methanol recovery is not favourable in most cases. MEG is preferred over DEG for applications where the temperature is expected to be −10 °C or lower due to high viscosity at low temperatures. Triethylene glycol (TEG) has too low vapour pressure to be suited as an inhibitor injected into a gas stream. More methanol is lost in the gas phase when compared to MEG or DEG.

The use of kinetic inhibitors and anti-agglomerants in actual field operations is a new and evolving technology. It requires extensive tests and optimisation to the actual system. While kinetic inhibitors work by slowing down the kinetics of the nucleation, anti-agglomerants do not stop the nucleation, but stop the agglomeration (sticking together) of gas hydrate crystals. These two kinds of inhibitors are also known as low dosage hydrate inhibitors, because they require much smaller concentrations than the conventional thermodynamic inhibitors. Kinetic inhibitors, which do not require water and hydrocarbon mixture to be effective, are usually polymers or copolymers and anti-agglomerants (requires water and hydrocarbon mixture) are polymers or zwitterionic – usually ammonium and COOH – surfactants being both attracted to hydrates and hydrocarbons.

Empty clathrate hydrates edit

Empty clathrate hydrates[39] are thermodynamically unstable (guest molecules are of paramount importance to stabilize these structures) with respect to ice, and as such their study using experimental techniques is greatly limited to very specific formation conditions; however, their mechanical stability renders theoretical and computer simulation methods the ideal choice to address their thermodynamic properties. Starting from very cold samples (110–145 K), Falenty et al.[40] degassed Ne–sII clathrates for several hours using vacuum pumping to obtain a so-called ice XVI, while employing neutron diffraction to observe that (i) the empty sII hydrate structure decomposes at T ≥ 145 K and, furthermore, (ii) the empty hydrate shows a negative thermal expansion at T < 55 K, and it is mechanically more stable and has a larger lattice constant at low temperatures than the Ne-filled analogue. The existence of such a porous ice had been theoretically predicted before.[41] From a theoretical perspective, empty hydrates can be probed using Molecular Dynamics or Monte Carlo techniques. Conde et al. used empty hydrates and a fully atomic description of the solid lattice to estimate the phase diagram of H2O at negative pressures and T ≤ 300 K,[42] and obtain the differences in chemical potentials between ice Ih and the empty hydrates, central to the van der Waals−Platteeuw theory. Jacobson et al. performed[43] simulations using a monoatomic (coarse-grained) model developed for H2O that is capable of capturing the tetrahedral symmetry of hydrates. Their calculations revealed that, under 1 atm pressure, sI and sII empty hydrates are metastable regarding the ice phases up to their melting temperatures, T = 245 ± 2 K and T = 252 ± 2 K, respectively. Matsui et al. employed[44] molecular dynamics to perform a thorough and systematic study of several ice polymorphs, namely space fullerene ices, zeolitic ices, and aeroices, and interpreted their relative stability in terms of geometrical considerations.

The thermodynamics of metastable empty sI clathrate hydrates have been probed over broad temperature and pressure ranges, 100 K ≤ T ≤ 220 K and 100 kPa ≤ p ≤ 500 MPa, by Cruz et al.[45] using large-scale simulations and compared with experimental data at 100 kPa. The whole pVT surface obtained was fitted by the universal form of the Parsafar and Mason equation of state with an accuracy of 99.7–99.9%. Framework deformation caused by applied temperature followed a parabolic law, and there is a critical temperature above which the isobaric thermal expansion becomes negative, ranging from 194.7 K at 100 kPa to 166.2 K at 500 MPa. Response to the applied (pT) field was analyzed in terms of angle and distance descriptors of a classical tetrahedral structure and observed to occur essentially by means of angular alteration for (pT) > (200 MPa, 200 K). The length of the hydrogen bonds responsible for framework integrity was insensitive to the thermodynamic conditions and its average value is r(̅O H) = 0.25 nm.

