Aggregation Behavior of Model Asphaltenes Revealed from Large-Scale Coarse-Grained Molecular Simulations

J Phys Chem B. 2019 Mar 14;123(10):2380-2396. doi: 10.1021/acs.jpcb.8b12295. Epub 2019 Mar 4.

Abstract

Fully atomistic simulations of models of asphaltenes in simple solvents have allowed the study of trends in aggregation phenomena to understand the underlying role played by molecular structure. The detail included at this scale of molecular modeling is, however, at odds with the required spatial and temporal resolution needed to fully understand asphaltene aggregation. The computational cost required to explore the relevant scales can be reduced by employing coarse-grained (CG) models, which consist of lumping a few atoms into a single segment that is characterized by effective interactions. In this work, CG force fields developed via the statistical associating fluid theory (SAFT-γ) [ Müller , E. A. ; Jackson , G. Annu. Rev. Chem. Biomol. Eng. 5 , 2014 , 405 - 427 ] equation of state (EoS) provide a reliable pathway to link the molecular description with macroscopic thermophysical data. A recent modification of the SAFT-VR EoS [ Müller , E. A. ; Mejía , A. Langmuir 33 , 2017 , 11518 - 11529 ], which allows for the parameterization of homonuclear rings, is selected as the starting point to develop CG models for polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons. The new aromatic-core models, along with others published for simpler organic molecules, are adopted for the construction of asphaltene models by combining different chemical moieties in a group-contribution fashion. We apply the procedure to two previously reported asphaltene models and perform molecular dynamics simulations to validate the coarse-grained representation against benchmark systems of 27 asphaltenes in a pure solvent (toluene or heptane) described in a fully atomistic fashion. An excellent match between both levels of description is observed for the cluster size, radii of gyration, and relative-shape-anisotropy-factor distributions. We exploit the advantages of the CG representation by simulating systems containing up to 2000 asphaltene molecules in an explicit solvent investigating the effect of asphaltene concentration, solvent composition, and temperature on aggregation. By studying large systems facilitated by the use of CG models, we observe stable continuous distributions of molecular aggregates at conditions away from the two-phase precipitation point. As a further example application, a widely accepted interpretation of cluster-size distributions in asphaltenic systems is challenged by performing system-size tests, reversibility checks, and a time-dependence analysis. The proposed coarse-graining procedure is seen to be general and predictive and, hence, can be applied to other asphaltenic molecular structures.