Water flow in carbon nanotubes

The effect of tube flexibility and thermostat

Journal Article (2017)
Author(s)

Alan Sam (Indian Institute of Technology Madras)

Sridhar Kumar Kannam (Swinburne University of Technology)

Remco Hartkamp (TU Delft - Process and Energy)

Sarith P. Sathian (Indian Institute of Technology Madras)

Department
Process and Energy
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4985252
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Publication Year
2017
Language
English
Department
Process and Energy
Issue number
23
Volume number
146
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Abstract

Although the importance of temperature control in nonequilibrium molecular dynamics simulations is widely accepted, the consequences of the thermostatting approach in the case of strongly confined fluids are underappreciated. We show the strong influence of the thermostatting method on the water transport in carbon nanotubes (CNTs) by considering simulations in which the system temperature is controlled via the walls or via the fluid. Streaming velocities and mass flow rates are found to depend on the tube flexibility and on the thermostatting algorithm, with flow rates up to 20% larger when the walls are flexible. The larger flow rates in flexible CNTs are explained by a lower friction coefficient between water and the wall. Despite the lower friction, a larger solid-fluid interaction energy is found for flexible CNTs than for rigid ones. Furthermore, a comparison of thermostat schemes has shown that the Berendsen and Nosé-Hoover thermostats result in very similar transport rates, while lower flow rates are found under the influence of the Langevin thermostat. These findings illustrate the significant influence of the thermostatting methods on the simulated confined fluid transport.

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