Gas Hydrates 1: Fundamentals, Characterization and Modeling

Gas hydrates, or clathrate hydrates, are crystalline solids resembling ice, in which small (guest) molecules, typically gases, are trapped inside cavities formed by hydrogen-bonded water (host) molecules. They form and remain stable under low temperatures – often well below ambient conditions – and high pressures ranging from a few bar to hundreds of bar, depending on the guest molecule. Their presence is ubiquitous on Earth, in deep-marine sediments and in permafrost regions, as well as in outer space, on planets or comets. In addition to water, they can be synthesized with organic species as host molecules, resulting in milder stability conditions: these are referred to as semi-clathrate hydrates. Clathrate and semi-clathrate hydrates are being considered for applications as diverse as gas storage and separation, cold storage and transport and water treatment.

This book is the first of two edited volumes, with chapters on the experimental and modeling tools used for characterizing and predicting the unique molecular, thermodynamic and kinetic properties of gas hydrates (Volume 1) and on gas hydrates in their natural environment and for potential industrial applications (Volume 2).

Full Text

FilePagesSizeAccess
Chapitre 1 Neutron Scattering of Clathrate Hydrates
6234 Mo
Chapitre 2 Spectroscopy of Gas Hydrates: From Fundamental Aspects to Chemical Engineering, Geophysical and Astrophysical Applications
5034 Mo
Chapitre 3 High-Resolution Optical Microscopy of Gas Hydrates
328 Mo
Chapitre 4 Calorimetric Characterization of Clathrate and Semiclathrate Hydrates
321 Mo
Chapitre 5 Thermodynamic Modeling of Solid–Fluid Equilibria: From Pure Solid Phases to Gas Semiclathrate Hydrates
50901 Ko
Chapitre 6 Volume and Non-Equilibrium Crystallization of Clathrate Hydrates
581 Mo
Index
2505 Ko
Front matter / Contents / Preface
10312 Ko
List of Authors
2106 Ko
How to cite
Broseta Daniel, Ruffine Livio, Desmedt Arnaud (2017). Gas Hydrates 1: Fundamentals, Characterization and Modeling. ISTE- Wiley. https://doi.org/10.1002/9781119332688, https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00453/56506/

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