The current work addresses a thermochemical study regarding the compounds N-methylphenothiazine and N-methylphenoxazine. The excellent agreement between the experimental and computational gas-phase enthalpy of formation values obtained for the N-methylphenothiazine reinforced the validation/ calibration of the computational methodology established, allowing the use of it for the homologous oxygen derivative. The computational studies were also extended to the attainment of gas-phase molar heat capacities at different temperatures, dipole moment, electrostatic potential energy maps mapped onto electron density isosurface, and frontier orbitals of N-methylphenothiazine and N-methylphenoxazine. The experimental techniques used were the Knudsen mass-loss effusion, Calvet microcalorimetry and combustion calorimetry aiming, respectively, the determination of the temperature-vapour pressures dependences, the enthalpy of sublimation and the massic energy of combustion of N-methylphenothiazine. These quantities were used to derive the corresponding enthalpy of formation in the gas phase, at T = 298.15 K, (271.3 +- 4.1) kJ mol 1. The results obtained for the enthalpies of formation are discussed and compared with related compounds, providing an opportunity to evaluate the effects in the enthalpies of formation associated with the substitution of the hydrogen of the amino group by a methyl group.
Compounds
#
Formula
Name
1
H2O4S
sulfuric acid
2
CO2
carbon dioxide
3
N2
nitrogen
4
H2O
water
5
O2
oxygen
6
C13H11NS
10-methylphenothiazine
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
6
Molar enthalpy of vaporization or sublimation, kJ/mol ; Crystal
Temperature, K; Crystal
Crystal
Gas
Static calorimetry
1
POMD
6
Vapor or sublimation pressure, kPa ; Crystal
Temperature, K; Crystal
Crystal
Gas
Calculated from knudsen effusion weight loss
36
RXND
6
1
2
3
4
5
Specific internal energy of reaction at constant volume, J/g