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Dive into the research topics where Paul F. Martin is active.

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Featured researches published by Paul F. Martin.


Langmuir | 2012

In Situ Molecular Spectroscopic Evidence for CO2 Intercalation into Montmorillonite in Supercritical Carbon Dioxide

John S. Loring; Herbert T. Schaef; Romulus Vf Turcu; Christopher J. Thompson; Quin R. S. Miller; Paul F. Martin; Jianzhi Hu; David W. Hoyt; Odeta Qafoku; Eugene S. Ilton; Andrew R. Felmy; Kevin M. Rosso

The interaction of anhydrous supercritical CO(2) (scCO(2)) with both kaolinite and ~1W (i.e., close to but less than one layer of hydration) calcium-saturated montmorillonite was investigated under conditions relevant to geologic carbon sequestration (50 °C and 90 bar). The CO(2) molecular environment was probed in situ using a combination of three novel high-pressure techniques: X-ray diffraction, magic angle spinning nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, and attenuated total reflection infrared spectroscopy. We report the first direct evidence that the expansion of montmorillonite under scCO(2) conditions is due to CO(2) migration into the interlayer. Intercalated CO(2) molecules are rotationally constrained and do not appear to react with waters to form bicarbonate or carbonic acid. In contrast, CO(2) does not intercalate into kaolinite. The findings show that predicting the seal integrity of caprock will have complex dependence on clay mineralogy and hydration state.


Nature Communications | 2014

Fluorocarbon adsorption in hierarchical porous frameworks

Radha Kishan Motkuri; Harsha V.R. Annapureddy; M. Vijaykumar; Herbert T. Schaef; Paul F. Martin; B.P. McGrail; Lilong Dang; Rajamani Krishna; Praveen K. Thallapally

Metal-organic frameworks comprise an important class of solid-state materials and have potential for many emerging applications such as energy storage, separation, catalysis and bio-medical. Here we report the adsorption behaviour of a series of fluorocarbon derivatives on a set of microporous and hierarchical mesoporous frameworks. The microporous frameworks show a saturation uptake capacity for dichlorodifluoromethane of >4 mmol g(-1) at a very low relative saturation pressure (P/Po) of 0.02. In contrast, the mesoporous framework shows an exceptionally high uptake capacity reaching >14 mmol g(-1) at P/Po of 0.4. Adsorption affinity in terms of mass loading and isosteric heats of adsorption is found to generally correlate with the polarizability and boiling point of the refrigerant, with dichlorodifluoromethane > chlorodifluoromethane > chlorotrifluoromethane > tetrafluoromethane > methane. These results suggest the possibility of exploiting these sorbents for separation of azeotropic mixtures of fluorocarbons and use in eco-friendly fluorocarbon-based adsorption cooling.


Langmuir | 2014

In Situ Study of CO2 and H2O Partitioning between Na–Montmorillonite and Variably Wet Supercritical Carbon Dioxide

John S. Loring; Eugene S. Ilton; Jeffrey Chen; Christopher J. Thompson; Paul F. Martin; Pascale Bénézeth; Kevin M. Rosso; Andrew R. Felmy; Herbert T. Schaef

Shale formations play fundamental roles in large-scale geologic carbon sequestration (GCS) aimed primarily to mitigate climate change and in smaller-scale GCS targeted mainly for CO2-enhanced gas recovery operations. Reactive components of shales include expandable clays, such as montmorillonites and mixed-layer illite/smectite clays. In this study, in situ X-ray diffraction (XRD) and in situ infrared (IR) spectroscopy were used to investigate the swelling/shrinkage and H2O/CO2 sorption of Na(+)-exchanged montmorillonite, Na-SWy-2, as the clay is exposed to variably hydrated supercritical CO2 (scCO2) at 50 °C and 90 bar. Measured d001 values increased in stepwise fashion and sorbed H2O concentrations increased continuously with increasing percent H2O saturation in scCO2, closely following previously reported values measured in air at ambient pressure over a range of relative humidities. IR spectra show H2O and CO2 intercalation, and variations in peak shapes and positions suggest multiple sorbed types of H2O and CO2 with distinct chemical environments. Based on the absorbance of the asymmetric CO stretching band of the CO2 associated with the Na-SWy-2, the sorbed CO2 concentration increases dramatically at sorbed H2O concentrations from 0 to 4 mmol/g. Sorbed CO2 then sharply decreases as sorbed H2O increases from 4 to 10 mmol/g. With even higher sorbed H2O concentrations as saturation of H2O in scCO2 was approached, the concentration of sorbed CO2 decreased asymptotically. Two models, one involving space filling and the other a heterogeneous distribution of integral hydration states, are discussed as possible mechanisms for H2O and CO2 intercalations in montmorillonite. The swelling/shrinkage of montmorillonite could affect solid volume, porosity, and permeability of shales. Consequently, the results may aid predictions of shale caprock integrity in large-scale GCS as well as methane transmissivity in enhanced gas recovery operations.