CO2 hydrate edit

Clathrate hydrate, which encaged CO2 as guest molecule is termed as CO2 hydrate. The term CO2 hydrates are more commonly used these days with its relevance in anthropogenic CO2 capture and sequestration. A nonstoichiometric compound, carbon dioxide hydrate, is composed of hydrogen-bonded water molecules arranged in ice-like frameworks that are occupied by molecules with appropriate sizes and regions. In structure I, the CO2 hydrate crystallizes as one of two cubic hydrates composed of 46 H2O molecules (or D2O) and eight CO2 molecules occupying both large cavities (tetrakaidecahedral) and small cavities (pentagonal dodecahedral).[46] Researchers believed that oceans and permafrost have immense potential to capture anthropogenic CO2 in the form CO2 hydrates. The utilization of additives to shift the CO2 hydrate equilibrium curve in phase diagram towards higher temperature and lower pressures is still under scrutiny to make extensive large-scale storage of CO2 viable in shallower subsea depths.[47]

See also edit

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Further reading edit

  • Gao, Shuqiang; House, Waylon; Chapman, Walter (2005). "NMR/MRI Study of Clathrate Hydrate Mechanisms". J. Phys. Chem. B. 109 (41): 19090–19093. doi:10.1021/jp052071w. PMID 16853461. S2CID 18762205.
  • Sultan, N; Cochonat, P; Foucher, J.-P; Mienert, J (2004). "Effect of gas hydrates melting on seafloor slope instability" (PDF). Marine Geology. 213 (1–4): 379–401. Bibcode:2004MGeol.213..379S. doi:10.1016/j.margeo.2004.10.015.

External links edit

  • , from , Kiel (IFM-GEOMAR)
  • , from , Kiel (IFM-GEOMAR)
  • Gas hydrates in video 2016-03-21 at the Wayback Machine and (by manufacturer of hydrate autoclaves)

clathrate, hydrate, hydrates, clathrates, hydrates, crystalline, water, based, solids, physically, resembling, which, small, polar, molecules, typically, gases, polar, molecules, with, large, hydrophobic, moieties, trapped, inside, cages, hydrogen, bonded, fro. Clathrate hydrates or gas hydrates clathrates or hydrates are crystalline water based solids physically resembling ice in which small non polar molecules typically gases or polar molecules with large hydrophobic moieties are trapped inside cages of hydrogen bonded frozen water molecules 1 2 In other words clathrate hydrates are clathrate compounds in which the host molecule is water and the guest molecule is typically a gas or liquid Without the support of the trapped molecules the lattice structure of hydrate clathrates would collapse into conventional ice crystal structure or liquid water Most low molecular weight gases including O2 H2 N2 CO2 CH4 H2S Ar Kr and Xe as well as some higher hydrocarbons and freons will form hydrates at suitable temperatures and pressures Clathrate hydrates are not officially chemical compounds as the enclathrated guest molecules are never bonded to the lattice The formation and decomposition of clathrate hydrates are first order phase transitions not chemical reactions Their detailed formation and decomposition mechanisms on a molecular level are still not well understood 3 4 5 Clathrate hydrates were first documented in 1810 by Sir Humphry Davy who found that water was a primary component of what was earlier thought to be solidified chlorine 6 7 Methane clathrate block embedded in the sediment of hydrate ridge off Oregon USA Clathrates have been found to occur naturally in large quantities Around 6 4 trillion 6 4 1012 tonnes of methane is trapped in deposits of methane clathrate on the deep ocean floor 8 Such deposits can be found on the Norwegian continental shelf in the northern headwall flank of the Storegga Slide Clathrates can also exist as permafrost as at the Mallik gas hydrate site in the Mackenzie Delta of northwestern Canadian Arctic These natural gas hydrates are seen as a potentially vast energy resource and several countries have dedicated national programs to develop this energy resource 9 Clathrate hydrate has also been of great interest as technology enabler for many