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1.
To understand host–guest interactions of hydrocarbon clathrate hydrates, we investigated the crystal structure of simple and binary clathrate hydrates including butane (n‐C4H10 or iso‐C4H10) as the guest. Powder X‐ray diffraction (PXRD) analysis using the information on the conformation of C4H10 molecules obtained by molecular dynamics (MD) simulations was performed. It was shown that the guest n‐C4H10 molecule tends to change to the gauche conformation within host water cages. Any distortion of the large 51264 cage and empty 512 cage for the simple iso‐C4H10 hydrate was not detected, and it was revealed that dynamic disorder of iso‐C4H10 and gauchenC4H10 were spherically extended within the large 51264 cages. It was indicated that structural isomers of hydrocarbon molecules with different van der Waals diameters are enclathrated within water cages in the same way owing to conformational change and dynamic disorder of the molecules. Furthermore, these results show that the method reported herein is applicable to structure analysis of other host–guest materials including guest molecules that could change molecular conformations.  相似文献   

2.
The crystal structure and phase transition of cubic structure II (sII) binary clathrate hydrates of methane (CH4) and propanol are reported from powder X‐ray diffraction measurements. The deformation of host water cages at the cubic–tetragonal phase transition of 2‐propanol+CH4 hydrate, but not 1‐propanol+CH4 hydrate, was observed below about 110 K. It is shown that the deformation of the host water cages of 2‐propanol+CH4 hydrate can be explained by the restriction of the motion of 2‐propanol within the 51264 host water cages. This result provides a low‐temperature structure due to a temperature‐induced symmetry‐lowering transition of clathrate hydrate. This is the first example of a cubic structure of the common clathrate hydrate families at a fixed composition.  相似文献   

3.
In this study, we investigate the crystal structures and phase equilibria of butanols+CH4+H2O systems to reveal the hydroxy group positioning and its effects on hydrate stability. Four clathrate hydrates formed by structural butanol isomers are identified with powder X‐ray diffraction (PXRD). In addition, Raman spectroscopy is used to analyze the guest distributions and inclusion behaviors of large alcohol molecules in these hydrate systems. The existence of a free OH indicates that guest molecules can be captured in the large cages of structure II hydrates without any hydrogen‐bonding interactions between the hydroxy group of the guests and the water‐host framework. However, Raman spectra of the binary (1‐butanol+CH4) hydrate do not show the free OH signal, indicating that there could be possible hydrogen‐bonding interactions between the guests and hosts. We also measure the four‐phase equilibrium conditions of the butanols+CH4+H2O systems.  相似文献   

4.
To provide improved understanding of guest–host interactions in clathrate hydrates, we present some correlations between guest chemical structures and observations on the corresponding hydrate properties. From these correlations it is clear that directional interactions such as hydrogen bonding between guest and host are likely, although these have been ignored to greater or lesser degrees because there has been no direct structural evidence for such interactions. For the first time, single‐crystal X‐ray crystallography has been used to detect guest–host hydrogen bonding in structure II (sII) and structure H (sH) clathrate hydrates. The clathrates studied are the tert‐butylamine (tBA) sII clathrate with H2S/Xe help gases and the pinacolone + H2S binary sH clathrate. X‐ray structural analysis shows that the tBA nitrogen atom lies at a distance of 2.64 Å from the closest clathrate hydrate water oxygen atom, whereas the pinacolone oxygen atom is determined to lie at a distance of 2.96 Å from the closest water oxygen atom. These distances are compatible with guest–water hydrogen bonding. Results of molecular dynamics simulations on these systems are consistent with the X‐ray crystallographic observations. The tBA guest shows long‐lived guest–host hydrogen bonding with the nitrogen atom tethered to a water HO group that rotates towards the cage center to face the guest nitrogen atom. Pinacolone forms thermally activated guest–host hydrogen bonds with the lattice water molecules; these have been studied for temperatures in the range of 100–250 K. Guest–host hydrogen bonding leads to the formation of Bjerrum L‐defects in the clathrate water lattice between two adjacent water molecules, and these are implicated in the stabilities of the hydrate lattices, the water dynamics, and the dielectric properties. The reported stable hydrogen‐bonded guest–host structures also tend to blur the longstanding distinction between true clathrates and semiclathrates.  相似文献   

