Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10225184 | Fluid Phase Equilibria | 2018 | 5 Pages |
Abstract
As a contribution to the 9th Industrial Fluid Property Simulation Challenge on predicting interfacial tension between water and a set of non-polar oils at temperatures up to 170 °C we have used our first-principles based model, which is based on density functional theory and uses COSMO-RS implicit solvent model thermodynamics. Our calculations predict that the oil-water interfacial tension starts to drop significantly for alkanes at temperatures above â¼100 °C, and the oil-water interfacial tension drops significantly with increased temperature already above â¼25 °C for aromatic oils. In the range 110-170 °C, the interfacial tension drops almost linearly with temperature at a rate of about â0.082 mN/m/K for dodecane and â0.147 mN/m/K for toluene. Our method predicts that for any mix of dodecane and toluene, a linear interpolation of the interfacial tension with respect to the composition is a good approximation. The agreement of our predictions with the experimental data was overall satisfying, apart from a significant difference in the temperature dependence of the dodecane-water interfacial tension. We provide results derived from other experimental measurements suggesting that the large decrease measured by the challenge organizers may be erroneous.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemical Engineering
Chemical Engineering (General)
Authors
M.P. Andersson, F. Eckert, J. Reinisch, A. Klamt,