Abstract
We performed molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of CO2 + H2O systems by employing widely used force fields (EPM2, TraPPE, and PPL models for CO2; SPC/E and TIP4P/2005 models for H2O). The phase behavior observed in our MD simulations is consistent with the coexistence lines obtained from previous experiments and SAFT-based theoretical models for the equations of state. Our structural analysis reveals a pronounced correlation between phase transitions and the structural orderliness. Specifically, the coordination number of Ow (oxygen in H2O) around other Ow significantly correlates with phase changes. In contrast, coordination numbers pertaining to the CO2 molecules show less sensitivity to the thermodynamic state of the system. Furthermore, our data indicate that a predominant number of H2O molecules exist as monomers without forming hydrogen bonds, particularly in a CO2-rich mixture, signaling a breakdown in the hydrogen bond network's orderliness, as evidenced by a marked decrease in tetrahedrality. These insights are crucial for a deeper atomic-level understanding of phase behaviors, contributing to the well-grounded design of CO2 injection under high-pressure and high-temperature conditions, where an atomic-scale perspective of the phase behavior is still lacking.
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