Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6619108 | Fluid Phase Equilibria | 2018 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
A Helmholtz energy functional consistent with the heterosegmented group-contribution perturbed-chain polar statistical associating fluid theory (GC-PCP-SAFT) is developed in this study and is applied to predict interfacial properties of planar vapor-liquid interfaces. Predicted surface tensions of pure substances are in very good agreement with experimental data for systems of non-polar as well as polar compounds including biodiesel systems where the group-contribution approach proves especially advantageous. The average deviation of the proposed model from experimental data is only 5% for these substances. Short hydrogen-bonding compounds, such as methanol and ethanol, are not predicted convincingly well. For longer hydrogen-bonding molecules the results are satisfying and deviations decrease to values of 3-10% for the entire liquid-vapor region. The orientation of hydrogen-bonding molecules at the vapor-liquid interface is reproduced qualitatively by the proposed model. Surface tensions for mixtures (including mixtures with hydrogen-bonding components) are predicted surprisingly well, with average deviations from experimental data of 5%. For mixtures, transferable group-group interaction parameters are adjusted to binary vapor-liquid equilibria data. The description of vapor-liquid phase equilibria is thereby significantly improved, however, the improvement of predicted surface tensions is mild. Further, in order to compensate for a weakness of group-contribution equations of state, we propose a concept for individualizing the group-contribution approach for substances that are well characterized by experimental data. We introduce a component-specific parameter. This concept improves the description mostly of vapor pressures, especially for short and multi-functional molecules. The effect of this measure on predicted surface tensions, however, is very modest.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemical Engineering
Chemical Engineering (General)
Authors
Jonas Mairhofer, Bo Xiao, Joachim Gross,