Hydrate formation in near surface ocean sediments

The aims of this research project were to assist in understanding hydrate formation, stability, and scientific aspects of CO2 storage as a liquid and CO2 hydrate. These have been addressed by two investigatory pathways: hydrate stability modelling and hydrate formation within sediments (in synthetic...

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Main Author: Camps, Ameena Penelope
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: Geology 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2381/30465
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spelling ftleicester:oai:lra.le.ac.uk:2381/30465 2023-05-15T17:11:50+02:00 Hydrate formation in near surface ocean sediments Camps, Ameena Penelope 2014-12-15T10:39:31Z http://hdl.handle.net/2381/30465 en eng Geology University of Leicester http://hdl.handle.net/2381/30465 U237970 a1003860 Copyright © the author. All rights reserved. ProQuest Thesis Doctoral PhD 2014 ftleicester 2019-03-22T20:19:47Z The aims of this research project were to assist in understanding hydrate formation, stability, and scientific aspects of CO2 storage as a liquid and CO2 hydrate. These have been addressed by two investigatory pathways: hydrate stability modelling and hydrate formation within sediments (in synthetic CO2 hydrates and natural methane hydrates). Developed computer models predict large regions offshore Western Europe with the potential to store considerable volumes of CO2 as a hydrate. Laboratory experiments have also shown CO2 hydrate to form rapidly and relatively easily in sandy sediments, cementing the sediment grains. In water-rich environments hydrate appears to create pore-filling cement impeding further CO2 flow to underlying sediments, which may aid trapping of an underlying liquid store. Fortunate acquisition of natural hydrate cores from Cascadia Margin also allowed investigation of natural methane hydrate formation; revealing a number of well-preserved methane hydrate morphologies, and complex brine filled pore networks within the hydrate, resulting from different rates of growth. Results highlight a number of research areas, which need addressing through further investigations. However, these preliminary investigations support CO2 storage as a hydrate as a potential feasible storage method, and this method should be pursued further as an emissions reducing mitigation strategy. Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis Methane hydrate University of Leicester: Leicester Research Archive (LRA)
institution Open Polar
collection University of Leicester: Leicester Research Archive (LRA)
op_collection_id ftleicester
language English
description The aims of this research project were to assist in understanding hydrate formation, stability, and scientific aspects of CO2 storage as a liquid and CO2 hydrate. These have been addressed by two investigatory pathways: hydrate stability modelling and hydrate formation within sediments (in synthetic CO2 hydrates and natural methane hydrates). Developed computer models predict large regions offshore Western Europe with the potential to store considerable volumes of CO2 as a hydrate. Laboratory experiments have also shown CO2 hydrate to form rapidly and relatively easily in sandy sediments, cementing the sediment grains. In water-rich environments hydrate appears to create pore-filling cement impeding further CO2 flow to underlying sediments, which may aid trapping of an underlying liquid store. Fortunate acquisition of natural hydrate cores from Cascadia Margin also allowed investigation of natural methane hydrate formation; revealing a number of well-preserved methane hydrate morphologies, and complex brine filled pore networks within the hydrate, resulting from different rates of growth. Results highlight a number of research areas, which need addressing through further investigations. However, these preliminary investigations support CO2 storage as a hydrate as a potential feasible storage method, and this method should be pursued further as an emissions reducing mitigation strategy.
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author Camps, Ameena Penelope
spellingShingle Camps, Ameena Penelope
Hydrate formation in near surface ocean sediments
author_facet Camps, Ameena Penelope
author_sort Camps, Ameena Penelope
title Hydrate formation in near surface ocean sediments
title_short Hydrate formation in near surface ocean sediments
title_full Hydrate formation in near surface ocean sediments
title_fullStr Hydrate formation in near surface ocean sediments
title_full_unstemmed Hydrate formation in near surface ocean sediments
title_sort hydrate formation in near surface ocean sediments
publisher Geology
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/2381/30465
genre Methane hydrate
genre_facet Methane hydrate
op_source ProQuest
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/2381/30465
U237970
a1003860
op_rights Copyright © the author. All rights reserved.
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