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Kinetics of CO2 hydrate formation in clayey sand sediments: Implications for CO2 sequestration.

Authors :
Mohamed, Abdirahman Hassan
Sulaimon, Aliyu Adebayo
Tsegab, Haylay
Lal, Bhajan
Atthi Tasan Singh, Aneel Jordan
Ridha, Syahrir
Source :
Gas Science & Engineering; Nov2024, Vol. 131, pN.PAG-N.PAG, 1p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Hydrate-based CO 2 sequestration beneath oceanic sediments is an emerging technique that involves the injection of CO 2 into the hydrate stability zone (HSZ) beneath the seabed, forming hydrate cap that structurally traps the injected CO 2 and reduces the risk of leaking CO 2 from the storage sediment. Gas hydrates are adequately stable in sand sediments saturated with fresh water; however, the salinity of oceanic water impairs hydrate formation kinetics, stability, and CO 2 storage capacity. In addition to sandstones, marine sediments are composed of many clay minerals that could affect hydrate formation. Therefore, this study experimentally simulates CO 2 injection into sand and clayey sand sediments to assess the potential of CO 2 hydrate formation. CO 2 hydrates are formed inside a high-pressure reactor, which contains unconsolidated sediment bed/pack (silica sand; mixed sand with bentonite clay: 5 wt% and 10 wt%), saturated with de-ionized water or brine (3.3 wt% NaCl). Hydrate formation experiments were performed at 4 MPa pressure and 274.15 K temperature. Results show that CO 2 hydrate formed within the sand sediment, with induction times of 6 and 8.5 h, for the de-ionized and brine systems, respectively. CO 2 gas mole uptake in the de-ionized system was 71.54 mmol/mol however, in the brine system the gas uptake was 56.95 mmol/mol. Hence this 20.4% reduction in the gas uptake indicated the inhibition effect of salinity. In contrast, in the brine-saturated 5 wt% clay-sand sediment, the induction time was 6.5 h, indicating the promoting effect of the nano-sized clay particles. However, the gas uptake in this brine-saturated clay-sand sediment was reduced by 45.51% compared to the brine-saturated sand sediment. Increasing the clay content to 10 wt% prevented CO 2 hydrate formation due to porosity reduction. Moreover, de-ionized water in clayey sand sediments prevented hydrate formation due to clay swelling. Finally, CO 2 hydrate formation at the end of each experiment was visually confirmed. [Display omitted] • Gas hydrates are hydrogen bonded crystalline structures of water and gas molecules. • Gas hydrates have the capacity to store a significant amount of gas molecules. • Salinity delayed CO 2 hydrate induction time, and reduced gas uptake by 20.4%. • Nano-sized clay particles in marine sediments can promote CO 2 hydrate nucleation. • Presence of 5 wt% clay enhanced induction time, but reduced gas uptake by 45.51%. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
29499097
Volume :
131
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Gas Science & Engineering
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
180954049
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jgsce.2024.205483