Stephanie Teich-McGoldrick
Sandia National Laboratories
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Featured researches published by Stephanie Teich-McGoldrick.
Molecular Simulation | 2014
Stephanie Teich-McGoldrick; Jeffery A. Greathouse; Randall T. Cygan
Anthropogenic activities have led to an increased concentration of uranium on the Earths surface and potentially in the subsurface with the development of nuclear waste repositories. Uranium is soluble in groundwater, and its mobility is strongly affected by the presence of clay minerals in soils and in subsurface sediments. We use molecular dynamics simulations to probe the adsorption of aqueous uranyl () ions onto the basal surface of muscovite, a suitable proxy for typically ultrafine-grained clay phases. Model systems include the competitive adsorption between potassium counterions and aqueous ions (0.1 M and 1.0 M UO2Cl2, 0.1 M NaCl). We find that for systems with the presence of potassium and uranyl ions, potassium ions dominate the adsorption phenomenon. Potassium ions adsorb entirely as inner sphere complexes associated with the ditrigonal cavity of the basal surface. Uranyl ions adsorb in two configurations when it is the only ion species present, and in a single configuration in the presence of potassium. The majority of adsorbed uranyl ions are tilted < 45° relative to the muscovite surface, and are associated with the Si4Al2 rings near the aluminium substitution sites.
Molecular Simulation | 2015
Jeffery A. Greathouse; Stephanie Teich-McGoldrick; Mark D. Allendorf
Molecular simulations were used to examine the adsorption of diatomic molecules (nitrogen and oxygen) and similarly sized gases (argon and methane) in pores with van der Waals diameters similar in size to the gas diameters. Idealised carbon nanotubes were used to model generic pores, to better understand the effect of pore diameter on guest adsorption in the absence of defects, specific adsorption sites, or variations in pore diameter that often complicate studies of gas adsorption in other porous materials. Molecular dynamics simulations of open nanotubes show that argon and methane are able to enter tubes whose diameters are slightly smaller than the gas diameters. Diatomic gases are able to enter tubes that are significantly smaller than their kinetic diameters with the molecular axis aligned parallel to the nanotube. The results indicate that size-selective adsorption of these gases is theoretically possible, although differences in pore diameters of only a few tenths of an Angstrom are required. Grand canonical Monte Carlo simulations of a 3.38 Å nanotube indicate significant uptake by argon and oxygen, but not nitrogen or methane. The adsorption of nitrogen and methane gradually increases as the nanotube diameter approaches 4.07 Å, and all gases fully saturate a 4.54 Å nanotube. Of the nanotubes studied, the largest adsorption enthalpy for any gas corresponds to the 4.54 Å nanotube, with significantly lower enthalpies seen in the 5.07 Å nanotube. These results suggest an ideal pore diameter for each gas based on the gas–pore van der Waals interaction energies. Trends in the ideal diameter correlate with the minimum tube diameter accessible to each gas.
Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2014
John J. Perry; Stephanie Teich-McGoldrick; Scott Thomas Meek; Jeffery A. Greathouse; Maciej Haranczyk; Mark D. Allendorf
Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2012
Timothy Van Heest; Stephanie Teich-McGoldrick; Jeffery A. Greathouse; Mark D. Allendorf; David S. Sholl
Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2012
Scott Thomas Meek; Stephanie Teich-McGoldrick; John J. Perry; Jeffery A. Greathouse; Mark D. Allendorf
Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2015
Stephanie Teich-McGoldrick; Jeffery A. Greathouse; Carlos F. Jove-Colon; Randall T. Cygan
Microporous and Mesoporous Materials | 2014
Marie Vernell Parkes; Hakan Demir; Stephanie Teich-McGoldrick; David S. Sholl; Jeffery A. Greathouse; Mark D. Allendorf
Crystal Growth & Design | 2011
Scott Thomas Meek; John J. Perry; Stephanie Teich-McGoldrick; Jeffery A. Greathouse; Mark D. Allendorf
Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2012
Stephanie Teich-McGoldrick; Jeffery A. Greathouse; Randall T. Cygan
Archive | 2015
Stephanie Teich-McGoldrick; Randall T. Cygan; David Hart