Pore habit of methane hydrate and its evolution in sediment matrix – Laboratory visualization with phase-contrast micro-CT

Describing the pore habit of methane hydrate in sediment matrices is essential for understanding natural distribution of methane hydrate, methane trace (transport and solidification) in the hydrate stability zone, physical properties of hydrate-bearing sediments, and the associated influence on pote...

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Main Authors: Lei, L, Seol, Y, Choi, JH, Kneafsey, TJ
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: eScholarship, University of California 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://escholarship.org/uc/item/4z79x27b
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spelling ftcdlib:oai:escholarship.org/ark:/13030/qt4z79x27b 2023-05-15T17:11:08+02:00 Pore habit of methane hydrate and its evolution in sediment matrix – Laboratory visualization with phase-contrast micro-CT Lei, L Seol, Y Choi, JH Kneafsey, TJ 2019-06-01 application/pdf https://escholarship.org/uc/item/4z79x27b unknown eScholarship, University of California qt4z79x27b https://escholarship.org/uc/item/4z79x27b public Methane hydrate Pore habit Phase-contrast micro CT Contact angle Geology Geophysics article 2019 ftcdlib 2021-06-28T17:06:48Z Describing the pore habit of methane hydrate in sediment matrices is essential for understanding natural distribution of methane hydrate, methane trace (transport and solidification) in the hydrate stability zone, physical properties of hydrate-bearing sediments, and the associated influence on potential gas production. Pore habit visualization in natural media at pore scale even with laboratory synthesized cores has been challenging due to the similar densities of methane hydrate from pore liquid. In this work, we used phase-contrast assisted micro-CT with potassium iodine-doped brine to visualize four phases: sand particles, pore fluid, methane hydrate and methane gas. This study visualizes the pore habit of methane hydrate at various stages including during hydrate formation in excess-gas systems, its evolution after brine injection to replace pore fluid, and hydrate formation in excess-water systems. Hydrate tends to adopt round and smooth surfaces when in contact with water while exhibits relatively angular interfaces when in contact with methane gas. Hydrate formation in excess-gas systems results in a partial cementing and partial mineral-coating pore habit, while hydrate in excess-water systems develops mainly as pore-filling, and locally cementing or mineral-coating where big gas pockets exist at the initial state. Pore liquid replacement from methane gas to brine triggers a shift of hydrate pore habit towards pore-filling. Methane hydrate evolution over time produces bigger hydrate particles but with less contact area with sand particles. The effects of hydrate pore habit become less important as hydrate particle size exceeds the pore size. Additionally, hydrate formation could trap residual methane gas and brine as inclusions. Article in Journal/Newspaper Methane hydrate University of California: eScholarship
institution Open Polar
collection University of California: eScholarship
op_collection_id ftcdlib
language unknown
topic Methane hydrate
Pore habit
Phase-contrast micro CT
Contact angle
Geology
Geophysics
spellingShingle Methane hydrate
Pore habit
Phase-contrast micro CT
Contact angle
Geology
Geophysics
Lei, L
Seol, Y
Choi, JH
Kneafsey, TJ
Pore habit of methane hydrate and its evolution in sediment matrix – Laboratory visualization with phase-contrast micro-CT
topic_facet Methane hydrate
Pore habit
Phase-contrast micro CT
Contact angle
Geology
Geophysics
description Describing the pore habit of methane hydrate in sediment matrices is essential for understanding natural distribution of methane hydrate, methane trace (transport and solidification) in the hydrate stability zone, physical properties of hydrate-bearing sediments, and the associated influence on potential gas production. Pore habit visualization in natural media at pore scale even with laboratory synthesized cores has been challenging due to the similar densities of methane hydrate from pore liquid. In this work, we used phase-contrast assisted micro-CT with potassium iodine-doped brine to visualize four phases: sand particles, pore fluid, methane hydrate and methane gas. This study visualizes the pore habit of methane hydrate at various stages including during hydrate formation in excess-gas systems, its evolution after brine injection to replace pore fluid, and hydrate formation in excess-water systems. Hydrate tends to adopt round and smooth surfaces when in contact with water while exhibits relatively angular interfaces when in contact with methane gas. Hydrate formation in excess-gas systems results in a partial cementing and partial mineral-coating pore habit, while hydrate in excess-water systems develops mainly as pore-filling, and locally cementing or mineral-coating where big gas pockets exist at the initial state. Pore liquid replacement from methane gas to brine triggers a shift of hydrate pore habit towards pore-filling. Methane hydrate evolution over time produces bigger hydrate particles but with less contact area with sand particles. The effects of hydrate pore habit become less important as hydrate particle size exceeds the pore size. Additionally, hydrate formation could trap residual methane gas and brine as inclusions.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Lei, L
Seol, Y
Choi, JH
Kneafsey, TJ
author_facet Lei, L
Seol, Y
Choi, JH
Kneafsey, TJ
author_sort Lei, L
title Pore habit of methane hydrate and its evolution in sediment matrix – Laboratory visualization with phase-contrast micro-CT
title_short Pore habit of methane hydrate and its evolution in sediment matrix – Laboratory visualization with phase-contrast micro-CT
title_full Pore habit of methane hydrate and its evolution in sediment matrix – Laboratory visualization with phase-contrast micro-CT
title_fullStr Pore habit of methane hydrate and its evolution in sediment matrix – Laboratory visualization with phase-contrast micro-CT
title_full_unstemmed Pore habit of methane hydrate and its evolution in sediment matrix – Laboratory visualization with phase-contrast micro-CT
title_sort pore habit of methane hydrate and its evolution in sediment matrix – laboratory visualization with phase-contrast micro-ct
publisher eScholarship, University of California
publishDate 2019
url https://escholarship.org/uc/item/4z79x27b
genre Methane hydrate
genre_facet Methane hydrate
op_relation qt4z79x27b
https://escholarship.org/uc/item/4z79x27b
op_rights public
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