This work aims at proposing the nondestructive methane-carbon dioxide (CH-CO) replacement mechanism as an ecofriendly energy production technique from the natural gas hydrate reserves in seafloor and permanently frozen grounds. Although the experimental data is widely available in literature, this replacement mechanism has not been elucidated at molecular level. In this contribution, we perform the microsecond level molecular dynamic simulations to evaluate two different CH-CO replacement mechanisms: (i) direct CH displacement from hydrate structure, and (ii) dissociation of existing methane hydrate followed by a reformation of mixed CH-CO hydrates. For this, we analyze CH-CO replacement in three different modes i.e., CO as a replacing agent in (i) absence of free water molecules, (ii) presence of free water molecules, and (iii) presence of salt ions and free water molecules. Despite slow kinetics in the first mode, pure CO is observed to replace the methane more efficiently, while in the second mode, CO forms a new mixed hydrate layer on the existing seed crystal. However, in the third mode, salt ions help in destabilizing the methane hydrate and allow CO to form the hydrates. This proves that salt ions are favorable for CH-CO replacement.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-06583-z | DOI Listing |
In previous work we have obtained a dimeric dipeptide mimetic of 4th loop of BDNF - hexamethylenediamide bis-(N-monosuccinil-L-seryl-L-lysine) (GSB-106), having a neuroprotective activity in vitro in a concentration range 10(-5)-10(-8) M and an antidepressant activity in vivo at doses 0.1 and 1 mg/kg i.p.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLangmuir
February 2010
College of Physics Science and Technology, China University of Petroleum Dongying, Shandong 257061, PR China.
Ethanol decomposition over Pd(111) has been systematically investigated using self-consistent periodic density functional theory, and the decomposition network has been mapped out. The most stable adsorption of the involved species tends to follow the gas-phase bond order rules, wherein C is tetravalent and O is divalent with the missing H atoms replaced by metal atoms. Desorption is preferable for adsorbed ethanol, methane, and CO, while for the other species decomposition is preferred.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFarmaco
April 1999
CNR-IMD, Laboratorio Sintesi Peptidica, Pisa, Italy.
We replaced the Asp18-Ile19 dipeptide of the C-terminal ET analogue Ph-Ph-CH2-O-N=CH-CO-Phe-Asp-Ile-Ile-Trp-OH by alkyl spacers of various lengths to investigate the role of the aminoacidic central portion of the molecule and to define the N-terminal and C-terminal pharmacophoric regions of this analogue. The side-chains of the central dipeptide have been shown to be irrelevant for the binding of the molecule to the receptor, but the distance between the two postulated sites of interaction of the ligand with the ETB receptor appears to be fundamental.
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