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Langmuir | 2017

Propane–Water Mixtures Confined within Cylindrical Silica Nanopores: Structural and Dynamical Properties Probed by Molecular Dynamics

Tran Thi Bao Le; Alberto Striolo; Siddharth Gautam; David R. Cole

Despite the multiple length and time scales over which fluid-mineral interactions occur, interfacial phenomena control the exchange of matter and impact the nature of multiphase flow, as well as the reactivity of C–O–H fluids in geologic systems. In general, the properties of confined fluids, and their influence on porous geologic phenomena are much less well understood compared to those of bulk fluids. We used equilibrium molecular dynamics simulations to study fluid systems composed of propane and water, at different compositions, confined within cylindrical pores of diameter ∼16 Å carved out of amorphous silica. The simulations are conducted within a single cylindrical pore. In the simulated system all the dangling silicon and oxygen atoms were saturated with hydroxyl groups and hydrogen atoms, respectively, yielding a total surface density of 3.8 −OH/nm2. Simulations were performed at 300 K, at different bulk propane pressures, and varying the composition of the system. The structure of the confined fluids was quantified in terms of the molecular distribution of the various molecules within the pore as well as their orientation. This allowed us to quantify the hydrogen bond network and to observe the segregation of propane near the pore center. Transport properties were quantified in terms of the mean square displacement in the direction parallel to the pore axis, which allows us to extract self-diffusion coefficients. The diffusivity of propane in the cylindrical pore was found to depend on pressure, as well as on the amount of water present. It was found that the propane self-diffusion coefficient decreases with increasing water loading because of the formation of water bridges across the silica pores, at sufficiently high water content, which hinder propane transport. The rotational diffusion, the lifespan of hydrogen bonds, and the residence time of water molecules at contact with the silica substrate were quantified from the simulated trajectories using the appropriate autocorrelation functions. The simulations contribute to a better understanding of the molecular phenomena relevant to the behavior of fluids in the subsurface.


Frontiers of Earth Science in China | 2017

Structure and Dynamics of Confined C-O-H Fluids Relevant to the Subsurface: Application of Magnetic Resonance, Neutron Scattering, and Molecular Dynamics Simulations

Siddharth Gautam; Salim Ok; David R. Cole

Geo-fluids consisting of C-O-H volatiles are the main mode of transport of mass and energy throughout the lithosphere and are commonly found confined in pores, grain boundaries and fractures. The confinement of these fluids by porous media at the length scales of a few nanometers gives rise to numerous physical and chemical properties that deviate from the bulk behavior. Studying the structural and dynamical properties of these confined fluids at the length and time scales of nanometers and picoseconds respectively forms an important component of understanding their behavior. To study confined fluids, non-destructive penetrative probes are needed. Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) by virtue of its ability to monitor longitudinal and transverse magnetization relaxations of spins, and chemical shifts brought about by the chemical environment of a nucleus, and measuring diffusion coefficient provides a good opportunity to study dynamics and chemical structure at the molecular length and time scales. Another technique that gives insights into the dynamics and structure at these length and time scales is neutron scattering (NS). This is because the wavelength and energies of cold and thermal neutrons used in scattering experiments are in the same range as the spatial features and energies involved in the dynamical processes occurring at the molecular level. Molecular Dynamics (MD) simulations on the other hand help with the interpretation of the NMR and NS data. Simulations can also supplement the experiments by calculating quantities not easily accessible to experiments. Thus using NMR, NS and MD simulations in conjunction, a complete description of the molecular structure and dynamics of confined geo-fluids can be obtained. In the current review, our aim is to show how a synergistic use of these three techniques has helped shed light on the complex behavior of water, CO2, and low molecular weight hydrocarbons. After summarizing the theoretical backgrounds of the techniques, we will discuss some recent examples of the use of NMR, NS, and MD simulations to the study of confined fluids.


SOLID STATE PHYSICS: Proceedings of the 58th DAE Solid State Physics Symposium 2013 | 2014

Effect of temperature and pressure on the dynamics of nanoconfined propane

Siddharth Gautam; Tingting Liu; Gernot Rother; Niina Jalarvo; Eugene Mamontov; Susan A. Welch; David R. Cole

We report the effect of temperature and pressure on the dynamical properties of propane confined in nanoporous silica aerogel studied using quasielastic neutron scattering (QENS). Our results demonstrate that the effect of a change in the pressure dominates over the effect of temperature variation on the dynamics of propane nano-confined in silica aerogel. At low pressures, most of the propane molecules are strongly bound to the pore walls, only a small fraction is mobile. As the pressure is increased, the fraction of mobile molecules increases. A change in the mechanism of motion, from continuous diffusion at low pressures to jump diffusion at higher pressures has also been observed.


