CEE Ph.D. Defense Announcement: Diffusion Behavior of Methane and Carbon Dioxide Hydrates During Formation, Dissociation, and Interfacial Exchange
Dianalaura Cueto Duenas, Ph.D. Candidate
UC Irvine, 2025
Professors Derek Dunn-Rankin & Yu-Chien (Alice) Chien
Abstract: The transition to clean energy relies on natural gas as a bridge fuel, with methane hydrates representing a vast potential source. Hydrate extraction methods, including depressurization, thermal stimulation, and chemical injection, enable gas recovery but pose environmental risks such as seabed collapse, ecosystem disturbance, and chemical leakage. An alternative strategy is CO₂ injection, which allows simultaneous methane extraction and carbon sequestration through guest molecule substitution. However, the molecular mechanisms remain unclear. This study employs molecular dynamics simulations to compare CO₂ and CH₄ hydrate dissociation, examining diffusion, structural dynamics, semi-dissociation, and CO₂-CH₄ hydrate exchange to better understand the processes driving environmentally sustainable hydrate exploitation.
Share
Upcoming Events
-
MSE 298 Seminar: Molecular Modeling in the Age of AI - From Energy Materials to Device Simulations
-
CBE 298 Seminar: Metal Electrodeposition for Modern Mineral Refining
-
MSE 298 Seminar: Quasi-1D/2D Charge-Density-Wave Materials - From Exotic Physics to Application Prospects
-
CBE 298 Seminar: Finding Catalysts of Gut Reactions - The Gut Microbiota in Disease Onset and Treatment
-
MSE 298 Seminar: Basic Materials Science Aspects In Sustainable Metallurgy