4.3 Article

Molecular dynamics simulations of NMR relaxation and diffusion of bulk hydrocarbons and water

Journal

JOURNAL OF MAGNETIC RESONANCE
Volume 277, Issue -, Pages 15-24

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.jmr.2017.02.001

Keywords

Intramolecular relaxation; Intermolecular relaxation; Autocorrelation function; Hard-sphere model

Funding

  1. Rice University Consortium on Processes in Porous Media
  2. Office of Science of the U.S. Department of Energy [DE-ACO2-05CH11231]

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Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations are used to investigate H-1 nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) relaxation and diffusion of bulk n-C5H12 to n-C17H36 hydrocarbons and bulk water. The MD simulations of the H-1 NMR relaxation times T-1,T-2 in the fast motion regime where T-1 = T-2 agree with measured (de-oxygenated) T-2 data at ambient conditions, without any adjustable parameters in the interpretation of the simulation data. Likewise, the translational diffusion D-T coefficients calculated using simulation configurations agree with measured diffusion data at ambient conditions. The agreement between the predicted and experimentally measured NMR relaxation times and diffusion coefficient also validate the forcefields used in the simulation. The molecular simulations naturally separate intramolecular from intermolecular dipole-dipole interactions helping bring new insight into the two NMR relaxation mechanisms as a function of molecular chain-length (i.e. carbon number). Comparison of the MD simulation results of the two relaxation mechanisms with traditional hard-sphere models used in interpreting NMR data reveals important limitations in the latter. With increasing chain length, there is substantial deviation in the molecular size inferred on the basis of the radius of gyration from simulation and the fitted hard-sphere radii required to rationalize the relaxation times. This deviation is characteristic of the local nature of the NMR measurement, one that is well-captured by molecular simulations. (C) 2017 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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