Affiliation:
1. School of Civil Engineering and the Environment, University of Southampton UK
2. Challenger Division for Seafloor Processes, Southampton Oceanography Centre UK
Abstract
Methane hydrates are ice-like compounds that can exist only under restricted thermobaric conditions, at low temperatures or under high ambient pressure. They are important because of their potential contributions as a future source of energy, to global warming, and as a possible trigger for long run-out submarine slope instability. This paper describes laboratory experiments to synthesise disseminated methane hydrates and to characterise them under small-strain dynamic loading in the resonant column apparatus. The effects of depositing varying quantities of methane hydrate within a sand are investigated by reference to their shear and bulk modulus, and damping, over a range of isotropic effective stress. Results are compared with those obtained on the same sand without hydrate bonding and after dissociation.
Subject
Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous),Geotechnical Engineering and Engineering Geology
Cited by
90 articles.
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