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The structure and dynamics of 2-dimensional fluids in swelling clays
Authors:Neal T Skipper  Peter A Lock  James O Titiloye  Jan Swenson  Zakaria A Mirza  W Spencer Howells  Felix Fernandez-Alonso
Institution:

aDepartment of Physics and Astronomy, University College London, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT, UK

bDepartment of Chemical Engineering and Applied Chemistry, Aston University, Birmingham, B4 7ET, UK

cDepartment of Applied Physics, Chalmers University of Technology, SE-412 96 Göteborg, Sweden

dISIS Facility, Rutherford Appleton Laboratory, Chilton, Didcot, OX11 0QX, UK

Abstract:The interlayer pores of swelling 2:1 clays provide an ideal 2-dimensional environment in which to study confined fluids. In this paper we discuss our understanding of the structure and dynamics of interlayer fluid species in expanded clays, based primarily on the outcome of recent molecular modelling and neutron scattering studies. Counterion solvation is compared with that measured in bulk solutions, and at a local level the cation-oxygen coordination is found to be remarkably similar in these two environments. However, for the monovalent ions the contribution to the first coordination shell from the clay surfaces increases with counterion radius. This gives rise to inner-sphere (surface) complexes in the case of potassium and caesium. In this context, the location of the negative clay surface charge (i.e. arising from octahedral or tetrahedral substitution) is also found to be of major importance. Divalent cations, such as calcium, eagerly solvate to form outer-sphere complexes. These complexes are able to pin adjacent clay layers together, and thereby prevent colloidal swelling. Confined water molecules form hydrogen bonds to each other and to the clays' surfaces. In this way their local environment relaxes to close to the bulk water structure within two molecular layers of the clay surface. Finally, we discuss the way in which the simple organic molecules methane, methanol and ethylene glycol behave in the interlayer region of hydrated clays. Quasi-elastic neutron scattering of isotopically labelled interlayer CH3OD and (CH2OD)2 in deuterated clay allows us to measure the diffusion of the CH3- and CH2-groups in both clay and liquid environments. We find that in both the one-layer methanol solvates and the two-layer glycol solvates the diffusion of the most mobile organic molecules is close to that in the bulk solution.
Keywords:Swelling clay  Confined fluid  Fluid diffusion
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