applications like seawater desalination 10 gas storage 11 carbon dioxide capture amp storage 12 cooling medium for data centre 13 and district cooling etc Hydrocarbon clathrates cause problems for the petroleum industry because they can form inside gas pipelines often resulting in obstructions Deep sea deposition of carbon dioxide clathrate has been proposed as a method to remove this greenhouse gas from the atmosphere and control climate change Clathrates are suspected to occur in large quantities on some outer planets moons and trans Neptunian objects binding gas at fairly high temperatures 14 Contents 1 Structure 2 Hydrates in the universe 3 Hydrates on Earth 3 1 Natural gas hydrates 3 2 Gas hydrates in pipelines 3 2 1 Hydrate formation prevention and mitigation philosophy 3 2 2 Hydrate inhibitors 4 Empty clathrate hydrates 5 CO2 hydrate 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksStructure edit nbsp Cages building the different gas hydrate structures Gas hydrates usually form two crystallographic cubic structures structure Type I named sI and structure Type II named sII 15 of space groups P m 3 n displaystyle Pm overline 3 n nbsp and F d 3 m displaystyle Fd overline 3 m nbsp respectively A third hexagonal structure of space group P 6 m m m displaystyle P6 mmm nbsp may also be observed Type H 16 The unit cell of Type I consists of 46 water molecules forming two types of cages small and large The unit cell contains two small cages and six large ones The small cage has the shape of a pentagonal dodecahedron 512 which is not a regular dodecahedron and the large one that of a tetradecahedron specifically a hexagonal truncated trapezohedron 51262 Together they form a version of the Weaire Phelan structure Typical guests forming Type I hydrates are CO2 in carbon dioxide clathrate and CH4 in methane clathrate The unit cell of Type II consists of 136 water molecules again forming two types of cages small and large In this case there are sixteen small cages and eight large ones in the unit cell The small cage again has the shape of a pentagonal dodecahedron 512 but the large one is a hexadecahedron 51264 Type II hydrates are formed by gases like O2 and N2 The unit cell of Type H consists of 34 water molecules forming three types of cages two small ones of different types and one huge In this case the unit cell consists of three small cages of type 512 two small ones of type 435663 and one huge of type 51268 The formation of Type H requires the cooperation of two guest gases large and small to be stable It is the large cavity that allows structure H hydrates to fit in large molecules e g butane hydrocarbons given the presence of other smaller help gases to fill and support the remaining cavities Structure H hydrates were suggested to exist in the Gulf of Mexico Thermogenically produced supplies of heavy hydrocarbons are common there Hydrates in the universe editIro et al 17 trying to interpret the nitrogen deficiency in comets stated most of the conditions for hydrate formation in the protoplanetary nebulae surrounding the pre main and main sequence stars were fulfilled despite the rapid grain growth to metre scale The key was to provide enough microscopic ice particles exposed to a gaseous environment Observations of the radiometric continuum of circumstellar discs around t displaystyle tau nbsp Tauri and Herbig Ae Be stars suggest massive dust disks consisting of millimetre sized grains which disappear after several million years e g 18 19 A lot of work on detecting water ices in the Universe was done on the Infrared Space Observatory ISO For instance broad emission bands of water ice at 43 and 60 mm were found in the disk of the isolated Herbig Ae Be star HD 100546 in Musca The one at 43 mm is much weaker than the one at 60 mm which means the water ice is located in the outer parts of the disk at temperatures below 50 K 20 There is also another broad ice feature between 87 and 90 mm which is very similar to the one in NGC 6302 21 the Bug or Butterfly nebula in Scorpius