Archive | 2001

Waste Form Release Data Package for the 2001 Immobilized Low-Activity Waste Performance Assessment

B. Peter McGrail; Jonathan P. Icenhower; Paul F. Martin; Herbert T. Schaef; Matthew J. O'Hara; Eugenio Rodriguez; Jackie L. Steele

This data package documents the experimentally derived input data on the representative waste glasses LAWABP1 and HLP-31 that will be used for simulations of the immobilized lowactivity waste disposal system with the Subsurface Transport Over Reactive Multiphases (STORM) code. The STORM code will be used to provide the near-field radionuclide release source term for a performance assessment to be issued in March of 2001. Documented in this data package are data related to 1) kinetic rate law parameters for glass dissolution, 2) alkali-H ion exchange rate, 3) chemical reaction network of secondary phases that form in accelerated weathering tests, and 4) thermodynamic equilibrium constants assigned to these secondary phases. The kinetic rate law and Na+-H+ ion exchange rate were determined from single-pass flow-through experiments. Pressurized unsaturated flow and vapor hydration experiments were used for accelerated weathering or aging of the glasses. The majority of the thermodynamic data were extracted from the thermodynamic database package shipped with the geochemical code EQ3/6. However, several secondary reaction products identified from laboratory tests with prototypical LAW glasses were not included in this database, nor are the thermodynamic data available in the open literature. One of these phases, herschelite, was determined to have a potentially significant impact on the release calculations and so a solubility product was estimated using a polymer structure model developed for zeolites. Although this data package is relatively complete, final selection of ILAW glass compositions has not been done by the waste treatment plant contractor. Consequently, revisions to this data package to address new ILAW glass formulations are to be regularly expected.


Journal of Applied Polymer Science | 2000

Temperature-sensitive switch from composite poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) sponge gels

Liang Liang; Xiangdong Feng; Paul F. Martin; Loni M. Peurrung

Thermally sensitive polymers change their properties with a change in environmental temperature in a predictable and pronounced way. These changes can be expected in drug delivery systems, solute separation, enzyme immobilization, energy-transducer processes, and photosensitive materials. We have demonstrated a thermal-sensitive switch module, which is capable of converting thermal into mechanical energy. We employed this module in the control of liquid transfer. The thermally sensitive switch was prepared by cross-linking poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) (PNIPAAm) gel inside the pores of a sponge to generate the composite PNIPAAm/sponge gel. This gel, contained in a polypropylene tube, was inserted into a thermoelectric module equipped with a fine temperature controller. As the water flux through the composite gel changes from 0 to 6.6 x 10{sup 2} L m{sup -2} h, with a temperature change from 23 to 40 degrees C, we can reversibly turn on and off the thermally sensitive switch.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2014

Automated high-pressure titration system with in situ infrared spectroscopic detection

Christopher J. Thompson; Paul F. Martin; Jeffrey Chen; Pascale Bénézeth; Herbert T. Schaef; Kevin M. Rosso; Andrew R. Felmy; John S. Loring

A fully automated titration system with infrared detection was developed for investigating interfacial chemistry at high pressures. The apparatus consists of a high-pressure fluid generation and delivery system coupled to a high-pressure cell with infrared optics. A manifold of electronically actuated valves is used to direct pressurized fluids into the cell. Precise reagent additions to the pressurized cell are made with calibrated tubing loops that are filled with reagent and placed in-line with the cell and a syringe pump. The cells infrared optics facilitate both transmission and attenuated total reflection (ATR) measurements to monitor bulk-fluid composition and solid-surface phenomena such as adsorption, desorption, complexation, dissolution, and precipitation. Switching between the two measurement modes is accomplished with moveable mirrors that direct the light path of a Fourier transform infrared spectrometer into the cell along transmission or ATR light paths. The versatility of the high-pressure IR titration system was demonstrated with three case studies. First, we titrated water into supercritical CO2 (scCO2) to generate an infrared calibration curve and determine the solubility of water in CO2 at 50 °C and 90 bar. Next, we characterized the partitioning of water between a montmorillonite clay and scCO2 at 50 °C and 90 bar. Transmission-mode spectra were used to quantify changes in the clays sorbed water concentration as a function of scCO2 hydration, and ATR measurements provided insights into competitive residency of water and CO2 on the clay surface and in the interlayer. Finally, we demonstrated how time-dependent studies can be conducted with the system by monitoring the carbonation reaction of forsterite (Mg2SiO4) in water-bearing scCO2 at 50 °C and 90 bar. Immediately after water dissolved in the scCO2, a thin film of adsorbed water formed on the mineral surface, and the film thickness increased with time as the forsterite began to dissolve. However, after approximately 2.5 h, the trend reversed, and a carbonate precipitate began to form on the forsterite surface, exposing dramatic chemical changes in the thin-water film. Collectively, these applications illustrate how the high-pressure IR titration system can provide molecular-level information about the interactions between variably wet scCO2 and minerals relevant to underground storage of CO2 (geologic carbon sequestration). The apparatus could also be utilized to study high-pressure interfacial chemistry in other areas such as catalysis, polymerization, food processing, and oil and gas recovery.


