Characterizing key features in the formation of ice and gas hydrate systems

Author:

Liang Shuai1,Hall Kyle Wm.2,Laaksonen Aatto345,Zhang Zhengcai6,Kusalik Peter G.6ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Key Laboratory of Gas Hydrate, Guangzhou Institute of Energy Conversion, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Guangdong Key Laboratory of New and Renewable Energy Research and Development, Guangzhou, People's Republic of China

2. Department of Chemistry, Temple University, Philadelphia, PA, USA

3. Department of Materials and Environmental Chemistry, Arrhenius Laboratory, Stockholm University, Stockholm, Sweden

4. Department of Chemistry-Ångström Laboratory, Uppsala University, 75121 Uppsala, Sweden

5. Centre of Advanced Research in Bionanoconjugates and Biopolymers, Petru Poni Institute of Macromolecular Chemistry, Aleea Grigore Ghica-Voda, 41A, 700487 Iasi, Romania

6. Department of Chemistry, University of Calgary, Calgary, Canada

Abstract

Crystallization in liquids is critical to a range of important processes occurring in physics, chemistry and life sciences. In this article, we review our efforts towards understanding the crystallization mechanisms, where we focus on theoretical modelling and molecular simulations applied to ice and gas hydrate systems. We discuss the order parameters used to characterize molecular ordering processes and how different order parameters offer different perspectives of the underlying mechanisms of crystallization. With extensive simulations of water and gas hydrate systems, we have revealed unexpected defective structures and demonstrated their important roles in crystallization processes. Nucleation of gas hydrates can in most cases be characterized to take place in a two-step mechanism where the nucleation occurs via intermediate metastable precursors, which gradually reorganizes to a stable crystalline phase. We have examined the potential energy landscapes explored by systems during nucleation, and have shown that these landscapes are rugged and funnel-shaped. These insights provide a new framework for understanding nucleation phenomena that has not been addressed in classical nucleation theory. This article is part of the theme issue ‘The physics and chemistry of ice: scaffolding across scales, from the viability of life to the formation of planets’.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Ministry of Research and Innovation, CNCS - UEFISCDI

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Engineering,General Mathematics

Reference138 articles.

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