Scientific Reports (Mar 2022)

Pore-scale observations of natural hydrate-bearing sediments via pressure core sub-coring and micro-CT scanning

  • Liang Lei,
  • Taehyung Park,
  • Karl Jarvis,
  • Lingli Pan,
  • Imgenur Tepecik,
  • Yumeng Zhao,
  • Zhuan Ge,
  • Jeong-Hoon Choi,
  • Xuerui Gai,
  • Sergio Andres Galindo-Torres,
  • Ray Boswell,
  • Sheng Dai,
  • Yongkoo Seol

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-07184-6
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 1 – 17

Abstract

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Abstract Both intra-pore hydrate morphology and inter-pore hydrate distribution influence the physical properties of hydrate-bearing sediments, yet there has been no pore-scale observations of hydrate habit under pressure in preserved pressure core samples so far. We present for the first time a pore-scale micro-CT study of natural hydrate-bearing cores that were acquired from Green Canyon Block 955 in UT-GOM2-1 Expedition and preserved within hydrate pressure–temperature stability conditions throughout sub-sampling and imaging processes. Measured hydrate saturation in the sub-samples, taken from units expected to have in-situ saturation of 80% or more, ranges from 3 ± 1% to 56 ± 11% as interpreted from micro-CT images. Pore-scale observations of gas hydrate in the sub-samples suggest that hydrate in silty sediments at the Gulf of Mexico is pore-invasive rather than particle displacive, and hydrate particles in these natural water-saturated samples are pore-filling with no evidence of grain-coating. Hydrate can form a connected 3D network and provide mechanical support for the sediments even without cementation. The technical breakthrough to directly visualize particle-level hydrate pore habits in natural sediments reported here sheds light on future investigations of pressure- and temperature-sensitive processes including hydrate-bearing sediments, dissolved gases, and other biochemical processes in the deep-sea environment.