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In this paper, we report microsecond molecular dynamics simulations of the kinetic pathway of CO(2) hydrate formation triggered by hydroxylated silica surfaces. Our simulation results show that the nucleation of the CO(2) hydrate is a three-stage process. First, an icelike layer is formed closest to the substrates on the nanosecond scale. Then, on the submicrosecond timescale, a thin layer with intermediate structure is induced to compensate for the structure mismatch between the icelike layer and the final stable CO(2) hydrate. Finally, on the microsecond timescale, the nucleation of the first CO(2) hydrate motif layer is generated from the intermediate structure that acts as nucleation seeds. We also address the effects of the distance between two surfaces.
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Dongsheng Bai
New York Genome Center
Guangjin Chen
China University of Petroleum, Beijing
Xianren Zhang
Beijing University of Chemical Technology
Langmuir
Beijing University of Chemical Technology
China University of Petroleum, Beijing
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Bai et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a17336df1526df9a8bb8221 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1021/la105088b