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- 2018 AIChE Annual Meeting
- Engineering Sciences and Fundamentals
- In Honor of Peter Monson II (Invited Talks)
- (227b) Confinement-Induced Compression and High Pressure Phases in Nanopores
For simple fluids in pores that are up to a few nanometers in width, molecular simulations show that both the normal and tangential pressures can be locally very high (thousands or tens of thousands of bars) in the pore, even though the bulk phase in equilibrium with the pore is at a pressure of one bar or less. The cause of these high in-pore pressures will be discussed.
When the molecules in the confined nanophase react with each other chemically it may be possible to achieve even higher tangential pressures, in the megabar range. Thus, Kaneko et al.3 have shown that when sulfur atoms are confined within a narrow carbon nanotube they covalently bond to form a one-dimensional phase that is metallic. In the bulk phase sulfur forms a metallic phase only at pressures above 95 GPa. In our recent molecular dynamics simulations of this system we find that the sulfur atoms are covalently bonded in the pore and that they experience tangential pressures in excess of 100 GPa as a result of the strong confinement4. Recently, Medeiros et al.5 have reported experiments in which they observe a similar covalently bonded one-dimensional phase, and an insulator-metal transition, for tellurium in single-walled carbon nanotubes.