5.
Heat capacities of structure I and II trimethylene oxide (TMO) clathrate hydrates doped with small amount of potassium hydroxide (x=1.8×10–4 to water) were measured by an adiabatic calorimeter in the temperature range 11–300 K. In the str. I hydrate (TMO·7.67H2O), a glass transition and a higher order phase transition were observed at 60 K and 107.9 K, respectively. The glass transition was considered to be due to the freezing of the reorientation of the host water molecules, which occurred around 85 K in the pure sample and was lowered owing to the acceleration effect of KOH. The relaxation time of the water reorientation and its distribution were estimated and compared with those of other clathrate hydrates. The phase transition was due to the orientational ordering of the guest TMO molecules accommodated in the cages formed by water molecules. The transition was of the higher order and the transition entropy was 1.88 J·K–1(TMO-mol)–1, which indicated that at least 75% of orientational disorder was remaining in the low temperature phase. In the str. II hydrates (TMO·17H2O), only one first-order phase transition appeared at 34.5 K. This transition was considered to be related to the orientational ordering of the water molecules as in the case of the KOH-doped acetone and tetrahydrofuran (THF) hydrates. The transition entropy was 2.36 JK–1(H2O-mol)–1, which is similar to those observed in the acetone and THF hydrates. The relations of the transition temperature and entropy to the guest properties (size and dipole moment) were discussed.Contribution No 57 from the Microcalorimetry Research CenterThe authors would like to express their sincere thanks to the Nissan Science Foundation for their financial support.  相似文献   

6.
A novel tetramethylammonium aluminosilicate hydrate with the approximate composition [NMe4]6[AlxSi8?xO18?x(OH)2+x] · 44H2O (x = 3–4) has been identified by powder X-ray diffraction as a component in a polyphasic solid mixture which crystallized at room temperature from an aqueous NMe4OH? Al2O3? SiO2 solution. Large crystals of the novel hydrate phase could be mechanically selected from that mixture. The crystal structure has been determined from 1 196 unique MoKα diffraction data measured at 180 K: Tetragonal crystal system, cell constants a = 16.181(4) and c = 17.450(4) Å, space group P4/mnc with Z = 2 formula units per unit cell, R = 0.072. The host-guest compound is of polyhedral clathrate type with a mixed three-dimensional, (mainly) four-connected network composed of oligomeric aluminosilicate anions [AlxSi8?xO18?x(OH)2+x]6? and H2O molecules linked via hydrogen bonds O? H …? O. The aluminosilicate anions possess a cube-shaped (double four-ring) structure. Orientationally disordered cationic guest species NMe4+ are enclosed in the large [4668] and [4151067] polyhedral voids of the host framework; the small [46] cages (i.e. the double four-ring anions) and [4356] cages are empty. The hydrate is a further member in a recently discovered series of clathrates with mixed tetrahedral networks, which provides a structure-chemical link between zeolite- and clathrate hydrate-type host-guest compounds.  相似文献   

7.
Owing to a stable and porous cage structure, natural gas hydrates can store abundant methane and serve as a potentially natural gas resource. However, the microscopic mechanism of how hydrate crystalline grows has not been fully explored, especially for the structure containing different guest molecules. Hence, we adopt density functional theory (DFT) to investigate the fusion process of structure I hydrates with CH4/C2H6 guest molecules from mono-cages to triple-cages. We find that the volume of guest molecules affects the stabilities of large (51262, L) and small (512, s) cages, which are prone to capture C2H6 and CH4, respectively. Mixed double cages (small cage and large cage) with the mixed guest molecules have the highest stability and fusion energy. The triangular triple cages exhibit superior stability because of the three shared faces, and the triangular mixed triple cages (large-small-large) structure with the mixed guest molecules shows the highest stability and fusion energy in the triple-cage fusion process. These results can provide theoretical insights into the growth mechanism of hydrates with other mono/mixed guest molecules for further development and application of these substances.  相似文献   

