Effect of CO2 on water condensation and homogeneous nucleation: Insights for supercritical water gasification syngas phase separation
TJ Zhang and J Zhang and BW Zhang and HT Wu and H Jin, PHYSICS OF FLUIDS, 37, 082046 (2025).
DOI: 10.1063/5.0283478
Supercritical water gasification (SCWG) syngas products typically
contain CO2 and unreacted H2O, necessitating gas-liquid separation for
water recovery. However, molecular-level investigations into the
influence of CO2 on water condensation and nucleation remain lacking. In
this study, molecular dynamics simulations were employed to examine both
cooling-induced and isothermal nucleation processes in pure water and
CO2-H2O mixtures. The role of CO2 during water condensation was analyzed
from multiple perspectives, including energy evolution, molecular
spatial distribution, and hydrogen bond (HB) formation. CO2 was found to
densify the core of water clusters while blurring their boundaries,
resulting in structural instability. At 380 K, the average number of
hydrogen bonds per H2O molecule decreased by 13.38%, reflecting a
disruption of the HB network. Nucleation rates were quantified using
classical nucleation theory (CNT), improved classical nucleation theory,
and the Yasuoka-Matsumoto (Y-M) method, from which the average
nucleation barriers were subsequently derived. At 340 K, the nucleation
rate J was 3.93 x 10(33) m(-3)
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