Investigation of Carbonation Kinetics in Carbonated Cementitious Materials by Reactive Molecular Dynamics Simulations.
Ling QinQijie XieJiuwen BaoGaurav N SantTiefeng ChenPeng ZhangDitao NiuXiaojian GaoMathieu BauchyPublished in: ACS sustainable chemistry & engineering (2024)
Calcium carbonate (CaCO 3 ) precipitation plays a significant role during the carbon capture process; however, the mechanism is still only partially understood. Understanding the atomic-level carbonation mechanism of cementitious materials can promote the mineralization capture, immobilization, and utilization of carbon dioxide, as well as the improvement of carbonated cementitious materials' performance. Therefore, based on molecular dynamics simulations, this paper investigates the effect of Si/Al concentrations in cementitious materials on carbonation kinetics. We first verify the force field used in this paper. Then, we analyze the network connectivity evolution, the number and size of the carbonate cluster during gelation, the polymerization rate, and the activation energy. Finally, in order to reveal the reasons that caused the evolution of polymerization rate and activation energy, we analyze the local stress and charge of atoms. Results show that the Ca-Oc bond number and carbonate cluster size increase with the decrease of the Si/Al concentration and the increase of temperature, leading to the higher amorphous calcium carbonate gel polymerization degree. The local stress of each atom in the system is the driving force of the gelation transition. The presence of Si and Al components increases the atom's local stress and average charge, thus causing the increase of the energy barrier of CaCO 3 polymerization and the activation energy of carbonation.