Formation of Metastability of Pore Gas Hydrates in Frozen Sediments: Experimental Evidence
The Arctic permafrost and zones of hydrate stability may evolve to the conditions that allow gas hydrates to remain metastable for a long time due to self-preservation within 150 m depths. The behavior of relict (metastable) gas hydrates in frozen sediments is controlled externally by pressure and t...
Published in: | Geosciences |
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Main Authors: | , , , , |
Format: | Text |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
2022
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Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.3390/geosciences12110419 |
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author | Evgeny Chuvilin Dinara Davletshina Boris Bukhanov Aliya Mukhametdinova Vladimir Istomin |
author_facet | Evgeny Chuvilin Dinara Davletshina Boris Bukhanov Aliya Mukhametdinova Vladimir Istomin |
author_sort | Evgeny Chuvilin |
collection | MDPI Open Access Publishing |
container_issue | 11 |
container_start_page | 419 |
container_title | Geosciences |
container_volume | 12 |
description | The Arctic permafrost and zones of hydrate stability may evolve to the conditions that allow gas hydrates to remain metastable for a long time due to self-preservation within 150 m depths. The behavior of relict (metastable) gas hydrates in frozen sediments is controlled externally by pressure and temperature and internally by the properties of hydrate particles and sediments. The sensitivity of the dissociation and self-preservation of pore gas hydrates to different factors is investigated in laboratory experiments. The observations focus on time-dependent changes in methane hydrate saturation in frozen sand samples upon the pressure dropping below phase equilibrium in the gas–hydrate–ice system. The preservation of pore gas hydrates in these conditions mainly depends on the initial hydrate and ice saturation, clay contents and mineralogy, salinity, and texture of sediments, which affect the size, shape, and structure distortion of hydrate inclusions. The self-preservation mechanism works well at high initial contents of pore ice and hydrate, low salinity, relatively low percentages of clay particles, temperatures below −4 °C, and below-equilibrium pressures. Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) measurements reveal considerable amounts of unfrozen pore water in frozen sediments that may hold for several days after the pressure drop, which controls the dissociation and self-preservation processes. Metastable gas hydrates in frozen sand may occupy up to 25% of the pore space, and their dissociation upon permafrost thawing and pressure drops may release up to 16 m3 of methane into the atmosphere per 1 m3 of hydrate-bearing permafrost. |
format | Text |
genre | Arctic Ice Methane hydrate permafrost |
genre_facet | Arctic Ice Methane hydrate permafrost |
geographic | Arctic |
geographic_facet | Arctic |
id | ftmdpi:oai:mdpi.com:/2076-3263/12/11/419/ |
institution | Open Polar |
language | English |
op_collection_id | ftmdpi |
op_coverage | agris |
op_doi | https://doi.org/10.3390/geosciences12110419 |
op_relation | Cryosphere https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/geosciences12110419 |
op_rights | https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ |
op_source | Geosciences; Volume 12; Issue 11; Pages: 419 |
publishDate | 2022 |
publisher | Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute |
record_format | openpolar |
spelling | ftmdpi:oai:mdpi.com:/2076-3263/12/11/419/ 2025-01-16T20:32:09+00:00 Formation of Metastability of Pore Gas Hydrates in Frozen Sediments: Experimental Evidence Evgeny Chuvilin Dinara Davletshina Boris Bukhanov Aliya Mukhametdinova Vladimir Istomin agris 2022-11-14 application/pdf https://doi.org/10.3390/geosciences12110419 EN eng Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute Cryosphere https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/geosciences12110419 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Geosciences; Volume 12; Issue 11; Pages: 419 Arctic permafrost gas hydrate experimental modelling porous media dissociation self-preservation NMR unfrozen water methane emission Text 2022 ftmdpi https://doi.org/10.3390/geosciences12110419 2023-08-01T07:19:59Z The Arctic permafrost and zones of hydrate stability may evolve to the conditions that allow gas hydrates to remain metastable for a long time due to self-preservation within 150 m depths. The behavior of relict (metastable) gas hydrates in frozen sediments is controlled externally by pressure and temperature and internally by the properties of hydrate particles and sediments. The sensitivity of the dissociation and self-preservation of pore gas hydrates to different factors is investigated in laboratory experiments. The observations focus on time-dependent changes in methane hydrate saturation in frozen sand samples upon the pressure dropping below phase equilibrium in the gas–hydrate–ice system. The preservation of pore gas hydrates in these conditions mainly depends on the initial hydrate and ice saturation, clay contents and mineralogy, salinity, and texture of sediments, which affect the size, shape, and structure distortion of hydrate inclusions. The self-preservation mechanism works well at high initial contents of pore ice and hydrate, low salinity, relatively low percentages of clay particles, temperatures below −4 °C, and below-equilibrium pressures. Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) measurements reveal considerable amounts of unfrozen pore water in frozen sediments that may hold for several days after the pressure drop, which controls the dissociation and self-preservation processes. Metastable gas hydrates in frozen sand may occupy up to 25% of the pore space, and their dissociation upon permafrost thawing and pressure drops may release up to 16 m3 of methane into the atmosphere per 1 m3 of hydrate-bearing permafrost. Text Arctic Ice Methane hydrate permafrost MDPI Open Access Publishing Arctic Geosciences 12 11 419 |
spellingShingle | Arctic permafrost gas hydrate experimental modelling porous media dissociation self-preservation NMR unfrozen water methane emission Evgeny Chuvilin Dinara Davletshina Boris Bukhanov Aliya Mukhametdinova Vladimir Istomin Formation of Metastability of Pore Gas Hydrates in Frozen Sediments: Experimental Evidence |
title | Formation of Metastability of Pore Gas Hydrates in Frozen Sediments: Experimental Evidence |
title_full | Formation of Metastability of Pore Gas Hydrates in Frozen Sediments: Experimental Evidence |
title_fullStr | Formation of Metastability of Pore Gas Hydrates in Frozen Sediments: Experimental Evidence |
title_full_unstemmed | Formation of Metastability of Pore Gas Hydrates in Frozen Sediments: Experimental Evidence |
title_short | Formation of Metastability of Pore Gas Hydrates in Frozen Sediments: Experimental Evidence |
title_sort | formation of metastability of pore gas hydrates in frozen sediments: experimental evidence |
topic | Arctic permafrost gas hydrate experimental modelling porous media dissociation self-preservation NMR unfrozen water methane emission |
topic_facet | Arctic permafrost gas hydrate experimental modelling porous media dissociation self-preservation NMR unfrozen water methane emission |
url | https://doi.org/10.3390/geosciences12110419 |