Liquid-liquid extraction processes are central to the separation of rare earth elements and other strategic materials, yet their performance is often limited by third-phase formation and phase instabilities in the organic phase. Molecular simulation of these phase transitions is challenging due to the long-range structure that emerges in the organic phase near demixing. Here, we employ coarse-grained molecular dynamics simulations with the MARTINI 2.0 force field to investigate the structure, scattering behavior, and dynamics of a prototypical amide/diluent system: DMDBPMA in n-dodecane. Simulations spanning three extractant mole fractions (x = 0.226, 0.311, 0.404) and multiple temperatures (290-320 K) reveal equilibrium composition fluctuations whose scattering profiles in wavenumber q are well described by an Ornstein-Zernike form. Extracted correlation lengths and q = 0 intensities exhibit power-law growth consistent with 3D Ising critical exponents as the spinodal temperature is approached, with Tsp values ranging from ∼287 to 270 K and decreasing with increasing extractant fraction. Dynamical analysis of intensity autocorrelations identifies three processes: a slow diffusive mode with a strongly q-dependent relaxation time, a faster convective mode with a weakly q-dependent relaxation time, and a very fast vibrational mode. A parameter-free model for interdiffusion transport gives semi-quantitative agreement with the observed relaxation times at low q. We further quantify equilibration criteria, showing that simulation times of at least ∼100 slow-mode relaxation times are required to achieve converged statistics of critical fluctuations. Together, these results provide a predictive framework for connecting mesoscale structure and dynamics in extractant-diluent mixtures to q-dependent experimental measurements of liquid dynamics, including x-ray photon-correlation spectroscopy.
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Siddharth Sundararaman
Suman Chakraborty
G. B. Stephenson
The Journal of Chemical Physics
University of Illinois Chicago
Argonne National Laboratory
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Sundararaman et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69e1cecc5cdc762e9d857bb2 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0316219