387106 Using Molecular Simulation to Study the Interfacial Properties of CO2/Water/Silica Systems

Wednesday, November 19, 2014: 8:45 AM
213 (Hilton Atlanta)
Adam R. Rall and Jeffrey R. Errington, Chemical and Biological Engineering, University at Buffalo, The State University of New York, Buffalo, NY

Carbon dioxide capture and storage via injection into saline aquifers is a promising option for the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions and the potential mitigation of global climate change. However, the estimation of reservoir capacity has been hampered by uncertainty in key interfacial properties of the CO2/water/rock system, especially at high pressures where supercritical CO2 is present. In order to prevent the leakage of sequestered gas through pores in caprock, the aquifer pressure must remain below the breakthrough pressure, which depends on (1) the interfacial tension between the CO2-rich and water-rich phases and (2) the contact angle that a water-rich droplet forms on a mineral surface in a mother CO2-rich background. We demonstrate here the use of Monte Carlo (MC) molecular simulations to measure these key properties for CO2/water mixtures in the presence of an atomistically detailed silica surface. Specifically, we present an interface potential-based free energy method to measure interfacial properties over a range of CO2/water compositions.

Extended Abstract: File Not Uploaded