Molecular insight into carbon dioxide hydrate formation from saline solution

Carbon dioxide hydrate has been intensively investigated in recent years because of its potential use as gas and heat storage materials. To understand the hydrate formation mechanisms, the crystallization of CO2 hydrate from NaCl solutions was simulated at a molecular level. The influence of tempera...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:RSC Advances
Main Authors: Liu, Chanjuan, Zhou, Xuebing, Liang, Deqing
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ir.giec.ac.cn/handle/344007/35159
http://ir.giec.ac.cn/handle/344007/35160
https://doi.org/10.1039/d1ra04015d
_version_ 1828669290424827904
author Liu, Chanjuan
Zhou, Xuebing
Liang, Deqing
author_facet Liu, Chanjuan
Zhou, Xuebing
Liang, Deqing
author_sort Liu, Chanjuan
collection Guangzhou Institute of Energy Conversion, Chinese Academy of Sciences: GIEC OpenIR
container_issue 50
container_start_page 31583
container_title RSC Advances
container_volume 11
description Carbon dioxide hydrate has been intensively investigated in recent years because of its potential use as gas and heat storage materials. To understand the hydrate formation mechanisms, the crystallization of CO2 hydrate from NaCl solutions was simulated at a molecular level. The influence of temperature, pressure, salt concentration and CO2 concentration on CO2 hydrate formation was evaluated. Results showed that the amount of the newly formed hydrate cages pressure went through a fast linear growth period followed by a relatively stable period. Pressure had little effect on CO2 hydrate formation and temperature had a significant influence. The linear growth rate was greatly reduced as the temperature dropped from 255 to 235 K. The salt ion pairs could inhibit CO2 hydrate formation, suggesting that we should choose the lower salinity areas if we want to storage CO2 as gas hydrates in the seabed sediments. The observations in this study can provide theoretical support for the micro mechanism of hydrate formation, and provide a theoretical reference for the technology of hydrate based CO2 storage.
format Report
genre Methane hydrate
genre_facet Methane hydrate
id ftchacadsciegiec:oai:ir.giec.ac.cn:344007/35160
institution Open Polar
language English
op_collection_id ftchacadsciegiec
op_container_end_page 31589
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1039/d1ra04015d
op_relation RSC ADVANCES
http://ir.giec.ac.cn/handle/344007/35159
http://ir.giec.ac.cn/handle/344007/35160
doi:10.1039/d1ra04015d
publishDate 2021
publisher ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
record_format openpolar
spelling ftchacadsciegiec:oai:ir.giec.ac.cn:344007/35160 2025-04-06T14:58:26+00:00 Molecular insight into carbon dioxide hydrate formation from saline solution Liu, Chanjuan Zhou, Xuebing Liang, Deqing 2021-09-24 http://ir.giec.ac.cn/handle/344007/35159 http://ir.giec.ac.cn/handle/344007/35160 https://doi.org/10.1039/d1ra04015d 英语 eng ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY RSC ADVANCES http://ir.giec.ac.cn/handle/344007/35159 http://ir.giec.ac.cn/handle/344007/35160 doi:10.1039/d1ra04015d METHANE HYDRATE GAS REPLACEMENT RECOVERY CO2 SIMULATIONS CH4 SEQUESTRATION DISSOCIATION VERIFICATION Chemistry Multidisciplinary 期刊论文 2021 ftchacadsciegiec https://doi.org/10.1039/d1ra04015d 2025-03-10T11:27:31Z Carbon dioxide hydrate has been intensively investigated in recent years because of its potential use as gas and heat storage materials. To understand the hydrate formation mechanisms, the crystallization of CO2 hydrate from NaCl solutions was simulated at a molecular level. The influence of temperature, pressure, salt concentration and CO2 concentration on CO2 hydrate formation was evaluated. Results showed that the amount of the newly formed hydrate cages pressure went through a fast linear growth period followed by a relatively stable period. Pressure had little effect on CO2 hydrate formation and temperature had a significant influence. The linear growth rate was greatly reduced as the temperature dropped from 255 to 235 K. The salt ion pairs could inhibit CO2 hydrate formation, suggesting that we should choose the lower salinity areas if we want to storage CO2 as gas hydrates in the seabed sediments. The observations in this study can provide theoretical support for the micro mechanism of hydrate formation, and provide a theoretical reference for the technology of hydrate based CO2 storage. Report Methane hydrate Guangzhou Institute of Energy Conversion, Chinese Academy of Sciences: GIEC OpenIR RSC Advances 11 50 31583 31589
spellingShingle METHANE HYDRATE
GAS
REPLACEMENT
RECOVERY
CO2
SIMULATIONS
CH4
SEQUESTRATION
DISSOCIATION
VERIFICATION
Chemistry
Multidisciplinary
Liu, Chanjuan
Zhou, Xuebing
Liang, Deqing
Molecular insight into carbon dioxide hydrate formation from saline solution
title Molecular insight into carbon dioxide hydrate formation from saline solution
title_full Molecular insight into carbon dioxide hydrate formation from saline solution
title_fullStr Molecular insight into carbon dioxide hydrate formation from saline solution
title_full_unstemmed Molecular insight into carbon dioxide hydrate formation from saline solution
title_short Molecular insight into carbon dioxide hydrate formation from saline solution
title_sort molecular insight into carbon dioxide hydrate formation from saline solution
topic METHANE HYDRATE
GAS
REPLACEMENT
RECOVERY
CO2
SIMULATIONS
CH4
SEQUESTRATION
DISSOCIATION
VERIFICATION
Chemistry
Multidisciplinary
topic_facet METHANE HYDRATE
GAS
REPLACEMENT
RECOVERY
CO2
SIMULATIONS
CH4
SEQUESTRATION
DISSOCIATION
VERIFICATION
Chemistry
Multidisciplinary
url http://ir.giec.ac.cn/handle/344007/35159
http://ir.giec.ac.cn/handle/344007/35160
https://doi.org/10.1039/d1ra04015d