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Propane and Water: The Cooperativity of Unlikely Molecules to Form Clathrate Structures

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posted on 2020-05-22, 15:44 authored by Yong Chen, Chen Chen, Amadeu K. Sum
Many unanswered questions still exist at the molecular level to understand the nucleation process and mechanism of clathrate hydrates, especially for larger guest molecules that would result in the structure II crystal. Here, we report on molecular dynamics simulations for propane and water to describe the molecular mechanism leading to a structure II system. Through a large number (30) of long (5 μs) and coupled annealing (20 μs) simulations, we detail the prenucleation, nucleation, growth, and annealing of propane clathrate hydrate structures at 250 K and 1800 bar. The results demonstrate the equal importance of the empty and occupied cages in the nucleation of propane hydrates. The critical nucleus size is identified to be eight cages. While separate distinct clusters may exist during the prenucleation period, only one survives to grow beyond the critical nucleus size, with the others remaining subcritical. From the annealing simulations, it is clear that solid rearrangement is a very slow process, and 20 μs is still not long enough to capture long-range ordering resembling the structure II crystal. These results, along with the developed analysis method, have a significant impact in advancing our understanding of the nucleation process for unlike molecules.

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