4.6 Article

Experimental determination and thermodynamic modeling of the hydrogen sulfide hydrate solubility in water

Journal

CHEMICAL ENGINEERING SCIENCE
Volume 284, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ces.2023.119474

Keywords

Hydrate-liquid water phase equilibrium; H 2 S solubility; Thermodynamic model; Raman spectroscopy

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In this study, the solubility of H2S hydrate in water was measured using Raman spectroscopy. The results showed that the solubility increases with temperature under certain equilibrium conditions, and the solubility also depends on pressure and temperature under different equilibrium conditions. A thermodynamic model based on the van der Waals-Platteeuw theory was developed to predict the solubility, demonstrating its accuracy.
The solubility of hydrogen sulfide (H2S) hydrate, which determines the minimum concentration required for hydrate stability, is critical for the production and transportation of natural gas and the safety of H2S emissions. Herein, Raman spectroscopy was used to measure the solubility of H2S hydrate in water at a temperature of 273.15-301.15 K and pressures ranging from the hydrate-liquid-vapor (H-Lw-V) three-phase equilibrium pressure for each temperature to 100 MPa. The results showed that the solubility of H2S hydrate in water increases with temperature under H-Lw-V three-phase equilibrium conditions. Meanwhile, under hydrate-liquid two-phase equilibrium conditions, the solubility increases significantly with temperature at constant pressure but decreases slightly with pressure at constant temperature. The three-phase solubility can be expressed as mH2S (mol center dot kg-1) = exp( - 6176.6286/T + 20.8318), where the temperature is in K, and the two-phase solubility (also depends on the pressure in MPa: mH2S mol center dot kg-1) = exp[ - 21.1 - 0.0182P - (6281.47 - 4.23P)/T ]. In addition, a thermodynamic model based on the van der Waals-Platteeuw theory was developed to predict the solubility of H2S hydrate in water and the relative deviations of the solubility of H2S hydrate (AADP) demonstrating the model's capability to accurately predict the H2S hydrate solubility in water.

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