Langmuir | 2015

Evidence for Carbonate Surface Complexation during Forsterite Carbonation in Wet Supercritical Carbon Dioxide

John S. Loring; Jeffrey Chen; Pascale Bénézeth; Odeta Qafoku; Eugene S. Ilton; Nancy M. Washton; Christopher J. Thompson; Paul F. Martin; B. Peter McGrail; Kevin M. Rosso; Andrew R. Felmy; Herbert T. Schaef

Continental flood basalts are attractive formations for geologic sequestration of carbon dioxide because of their reactive divalent-cation containing silicates, such as forsterite (Mg2SiO4), suitable for long-term trapping of CO2 mineralized as metal carbonates. The goal of this study was to investigate at a molecular level the carbonation products formed during the reaction of forsterite with supercritical CO2 (scCO2) as a function of the concentration of H2O adsorbed to the forsterite surface. Experiments were performed at 50 °C and 90 bar using an in situ IR titration capability, and postreaction samples were examined by ex situ techniques, including scanning electron microscopy (SEM), X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), focused ion beam transmission electron microscopy (FIB-TEM), thermal gravimetric analysis mass spectrometry (TGA-MS), and magic angle spinning nuclear magnetic resonance (MAS NMR). Carbonation products and reaction extents varied greatly with adsorbed H2O. We show for the first time evidence of Mg-carbonate surface complexation under wet scCO2 conditions. Carbonate is found to be coordinated to Mg at the forsterite surface in a predominately bidentate fashion at adsorbed H2O concentrations below 27 μmol/m(2). Above this concentration and up to 76 μmol/m(2), monodentate coordinated complexes become dominant. Beyond a threshold adsorbed H2O concentration of 76 μmol/m(2), crystalline carbonates continuously precipitate as magnesite, and the particles that form are hundreds of times larger than the estimated thicknesses of the adsorbed water films of about 7 to 15 Å. At an applied level, these results suggest that mineral carbonation in scCO2 dominated fluids near the wellbore and adjacent to caprocks will be insignificant and limited to surface complexation, unless adsorbed H2O concentrations are high enough to promote crystalline carbonate formation. At a fundamental level, the surface complexes and their dependence on adsorbed H2O concentration give insights regarding forsterite dissolution processes and magnesite nucleation and growth.


