Competitive Adsorption of H 2 O and CO 2 in 2-Dimensional Nanoconfinement: GCMD Simulations of Cs- and Ca-Hectorites

The intercalation of H2O, CO2, and other fluid species in expandable clay minerals (smectites) may play a significant role in controlling the behavior of these species in geological carbon sequestration and enhanced petroleum production and has been the subject of intensive study in recent years. Th...

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Published inJournal of physical chemistry. C Vol. 122; no. 41; pp. 23460 - 23469
Main Authors Loganathan, Narasimhan, Bowers, Geoffrey M., Yazaydin, A. Ozgur, Kalinichev, Andrey G., Kirkpatrick, R. James
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States American Chemical Society 18.10.2018
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Summary:The intercalation of H2O, CO2, and other fluid species in expandable clay minerals (smectites) may play a significant role in controlling the behavior of these species in geological carbon sequestration and enhanced petroleum production and has been the subject of intensive study in recent years. This paper reports the results of a computational study of the effects of the properties of the charge-balancing, exchangeable cations on H2O and CO2 intercalation in the smectite mineral, hectorite, in equilibrium with an H2O-saturated supercritical CO2 fluid under reservoir conditions using grand canonical molecular dynamics methods. The results show that the intercalation behavior is greatly different for the cations with relatively low hydration energies and high affinities for CO2 (here Cs+) than for cations with higher hydration energies (here Ca2+). With Cs+, CO2 intercalation occurs in a 1-layer structure and does not require H2O intercalation, whereas with Ca2+, the presence of a sub-monolayer of H2O is required for CO2 intercalation. The computational results provide a detailed structural, dynamical, and energetic insight into the differences in the intercalation behavior and are in excellent agreement with in situ experimental X-ray diffraction, infrared, quartz crystal microbalance, and nuclear magnetic resonance results for smectite materials obtained under reservoir conditions.
Bibliography:FG02-08ER15929
USDOE Office of Science (SC), Basic Energy Sciences (BES)
ISSN:1932-7447
1932-7455
DOI:10.1021/acs.jpcc.8b06602