Global warming may initiate release of underground methane into atmosphere
September 3rd, 2009 - 2:51 pm ICT by ANIWashington, September 3 (ANI): Scientists are worrying that rising global temperatures accompanied by melting permafrost in arctic regions will initiate the release of underground methane into the atmosphere.
Once released, that methane gas would speed up global warming by trapping the Earth’s heat radiation about 20 times more efficiently than does the better-known greenhouse gas, carbon dioxide (CO2).
An MIT research paper elucidates how this underground methane in frozen regions would escape and also concludes that methane trapped under the ocean may already be escaping through vents in the sea floor at a much faster rate than previously believed.
Some scientists have associated the release, both gradual and fast, of subsurface ocean methane with climate change of the past and future.
“The sediment conditions under which this mechanism for gas migration dominates, such as when you have a very fine-grained mud, are pervasive in much of the ocean as well as in some permafrost regions,” said lead author Ruben Juanes, the ARCO Assistant Professor in Energy Studies in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering.
“This indicates that we may be greatly underestimating the methane fluxes presently occurring in the ocean and from underground into Earth’s atmosphere,” said Juanes.
“This could have implications for our understanding of the Earth’s carbon cycle and global warming,” he added.
According to Juanes, some of the naturally occurring underground methane exists not as gas but as methane hydrate.
In the hydrate phase, a methane gas molecule is locked inside a crystalline cage of frozen water molecules.
These hydrates exist in a layer of underground rock or oceanic sediments called the hydrate stability zone or HSZ.
Methane hydrates will remain stable as long as the external pressure remains high and the temperature low.
Beneath the hydrate stability zone, where the temperatures are higher, methane is found primarily in the gas phase mixed with water and sediment.
But the stability of the hydrate stability zone is climate-dependent.
If atmospheric temperatures rise, the hydrate stability zone will shift upward, leaving in its stead a layer of methane gas that has been freed from the hydrate cages.
Pressure in that new layer of free gas would build, forcing the gas to shoot up through the HSZ to the surface through existing veins and new fractures in the sediment.
A grain-scale computational model developed by Juanes and recent MIT graduate Antone Jain indicates that the gas would tend to open up cornflake-shaped fractures in the sediment, and would flow quickly enough that it could not be trapped into icy hydrate cages en route. (ANI)
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Tags: arctic regions, carbon cycle, climate change, energy studies, frozen water, gas carbon dioxide, gas migration, gas molecule, global temperatures, greenhouse gas, heat radiation, melting permafrost, methane gas, methane hydrate, methane hydrates, oceanic sediments, permafrost regions, sea floor, subsurface ocean, water molecules