SEDIMENT SURFACE EFFECTS ON METHANE HYDRATE FORMATION AND DISSOCIATION

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dc.contributor.author Riestenberg D.
dc.contributor.author West O.
dc.contributor.author Lee S.
dc.contributor.author McCallum S.
dc.contributor.author Phelps T.J.
dc.date.accessioned 2022-01-24T03:31:20Z
dc.date.available 2022-01-24T03:31:20Z
dc.date.issued 2003
dc.identifier https://elibrary.ru/item.asp?id=1608465
dc.identifier.citation Marine Geology, 2003, 198, 1-2, 181-190
dc.identifier.issn 0025-3227
dc.identifier.uri https://repository.geologyscience.ru/handle/123456789/34562
dc.description.abstract The effects of sediment surfaces on methane hydrate formation and dissociation were investigated using colloidal suspensions and new experimental methods developed for a large volume (72 liters), temperature-controlled pressure vessel. Hydrates were formed by bubbling methane gas through test solutions at temperatures and pressures within the hydrate stability field. Hydrate formation was visually detected by the accumulation of hydrate-encrusted gas bubbles. To measure hydrate dissociation conditions, the pressure vessel was warmed while temperature was monitored within a zone of previously formed hydrate-encrusted gas bubbles. Hydrate dissociation was indicated by a distinct plateau in the hydrate zone temperature, while temperatures of the gas and liquid phases within the vessel continued to rise. The 'dissociation plateau' appears to be a phenomenon that is unique to the large volume of the pressure vessel used for the experiments. In experiments where hydrates were formed in pure water, temperature and corresponding pressure conditions measured during the temperature plateau matched model-predicted values for hydrate stability in water, thus confirming the validity of this new method for measuring hydrate dissociation conditions. Formation and dissociation conditions were measured for methane hydrates in colloidal suspensions containing bentonite. Hydrate formation experiments indicated that the presence of bentonite in water at 200 mg/l significantly decreased pressures required for hydrate formation relative to formation in pure water alone. On the other hand, hydrate dissociation conditions measured in bentonite and silica suspensions with solids concentrations of 34 g/l did not differ significantly from that of water. These results are relevant to the origin and stability of natural gas hydrate deposits known to exist in deep permafrost and marine sediments, where the effects of sediment surfaces are largely unknown.
dc.subject MINERAL SURFACES
dc.subject METHANE HYDRATES
dc.subject GAS HYDRATES
dc.subject BENTONITE
dc.title SEDIMENT SURFACE EFFECTS ON METHANE HYDRATE FORMATION AND DISSOCIATION
dc.type Статья


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