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NaCl aggregation in water at elevated temperatures and pressures: Comparison of classical force fields

Authors :
Katie A. Maerzke
Lara A. Patel
Robert P. Currier
Tae Jun Yoon
Source :
The Journal of Chemical Physics. 154:064503
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
AIP Publishing, 2021.

Abstract

The properties of water vary dramatically with temperature and density. This can be exploited to control its effectiveness as a solvent. Thus, supercritical water is of keen interest as solvent in many extraction processes. The low solubility of salts in lower density supercritical water has even been suggested as a means of desalination. The high temperatures and pressures required to reach supercritical conditions can present experimental challenges during collection of required physical property and phase equilibria data, especially in salt-containing systems. Molecular simulations have the potential to be a valuable tool for examining the behavior of solvated ions at these high temperatures and pressures. However, the accuracy of classical force fields under these conditions is unclear. We have, therefore, undertaken a parametric study of NaCl in water, comparing several salt and water models at 200 bar-600 bar and 450 K-750 K for a range of salt concentrations. We report a comparison of structural properties including ion aggregation, hydrogen bonding, density, and static dielectric constants. All of the force fields qualitatively reproduce the trends in the liquid phase density. An increase in ion aggregation with decreasing density holds true for all of the force fields. The propensity to aggregate is primarily determined by the salt force field rather than the water force field. This coincides with a decrease in the water static dielectric constant and reduced charge screening. While a decrease in the static dielectric constant with increasing NaCl concentration is consistent across all model combinations, the salt force fields that exhibit more ionic aggregation yield a slightly smaller dielectric decrement.

Details

ISSN :
10897690 and 00219606
Volume :
154
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of Chemical Physics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3d2221b9a7bd7de031fac2e879775b96
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0030962