November 1, 2015
Journal Article

Weak interactions between water and clathrate-forming gases at low pressures

Abstract

Using scanning probe microscopy and temperature programed desorption we examined the interaction between water and two common clathrate-forming gases, methane and isobutane, at low temperature and low pressure. Water co-deposited with up to 10-1 mbar methane or 10-5 mbar isobutane at 140 K onto a Pt(111) substrate yielded pure crystalline ice, i.e., the exposure to up to ~107 gas molecules for each deposited water molecule did not have any detectable effect on the growing films. Exposing metastable, less than 2 molecular layers thick, water films to 10-5 mbar methane does not alter their morphology, suggesting that the presence of the Pt(111) surface is not a strong driver for hydrate formation. This weak water-gas interaction at low pressures is supported by our thermal desorption measurements from amorphous solid water and crystalline ice where 1 ML of methane desorbs near ~43 K and isobutane desorbs near ~100 K. Similar desorption temperatures were observed for desorption from amorphous solid water.

Revised: March 18, 2016 | Published: November 1, 2015

Citation

Thurmer K., C. Yuan, G.A. Kimmel, B.D. Kay, and R.S. Smith. 2015. Weak interactions between water and clathrate-forming gases at low pressures. Surface Science 641. PNNL-SA-110418. doi:10.1016/j.susc.2015.07.013