Abstract

Evaporation at the nanoscale is critical to many natural and synthetic systems including rapidly emerging unconventional oil and gas production from nanoporous shale reservoirs. During extraction processes, hydrocarbons confined to nanoscopic pores (ranging from one to a few hundred nanometers in size) can undergo phase change as pressure is reduced. Here, we directly observe evaporation in two-dimensional (2D) nanoporous media at the sub-10 nm scale. Using an experimental procedure that mimics pressure drawdown during shale oil/gas production, our results show that evaporation takes place at pressures significantly lower than predictions from the Kelvin equation (maximum deviation of 11%). We probe evaporation dynamics as a function of superheat and find that vapor transport resistance dominates evaporation rate. The transport resistance is made up of both Knudsen and viscous flow effects, with the magnitude of the Knudsen effect being approximately twice that of the viscous effects here. We also observe...

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