4.6 Article

Formation, growth and sintering of CO2 hydrate crystals in liquid water with continuous CO2 supply: Implication for subsurface CO2 sequestration

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF GREENHOUSE GAS CONTROL
Volume 63, Issue -, Pages 386-391

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijggc.2017.06.007

Keywords

Clathrate hydrate; CO2 sequestration; Global warming; Ccs; Liquid phase sintering; Crystal growth

Funding

  1. JKA Foundation [28-142]
  2. JSPS KAKENHI [25289045]

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The crystal growth of a CO2 hydrate in liquid water with a continuous supply of CO2 was visually investigated, while the high-pressure visual cell was connected to a water-flow loop filled with circulating CO2-saturated water. The test section may be viewed as a simplified model of the subsurface with injected CO2. The observation was continued for over 10 h, thereby revealing the morphology change of the hydrate crystals. The morphology of the initial hydrate crystals distinctly varied depending on the system subcooling temperature, Delta T-sub. At Delta T-sub < 1.5 K, polygonal flat-plate crystals were found. The morphology changed into columnar crystals at Delta T-sub approximate to 2.0 K and then dendritic crystals at Delta T-sub > 2.5 K. At any Delta T-sub, it was found that hydrate crystals grew and converted into spherical particles after an hour. The agglomeration of the crystals and the densification of the crystal layer were also observed. The hydrate crystals eventually became at least 0.5 mm in size. These are the features of the liquid phase sintering. If this sintering occurred in the pores in the subsurface, typically 100 micrometer or smaller, the hydrate crystals would occupy the pore space which would result in the decrease in porosity of hydrate-forming layer and in the change of geophysical properties.

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