Interfacial properties of the brine plus carbon dioxide plus oil plus
silica system
YF Yang and AKN Nair and D Lau and SY Sun, JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS,
160, 114702 (2024).
DOI: 10.1063/5.0197087
Molecular dynamics simulations were conducted to study the interfacial
behavior of the CO2 + H2O and hexane +
CO2 + H2O systems in the presence of hydrophilic
silica at geological conditions. Simulation results for the
CO2 + H2O and hexane + CO2 +
H2O systems are in reasonable agreement with the theoretical
predictions based on the density functional theory. In general, the
interfacial tension (IFT) of the CO2 + H2O system
exponentially (linearly) decreased with increasing pressure
(temperature). The IFTs of the hexane + CO2 + H2O
(two-phase) system decreased with the increasing mole fraction of
CO2 in the hexane/CO2-rich phase
xCO2. Here, the negative surface excesses of
hexane lead to a general increase in the IFTs with increasing pressure.
The effect of pressure on these IFTs decreased with increasing
xCO2 due to the positive surface excesses of
carbon dioxide. The simulated water contact angles of the CO2
+ H2O + silica system fall in the range from 43.8 degrees to
76.0 degrees, which is in reasonable agreement with the experimental
results. These contact angles increased with pressure and decreased with
temperature. Here, the adhesion tensions are influenced by the
variations in fluid-fluid IFT and contact angle. The simulated water
contact angles of the hexane + H2O + silica system fall in
the range from 58.0 degrees to 77.0 degrees and are not much affected by
the addition of CO2. These contact angles increased with
pressure, and the pressure effect was less pronounced at lower
temperatures. Here, the adhesion tensions are mostly influenced by
variations in the fluid-fluid IFTs. In all studied cases, CO2
molecules could penetrate into the interfacial region between the water
droplet and the silica surface.
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