[Oral Presentation]CO2 displacement of N2 in coal: experiment and principle
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[Oral Presentation]CO2 displacement of N2 in coal: experiment and principle

CO2 displacement of N2 in coal: experiment and principle
ID:72 Submission ID:320 View Protection:ATTENDEE Updated Time:2024-05-16 19:03:47 Hits:591 Oral Presentation

Start Time:2024-05-31 16:45 (Asia/Shanghai)

Duration:15min

Session:[S6] Clean Processing, Conversion and Utilization of Energy Resources » [S6-2] Afternoon of May 31st

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Abstract
As CO2 emissions increase year by year, the climate and environmental problems caused by CO2 are gradually intensifying. The porous nature of the coal seam itself and its strong adsorption of carbon dioxide are the keys to sequestering carbon dioxide. However, as to how coal seams can effectively store CO2, the process and mechanism of coal seams storing CO2 still need further research. Based on the device independently developed and designed by the research group, the author carried out an experiment of injecting CO2 into a coal cylinder to replace N2. Based on the comparison of FTIR and 13C NMR experiments with computer molecular design calculation spectral results, 2D and 3D models of anthracite macromolecules were created. At the same time, based on the 3D coal molecule model, Giant Canonical Monte Carlo (GCMC) and Molecular Dynamics (MD) methods were used to conduct molecular simulations of the CO2 and N2 adsorption and replacement processes. The results show that the macroscopic process of the displacement process and the microscopic performance of molecular simulation have good mutual verification. The CO2 production at the end of the coal pillar shows three stages: early accumulation, rapid displacement, and stable generation. The greater the CO2 pressure or the pressure difference between CO2 and N2, the faster the CO2 stored in the coal pillar can reach saturation, that is, the shorter the time required for the terminal gas components to reach equal percentages. Injecting CO2 at a relatively low pressure is more conducive to the adsorption of CO2 in the micropores and the full competitive adsorption of CO2 and N2 in the mixed components. In addition, molecular simulation further confirmed that coal seams have stronger adsorption capacity for CO2 than N2, and the pore size has a significant control on the adsorption and diffusion of CO2 and N2 molecules. For example, in 1 nm pores, the diffusion coefficient ratio of N2 to CO2 ranges from 14.14 to 20.98. The CO2 injection pressure was 6 MPa, and more CO2 molecules could be stored in the 2 nm and 3 nm pores. The research results explain the transport mechanism of CO2 and N2 in coal from a microscopic perspective, and provide a reference for CO2 storage in coal seams.
Keywords
CO2 displacement N2,Molecular Structure,Molecular Dynamics Simulation,Diffusion,CO2 Storage
Speaker
Hong Xie
China University of Mining and Technology

Submission Author
红 谢 320476947@qq.com
宇 刘 中国矿业大学(北京)
炎铭 朱 中国矿业大学
效志 周 中国矿业大学
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