Abstract

The dissociation rates of methane hydrates formed with and without the presence of sodium dodecylsulfate (methane-SDS hydrates), were measured under atmospheric pressure and temperatures below ice point toinvestigate the influence of the hydrate production conditions and manners upon its dissociation kinetic behavior. The experimental results demonstrated that the dissociation rate of methane hydrate below ice point is strongly dependent on the manners of hydrate formation and processing. The dissociation rate of hydrate formed quiescentlywas lower than that of hydrate formed with stirring; the dissociation rate of hydrate formed at lower pressure was higher than that of hydrate formed at higher pressure; the compaction of hydrate after its formation lowered its stability, i.e., increased its dissociation rate. The stability of hydrate could be increased by prolonging the time periodfor which hydrate was held at formation temperature and pressure before it was cooled down, or by prolonging thetime period for which hydrate was held at dissociation temperature and formation pressure before it was depressurized to atmospheric pressure. It was found that the dissociation rate of methane hydrate varied with the temperature(ranging from 245.2 to 272.2 K) anomalously as reported on the dissociation of methane hydrate without the presence of surfactant as kinetic promoter. The dissociation rate at 268 K was found to be the lowest when the manners and conditions at which hydrates were formed and processed were fixed.

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