4.6 Article

Tuning the Composition of Guest Molecules in Clathrate Hydrates: NMR Identification and Its Significance to Gas Storage

Journal

CHEMISTRY-AN ASIAN JOURNAL
Volume 4, Issue 8, Pages 1266-1274

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/asia.200900087

Keywords

clathrates; gas hydrates; natural gas; NMR spectroscopy; storage

Funding

  1. Korea Institute of Energy Research
  2. National Research Lab Program [R0A-2005-000-10074-0(2008]
  3. Brain Korea 21 Project
  4. WCU program [31-2008-000-10055-0]
  5. Ministry of Education, Science and Technology

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Gas hydrates represent an attractive way of storing large quantities of gas such as methane and carbon dioxide, although to date there has been little effort to optimize the storage capacity and to understand the trade-offs between storage conditions and storage capacity. In this work, we present estimates for gas storage based on the ideal structures, and show how these must be modified given the little data available on hydrate composition. We then examine the hypothesis based on solid-solution theory for clathrate hydrates as to how storage capacity may be improved for structure II hydrates, and test the hypothesis for a structure It hydrate of THF and methane, paying special attention to the synthetic approach used. Phase equilibrium data are used to map the region of stability of the double hydrate in P-T space as a function of the concentration of THE In situ high-pressure NMR experiments were used to measure the kinetics of reaction between frozen THF solutions and methane gas, and C-13 MAS NMR experiments were used to measure the distribution of the guests over the cage sites. As known from previous work, at high concentrations, of THF, methane only occupies the small cages in structure II hydrate, and in accordance with the hypothesis posed, we confirm that methane can be introduced into the large cage of structure II hydrate by lowering the concentration of THF to below 1.0 mol %. We note that in some preparations the cage occupancies appear to fluctuate with time and are not necessarily homogeneous over the sample. Although the tuning mechanism is generally valid, the composition and homogeneity of the product vary with the details of the synthetic procedure. The best results, those obtained from the gas-liquid reaction, are in good agreement with thermodynamic predictions; those obtained for the gas-solid reaction do not agree nearly as well.

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