Along with nomenclature of ionic compounds, acids, and molecular compounds.
Energy Storage in Clathrates and Related Molecular Compounds
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Transcript of Energy Storage in Clathrates and Related Molecular Compounds
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Energy Storage in Clathrates and Related Molecular
Compounds
Wendy L. MaoGeological and Environmental Sciences & Photon Science, SLAC
Stanford University
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Clathrates Filled Ices van der Waals Compounds
Molecular Compounds
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Clathrates Crystalline structures based on
a hydrogen-bonded water framework (‘host’ lattice) with cavities which contain ‘guest’ molecules
Filled Ices van der Waals Compounds
Molecular Compounds
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Clathrate structures
cubic
cubic
hexagonal
W. Mao et al, Physics Today 2007
sI
sII
sH
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Clathrates – an old science
In 1778, Joseph Priestley may have been the first to discover clathrates taking advantage of the cold winters in Birmingham to refrigerate his samples of sulfur dioxide + water
Credit for the discovery is usually given to Michael Faraday’s boss, Sir Humphry Davy who reported a clathrate in the chlorine + water system in 1811
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Clathrates on Earth
Clathrates represent major flow assurance problem in natural gas and oil pipelines
Methane clathrate in sI structure is the most abundant form of hydrocarbon on Earth (> 60%)
Found in terrestrial marine sediments and permafrost
Source of global climate change?
Potential energy resource?
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Clathrates represent major flow assurance problem in natural gas and oil pipelines
Methane clathrate in sI structure is the most abundant form of hydrocarbon on Earth (> 60%)
Found in terrestrial marine sediments and permafrost
Source of global climate change?
Potential energy resource?Image courtesy of Petrobas
Clathrates on Earth
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Clathrates represent major flow assurance problem in natural gas and oil pipelines
Methane clathrate in sI structure is the most abundant form of hydrocarbon on Earth (> 60%)
Found in terrestrial marine sediments and permafrost
Source of global climate change?
Potential energy resource?
Methane ice worm
Clathrates on Earth
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Clathrates represent major flow assurance problem in natural gas and oil pipelines
Methane clathrate in sI structure is the most abundant form of hydrocarbon on Earth (> 60%)
Found in terrestrial marine sediments and permafrost
Source of global climate change?
Potential energy resource?
Figure courtesy of G. Dickens
Clathrates on Earth
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Clathrates represent major flow assurance problem in natural gas and oil pipelines
Methane clathrate in sI structure is the most abundant form of hydrocarbon on Earth (> 60%)
Found in terrestrial marine sediments and permafrost
Source of global climate change?
Potential energy resource?
Image courtesy of G. Klinkhammer
Clathrates on Earth
Flare from the Mallik 2002 production test
well
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Clathrates in the Solar system
Ubiquitous presence in the Universe?
CO2 and CH4 clathrates on Mars CH4 clathrates on Titan Source of plumes on Saturn’s moon
Enceladus Clathrates in Halley’s comet
Porco et al, Science 2006Kieffer et al, Science 2006
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Clathrates Filled Ices
Hydrates with structures related to known ice phase
Guest molecules occupy channels within ice structure rather than cages
van der Waals Compounds
Molecular Compounds
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Formed at higher pressures He hydrate (ice II), Londono et al JCP, 1992 Hydrogen hydrates (ice II and ice Ic), Vos et al, PRL
1993 Methane hydrate III (ice Ih), Loveday et al, PRL 2001
Filled Ices
Filled ice II
Filled ice IcFilled ice Ih
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Clathrates Filled Ices van der Waals Compounds
Stoichiometric crystals of mixtures of atoms and molecules held together by weak van der Waals forces
Molecular Compounds
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van der Waals compounds
He(N2)11, Vos et al, Nature 1992
Ne(He)2, Loubeyre et al, PRL 1993
Ar(H2)2, Loubeyre et al, PRL 1994
CH4-H2, Somayazulu et al, Science 1996
He(N2)11
9 GPa
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Hydrogen Storage
Requirements:1. High hydrogen content (by mass and volume)2. Moderate P-T synthesis3. Moderate P-T storage4. Easy hydrogen release5. Environmentally friendly by-products6. Cost and availability7. Safety
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C2 (filled Ice Ic) H2-H2O
C1 (filled Ice II) H2-6H2O
C2
Vos et al, PRL 1993
H2 + H2O system
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H2 + H2O system
W. Mao et al, Science 2002
300 MPa250 K
249 Kt = 0
t = 30 min HHsII (Hydrogen hydrate in sII clathrate structure) H2-2H2O
H2
H2O
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H2 + H2O system
Two filled ices and sII H2 clathrate found
at high P Can be quenched to much lower P with low T Studied using XRD, Neutron diffraction, Raman and IR spectroscopy Chemical stabilization of clathrate phase Not enough hydrogen storage, kinetic limitations Different P-T range (e.g. C2 filled Ice Ic)
Lokshin et al, PRL 2004
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Use THF as a promoter molecule to fill large cage
Forms sII clathrate at 277.3 K at ambient P
Florusse et al, Science 2004
Chemical stabilization
.. ..
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H2 + H2O system
Two filled ices and sII H2 clathrate found
at high P Can be quenched to much lower P with low T Studied using XRD, Neutron diffraction, Raman and IR spectroscopy Chemical stabilization of clathrate phase Not enough hydrogen storage, kinetic limitations Different P-T range (e.g. C2 filled Ice Ic)
W. Mao et al, Science 2002Lokshin et al, PRL 2004
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Somayazulu et al, Science 1996
H2 + CH4 system
CH4(H2)2
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H2 + CH4 system
Needs more characterization Structure Hydrogen occupancy Phase diagram Metastable synthesis paths
0.4 GPa, 86 K 1.0 GPa, 120 K
H4Mcrystals
liquid
0.4 GPa, 86 K 1.0 GPa, 120 K
H4Mcrystals
liquid
W. Mao et al, CPL 2005
CH4(H2)4 has 33.4 wt% H2
(not including H in CH4)
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0.00
0.05
0.10
0.15
0.20
0.25
0.30
0.35
0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40
Liquidhydrogen
100
density: 5 g/cm3
2 g/cm3
1 g/cm3
0.7 g/cm3
CH4(H2)4
Light element hydridesTransition
metal hydridesHydrocarbons
2007
2015
HHsII
C2
2010
Gravimetric H2 density (wt %)
Vol
umet
ric H
2 de
nsity
(kg
H2/
L)
0.00
0.05
0.10
0.15
0.20
0.25
0.30
0.35
0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40
Liquidhydrogen
100
density: 5 g/cm3
2 g/cm3
1 g/cm3
0.7 g/cm3
CH4(H2)4
Light element hydridesTransition
metal hydridesHydrocarbons
2007
2015
HHsII
C2
2010
Gravimetric H2 density (wt %)
Vol
umet
ric H
2 de
nsity
(kg
H2/
L)
W. Mao et al, Physics Today 2007
Hydrogen storage capacity
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Astrophysics
Experimental Results
Spectra from WL5, protostar in the Ophiuchus cloud complex
Sandford et al, Science 1993
Trifid Nebula
•HH-sII in small, icy bodies? Telescope Observations