(573u) Surface Wettability and Pore Size Effect on CO2 Diffusivity in Water-Saturated Kaolinite Nanopores
AIChE Annual Meeting
2024
2024 AIChE Annual Meeting
Sustainable Engineering Forum
Poster Session: Sustainability Science and Engineering, Biorefineries, and Energy
Wednesday, October 30, 2024 - 3:30pm to 5:00pm
In this work, we use molecular dynamics (MD) simulations to study CO2 diffusivity in water-saturated nanopores under in-situ GCS condition. Kaolinite, a common type of clay minerals in caprocks, is used as substrate. It has surfaces of different wettability and pore sizes are also considered in our simulation set-up. We find that CO2 diffusivity is higher in water-saturated hydrophobic confinements than in hydrophilic ones. It is further reduced by stronger surface hydrophilicity due to increasing content of H2O. Moreover, smaller pore size can inhibit diffusion of CO2 as the result of stronger surface-CO2 interactions. But there is a sudden drop for CO2 diffusivity in all types of confinements when the pore width is smaller than 1.0 nm as all the molecules are adsorbed on the surface. Our study should provide fundamental understanding into the effect of surface wettability and pore size on CO2 diffusion in caprock, which may help evaluate the CO2 leakage in GCS projects.