Chemistry and Dynamics of Supercritical Carbon Dioxide and Methane in the Slit Pores of Layered Silicates.

Accounts of chemical research(2023)

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ConspectusIn the mid 2010s, high-pressure diffraction and spectroscopic tools opened a window into the molecular-scale behavior of fluids under the conditions of many CO sequestration and shale/tight gas reservoirs, conditions where CO and CH are present as variably wet supercritical fluids. Integrating high-pressure spectroscopy and diffraction with molecular modeling has revealed much about the ways that supercritical CO and CH behave in reservoir components, particularly in the slit-shaped micro- and mesopores of layered silicates (phyllosilicates) abundant in caprocks and shales. This Account summarizes how supercritical CO and CH behave in the slit pores of swelling phyllosilicates as functions of the HO activity, framework structural features, and charge-balancing cation properties at 90 bar and 323 K, conditions similar to a reservoir at ∼1 km depth. Slit pores containing cations with large radii, low hydration energy, and large polarizability readily interact with CO, allowing CO and HO to adsorb and coexist in these interlayer pores over a wide range of fluid humidities. In contrast, cations with small radii, high hydration energy, and low polarizability weakly interact with CO, leading to reduced CO uptake and a tendency to exclude CO from interlayers when HO is abundant. The reorientation dynamics of confined CO depends on the interlayer pore height, which is strongly influenced by the cation properties, framework properties, and fluid humidity. The silicate structural framework also influences CO uptake and behavior; for example, smectites with increasing F-for-OH substitution in the framework take up greater quantities of CO. Reactions that trap CO in carbonate phases have been observed in thin HO films near smectite surfaces, including a dissolution-reprecipitation mechanism when the edge surface area is large and an ion exchange-precipitation mechanism when the interlayer cation can form a highly insoluble carbonate. In contrast, supercritical CH does not readily associate with cations, does not react with smectites, and is only incorporated into interlayer slit mesopores when (i) the pore has a -dimension large enough to accommodate CH, (ii) the smectite has low charge, and (iii) the HO activity is low. The adsorption and displacement of CH by CO and vice versa have been studied on the molecular scale in one shale, but opportunities remain to examine behavioral details in this more complicated, slit-pore inclusive system.
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supercritical carbon dioxide,layered silicates,slit pores,methane
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