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Formation of air clathrate hydrates in polar ice sheets: heterogeneous nucleation induced by micro-inclusions

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 September 2017

Hiroshi Ohno
Affiliation:
Institute of Low Temperature Science, Hokkaido University, Sapporo 060-0819, Japan E-mail: hiroshi-ohno@aist.go.jp
Vladimir Ya. Lipenkov
Affiliation:
Arctic and Antarctic Research Institute, 199397 St Petersburg, Russia
Takeo Hondoh
Affiliation:
Institute of Low Temperature Science, Hokkaido University, Sapporo 060-0819, Japan E-mail: hiroshi-ohno@aist.go.jp
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Abstract

To investigate factors influencing nucleation of air clathrate hydrates in polar ice sheets, we have performed high-resolution mapping of the distributions of soluble impurities, air bubbles and air- hydrate crystals versus depth in the Dome Fuji Antarctic ice. Significant correlation observed between the concentrations of air inclusions and impurities in ice along with frequent occurrence of impurities inside hydrate crystals suggest that micro-inclusions promote hydrate nucleation in the ice matrix. Our observations also show that the diffusive macroscopic-scale redistribution of air constituents in ice in the bubble-hydrate transition zone is controlled by the original sedimentary layering of soluble impurities acting as nucleation helpers. The results of this study are important for the correct interpretation of high-resolution gas analyses of ice cores and for better understanding the global bubble-to-hydrate transformation process in polar ice sheets.

Information

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © International Glaciological Society 2010
Figure 0

Fig. 1. Depth profiles of soluble ion concentrations and the number concentrations of air bubbles, Nb (dotted curve), clathrate hydrates, Nh (solid curve), and micro-inclusions, Nm, in the Dome Fuji ice from the bubble-to-hydrate transition zone. The ratio of the number of clathrate hydrates to the total air inclusion number, Nh/N, can be considered an index of the degree of transformation from bubbles to hydrates.

Figure 1

Fig. 2. Correlations between the ratio of the number of clathrate hydrates to the total air inclusion number, Nh/N, and the soluble ion concentrations, and the number concentration of micro-inclusions, Nm.

Figure 2

Fig. 3. Micro-inclusions inside hydrate crystals found in the Dome Fuji ice from the bubble-to-hydrate transition zone and their Raman spectra. Raman peak assignments are based on Nakahara and others (1988) and Ohno and others (2005). Detailed information on the Raman measurement is described elsewhere (Ohno and others, 2005).

Figure 3

Table 1. Statistical analyses of the location of micro-inclusions with respect to clathrate hydrates in the bubble-to-hydrate transition zone of the Dome Fuji ice. Nm and Nm are the number concentrations of micro-inclusions in the ice matrix and clathrate hydrates, respectively. Nh′/Nh represents the percentage of clathrate hydrates in which at least one micro-inclusion was observed. Values in parentheses show the calculations assuming that micro-inclusions are uniformly distributed in the ice matrix. Nm′ was estimated from the size measurement of 100 clathrate hydrates measured for a given ice section and the number of micro-inclusions in the hydrates. Age estimations are from Hondoh and others (2002)