Title: Methane Hydrates Jake Ross and Yuliana Proenza
1Methane HydratesJake Ross and Yuliana Proenza
- The Three Questions
- What is a Gas Hydrate?
- What is their potential as an energy resource?
- What role do they play in global climate change?
2What is a Gas Hydrate?
- A gas hydrate is a crystalline solid its
building blocks consist of a gas molecule
surrounded by a cage of water molecules. - It is similar to ice, except that the crystalline
structure is stabilized by the guest gas molecule
within the cage of water molecules. - Suitable gases are carbon dioxide, hydrogen
sulfide, and several low-carbon-number
hydrocarbons. Most gas hydrates , however are
Methane Hydrates.
3 Hydrate Samples
Gas hydrates in sea-floor mounds Here methane
gas is actively dissociating from a hydrate mound.
Gas hydrate can occur as nodules, laminae, or
veins within sediment.
4CH4 Hydrate Stability
5Where are Methane Hydrates located?
- Found in 4 major location types
- Subduction zones (e.g., Nankai Trough Japan,
Cascadia Basin) - Passive Margins (e.g., Blake Ridge on the
southeast cost of the US) - Off-shore hydrocarbon (e.g., Gulf of Mexico,
North Slope Alaska) - On-shore Arctic Permafrost (e.g., Mackenzie
Delta, Arctic Russia, Arctic Alaska)
6Where are Methane Hydrates located?
-
- Methane hydrate occurs in a zone referred to as
the hydrate stability zone. - The zone lies roughly parallel to the land or
seafloor surface. - Permafrost regions,
- depths about 150 - 2000 m below the surface.
- In oceanic sediment
- ocean is at least 300 m deep,
- depths of 0 - 1,100 m below the seafloor.
7Where are Methane Hydrates located?
- Hydrate concentration occurs at depocenters
- Where there is a rapid accumulation of organic
detritus (from which bacteria
generate methane). Carbon isotope analyses
indicate most of the methane in hydrates is
microbial, however thermogenic sources have been
identified in the Gulf of Mexico - Where there is a rapid accumulation of sediments
(which protect detritus from oxidation).
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9What is the potential of CH4 Hydrates as an
energy resource
10- The estimated conventional gas resources and
reserves in the United States alone are 1,400
trillion cubic feet. - If it could be safely and economically recovered,
one 50 by 150 kilometer area off the coast of
North and South Carolina is estimated to hold
enough methane to supply the needs of the United
States for over 70 years
11Conceptual Drawing of Blake Ridge
12 Why are CH4 Hydrates a good energy resource
- The gas is held in a crystal structure, therefore
gas molecules are more densely packed than in
conventional or other unconventional gas traps. - Hydrate forms as cement in the pore spaces of
sediment and has the capacity to fill sediment
pore space and reduce permeability. CH4 -
hydrate-cemented strata thereby act as seals for
trapped free gas - Production of gas from hydrate-sealed traps may
be an easy way to extract hydrate gas because the
reduction of pressure caused by production can
initiate a breakdown of hydrates and a recharging
of the trap with gas
13A Proposed Method
- For the gas production from hydrates and the
seabed stability after the production, we
proposed a new concept. The figure illustrates
the molecular mining method by means of CO2
injection in order to extract CH4 from gas
hydrate reservoirs. The concept is composed of
three steps as follows 1) injection of hot sea
water into the hydrate layer to dissociate the
hydrates, 2) produce gas from the hydrate, 3)
inject CO2 to form carbon dioxide hydrate with
residual water to hold the sea bed stable
14CH4 Hydrates and Climate Change
- Methane is a very effective greenhouse gas. It
is ten times more potent than carbon dioxide. -
- There is increasing evidence that points to the
periodic massive release of methane into the
atmosphere over geological timescales. Are these
enormous releases of methane a cause or an effect
of global climate change?
15- Global warming may cause hydrate destabilization
through a rise in ocean bottom water
temperatures. The increased methane content in
the atmosphere in turn would be expected to
accelerate warming, causing further dissociation,
potentially resulting in run away global warming.
- Sea level rise, however, during warm periods may
act to stabilize hydrates by increasing
hydrostatic pressure, thereby acting as a check
on warming. - Hydrate dissociation may act as a check on
glaciations, whereby reduced sea levels may cause
seafloor hydrate dissociation, releasing methane
and warming the climate.
16This diagram illustrates the affect sea level
change has on the stability of hydrates.
17The Past
- A prominent negative shift in d 13C has been
recorded in Late Paleocene sediments worldwide. - The late Paleocene-early Eocene interval (55.5
mya) was a thermal maximum - Ocean bottom waters warmed rapidly by as much 4
degrees C, along with a concurrent rapid shift in
d 13C values of all the carbon reservoirs in the
global carbon cycle - Data from sediments cores suggest that the
isotopic shift occurring within no more than a
few thousand years - Only a catastrophic infusion of d 12C-enriched
carbon from methane hydrates could cause such a
rapid shift.
18CH4 Hydrates and the Atmosphere
- An important aspect of methane hydrates and their
affect on climate change is their potential to
enter the atmosphere - Methane concentration in seawater is observed to
decrease by 98 between a depth of 300m and the
sea surface as a result of microbial oxidation. - The flux of methane into the atmosphere is thus
lowered 50-fold (Mienert et al., 1998) - However during catastrophic events such as
largescale sediment slumping much higher
proportions of methane would be released.
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20The Future of Methane Hydrates
- Worldwide gas production in the next 30-50 years
- Areas with unique economic and/or political
motivations could see substantial production
within 5-10 years - We need to better understand the mechanisms of
hydrate disassociation and its role in global
warming, either as an accelerator or and
inhibitor