Crystalline ices were also detected in the proto planetary disks of e Eridani and the isolated Fe star HD 142527 22 23 in Lupus 90 of the ice in the latter was found crystalline at temperature around 50 K HST demonstrated that relatively old circumstellar disks as the one around the 5 million year old B9 5Ve 24 Herbig Ae Be star HD 141569A are dusty 25 Li amp Lunine 26 found water ice there Knowing the ices usually exist at the outer parts of the proto planetary nebulae Hersant et al 27 proposed an interpretation of the volatile enrichment observed in the four giant planets of the Solar System with respect to the Solar abundances They assumed the volatiles had been trapped in the form of hydrates and incorporated in the planetesimals flying in the protoplanets feeding zones Kieffer et al 2006 hypothesized that the geyser activity in the south polar region of Saturn s moon Enceladus originates from clathrate hydrates where carbon dioxide methane and nitrogen are released when exposed to the vacuum of space through the Tiger Stripe fractures found in that area 28 However subsequent analysis of plume material makes it more likely that the geysers on Enceladus derive from a salty subsurface ocean 29 Carbon dioxide clathrate is believed to play a major role in different processes on Mars Hydrogen clathrate is likely to form in condensation nebulae for gas giants Kamata et al 30 2019 of the University of Hokkaido have proposed that a thin layer of clathrate hydrates thermally insulates the subsurface ocean of liquid water of Pluto the existence of which is suggested by data from the New Horizons probe Hydrates on Earth editNatural gas hydrates edit Main article Methane clathrate Naturally on Earth gas hydrates can be found on the seabed in ocean sediments 31 in deep lake sediments e g Lake Baikal as well as in the permafrost regions The amount of methane potentially trapped in natural methane hydrate deposits may be significant 1015 to 1017 cubic metres 32 which makes them of major interest as a potential energy resource Catastrophic release of methane from the decomposition of such deposits may lead to a global climate change referred to as the clathrate gun hypothesis because CH4 is a more potent greenhouse gas than CO2 see Atmospheric methane The fast decomposition of such deposits is considered a geohazard due to its potential to trigger landslides earthquakes and tsunamis However natural gas hydrates do not contain only methane but also other hydrocarbon gases as well as H2S and CO2 Air hydrates are frequently observed in polar ice samples Pingos are common structures in permafrost regions 33 Similar structures are found in deep water related to methane vents Significantly gas hydrates can even be formed in the absence of a liquid phase Under that situation water is dissolved in gas or in liquid hydrocarbon phase 34 In 2017 both Japan and China announced that attempts at large scale resource extraction of methane hydrates from under the seafloor were successful However commercial scale production remains years away 35 36 The 2020 Research Fronts report identified gas hydrate accumulation and mining technology as one of the top 10 research fronts in the geosciences 37 Gas hydrates in pipelines edit Thermodynamic conditions favouring hydrate formation are often found in pipelines This is highly undesirable because the clathrate crystals might agglomerate and plug the line 38 and cause flow assurance failure and damage valves and instrumentation The results can range from flow reduction to equipment damage Hydrate formation prevention and mitigation philosophy edit Hydrates have a strong tendency to agglomerate and to adhere to the pipe wall and thereby plug the pipeline Once formed they can be decomposed by increasing the temperature and or decreasing the pressure Even under these conditions the clathrate dissociation is a slow process Therefore preventing hydrate formation appears to be the key to the problem A hydrate prevention philosophy could typically be based on three levels of