Morphological analysis of organo-montmorillonites via MD simulations

Deniz Karataş*, Adem Tekin, Muhammed F. Can, Zhenghe Xu, Mehmet S. Çelik

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Adsorption on clay surfaces has been studied intensively in recent years. The most curious subject of these studies, which are generally experimental, is how the surfactants are adsorbed at the atomic level to the surface. In this study, the adsorption of quaternary amine salt (tetradecyl dimethyl ethyl benzyl ammonium chloride–TDEBAC) to sodium montmorillonite (Na-MMT) with various cation exchange capacities (CEC) was investigated by using Molecular Dynamics (MD) simulation. In the simulations, as in the experimental studies, it was revealed that the surfactants were both adsorbed on to basal surfaces and settled between the layers. From the morphological analysis obtained from MD simulations, it was calculated that the inter-molecular interaction between the layers was higher than on the basal surface. For example, for the model with 118 CEC motif, the binding energy of all three surfactants in the models with the hydrophilic heads facing the same direction was calculated as -678.18 kcal/mol at the basal surface, while this value was found to be -688.90 kcal/mol in the interlayer. The more striking result is that in the simulations made by turning the head of the middle one of the three surfactants towards the tails of the right and left ones, only -34.86 kcal/mol binding energy was calculated on the basal surface, while this value was -525.63 kcal/mol in the interlayer. As compared middle reversed surfactant models with the same direction ones, despite increased CEC the intermolecular interaction decreased for the basal surface, but the interaction increased between the layers.

Original languageEnglish
Article number152499
JournalPhysicochemical Problems of Mineral Processing
Volume58
Issue number5
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2022

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© Wroclaw University of Science and Technology

Funding

The financial support for this work from TUBITAK-BIDEB 2214/A scholarship program (The Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey-Science Fellowships and Grant Programs Department) is gratefully acknowledged. Computing resources used in this work were provided by Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering (CME) at University of Alberta.

FundersFunder number
Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering
Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey-Science
TUBITAK-BIDEB 2214/A scholarship program
Society for Academic Continuing Medical Education
University of Alberta

    Keywords

    • Binding energy
    • Cation exchange capacity
    • Molecular dynamics simulation
    • Organo-montmorillonite
    • Tetradecyl dimethyl ethyl benzyl ammonium chloride

    Fingerprint

    Dive into the research topics of 'Morphological analysis of organo-montmorillonites via MD simulations'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

    Cite this