Abstract

Knowledge of thermal expansivity can aid in the understanding of both microscopic and macroscopic behavior of clathrate hydrates. Diffraction studies have shown that hydrate volume changes significantly (as much as 1.5% over 50 K) as a function of temperature. It has been demonstrated previously via statistical mechanics that a minor change in hydrate volume (e.g., a 1.5% change in volume or 0.5% change in lattice parameter) can lead to a major change in the predicted hydrate formation pressure (e.g., >15% at >100 MPa for methane). Because of this sensitivity, hydrate thermal expansivity measurements, for both Structures I and II with various guests, are needed help quantify volume distortions in hydrate lattices to ensure accurate hydrate phase equilibria predictions. In addition to macroscopic phase equilibria, the thermal expansion of different hydrates can give information about the interactions between the guest molecules and the host lattice. In this work, the hydrate lattice parameters for four Structure I (C2H6, CO2, 47% C2H6 + 53% CO2, and 85% CH4 + 15% CO2) and seven Structure II (C3H8, 60% CH4 + 40% C3H8, 30% C2H6 + 70% C3H8, 18% CO2 + 82% C3H8, 87.6% CH4 + 12.4% i-C4H10, 95% CH4 + 5% C5H10O, and a natural gas mixture) systems were measured as a function of temperature. The lattice parameter measurements were combined with existing literature values. Both sI and sII hydrates, with a few exceptions, had a common thermal expansivity, independent of hydrate guest. Many guest-dependent correlations for linear thermal expansivity have been proposed. However, we present two guest-independent, structure-dependent correlations for sI and sII lattices, which have been developed to express the normalized hydrate lattice parameters (and therefore volume) as a function of temperature.

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