security listed in order of priority Avoid operational conditions that might cause formation of hydrates by depressing the hydrate formation temperature using glycol dehydration Temporarily change operating conditions in order to avoid hydrate formation Prevent formation of hydrates by addition of chemicals that a shift the hydrate equilibrium conditions towards lower temperatures and higher pressures or b increase hydrate formation time inhibitors The actual philosophy would depend on operational circumstances such as pressure temperature type of flow gas liquid presences of water etc Hydrate inhibitors edit When operating within a set of parameters where hydrates could be formed there are still ways to avoid their formation Altering the gas composition by adding chemicals can lower the hydrate formation temperature and or delay their formation Two options generally exist Thermodynamic inhibitors Kinetic inhibitors and anti agglomerants The most common thermodynamic inhibitors are methanol monoethylene glycol MEG and diethylene glycol DEG commonly referred to as glycol All may be recovered and recirculated but the economics of methanol recovery is not favourable in most cases MEG is preferred over DEG for applications where the temperature is expected to be 10 C or lower due to high viscosity at low temperatures Triethylene glycol TEG has too low vapour pressure to be suited as an inhibitor injected into a gas stream More methanol is lost in the gas phase when compared to MEG or DEG The use of kinetic inhibitors and anti agglomerants in actual field operations is a new and evolving technology It requires extensive tests and optimisation to the actual system While kinetic inhibitors work by slowing down the kinetics of the nucleation anti agglomerants do not stop the nucleation but stop the agglomeration sticking together of gas hydrate crystals These two kinds of inhibitors are also known as low dosage hydrate inhibitors because they require much smaller concentrations than the conventional thermodynamic inhibitors Kinetic inhibitors which do not require water and hydrocarbon mixture to be effective are usually polymers or copolymers and anti agglomerants requires water and hydrocarbon mixture are polymers or zwitterionic usually ammonium and COOH surfactants being both attracted to hydrates and hydrocarbons Empty clathrate hydrates editEmpty clathrate hydrates 39 are thermodynamically unstable guest molecules are of paramount importance to stabilize these structures with respect to ice and as such their study using experimental techniques is greatly limited to very specific formation conditions however their mechanical stability renders theoretical and computer simulation methods the ideal choice to address their thermodynamic properties Starting from very cold samples 110 145 K Falenty et al 40 degassed Ne sII clathrates for several hours using vacuum pumping to obtain a so called ice XVI while employing neutron diffraction to observe that i the empty sII hydrate structure decomposes at T 145 K and furthermore ii the empty hydrate shows a negative thermal expansion at T lt 55 K and it is mechanically more stable and has a larger lattice constant at low temperatures than the Ne filled analogue The existence of such a porous ice had been theoretically predicted before 41 From a theoretical perspective empty hydrates can be probed using Molecular Dynamics or Monte Carlo techniques Conde et al used empty hydrates and a fully atomic description of the solid lattice to estimate the phase diagram of H2O at negative pressures and T 300 K 42 and obtain the differences in chemical potentials between ice Ih and the empty hydrates central to the van der Waals Platteeuw theory Jacobson et al performed 43 simulations using a monoatomic coarse grained model developed for H2O that is capable of capturing the tetrahedral symmetry of hydrates Their calculations revealed that under 1 atm pressure sI and sII empty hydrates are metastable regarding the ice phases up to their melting temperatures