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    Publication Date: 2021-01-08
    Description: Gas hydrates dissociation could induce or trigger submarine landslides, especially in upper continental slopes where hydrates are vulnerable to natural and artificial perturbations. This work investigates destabilization mechanisms of an upper continental slope undergoing hydrate dissociation and identifies spatiotemporal failure modes influenced by characteristics of the overburden above the hydrate-bearing layer (i.e. the hydrate reservoir). A Thermo-Hydro-Chemical coupled numerical model of transient pore pressure induced by hydrate dissociation is coupled with the limit equilibrium slope analysis method to study the spatiotemporal evolution of the potential sliding plane and to calculate the corresponding factor of safety. The results suggest that overpressure generated by the liberated fluid from hydrate dissociation is the primary reason for instability in a gentle marine slope. The study identifies three sliding modes, namely co-melting non-interface sliding, co-melting interface sliding, and post-melting non-interface sliding, depending on the overburden's characteristics, including overburden thickness, permeability, and cohesion. Co-melting non-interface sliding takes place during hydrate dissociation if the hydrate reservoir underlies a thin, pervious and low-cohesion overburden cover. For less permeable and more cohesive overburdens, the potential sliding plane is deeper and co-melting interface sliding could be triggered due to overpressure developed at the reservoir-overburden interface. If the hydrate reservoir is covered by a thick, low-permeability and slightly cohesive overburden, post-melting non-interface sliding could occur after the hydrates are completely dissociated. This failure is delayed, because the gas/water trapped at the interface during hydrate dissociation is insufficient to trigger instability due to very high overburden stresses. However, as the gas migrates upwards over time and encounters a weak zone in the overburden deposits, failure could happen within the overburden deposits even after hydrate dissociation stops. The findings help to improve our fundamental understanding about the destabilization mechanism and failure modes of the continental slopes undergoing hydrate dissociation, and to delineate the vulnerable configurations of the slopes.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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