Posted on 11/06/2002 1:51:07 PM PST by ckilmer
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The supposed "experts" were saying the same thing about petroleum in 1870, and at about twenty-year intervals ever since. We've had three such "peak" predictions in my own lifetime, and I'm only 43.
Between what a worldwide market is pulling out of the oil patches, the oil shales, and the methane hydrates ... don't believe them.
They're assuming you need to carry this stuff around in solid form, but I don't see that that's necessary.
Seems to me that you could put that 164-1 expansion ratio to good use. Specifically, if you modified an oil platform to drill for this stuff instead of oil, you'd simply have a high-pressure gas line. Put storage tanks on the platform, and build some big-ass methane tankers, and you're done.
Grrrrrr. Carbon Dioxide is NOT pollution. It's plant food.
My knowledge is not at all vastly superior. More than anything else, I was responding to the article's assumption that you'd need/want to tansport this stuff in solid form. If you don't make that assumption, but instead assume the exact opposite, it doesn't seem to differ much from existing gas transport problems.
As for the rate of expansion, etc, that's probably a calculable property, and the bottom part of the pipe could be built with a diameter profile that accounts for it -- or you could drop a self-contained "expansion unit" down to the seabed, and run the pipe out of it.
As an example, look at this rocket engine:
That tube around the middle was used both to cool the nozzle and preheat the cryogenic propellant (LOX or hydrogen.... I can't recall which), and its diameter varies according to expansion of the stuff as it's heated, and thus maintains a constant pressure.
The basic approach would probably work for this stuff, too.
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