Interlayer Pores Play a Limited Role in Diffusion Through Hydrated Na-MMT: Insights from a Multiscale, Experimentally Anchored Model
Yaoting Zhang, Mikaella Brillantes, Justine Kuczera, Keyvan Ferasat, Mia L. San Gabriel, Scott Briggs, Chang Seok Kim, George Opletal, Yuankai Yang, Jane Howe, Laurent K. Beland

TL;DR
This paper develops a multiscale, geometry-based model to analyze diffusion in Na-MMT clay, revealing that interlayer pores play a limited role and that free pores dominate water transport.
Contribution
The study introduces a predictive, coarse-grained framework linking microscopic structure to diffusion, validated against experiments and simulations, with focus on interlayer versus free pore contributions.
Findings
Interlayer pores contribute minimally to diffusion at studied densities.
Transport is dominated by free pores, not interlayer pores.
Model accurately predicts diffusion scaling and anisotropy.
Abstract
This study investigates interlayer diffusion dynamics in sodium montmorillonite (Na--MMT), a smectite clay widely used in environmental remediation, pharmaceutical formulations, and advanced materials. Understanding diffusion in Na--MMT is critical, yet current models often rely on fitted parameters rather than directly linking transport to microscopic structure; even when the structure is known, interlayer diffusion remains challenging to model. This motivates the development of a predictive, coarse-grained, geometry-based computational framework. Our multiscale framework couples atomistic simulations with a coarse-grained mesoscale model to quantify contributions from interlayer one-, two-, and three-water pores, as well as free pores (-water diameter), across dry densities of --. Experimentally derived platelet size distributions, polydispersity,…
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