Characteristics of Methane Hydrate Formation in Artificial and Natural Media

The formation of methane hydrate in two significantly different media was investigated, using silica gel as an artificial medium and loess as a natural medium. The methane hydrate formation was observed through the depletion of water in the matrix, measured via the matrix potential and the relations...

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Main Authors: Qingbai Wu, Peng Zhang, Yuzhong Yang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2013-03-01
Series:Energies
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/6/3/1233
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spelling doaj-ef856bd5c9ee48fc8aa3f7d50de58d732020-11-25T01:09:31ZengMDPI AGEnergies1996-10732013-03-01631233124910.3390/en6031233Characteristics of Methane Hydrate Formation in Artificial and Natural MediaQingbai WuPeng ZhangYuzhong YangThe formation of methane hydrate in two significantly different media was investigated, using silica gel as an artificial medium and loess as a natural medium. The methane hydrate formation was observed through the depletion of water in the matrix, measured via the matrix potential and the relationship between the matrix potential and the water content was determined using established equations. The velocity of methane hydrate nucleation slowed over the course of the reaction, as it relied on water transfer to the hydrate surfaces with lower Gibbs free energy after nucleation. Significant differences in the reactions in the two types of media arose from differences in the water retention capacity and lithology of media due to the internal surface area and pore size distributions. Compared with methane hydrate formation in silica gel, the reaction in loess was much slower and formed far less methane hydrate. The results of this study will advance the understanding of how the properties of the environment affect the formation of gas hydrates in nature.http://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/6/3/1233water conversionmatrix potentialmethane hydrateporous media
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Qingbai Wu
Peng Zhang
Yuzhong Yang
spellingShingle Qingbai Wu
Peng Zhang
Yuzhong Yang
Characteristics of Methane Hydrate Formation in Artificial and Natural Media
Energies
water conversion
matrix potential
methane hydrate
porous media
author_facet Qingbai Wu
Peng Zhang
Yuzhong Yang
author_sort Qingbai Wu
title Characteristics of Methane Hydrate Formation in Artificial and Natural Media
title_short Characteristics of Methane Hydrate Formation in Artificial and Natural Media
title_full Characteristics of Methane Hydrate Formation in Artificial and Natural Media
title_fullStr Characteristics of Methane Hydrate Formation in Artificial and Natural Media
title_full_unstemmed Characteristics of Methane Hydrate Formation in Artificial and Natural Media
title_sort characteristics of methane hydrate formation in artificial and natural media
publisher MDPI AG
series Energies
issn 1996-1073
publishDate 2013-03-01
description The formation of methane hydrate in two significantly different media was investigated, using silica gel as an artificial medium and loess as a natural medium. The methane hydrate formation was observed through the depletion of water in the matrix, measured via the matrix potential and the relationship between the matrix potential and the water content was determined using established equations. The velocity of methane hydrate nucleation slowed over the course of the reaction, as it relied on water transfer to the hydrate surfaces with lower Gibbs free energy after nucleation. Significant differences in the reactions in the two types of media arose from differences in the water retention capacity and lithology of media due to the internal surface area and pore size distributions. Compared with methane hydrate formation in silica gel, the reaction in loess was much slower and formed far less methane hydrate. The results of this study will advance the understanding of how the properties of the environment affect the formation of gas hydrates in nature.
topic water conversion
matrix potential
methane hydrate
porous media
url http://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/6/3/1233
work_keys_str_mv AT qingbaiwu characteristicsofmethanehydrateformationinartificialandnaturalmedia
AT pengzhang characteristicsofmethanehydrateformationinartificialandnaturalmedia
AT yuzhongyang characteristicsofmethanehydrateformationinartificialandnaturalmedia
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