An Innovative Solution Method for the Evaluation of CO2 Disposal in the Seafloor Environment
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Identification of Suitable Seawater Depths
3. Analytical Method
4. System Requirement
- 1
- Select a seafloor site that is deeper than the critical water depth determined in the procedure shown in Figure 5. Designthe seawater depth for CO2 placement.
- 2
- Calculate the hydrostatic pressure of seawater pdn at the water depth of CO2 placement. This pressure is considered to be the downstream pressure of the jetting nozzles.
- 3
- Calculate the required upstream pressure pup of the jetting nozzles using
5. Discussion
- Conducting experimental investigations of the proposed jet-cooling process to validate the concept. This is being designed and prepared using a high-pressure–low-temperature windowed cell to observe the settling of CO2 hydrates and CO2 liquid due to gravitational segregation.
- Performing a quantitative hydrate formation kinetics analysis to determine the minimum required residence time of the jet plume for full solidification under the seawater conditions of the proposed process. This information will be used for designing the geometry (diameter and length) of the buffer chamber to ensure 100% conversion of CO2 to hydrates before the CO2 plume exits the buffer chamber.
- Carrying out research work to analyze how CO2 liquid and hydrates might be disturbed by bottom sea currents, interact with sediments and nearby man-made structures, warming scenarios of geological events (e.g., earthquake and volcano rupture), extreme weather (e.g., hurricanes and tsunamis), and human activities such as the aviation of artificial objects.
- It is understood that Equation (1) was established based on the data in Figure 2. Under other seawater conditions, either the actual temperature data from local survey or Equation (1) validated using the actual data should be used to determine the critical water depth for CO2 hydrate formation.
- Application of the proposed technique is limited to disposal water depths greater than the critical disposal water depths, typically 700 m for storage in hydrate form and 1900 m for storage in liquid form. Local studies need to be conducted in real applications. The major drawback of the technique is that it requires significant investment in building the CO2-disposing ship for CO2 disposal and CO2 carrier for CO2 delivery.
6. Conclusions
- CO2 can be stored on the seafloor in its liquid-to-hydrate form if the seawater is deep enough. In a typical seawater environment, if the seafloor depth is greater than 6200 ft (1900 m), CO2 can be injected directly onto the seafloor in liquid form. The liquid CO2 will then form hydrates and stay on the seafloor.
- CO2 can be stored on the seafloor in its hydrate form if the seafloor is deep enough. In a typical seawater environment, if the seafloor depth is greater than 700 m, CO2 can be injected through nozzles to reduce its temperature and generate hydrates. The generated hydrates will then be deposited on the sea floor.
- The nozzle for reducing the CO2 temperature to generate hydrate is the key component of the proposed technology suite. The nozzles should be sized based on the required upstream pressure and CO2 flow rate. Sonic (critical) flow condition is preferred to maximize the cooling efficiency.
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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Guo, B.; Islam, M.T.; Amponsah, V.N.B. An Innovative Solution Method for the Evaluation of CO2 Disposal in the Seafloor Environment. C 2025, 11, 81. https://doi.org/10.3390/c11040081
Guo B, Islam MT, Amponsah VNB. An Innovative Solution Method for the Evaluation of CO2 Disposal in the Seafloor Environment. C. 2025; 11(4):81. https://doi.org/10.3390/c11040081
Chicago/Turabian StyleGuo, Boyun, Muhammad Towhidul Islam, and Vincent Nana Boah Amponsah. 2025. "An Innovative Solution Method for the Evaluation of CO2 Disposal in the Seafloor Environment" C 11, no. 4: 81. https://doi.org/10.3390/c11040081
APA StyleGuo, B., Islam, M. T., & Amponsah, V. N. B. (2025). An Innovative Solution Method for the Evaluation of CO2 Disposal in the Seafloor Environment. C, 11(4), 81. https://doi.org/10.3390/c11040081

