Methane hydrate formation and decomposition: Structural studies via neutron diffraction and empirical potential structure refinement

Neutron diffraction studies with hydrogen/deuterium isotope substitution measurements are performed to investigate the water structure at the early, medium, and late periods of methane clathrate hydrate formation and decomposition. These measurements are coupled with simultaneous gas consumption mea...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:The Journal of Chemical Physics
Main Authors: Thompson, Helen, Soper, Alan K., Buchanan, Piers, Aldiwan, Nawaf, Creek, Jefferson L., Koh, Carolyn A.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: AIP Publishing 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.2191056
https://pubs.aip.org/aip/jcp/article-pdf/doi/10.1063/1.2191056/15384062/164508_1_online.pdf
Description
Summary:Neutron diffraction studies with hydrogen/deuterium isotope substitution measurements are performed to investigate the water structure at the early, medium, and late periods of methane clathrate hydrate formation and decomposition. These measurements are coupled with simultaneous gas consumption measurements to track the formation of methane hydrate from a gas/water mixture, and then the complete decomposition of hydrate. Empirical potential structure refinement computer simulations are used to analyze the neutron diffraction data and extract from the data the water structure in the bulk methane hydrate solution. The results highlight the significant changes in the water structure of the remaining liquid at various stages of hydrate formation and decomposition, and give further insight into the way in which hydrates form. The results also have important implications on the memory effect, suggesting that the water structure in the presence of hydrate crystallites is significantly different at equivalent stages of forming compared to decomposing. These results are in sharp contrast to the previously reported cases when all remaining hydrate crystallites are absent from the solution. For these systems there is no detectable change in the water structure or the methane hydration shell before hydrate formation and after decomposition. Based on the new results presented in this paper, it is clear that the local water structure is affected by the presence of hydrate crystallites, which may in turn be responsible for the “history” or “memory” effect where the production of hydrate from a solution of formed and then subsequently melted hydrate is reportedly much quicker than producing hydrate from a fresh water/gas mixture.