Methane hydrates as potential energy resource: Part 1-Importance, resource and recovery facilities

被引:101
|
作者
Demirbas, Ayhan [1 ]
机构
[1] Sirnak Univ, Fac Engn, Sirnak, Turkey
关键词
Methane; Methane hydrate; Clathrate; Greenhouse effect; Resource; Recovery; GAS-HYDRATE; BLACK-SEA; CLATHRATE HYDRATE; MASSIVE DISSOCIATION; VEGETABLE-OILS; MUD VOLCANOS; STABILITY; CARBON; SLOPE; WATER;
D O I
10.1016/j.enconman.2010.02.013
中图分类号
O414.1 [热力学];
学科分类号
摘要
Gas hydrates are ice-like crystalline solids that form from mixtures of water and light natural gases such as methane, carbon dioxide, ethane, propane and butane. Methane was the dominant component among other hydrocarbon gases in the sediments. Gas hydrates, potentially one of the most important energy resources for the future. Methane gas hydrates are increasingly considered a potential energy resource. Enormous reserves of hydrates can be found under continental shelves and on land under permafrost. Gas hydrate or clathrate consists of three general structure types. Depending on the size of the guest molecule, natural gas hydrates can consist of any combination of three crystal structures: (1) Structure 1 or sl, (2) Structure II or all and (3) Structure H or sH. When pure liquid water freezes it crystallizes with hexagonal symmetry, but when it "freezes" as a hydrocarbon hydrate it does so with cubic symmetry for sl and all, reverting to hexagonal symmetry for sH. Methane hydrates are widespread in sea sediments hundreds of meters below the sea floor along the outer continental margins and are also found in Arctic permafrost. Some deposits are close to the ocean floor and at water depths as shallow as 150 m, although at low latitudes they are generally only found below 500 m. The deposits can be 300-600 m thick and cover large horizontal areas. Hydrates may affect climate because when warmed or depressurized, they decompose and dissociate into water and methane gas, one of the greenhouse gases that warms the planet. Methane is a greenhouse gas. Discharge of large amounts of methane into the atmosphere would cause global warming. Methane hydrates hold the danger of natural hazards associated with sea floor stability, release of methane to ocean and atmosphere and gas hydrates disturbed during drilling pose a safety problem. (C) 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:1547 / 1561
页数:15
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] The difference between energy consumption and energy cost: Modelling energy tariff structures for water resource recovery facilities
    Aymerich, I.
    Rieger, L.
    Sobhani, R.
    Rosso, D.
    Corominas, Ll
    WATER RESEARCH, 2015, 81 : 113 - 123
  • [42] Methane and carbon dioxide hydrates on Mars: Potential origins, distribution, detection, and implications for future in situ resource utilization
    Pellenbarg, RE
    Max, MD
    Clifford, SM
    JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-PLANETS, 2003, 108 (E4)
  • [43] Resource potential of methane hydrate coming into focus
    Boswell, Ray
    JOURNAL OF PETROLEUM SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING, 2007, 56 (1-3) : 9 - 13
  • [44] COURT RULES COALBED METHANE IS PART OF THE COAL RESOURCE
    KOEN, AD
    OIL & GAS JOURNAL, 1993, 91 (07) : 32 - &
  • [45] RESOURCE RECOVERY .1. ENERGY RECOVERY REDUCES WASTES DISPOSAL COSTS
    SMITH, JG
    WORRELL, WA
    MANAGEMENT OF WORLD WASTES, 1983, 26 (09): : 24 - &
  • [46] Comparative energy and carbon footprint analysis of biosolids management strategies in water resource recovery facilities
    Zhao, Gang
    Garrido-Baserba, Manel
    Reifsnyder, Samuel
    Xu, Jing-Cheng
    Rosso, Diego
    SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT, 2019, 665 : 762 - 773
  • [47] Optimizing water and resource recovery facilities (WRRF) for energy generation without compromising effluent quality
    Ekama, George A.
    WATER SA, 2021, 47 (02) : 141 - 153
  • [48] Review of natural gas hydrates as an energy resource: Prospects and challenges
    Chong, Zheng Rong
    Yang, She Hern Bryan
    Babu, Ponnivalavan
    Linga, Praveen
    Li, Xiao-Sen
    APPLIED ENERGY, 2016, 162 : 1633 - 1652
  • [49] Hybrid modelling of water resource recovery facilities: status and opportunities
    Schneider, Mariane Yvonne
    Quaghebeur, Ward
    Borzooei, Sina
    Froemelt, Andreas
    Li, Feiyi
    Saagi, Ramesh
    Wade, Matthew J.
    Zhu, Jun-Jie
    Torfs, Elena
    WATER SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, 2022, 85 (09) : 2503 - 2524
  • [50] Water Resource Recovery Facilities Empower the Electrolytic Hydrogen Economy
    Jiang, Jinyue
    Du, Lin
    Zhu, Jun-Jie
    Ku, Anthony Y.
    Ren, Zhiyong Jason
    ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY, 2024, 58 (50) : 22124 - 22134