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Journal ArticleDOI

Increasing Gas Hydrate Formation Temperature for Desalination of High Salinity Produced Water with Secondary Guests

TLDR
In this paper, a new gas hydrate-based desalination process using water-immiscible hydrate formers; cyclopentane (CP) and cyclohexane (CH) as secondary hydrate guests to alleviate temperature requirements for hydrate formation.
Abstract
We suggest a new gas hydrate-based desalination process using water-immiscible hydrate formers; cyclopentane (CP) and cyclohexane (CH) as secondary hydrate guests to alleviate temperature requirements for hydrate formation. The hydrate formation reactions were carried out in an isobaric condition of 3.1 MPa to find the upper temperature limit of CO2 hydrate formation. Simulated produced water (8.95 wt % salinity) mixed with the hydrate formers shows an increased upper temperature limit from −2 °C for simple CO2 hydrate to 16 and 7 °C for double (CO2 + CP) and (CO2 + CH) hydrates, respectively. The resulting conversion rate to double hydrate turned out to be similar to that with simple CO2 hydrate at the upper temperature limit. Hydrate formation rates (Rf) for the double hydrates with CP and CH are shown to be 22 and 16 times higher, respectively, than that of the simple CO2 hydrate at the upper temperature limit. Such mild hydrate formation temperature and fast formation kinetics indicate increased energ...

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Seawater desalination by gas hydrate process and removal characteristics of dissolved ions (Na+, K+, Mg2 +, Ca2 +, B3 +, Cl−, SO42 −)

TL;DR: In this paper, the removal efficiency of cations and anions in a real seawater sample using HBD processes were reported for the first time, and it was also found that the desalting efficiency depended on the hydrate-forming gas (CO2> CH4) and the hydraulic pressure (6-10 MPa) to produce hydrate pellets.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Review of Clathrate Hydrate Based Desalination To Strengthen Energy–Water Nexus

TL;DR: A detailed review of the literature (both patents and publications) so far on hydesal is critically evaluated, and prospects and directions to commercialize the HyDesal process are presented as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

LNG cold energy utilization: Prospects and challenges

TL;DR: In this article, the authors review various studies on the current LNG cold energy utilization systems, including power generation, air separation, desalination, cryogenic carbon dioxide capture, and NGL recovery.
Journal ArticleDOI

A review of gas hydrate growth kinetic models

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a systematic review of literature on the kinetic models describing the behavior of gas hydrate growth, which is further augmented by the dynamic behaviour of multiphase fluids flow, the thermodynamics of hydrate-forming system, and compounding interfacial phenomena.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Review of technologies for oil and gas produced water treatment

TL;DR: Major research efforts in the future could focus on the optimization of current technologies and use of combined physico-chemical and/or biological treatment of produced water in order to comply with reuse and discharge limits.
Journal ArticleDOI

Advances in seawater desalination technologies

TL;DR: A number of seawater desalination technologies have been developed during the last several decades to augment the supply of water in arid regions of the world as mentioned in this paper, however, many countries are unable to afford these technologies as a fresh water resource.
Journal ArticleDOI

Clathrate hydrates

Journal ArticleDOI

Tuning clathrate hydrates for hydrogen storage

TL;DR: Hydrogen storage capacities in THF-containing binary-clathrate hydrates can be increased to ∼4 wt% at modest pressures by tuning their composition to allow the hydrogen guests to enter both the larger and the smaller cages, while retaining low-pressure stability.
Journal ArticleDOI

A kinetic study of methane hydrate formation

TL;DR: In this paper, a semi-empirical model was formulated to correlate the experimental kinetic data, which revealed that the formation kinetics were dependent on the interfacial area, pressure, temperature and degree of supercooling.
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