T 245 2 K and T 252 2 K respectively Matsui et al employed 44 molecular dynamics to perform a thorough and systematic study of several ice polymorphs namely space fullerene ices zeolitic ices and aeroices and interpreted their relative stability in terms of geometrical considerations The thermodynamics of metastable empty sI clathrate hydrates have been probed over broad temperature and pressure ranges 100 K T 220 K and 100 kPa p 500 MPa by Cruz et al 45 using large scale simulations and compared with experimental data at 100 kPa The whole p V T surface obtained was fitted by the universal form of the Parsafar and Mason equation of state with an accuracy of 99 7 99 9 Framework deformation caused by applied temperature followed a parabolic law and there is a critical temperature above which the isobaric thermal expansion becomes negative ranging from 194 7 K at 100 kPa to 166 2 K at 500 MPa Response to the applied p T field was analyzed in terms of angle and distance descriptors of a classical tetrahedral structure and observed to occur essentially by means of angular alteration for p T gt 200 MPa 200 K The length of the hydrogen bonds responsible for framework integrity was insensitive to the thermodynamic conditions and its average value is r O H 0 25 nm CO2 hydrate editClathrate hydrate which encaged CO2 as guest molecule is termed as CO2 hydrate The term CO2 hydrates are more commonly used these days with its relevance in anthropogenic CO2 capture and sequestration A nonstoichiometric compound carbon dioxide hydrate is composed of hydrogen bonded water molecules arranged in ice like frameworks that are occupied by molecules with appropriate sizes and regions In structure I the CO2 hydrate crystallizes as one of two cubic hydrates composed of 46 H2O molecules or D2O and eight CO2 molecules occupying both large cavities tetrakaidecahedral and small cavities pentagonal dodecahedral 46 Researchers believed that oceans and permafrost have immense potential to capture anthropogenic CO2 in the form CO2 hydrates The utilization of additives to shift the CO2 hydrate equilibrium curve in phase diagram towards higher temperature and lower pressures is still under scrutiny to make extensive large scale storage of CO2 viable in shallower subsea depths 47 See also editClathrate Star formation and evolution Clathrate gun hypothesisReferences edit Englezos Peter 1993 Clathrate hydrates Industrial amp Engineering Chemistry Research 32 7 1251 1274 doi 10 1021 ie00019a001 Hassanpouryouzband Aliakbar Joonaki Edris Vasheghani Farahani Mehrdad Takeya Satoshi Ruppel Carolyn Yang Jinhai J English Niall M Schicks Judith Edlmann Katriona Mehrabian Hadi M Aman Zachary Tohidi Bahman 2020 Gas hydrates in sustainable chemistry Chemical Society Reviews 49 15 5225 5309 doi 10 1039 C8CS00989A hdl 1912 26136 PMID 32567615 S2CID 219971360 Gao S House W Chapman WG 2005 NMR MRI Study of Gas Hydrate Mechanisms The Journal of Physical Chemistry B 109 41 19090 19093 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 175 9193 doi 10 1021 jp052071w PMID 16853461 S2CID 18762205 Retrieved August 3 2009 Gao S Chapman WG House W 2005 NMR and Viscosity Investigation of Clathrate Formation and Dissociation Ind Eng Chem Res 44 19 7373 7379 doi 10 1021 ie050464b Retrieved August 3 2009 Choudhary Nilesh Chakrabarty Suman Roy Sudip Kumar Rajnish January 2019 A comparison of different water models for melting point calculation of methane hydrate using molecular dynamics simulations Chemical Physics 516 6 14 Bibcode 2019CP 516 6C doi 10 1016 j chemphys 2018 08 036 S2CID 106222519 Michael Faraday 1859 On Hydrate of Chlorine Quarterly Journal of Science pp 81 84 Retrieved 8 April 2024 Ellen Thomas November 2004 Clathrates little known components of the global carbon cycle Wesleyan University Retrieved 13 December 2007 Buffett B Archer D 2004 Global inventory of methane clathrate sensitivity to changes in the deep ocean Earth Planet Sci Lett 227 3 4 185 199 Bibcode 2004E amp PSL 227 185B doi 10 1016 j epsl 2004 09 005 Chong Zheng