8.
Guest-host hydrogen bonding in clathrate hydrates occurs when in addition to the hydrophilic moiety which causes the molecule to form hydrates under high pressure-low temperature conditions, the guests contain a hydrophilic, hydrogen bonding functional group. In the presence of carbon dioxide, ethanol clathrate hydrate has been synthesized with 10% of large structure I (sI) cages occupied by ethanol. In this work, we use molecular dynamics simulations to study hydrogen bonding structure and dynamics in this binary sI clathrate hydrate in the temperature range of 100-250 K. We observe that ethanol forms long-lived (>500 ps) proton-donating and accepting hydrogen bonds with cage water molecules from both hexagonal and pentagonal faces of the large cages while maintaining the general cage integrity of the sI clathrate hydrate. The presence of the nondipolar CO(2) molecules stabilizes the hydrate phase, despite the strong and prevalent alcohol-water hydrogen bonding. The distortions of the large cages from the ideal form, the radial distribution functions of the guest-host interactions, and the ethanol guest dynamics are characterized in this study. In previous work through dielectric and NMR relaxation time studies, single crystal x-ray diffraction, and molecular dynamics simulations we have observed guest-water hydrogen bonding in structure II and structure H clathrate hydrates. The present work extends the observation of hydrogen bonding to structure I hydrates.  相似文献   

9.
The lack of practical methods for hydrogen storage is still a major bottleneck in the realization of an energy economy based on hydrogen as energy carrier. 1 Storage within solid‐state clathrate hydrates, 2 4 and in the clathrate hydrate of tetrahydrofuran (THF), has been recently reported. 5 , 6 In the latter case, stabilization by THF is claimed to reduce the operation pressure by several orders of magnitude close to room temperature. Here, we apply in situ neutron diffraction to show that—in contrast to previous reports[5, 6]—hydrogen (deuterium) occupies the small cages of the clathrate hydrate only to 30 % (at 274 K and 90.5 bar). Such a D2 load is equivalent to 0.27 wt. % of stored H2. In addition, we show that a surplus of D2O results in the formation of additional D2O ice Ih instead of in the production of sub‐stoichiometric clathrate that is stabilized by loaded hydrogen (as was reported in ref. 6 ). Structure‐refinement studies show that [D8]THF is dynamically disordered, while it fills each of the large cages of [D8]THF?17D2O stoichiometrically. Our results show that the clathrate hydrate takes up hydrogen rapidly at pressures between 60 and 90 bar (at about 270 K). At temperatures above ≈220 K, the H‐storage characteristics of the clathrate hydrate have similarities with those of surface‐adsorption materials, such as nanoporous zeolites and metal–organic frameworks, 7 , 8 but at lower temperatures, the adsorption rates slow down because of reduced D2 diffusion between the small cages.  相似文献   

10.
Micro-Raman investigations of mixed gas hydrates   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
We report laser Raman spectroscopic measurements on mixed hydrates (clathrates), with guest molecules tetrahydrofuran (THF) and methane (CH4), at ambient pressure and at temperatures from 175 to 280 K. Gas hydrates were synthesized with different concentrations of THF ranging from 5.88 to 1.46 mol%. In all cases THF molecules occupied the large cages of sII hydrate. The present studies demonstrate formation of sII clathrates with CH4 molecules occupying unfilled cages for concentrations of THF ranging from 5.88 to 2.95 mol%. The Raman spectral signature of hydrates with 1.46 mol% THF are distinctly different; hydrate growth was non-uniform and structural transformation occurred from sII to sI prior to clathrate melting.  相似文献   

11.
The first crystal structure is reported for a silicate clathrate hydrate involving a triply charged cation [C18H30N3]3+ and an octameric cubic silicate cage. The structure is essentially a host/guest system, with the silicate cages linked into a framework by hydrogen bonding to water molecules. The space group is P with Z = 2, and the asymmetric unit includes a complete cation and half the anion, plus 21 water molecules (4 of which are in disordered positions). Solid-state (CPMAS) 29Si and 13CNMR spectra are consistent with the diffraction-determined structure and indicate substantial distortion of the anion from cubic symmetry. Solution-state spectra of precursor solutions and of melted material are also presented and discussed.  相似文献   

