Influence of CO2 on Nanoconfined Water in a Clay Mineral

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Documents

  • Kristoffer W. Bo Hunvik
  • da Silva Lima, Rodrigo Jose
  • Alexsandro Kirch
  • Patrick Loch
  • Paul Monceyron Roren
  • Martin Hoffmann Petersen
  • Svemir Rudic
  • Victoria Garcia Sakai
  • Kenneth Dahl Knudsen
  • Caetano Rodrigues Miranda Materiais Instituto
  • Josef Breu
  • Jon Otto Fossum
  • Nunes Bordallo, Heloisa

Developing new technologies for carbon sequestra-tion and long-term carbon storage is important. Clay minerals are interesting in this context as they are low-cost, naturally abundant, can adsorb considerable amounts of CO2, and are present in storage sites for anthropogenic carbon. Here, to better understand the intercalation mechanisms of CO2 in dehydrated and hydrated synthetic Na-fluorohectorite clay, we have combined powder X-ray diffraction, inelastic and quasi-elastic neutron scattering, and density functional theory calculations. For dehydrated Na-fluorohectorite, we observe no crystalline swelling or spectroscopic changes in response to CO2, whereas for the hydrated case, damping of the librational modes related to the intercalated water was clearly observed. These findings suggest the formation of a more disordered water coordination in the interlayer associated with highly confined water molecules. From the simulations, we conclude that intercalated water molecules decrease the layer-layer cohesion energy and create physical space for CO2 intercalation. Furthermore, we confirm that interlayer confinement reduces the Na+ hydration number when compared to that in bulk aqueous water, which may allow for proton transfer and hydroxide formation followed by CO2 adsorption in the form of carbonates. The experimental results are discussed in the context of previous and present observations on, a similar smectite, Ni-fluorohectorite, for which it is established that CO2 attaches to the edge of nickel hydroxide islands present in the interlayer.

Original languageEnglish
JournalJournal of Physical Chemistry C
Volume126
Issue number40
Pages (from-to)17243-17254
Number of pages12
ISSN1932-7447
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 13 Oct 2022

    Research areas

  • INELASTIC NEUTRON-SCATTERING, CARBON-DIOXIDE, X-RAY, HYDRATION PROPERTIES, INTERCALATED WATER, MOLECULAR-DYNAMICS, SUPERCRITICAL CO2, SMECTITE CLAYS, ADSORPTION, INTERLAYER

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