This identifies an interesting possibility. it may be possible to induce nano bubbles and thereby speed up the formation of the hydrate itself.
This would provide a nifty storage and transportation option clearly superior to present options.
This is one of those potential options that you can actually see and feel while stymied in every way possible to actually exploit. Sort of reminds me of the original efforts to produce usable nitrogen.
Even then, hydrates remain a comparably recent discovery and actual usage will easily survive even free energy itself. Any form of methane remains just too convenient even as a heating option and i would sooner tote a canister of hydrates than a canister of propane. I know one is a perfectly good bomb.
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The invisible key to methane hydrates
This
image shows a methane hydrate being subjected to heat
by Staff Writers
Washington DC (SPX) Jun 05, 2015
http://esciencenews.com/sources/newswise.scinews/2015/06/02/the.invisible.key.methane.hydrates
Like the carbon dioxide in a fizzing glass of soda, most bubbles of gas
in a liquid don't last long. But nanobubbles persist. These bubbles are
thousands of times smaller than the tip of a pencil lead - so small they
are invisible even under most optical microscopes - and their stability
makes them useful in a variety of applications, from targeted drug
delivery to water treatment procedures.
Now a team of Canadian researchers from the University of British
Columbia and National Research Council of Canada is studying the role
that methane nanobubbles might play in the formation and dissociation of
natural gas hydrates - crystalline lattices of hydrogen-bonded water
molecules with gas molecules nestled between.
Hydrates are a currently untapped source of natural gas, one of the
chief energy sources in the United States. Gaining a better
understanding of how nanobubbles impact their formation and dissociation
could help design procedures to more efficiently and safely harvest
hydrates for natural gas capture. The findings are published this week
in The Journal of Chemical Physics, from AIP Publishing.
Naturally-occurring methane hydrates, hidden deep under the sea floor or
tucked under Arctic permafrost, contain substantial natural gas
reserves locked up in a form that is difficult to extract. When these
hydrates decompose (with the injection of heat or depressurization), the
gas inside is liberated and can then be used for energy.
Whether, and how, to take advantage of this resource is a complicated
question. Hydrates have shaped the history of our planet: by locking
away methane produced in the earth's crust instead of allowing it to
accumulate in the atmosphere, they helped to make the earth a hospitable
place for life.
Their role in this regard continues today - while the methane trapped in
hydrates is a potential source of future energy, it may also serve as a
potent source of greenhouse gas if it escapes into the atmosphere.
Thus, in order to extract methane without contributing to climate
change, understanding the precise mechanics of the hydrate decomposition
process is crucial.
The researchers used molecular dynamics simulations to model the solid
hydrates' decomposition into liquid and gaseous states. Whether or not
nanobubbles formed during decomposition was influenced, among other
factors, by the temperature - higher heat made the hydrate dissociate
more quickly. When methane was released from the hydrate into the liquid
state faster than it could diffuse out, it became supersaturated and
formed nanobubbles.
"If the decomposition of the methane hydrate phase is fast enough, which
depends on temperature, the methane gas in the aqueous phase forms
nanobubbles," said Saman Alavi, one of the lead researchers on the
project.
Alavi, along with colleagues A. Bagherzadeh, J. A. Ripmeester and P.
Englezos, also briefly studied the other side of the process: hydrate
formation. Because they are stable under relatively mild conditions,
hydrates could be a potential means to safely transport flammable
gasses. But in nature, methane hydrates can take years to form.
That's where the nanobubbles come into play: through their simulations,
the researchers found that if temperature and pressure conditions were
favorable for hydrate formation, methane nanobubbles in the aqueous
solution sped up the rate at which the hydrate formed. "Nanobubbles may
bring more methane into contact with water and enhance hydrate formation
efficiency," said Alavi.
Separately, these findings provide insight into nanobubble dynamics that
could allow researchers to take advantage of the unique properties of
hydrates.
Taken together, they also provide a potential explanation for the
so-called memory effect - the fact that "aqueous solutions in contact
with methane form solid methane hydrate at a much faster rate if they
have already undergone a methane hydrate formation-decomposition cycle,"
said Alavi, almost as if the hydrate "remembers" its previous state.
Nanobubbles might explain why. If a hydrate dissociates fast enough, it
leads to the formation of nanobubbles. If these bubbles persist, they
could hasten the formation of future hydrates by providing sites for
nucleation.
Next, the researchers plan to more thoroughly investigate the
composition and long-term fate of nanobubbles resulting from hydrate
decomposition.
The article, "Formation of methane nano-bubbles during hydrate decomposition and their effect on hydrate growth," is authored by S. Alireza Bagherzadeh, Saman Alavi, John Ripmeester and Peter Englezos.
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