Migration of Salt Ions in Frozen Hydrate-Saturated Sediments: Temperature and Chemistry Constraints

Migration of dissolved salts from natural (cryopeg brines, seawater, etc.), or artificial sources can destabilize intrapermafrost gas hydrates. Salt transport patterns vary as a function of gas pressure, temperature, salinity, etc. The sensitivity of the salt migration and hydrate dissociation proce...

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Published in:Geosciences
Main Authors: Evgeny Chuvilin, Valentina Ekimova, Dinara Davletshina, Boris Bukhanov, Ekaterina Krivokhat, Vladimir Shilenkov
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3390/geosciences12070276
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author Evgeny Chuvilin
Valentina Ekimova
Dinara Davletshina
Boris Bukhanov
Ekaterina Krivokhat
Vladimir Shilenkov
author_facet Evgeny Chuvilin
Valentina Ekimova
Dinara Davletshina
Boris Bukhanov
Ekaterina Krivokhat
Vladimir Shilenkov
author_sort Evgeny Chuvilin
collection MDPI Open Access Publishing
container_issue 7
container_start_page 276
container_title Geosciences
container_volume 12
description Migration of dissolved salts from natural (cryopeg brines, seawater, etc.), or artificial sources can destabilize intrapermafrost gas hydrates. Salt transport patterns vary as a function of gas pressure, temperature, salinity, etc. The sensitivity of the salt migration and hydrate dissociation processes to ambient temperature and to the concentration and chemistry of saline solutions is investigated experimentally on frozen sand samples at a constant negative temperature (−6 °C). The experiments show that the ambient temperature and the solution chemistry control the critical salt concentration required for complete gas hydrate dissociation. Salt ions migrate faster from more saline solutions at higher temperatures, and the pore moisture can reach the critical salinity in a shorter time. The flux density and contents of different salt ions transported to the samples increase in the series Na2SO4–KCl–CaCl2–NaCl–MgCl2. A model is suggested to account for phase transitions of pore moisture in frozen hydrate-saturated sediments exposed to contact with concentrated saline solutions at pressures above and below the thermodynamic equilibrium, in stable and metastable conditions of gas hydrates, respectively.
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genre permafrost
genre_facet permafrost
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op_doi https://doi.org/10.3390/geosciences12070276
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https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/geosciences12070276
op_rights https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
op_source Geosciences; Volume 12; Issue 7; Pages: 276
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spelling ftmdpi:oai:mdpi.com:/2076-3263/12/7/276/ 2025-01-17T00:16:41+00:00 Migration of Salt Ions in Frozen Hydrate-Saturated Sediments: Temperature and Chemistry Constraints Evgeny Chuvilin Valentina Ekimova Dinara Davletshina Boris Bukhanov Ekaterina Krivokhat Vladimir Shilenkov agris 2022-07-09 application/pdf https://doi.org/10.3390/geosciences12070276 EN eng Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute Cryosphere https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/geosciences12070276 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Geosciences; Volume 12; Issue 7; Pages: 276 permafrost gas hydrate frozen sediment salt migration hydrate dissociation sensitivity to temperature salt concentration salt chemistry Text 2022 ftmdpi https://doi.org/10.3390/geosciences12070276 2023-08-01T05:39:32Z Migration of dissolved salts from natural (cryopeg brines, seawater, etc.), or artificial sources can destabilize intrapermafrost gas hydrates. Salt transport patterns vary as a function of gas pressure, temperature, salinity, etc. The sensitivity of the salt migration and hydrate dissociation processes to ambient temperature and to the concentration and chemistry of saline solutions is investigated experimentally on frozen sand samples at a constant negative temperature (−6 °C). The experiments show that the ambient temperature and the solution chemistry control the critical salt concentration required for complete gas hydrate dissociation. Salt ions migrate faster from more saline solutions at higher temperatures, and the pore moisture can reach the critical salinity in a shorter time. The flux density and contents of different salt ions transported to the samples increase in the series Na2SO4–KCl–CaCl2–NaCl–MgCl2. A model is suggested to account for phase transitions of pore moisture in frozen hydrate-saturated sediments exposed to contact with concentrated saline solutions at pressures above and below the thermodynamic equilibrium, in stable and metastable conditions of gas hydrates, respectively. Text permafrost MDPI Open Access Publishing Geosciences 12 7 276
spellingShingle permafrost
gas hydrate
frozen sediment
salt migration
hydrate dissociation
sensitivity to temperature
salt concentration
salt chemistry
Evgeny Chuvilin
Valentina Ekimova
Dinara Davletshina
Boris Bukhanov
Ekaterina Krivokhat
Vladimir Shilenkov
Migration of Salt Ions in Frozen Hydrate-Saturated Sediments: Temperature and Chemistry Constraints
title Migration of Salt Ions in Frozen Hydrate-Saturated Sediments: Temperature and Chemistry Constraints
title_full Migration of Salt Ions in Frozen Hydrate-Saturated Sediments: Temperature and Chemistry Constraints
title_fullStr Migration of Salt Ions in Frozen Hydrate-Saturated Sediments: Temperature and Chemistry Constraints
title_full_unstemmed Migration of Salt Ions in Frozen Hydrate-Saturated Sediments: Temperature and Chemistry Constraints
title_short Migration of Salt Ions in Frozen Hydrate-Saturated Sediments: Temperature and Chemistry Constraints
title_sort migration of salt ions in frozen hydrate-saturated sediments: temperature and chemistry constraints
topic permafrost
gas hydrate
frozen sediment
salt migration
hydrate dissociation
sensitivity to temperature
salt concentration
salt chemistry
topic_facet permafrost
gas hydrate
frozen sediment
salt migration
hydrate dissociation
sensitivity to temperature
salt concentration
salt chemistry
url https://doi.org/10.3390/geosciences12070276