Chemical Physics | 2019

Influence of molecular shape on self-diffusion under severe confinement: A molecular dynamics study

Indu Dhiman; Utsab Shrestha; Debsindhu Bhowmik; David R. Cole; Siddharth Gautam

Abstract We have investigated the effect of molecular shape and charge asymmetry on the translation dynamics of confined hydrocarbon molecules having different shapes but similar kinetic diameters, inside ZSM-5 pores using molecular dynamics simulations. The mean square displacement of propane, acetonitrile, acetaldehyde, and acetone in ZSM-5 exhibit two different regimes – ballistic and diffusive/sub-diffusive. All the molecules except propane exhibit sub-diffusive motion at time scales greater than 1u202fps. The intermediate scattering functions reveal that there is a considerable rotational-translational coupling in the motion of all the molecules, due to the strong geometrical restriction imposed by ZSM-5. Overall the difference in shape and asymmetry in charge imposes severe restriction inside the ZSM-5 channels for all the molecules to different extents. Further, the behavior of molecules confined in ZSM-5 in the present study, quantified wherever possible, is compared to their behavior in bulk or in other porous media reported in literature.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2018

Effects of Confinement and Pressure on the Vibrational Behavior of Nano-Confined Propane

Siddharth Gautam; Alexander I. Kolesnikov; Gernot Rother; Sheng Dai; Zhen-An Qiao; David R. Cole

Fluids confined in nanopores exhibit significant deviations in their structure and dynamics from the bulk behavior. Although phase, structural, and diffusive behaviors of confined fluids have been investigated and reported extensively, confinement effects on the vibrational properties are less understood. We study the vibrational behavior of propane confined in 1.5 nm nanopores of MCM-41-S using inelastic neutron scattering (INS) and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. Vibrational spectra have been obtained from INS data as functions of temperature and pressure. At ambient pressure, a strong quasielastic signal observed in the INS spectrum at 80 K suggests that confined propane remains liquid below the bulk phase melting point of 85 K. The quasielastic signal is heavily suppressed when either the pressure is increased to 1 kbar or the temperature is lowered to 30 K, indicating solidification of pore-confined propane. Confinement in MCM-41-S pores results in a glass-like state of propane that exhibits a relatively featureless low-energy vibrational spectrum compared to that of the bulk crystalline propane. Increasing the pressure to 3 kbar results in hardening of the intermolecular and methyl torsional modes. The INS data are used for estimating the isochoric specific heat of confined propane, which is compared with the specific heat of bulk propane reported in literature. Data from MD simulations are used to calculate the vibrational power spectra that agree qualitatively with the experimental data. Simulation data also suggest a reduction of the structural ordering (positional, orientational, and intramolecular) of propane under confinement.


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2015

Dynamics of Propane in Nanoporous Silica Aerogel: A Quasielastic Neutron Scattering Study

Siddharth Gautam; Tingting Liu; Gernot Rother; Niina Jalarvo; Eugene Mamontov; Susan P Welch; Julia Sheets; Michael Droege; David R. Cole


Chemical Physics | 2015

Molecular dynamics simulation study of meso-confined propane in TiO2

Siddharth Gautam; David R. Cole


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2016

Role of Confinement on Adsorption and Dynamics of Ethane and an Ethane–CO2 Mixture in Mesoporous CPG Silica

Sumant Patankar; Siddharth Gautam; Gernot Rother; Andrey Podlesnyak; Georg Ehlers; Tingting Liu; David R. Cole; David L. Tomasko


Chemical Physics Letters | 2016

Location dependent orientational structure and dynamics of ethane in ZSM5

Siddharth Gautam; Tingting Liu; Sumant Patankar; David L. Tomasko; David R. Cole


Chemical Engineering Science | 2018

Effect of molecular shape on rotation under severe confinement

Indu Dhiman; Debsindhu Bhowmik; Utsab Shrestha; David R. Cole; Siddharth Gautam

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Gernot Rother

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Eugene Mamontov

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Indu Dhiman

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Niina Jalarvo

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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