Thermodynamics Research Center / ThermoML | Journal of Chemical Thermodynamics

Determination of the activity of a molecular solute in saturated solution

Nordstrom, F. L.[Fredrik L.], Rasmuson, A. C.[Ake C.]
J. Chem. Thermodyn. 2008, 40, 12, 1684-1692
ABSTRACT
Prediction of the solubility of a solid molecular compound in a solvent, as well as, estimation of the solution activity coefficient from experimental solubility data both require estimation of the activity of the solute in the saturated solution. The activity of the solute in the saturated solution is often defined using the pure melt at the same temperature as the thermodynamic reference. In chemical engineering literature also the activity of the solid is usually defined on the same reference state. However, far below the melting temperature, the properties of this reference state cannot be determined experimentally, and different simplifications and approximations are normally adopted. In the present work, a novel method is presented to determine the activity of the solute in the saturated solution (=ideal solubility) and the heat capacity difference between the pure supercooled melt and solid. The approach is based on rigorous thermodynamics, using standard experimental thermodynamic data at the melting temperature of the pure compound and solubility measurements in different solvents at various temperatures. The method is illustrated using data for ortho-, meta-, and para-hydroxybenzoic acid, salicylamide and paracetamol. The results show that complete neglect of the heat capacity terms may lead to estimations of the activity that are incorrect by a factor of 12. Other commonly used simplifications may lead to estimations that are only one-third of the correct value.
Compounds
# Formula Name
1 C7H6O3 2-hydroxybenzoic acid
2 C7H6O3 3-hydroxybenzoic acid
3 C7H6O3 4-hydroxybenzoic acid
4 C7H7NO2 2-hydroxybenzamide
Datasets
The table above is generated from the ThermoML associated json file (link above). POMD and RXND refer to PureOrMixture and Reaction Datasets. The compound numbers are included in properties, variables, and phases, if specificied; the numbers refer to the table of compounds on the left.
Type Compound-# Property Variable Constraint Phase Method #Points
  • POMD
  • 1
  • Molar heat capacity at constant pressure, J/K/mol ; Crystal
  • Temperature, K; Crystal
  • Pressure, kPa; Crystal
  • Crystal
  • Small sample (50 mg) DSC
  • 26
  • POMD
  • 2
  • Molar heat capacity at constant pressure, J/K/mol ; Crystal
  • Temperature, K; Crystal
  • Pressure, kPa; Crystal
  • Crystal
  • Small sample (50 mg) DSC
  • 37
  • POMD
  • 3
  • Molar heat capacity at constant pressure, J/K/mol ; Crystal
  • Temperature, K; Crystal
  • Pressure, kPa; Crystal
  • Crystal
  • Small sample (50 mg) DSC
  • 37
  • POMD
  • 4
  • Molar heat capacity at constant pressure, J/K/mol ; Crystal
  • Temperature, K; Crystal
  • Pressure, kPa; Crystal
  • Crystal
  • Small sample (50 mg) DSC
  • 24