4.7 Article

Overview: Nucleation of clathrate hydrates

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 145, Issue 21, Pages -

Publisher

AMER INST PHYSICS
DOI: 10.1063/1.4968590

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Colorado School of Mines Hydrate Consortium
  2. BP
  3. Chevron
  4. ConocoPhillips
  5. ENI
  6. ExxonMobil
  7. Halliburton
  8. IMP
  9. MultiChem
  10. Nalco Champion
  11. OneSubsea
  12. Petrobras
  13. Schlumberger
  14. Shell
  15. SPT Group
  16. Statoil
  17. Total
  18. Petroleum Institute, Abu Dhabi

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Molecular level knowledge of nucleation and growth of clathrate hydrates is of importance for advancing fundamental understanding on the nature of water and hydrophobic hydrate formers, and their interactions that result in the formation of ice-like solids at temperatures higher than the ice-point. The stochastic nature and the inability to probe the small length and time scales associated with the nucleation process make it very difficult to experimentally determine the molecular level changes that lead to the nucleation event. Conversely, for this reason, there have been increasing efforts to obtain this information using molecular simulations. Accurate knowledge of how and when hydrate structures nucleate will be tremendously beneficial for the development of sustainable hydrate management strategies in oil and gas flowlines, as well as for their application in energy storage and recovery, gas separation, carbon sequestration, seawater desalination, and refrigeration. This article reviews various aspects of hydrate nucleation. First, properties of supercooled water and ice nucleation are reviewed briefly due to their apparent similarity to hydrates. Hydrate nucleation is then reviewed starting from macroscopic observations as obtained from experiments in laboratories and operations in industries, followed by various hydrate nucleation hypotheses and hydrate nucleation driving force calculations based on the classical nucleation theory. Finally, molecular simulations on hydrate nucleation are discussed in detail followed by potential future research directions. Published by AIP Publishing.

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