12.
Crystal growth simulations of gas hydrates have suggested that hydrate cages may occasionally be occupied by H(2)O rather than guest molecules, leaving interstitial defects within the hydrate crystal. Further inspection of the behavior of these interstitial H(2)O molecules has revealed that they are relatively highly mobile entities within a gas hydrate. In this paper, we report these observations and examine the molecular mechanisms responsible for the transport of these interstitial molecules through hydrate crystals. Four distinct pathways for the H(2)O molecule transport between cages are found, each facilitated by the presence of empty cages. The relative richness of the observed behavior of interstitial defects suggests that interstitial diffusion could be an important mechanism for the mass transport of H(2)O molecules through gas hydrates.  相似文献   

13.
We suggest two types of new amine-type sII formers: pyrrolidine and piperidine. These guest compounds fail to form clathrate hydrate structures with host water, but instead have to combine with light gaseous guest molecules (methane) for enclathration. First, two binary clathrate hydrates of (pyrrolidine + methane) and (piperidine + methane) were synthesized at various amine concentrations. 13C NMR and Raman analysis were done to identify the clathrate hydrate structure and guest distribution over sII-S and sII-L cages. XRD was also used to find the exact structure and corresponding cell parameters. At a dilute pyrrolidine concentration of less than 5.56 mol%, the tuning phenomenon is observed such that methane molecules surprisingly occupy sII-L cages. At the critical guest concentration of about 0.1 mol%, the cage occupancy ratio reaches the maximum of approximately 0.5. At very dilute guest concentration below 0.1 mol%, the methane molecules fail to occupy large cages on account of their rarefied distribution in the network. Direct-release experiments were performed to determine the actual guest compositions in the clathrate hydrate phases. Finally, we measured the clathrate hydrate phase equilibria of (pyrrolidine + methane) and (piperidine + methane).  相似文献   

14.
We investigated for the first time the abnormal thermal expansion induced by an asymmetric guest structure using high‐resolution neutron powder diffraction. Three dihydrogen molecules (H2, D2, and HD) were tested to explore the guest dynamics and thermal behavior of hydrogen‐doped clathrate hydrates. We confirmed the restricted spatial distribution and doughnut‐like motion of the HD guest in the center of anisotropic sII‐S (sII‐S=small cages of structure II hydrates). However, we failed to observe a mass‐dependent relationship when comparing D2 with HD. The use of asymmetric guest molecules can significantly contribute to tuning the cage dimension and thus can improve the stable inclusion of small gaseous molecules in confined cages.  相似文献   

15.
At relatively high temperatures (200–270K), clathrate hydrate cages achieve their full crystallographic symmetry because of time averaging of different cage configurations which exist because of disorder in the water molecule orientations. The average orientation of guest molecules in the cages can be obtained from the NMR spectrum, in case of spin 1/2 nuclei from the nuclear shielding tensor, in case of spin 1 nuclei from the quadrupole coupling tensor. Guest molecules studied include carbon dioxide, carbonyl sulphide, methyl-d3 fluoride, methyl-d3 chloride, methyl-d3 bromide, ethane-d6, acetylene-d2 in the structure I hydrates, and methyl-d3 iodide in the structure II hydrate.For the slightly flattened large cage of structure I hydrate, the guest molecules rotate so that the plane which contains the long axis of the molecule is confined to be nearer to the equatorial plane of the cage than the axial regions.Since the structure II large cage has tetrahedral symmetry on time average, it exerts no orienting effect on guest molecules.NRCC no. 32722.  相似文献   