Archive | 2011

Effective Permeability Change in Wellbore Cement with Carbon Dioxide Reaction

Wooyong Um; Hun Bok Jung; Paul F. Martin; B. Peter McGrail

Portland cement, a common sealing material for wellbores for geological carbon sequestration was reacted with CO{sub 2} in supercritical, gaseous, and aqueous phases at various pressure and temperature conditions to simulate cement-CO{sub 2} reaction along the wellbore from carbon injection depth to the near-surface. Hydrated Portland cement columns (14 mm diameter x 90 mm length; water-to-cement ratio = 0.33) including additives such as steel coupons and Wallula basalt fragments were reacted with CO{sub 2} in the wet supercritical (the top half) and dissolved (the bottom half) phases under carbon sequestration condition with high pressure (10 MPa) and temperature (50 C) for 5 months, while small-sized hydrated Portland cement columns (7 mm diameter x 20 mm length; water-to-cement ratio = 0.38) were reacted with CO{sub 2} in dissolved phase at high pressure (10 MPa) and temperature (50 C) for 1 month or with wet CO{sub 2} in gaseous phase at low pressure (0.2 MPa) and temperature (20 C) for 3 months. XMT images reveal that the cement reacted with CO{sub 2} saturated groundwater had degradation depth of {approx}1 mm for 1 month and {approx}3.5 mm for 5 month, whereas the degradation was minor with cement exposure to supercritical CO{sub 2}. SEM-EDS analysis showed that the carbonated cement was comprised of three distinct zones; the innermost less degraded zone with Ca atom % > C atom %, the inner degraded zone with Ca atom % {approx} C atom % due to precipitation of calcite, the outer degraded zone with C atom % > Ca atom % due to dissolution of calcite and C-S-H, as well as adsorption of carbon to cement matrix. The outer degraded zone of carbonated cement was porous and fractured because of dissolution-dominated reaction by carbonic acid exposure, which resulted in the increase in BJH pore volume and BET surface area. In contrast, cement-wet CO{sub 2}(g) reaction at low P (0.2 MPa)-T (20 C) conditions for 1 to 3 months was dominated by precipitation of micron-sized calcite on the outside surface of cement, which resulted in the decrease in BJH pore volume and BET surface area. Cement carbonation and pore structure change are significantly dependent on pressure and temperature conditions as well as the phase of CO{sub 2}, which controls the balance between precipitation and dissolution in cement matrix. Geochemical modeling result suggests that ratio of solid (cement)-to-solution (carbonated water) has a significant effect on cement carbonation, thus the cement-CO{sub 2} reaction experiment needs to be conducted under realistic conditions representing the in-situ wellbore environment of carbon sequestration field site. Total porosity and air permeability for a duplicate cement column with water-to-cement ratio of 0.38 measured after oven-drying by Core Laboratories using Boyles Law technique and steady-state method were 31% and 0.576 mD. A novel method to measure the effective liquid permeability of a cement column using X-ray micro-tomography images after injection of pressurized KI (potassium iodide) is under development by PNNL. Preliminary results indicate the permeability of a cement column with water-to-cement ratio of 0.38 is 4-8 mD. PNNL will apply the method to understand the effective permeability change of Portland cement by CO{sub 2}(g) reaction under a variety of pressure and temperature conditions to develop a more reliable well-bore leakage risk model.


Archive | 2001

Application of the Pressurised Unsaturated Flow (PUF) Test for Accelerated Ageing of Waste Forms

B.P. McGrail; Paul F. Martin; C. W. Lindenmeier; Herbert T. Schaef

The pressurised unsaturated flow (PUF) test method is an emerging technique for studying the long-term durability or weathering of waste forms and other geologic materials. We have used the technique to monitor the complex coupling between primary phase dissolution, secondary phase precipitation and unsaturated flow behaviour, including changes in the hydraulic properties of the materials. New experimental data with low-activity waste glasses has shown that the technique effectively accelerates the hydrolysis and ageing processes by as much as 50 times over conventional static tests run at the same temperature. Rapid, sustained increases in the corrosion rate of three low-activity waste glasses were detected with the PUF technique in only a few days that required months to observe in static experiments. The ability to quickly detect long-term performance problems with waste forms may make it possible to formulate second generation materials concurrently with meaningful long-term durability screening.


Solvent Extraction and Ion Exchange | 1998

Synergistic Extraction of Eu(III) and Am(III) by Thenoyltrifluoroacetone and Neutral Donor Extractants: (Carbamoylmethyl)phosphine Oxide and 2,6-Bis((Diphenylphosphino)methyl)pyridine N,P,P-Trioxide

Linfeng Rao; Yuanxian Xia; Brian M. Rapko; Paul F. Martin

ABSTRACT Solvent extraction of Eu(III) and Am(III) from weakly acidic solutions with octyl(phenyl)-N, N-diisobutylcarbamoylmethylphosphine oxide (CMPO) and 2,6-bis((diphenylphosphino)methyl)pyridine N, P, P-trioxide (NOPOPO) in 1,2-dichloroethane was studied on a comparative basis. NOPOPO was found to exhibit unusually high extractability for Eu(III) and Am(III), probably due to its trifunctional nature, sufficient steric flexibility and basicity of the functional groups. Both CMPO and NOPOPO demonstrated synergistic effects in extraction of Eu(III) and Am(III) when used in combination with thenoyltrifluoroacetone (HTTA). However, the stoichiometry of the extracted species with CMPO/HTTA and NOPOPO/HTTA was different under similar experimental conditions. The extractant dependencies of the synergistic extractions suggest that the extracted species are the adduct complexes, M(ClO4)(TTA)2(CMPO)2 and M(ClO4)2(TTA)(NOPOPO)2, respectively. It was also observed that CMPO and CMPO/HTTA in dichloroethane extracte...

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Herbert T. Schaef

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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B. Peter McGrail

Battelle Memorial Institute

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Kevin M. Rosso

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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John S. Loring

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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Andrew R. Felmy

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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Christopher J. Thompson

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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Eugene S. Ilton

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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B. P. McGrail

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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Carlos A. Fernandez

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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Charles F. Windisch

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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