The
influence of the vacancy defect of the CaO surface on the wettability
of molten alkali metal salt was studied by molecular dynamics simulations.
The results indicated that in the temperature range of 800–1100
K, the molten Na2SO4 on both VDcalcium and VDoxygen defect surfaces presented a poor wettability
compared to that on the complete surface. Measurement of the density
profile and the contact angle of the molten Na2SO4 showed that the higher the temperature and defect concentration,
the worse the wettability. The micromechanism was revealed by calculating
the polarization intensity that the vacancy defect surface led to
the formation of the induced dipole moment in the molten Na2SO4. Induced polarization caused by defect surfaces reduces
the wettability of Na2SO4. More importantly,
as the temperature and defect concentration increase, various defect
surfaces form loose and local weak liquidity structures. These structures
are beneficial for the diffusion of carbon dioxide into the solid,
but the reduction in the spreading area caused by poor wettability
causes the efficiency of the CaL to decline. The vibration difference
between Na2SO4 and CaO increases with the increased
temperature and defect concentration. This means that the thermal
energy transportability at the interface is suppressed by poor wettability.
Molten alkali metal salt effectively promotes the performance of calcium looping (CaL). Deep insight into the nonequilibrium phase-transition characteristic of alkali metal salt is better for the control of the temperature in CaL, which not only ensures the complete melting of metal salt but also prevents the reaction from inhibiting caused by higher temperatures. In this work, therefore, the molecular dynamics simulation method is used to explore the nonequilibrium phase-transition characteristic of Na 2 SO 4 . The results show that the equilibrium melting temperature of nanosodium sulfate on the calcium oxide surface is 810 K, which is lower than the macroscopic melting temperature. Meanwhile, the high heating rates led to the atoms in Na 2 SO 4 unable to break through the thermal stability limit, resulting in overheating of the crystal. Both the surface premelting and overheating melting temperature of the crystal are increased. When the heating rates are 0.25, 0.5, and 1.0 K/ps, the overheating melting temperatures are 845, 885, and 930 K, respectively. More than that, the surface defects enhance the interaction between CaO and Na 2 SO 4 because of the surface being charged. The increases in the interaction not only effectively break the stability of the crystal lattice of Na 2 SO 4 on the defective surfaces but also promote the energy transport inside Na 2 SO 4 . Therefore, as the defect concentration increases from 0 to 3% and 5%, the overheating melting temperature of Na 2 SO 4 gradually decreases from 845 to 836 and 815 K.
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