16.
Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of structure II clathrate hydrates are performed under canonical (NVT) and isobaric–isothermal (NPT) ensembles. The guest molecule as a small help gas is xenon and gases such as cyclopropane, isobutane and propane are used as large hydrocarbon guest molecule (LHGM). The dynamics of structure II clathrate hydrate is considered in two cases: empty small cages and small cages containing xenon. Therefore, the MD results for structure II clathrate hydrates of LHGM and LHGM + Xe are obtained to clarify the effects of guest molecules on host lattice structure. To understand the characteristic configurations of structure II clathrate hydrate the radial distribution functions (RDFs) are calculated for the studied hydrate system. The obtained results indicate the significance of interactions of the guest molecules on stabilizing the hydrate host lattice and these results is consistent with most previous experimental and theoretical investigations.  相似文献   

17.
Nonspherical cages in inclusion compounds can result in non‐uniform motion of guest species in these cages and anisotropic lineshapes in NMR spectra of the guest. Herein, we develop a methodology to calculate lineshape anisotropy of guest species in cages based on molecular dynamics simulations of the inclusion compound. The methodology is valid for guest atoms with spin 1/2 nuclei and does not depend on the temperature and type of inclusion compound or guest species studied. As an example, the nonspherical shape of the structure I (sI) clathrate hydrate large cages leads to preferential alignment of linear CO2 molecules in directions parallel to the two hexagonal faces of the cages. The angular distribution of the CO2 guests in terms of a polar angle θ and azimuth angle ? and small amplitude vibrational motions in the large cage are characterized by molecular dynamics simulations at different temperatures in the stability range of the CO2 sI clathrate. The experimental 13C NMR lineshapes of CO2 guests in the large cages show a reversal of the skew between the low temperature (77 K) and the high temperature (238 K) limits of the stability of the clathrate. We determine the angular distributions of the guests in the cages by classical MD simulations of the sI clathrate and calculate the 13C NMR lineshapes over a range of temperatures. Good agreement between experimental lineshapes and calculated lineshapes is obtained. No assumptions regarding the nature of the guest motions in the cages are required.  相似文献   

18.
Pure and KOH (x=1.3×10?3)-doped argon clathrate hydrates were synthesized in an adiabatic high-pressure calorimetric cell from one mole of water and 200 MPa of Ar gas. The heat capacities of the hydrates were measured from 12 to 130 K. No anomaly was found in the pure sample but a glass transition considered to be related to a proton-configurational mode of the host hydrogen-bonded lattice was observed for the first time at 55 K in the doped sample. Comparison with the results on pure and KOH-doped tetrahydrofuran clathrate hydrates indicated that the thermodynamic properties of a hydrogen-bonded system depend on the kind of guest molecule. The heat capacity of argon in the hydrate cages was adequately analyzed with the one-dimensional Pöschl-Teller potential as used in the Ar-β-quinol clathrate and the addivity of heat capacities of the guest and host was shown to be valid in the temperature range 12–130 K.  相似文献   

19.
The structure I clathrate hydrate of carbon monoxide has been studied using dielectric measurements and13C NMR spectroscopy. Broad, weak dielectric absorption curves with maxima at 2.2–3.8 K yieldE a = 0.14 kJ mol–1 for the average Arrhenius activation energy associated with the reorientation of the low polarity guest. Except for H2S this represents the fastest reorienting polar guest known among the clathrate hydrates. The low temperature dielectric absorption curves can best be fitted with a Cole-Davidson asymmetric distribution of relaxation times and activation energies (with = 0.06 at 4 × 106 Hz), which at 107 Hz has been resolved into a double symmetric distribution of discrete relaxation times for CO in the small and large cages. The cross-polarization magic angle spinning13C NMR spectra indicate identical chemical shifts for CO in the small and large cages, in contrast to other hydrates. The static spectra show that the CO molecules undergo anisotropic reorientation in the large cages and that there is still considerable mobility at 77 K. One possible model for the anisotropic motion has the CO rapidly moving among sites over each of the 14 faces of the cage with the CO axis orientated towards the cage centre. The cage occupancy ratio at 220 K, s/ L = 1.11, indicates slightly greater preference of CO for the small cage.Dedicated to Dr D. W. Davidson in honor of his great contributions to the sciences of inclusion phenomena.  相似文献   

20.
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