4.5 Article Proceedings Paper

Investigations into surfactant/gas hydrate relationship

Journal

JOURNAL OF PETROLEUM SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING
Volume 56, Issue 1-3, Pages 82-88

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.petrol.2005.07.006

Keywords

gas hydrate; biosurfactant; anionic surfactant; microbes; gas storage; hydrate catalysis

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Gas hydrates have unique physical properties portending useful industrial applications of gas storage, gas separation, or water desalination. When gas hydrates were found in the early 1990s to occur naturally and abundantly in seafloors, three other primary interests and concerns emerged: potential new energy source, climate threat from their greenhouse gases, and seafloor instabilities. This paper presents research showing how anionic synthetic surfactants helped develop an industrial gas hydrate storage process for natural gas and how naturally-occurring in-situ anionic biosurfactants influence the formation and placement of gas hydrates in ocean sediments. The catalytic effects, mechanisms, and surface specificities imparted by synthetic surfactants in the gas storage process and imparted by biosurfactants in porous media are discussed. The Bacillus subtilis bacterium that is indigenous to gas hydrate mounds in the Gulf of Mexico was cultured in the laboratory. Its biosurfactant was separated and found to catalyze gas hydrates in porous media. The experiments indicate that seafloor-biosurfactants can be produced rapidly in-situ to achieve threshold concentrations whereby hydrates are promoted. The biosurfactarts accumulate and promote hydrate formation on specific mineral surfaces such as sodium montmorillonite. (C) 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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