Structure I (sI) carbon dioxide (CO2) hydrate exhibits markedly different dissociation behavior from sI methane
(CH4) hydrate in experiments in which equilibrated samples at 0.1 MPa are heated isobarically at 13 K/h
from 210 K through the H2O melting point (273.15 K). The CO2 hydrate samples release only about 3% of
their gas content up to temperatures of 240 K, which is 22 K above the hydrate phase boundary. Up to 20%
is released by 270 K, and the remaining CO2 is released at 271.0 ± 0.5 K, where the sample temperature is
buffered until hydrate dissociation ceases. This reproducible buffering temperature for the dissociation reaction
CO2·nH2O = CO2(g) + nH2O(l to s) is measurably distinct from the pure H2O melting point at 273.15 K,
which is reached as gas evolution ceases. In contrast, when sI CH4 hydrate is heated at the same rate at
0.1 MPa, >95% of the gas is released within 25 K of the equilibrium temperature (193 K at 0.1 MPa). In
conjunction with the dissociation study, a method for efficient and reproducible synthesis of pure polycrystalline
CO2 hydrate with suitable characteristics for material properties testing was developed, and the material was
characterized. CO2 hydrate was synthesized from CO2 liquid and H2O solid and liquid reactants at pressures
between 5 and 25 MPa and temperatures between 250 and 281 K. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM)
examination indicates that the samples consist of dense crystalline hydrate and 50−300 μm diameter pores
that are lined with euhedral cubic hydrate crystals. Deuterated hydrate samples made by this same procedure
were analyzed by neutron diffraction at temperatures between 4 and 215 K; results confirm that complete
conversion of water to hydrate has occurred and that the measured unit cell parameter and thermal expansion
are consistent with previously reported values. On the basis of measured weight gain after synthesis and gas
yields from the dissociation experiments, approximately all cages in the hydrate structure are filled such that
n ≈ 5.75.
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