Rong Yang She Hern Bryan Babu Ponnivalavan Linga Praveen Li Xiao Sen 2016 Review of natural gas hydrates as an energy resource Prospects and challenges Applied Energy 162 1633 1652 Bibcode 2016ApEn 162 1633C doi 10 1016 j apenergy 2014 12 061 Drinkable water from cold energy Engineers Australia Eco friendly ways to harness natural gas efficiently The Straits Times 30 June 2017 Babu Ponnivalavan Linga Praveen Kumar Rajnish Englezos Peter 1 June 2015 A review of the hydrate based gas separation HBGS process for carbon dioxide pre combustion capture Energy 85 261 279 doi 10 1016 j energy 2015 03 103 NUS Keppel SLNG in tie up to develop better cooling technology for data centres The Straits Times 22 October 2019 Ghosh Jyotirmoy Methikkalam Rabin Rajan J Bhuin Radha Gobinda Ragupathy Gopi Choudhary Nilesh Kumar Rajnish Pradeep Thalappil 29 January 2019 Clathrate hydrates in interstellar environment Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 116 5 1526 1531 Bibcode 2019PNAS 116 1526G doi 10 1073 pnas 1814293116 PMC 6358667 PMID 30630945 Stackelberg M v Muller H R 1954 Feste Gashydrate II Struktur und Raumchemie Solid gas hydrates II Structure and space chemistry Zeitschrift fur Elektrochemie Berichte der Bunsengesellschaft fur physikalische Chemie in German 58 1 25 39 doi 10 1002 bbpc 19540580105 S2CID 93862670 Sloan E Dendy amp Koh Carolyn A 2008 1st pub 1998 Chapter 2 Molecular Structures and Similarities to Ice Clathrate hydrates of natural gases CRC Press p 45 ISBN 978 0 8493 9078 4 Iro Nicolas Gautier Daniel Hersant Franck Bockelee Morvan Dominique Lunine Jonathan I February 2003 An interpretation of the nitrogen deficiency in comets Icarus 161 2 511 532 Bibcode 2003Icar 161 511I CiteSeerX 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Malfait K Waelkens C Bouwman J De Koter A Waters L B F M 1999 The ISO spectrum of the young star HD 142527 Astronomy and Astrophysics 345 181 Bibcode 1999A amp A 345 181M Jaschek C Jaschek M 1992 A southern be star survey Spectra and envelope radii Astronomy and Astrophysics Supplement Series 95 535 Bibcode 1992A amp AS 95 535J Clampin M Krist J E Ardila D R Golimowski D A Hartig G F Ford H C Illingworth G D Bartko F Bentez N Blakeslee J P Bouwens R J Broadhurst T J Brown R A Burrows C J Cheng E S Cross N J G Feldman P D Franx M Gronwall C Infante L Kimble R A Lesser M P Martel A R Menanteau F Meurer G R Miley G K Postman M Rosati P Sirianni M Sparks W B Tran H D Tsvetanov Z I White R L Zheng W 2003 Hubble Space Telescope ACS Coronagraphic Imaging of the Circumstellar Disk around HD 141569A The Astronomical Journal 126 1 385 392 arXiv astro ph 0303605 Bibcode 2003AJ 126 385C doi 10 1086 375460 S2CID 243393 Li Aigen Lunine Jonathan I 2003 Modeling the infrared emission from the HD 141569A disk Astrophysical Journal 594 2 987 1010 arXiv astro ph 0311070 Bibcode 2003ApJ 594 987L doi 10 1086 376939 S2CID 14852254 Hersant F 2004 Enrichment in volatiles in the giant planets of the Solar System Planetary and Space Science 52 7 623 641 Bibcode 2004P amp SS 52 623H doi 10 1016 j pss 2003 12 011 Kieffer Susan W Xinli Lu Craig M Bethke John R Spencer Stephen Marshak Alexandra Navrotsky 2006 A Clathrate Reservoir Hypothesis for Enceladus South Polar Plume Science 314 5806 1764 1766 Bibcode 2006Sci 314 1764K doi 10 1126 science 1133519 PMID 17170301 S2CID 41743663 Iess L Stevenson D J Parisi M Hemingway D Jacobson R A Lunine Jonathan I Nimmo F Armstrong J W Asmar S W Ducci M Tortora P April 4 2014 The Gravity Field and Interior Structure of Enceladus PDF Science 344 6179 78 80 Bibcode 2014Sci 344 78I doi 10 1126 science 1250551 PMID 24700854 S2CID 28990283 Kamata Shunichi Nimmo Francis Sekine Yasuhito Kuramoto Kiyoshi Noguchi Naoki Kimura Jun Tani Atsushi June 2019 Pluto s ocean is capped and insulated by gas hydrates Nature Geoscience 12 6 407 410 Bibcode 2019NatGe 12 407K doi 10 1038 s41561 019 0369 8 hdl 2115 76168 S2CID 182346067 Kvenvolden Keith A McMenamin Mark A 1980 Hydrates of natural gas a review of their geologic occurrence Circular