Superheating of Structure I Gas Hydrates within the Structure II Cyclopentane Hydrate Shell.
Satoshi TakeyaSanehiro MuromachiAkio YoneyamaKeiichi HiranoKazuyuki HyodoJohn A RipmeesterPublished in: The journal of physical chemistry letters (2022)
The superheated state of methane (CH 4 ) hydrate that exists under the surface ice layer can persist for considerable lengths of time, which showed promise as a method for storing and transporting natural gas. This study extends this further by coating sI CH 4 hydrate with one of several sII hydrates, thus eliminating the need for a defect-free continuous interface between the sI and sII hydrates. Gas hydrate crystals were kept intact above their dissociation temperature by immersing them in liquid cyclopentane (CP), as observed with powder X-ray diffraction and X-ray CT methods. It was observed that placing the CH 4 hydrate in CP converted the outer layer of CH 4 hydrate to a thin layer of CP hydrate at around 270 K under atmospheric pressure, which is ∼80 K higher than the usual dissociation temperature. It was also observed that sI CO 2 hydrate and C 2 H 6 hydrate could be preserved by CP hydrate.