Report doi 10 3133 cir825 Marshall Michael 26 March 2009 Ice that burns could be a green fossil fuel New Scientist Ussler W Paull C K Lorenson T Dallimore S Medioli B Blasco S McLaughlin F Nixon F M 2005 Methane Leakage from Pingo like Features on the Arctic Shelf Beaufort Sea NWT Canada AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts 2005 C11A 1069 Bibcode 2005AGUFM C11A1069U Youssef Z Barreau A Mougin P Jose J Mokbel I 15 April 2009 Measurements of Hydrate Dissociation Temperature of Methane Ethane and CO2 in the Absence of Any Aqueous Phase and Prediction with the Cubic Plus Association Equation of State Industrial amp Engineering Chemistry Research 48 8 4045 4050 doi 10 1021 ie801351e China claims breakthrough in flammable ice BBC News 19 May 2017 China and Japan find way to extract combustible ice from seafloor harnessing a legendary frozen fossil fuel National Post 19 May 2017 Web of Science Gao Shuqiang 2008 Investigation of Interactions between Gas Hydrates and Several Other Flow Assurance Elements Energy amp Fuels 22 5 3150 3153 doi 10 1021 ef800189k Cruz Fernando J A L Alavi Saman Mota Jose P B 2019 Low Temperature Thermodynamic Study of the Metastable Empty Clathrate Hydrates Using Molecular Simulations ACS Earth and Space Chemistry 3 5 789 799 Bibcode 2019ESC 3 789C doi 10 1021 acsearthspacechem 9b00009 S2CID 140362440 Falenty A Hansen T C Kuhs F 2014 Formation and Properties of Ice XVI Obtained by Emptying a Type sII Clathrate Hydrate Nature 516 7530 231 234 Bibcode 2014Natur 516 231F doi 10 1038 nature14014 PMID 25503235 S2CID 4464711 Kosyakov V I 2009 Structure Formation Under Negative Pressures J Struct Chem 50 60 65 doi 10 1007 s10947 009 0190 0 S2CID 97767359 Conde M M Vega C Tribello G A Slater B 2009 The Phase Diagram of Water at Negative Pressures Virtual Ices J Chem Phys 131 3 034510 Bibcode 2009JChPh 131c4510C doi 10 1063 1 3182727 PMID 19624212 Jacobson L C Hujo W Molinero V 2009 Thermodynamic Stability and Growth of Guest Free Clathrate Hydrates A Low Density Crystal Phase of Water J Phys Chem B 113 30 10298 10307 doi 10 1021 jp903439a PMID 19585976 Matsui T Hirata M Yagasaki T Matsumoto M Tanaka H 2017 Hypothetical Ultralow density Ice Polymorphs J Chem Phys 147 9 091101 doi 10 1063 1 4994757 PMID 28886658 Cruz F J A L Alavi S Mota J P B 2019 Low Temperature Thermodynamic Study of the Metastable Empty Clathrate Hydrates Using Molecular Simulations ACS Earth and Space Chemistry 3 5 789 799 Bibcode 2019ESC 3 789C doi 10 1021 acsearthspacechem 9b00009 S2CID 140362440 Circone S Stern L A Kirby S H Durham W B Chacoumakos B C Rawn C J Rondinone A J Ishii Y 2003 CO2 Hydrate Synthesis Composition Structure Dissociation Behavior and a Comparison to Structure I CH4 Hydrate The Journal of Physical Chemistry B 107 23 5529 5539 doi 10 1021 jp027391j Zheng J Chong Z R Qureshi M F Linga P 2020 Carbon Dioxide Sequestration via Gas Hydrates A Potential Pathway toward Decarbonization Energy Fuels 34 9 10529 10546 doi 10 1021 acs energyfuels 0c02309 S2CID 225428567 Further reading editGao Shuqiang House Waylon Chapman Walter 2005 NMR MRI Study of Clathrate Hydrate Mechanisms J Phys Chem B 109 41 19090 19093 doi 10 1021 jp052071w PMID 16853461 S2CID 18762205 Sultan N Cochonat P Foucher J P Mienert J 2004 Effect of gas hydrates melting on seafloor slope instability PDF Marine Geology 213 1 4 379 401 Bibcode 2004MGeol 213 379S doi 10 1016 j margeo 2004 10 015 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Gas hydrates Gas hydrates from Leibniz Institute of Marine Sciences Kiel IFM GEOMAR The SUGAR Project Submarine Gas Hydrate Reservoirs from Leibniz Institute of Marine Sciences Kiel IFM GEOMAR Gas hydrates in video Archived 2016 03 21 at the Wayback Machine and Background knowledge about gas hydrates their prevention and removal by manufacturer of hydrate autoclaves Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Clathrate hydrate amp oldid 1218072531, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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