Article Previous Article Next Article Articles ASAP Use of Equations of State and Coarse Grained Simulations to Complement Experiments: Describing the Interfacial Properties of Carbon Dioxide + Decane and Carbon Dioxide + Eicosane Mixtures
Mejia, A.[Andres], Cartes, M.[Marcela], Segura, H.[Hugo], Muller, E. A.[Erich A.]
We report surface tension measurements, coexisting densities, concentration profiles along the interfacial region, surface activities, and relative Gibbs adsorption isotherms for binary mixtures of carbon dioxide (CO2) + n-decane (n-C10H22) at 344.15 K and carbon dioxide (CO2) + n-eicosane (n-C20H42) at 323.15 K over a pressure range from 0.1 MPa to 10.35 MPa. The results are obtained by employing a broad approach that integrates experiments with both theory and molecular simulations to gain an enhanced multiscale description of the interfacial region. Measurements are based on the use of a high-pressure pendant drop tensiometer coupled to a high-pressure densimeter. Theoretical modeling is carried out using the Square Gradient Theory based on a version of the Statistical Associated Fluid Theory (SAFT-VR Mie) equation of state. At the molecular level, Molecular Dynamics is employed and molecules are represented by the SAFT-? coarse-grained force field. The novelty here is that both the theory and the simulations uniquely share the same underlying intermolecular potentials, hence the experimental data are employed to verify and inform in the same way both the theory and simulations. Reassuringly, theory, experiments, and molecular simulations agree with each other in the description of the bulk phase equilibria and interfacial tension. It is observed that for both mixtures, the interfacial tension decreases as the pressure (or the liquid mole fraction of CO2) increases. Furthermore, there is quantitative agreement between the theoretical predictions and the results obtained from the molecular simulations of surface activities, concentration profiles along the interfacial region, and relative Gibbs adsorption isotherms at the interfaces. A remarkable high excess adsorption of CO2, larger in eicosane than in decane, is detected along the interface.
Compounds
#
Formula
Name
1
CO2
carbon dioxide
2
C10H22
decane
3
C20H42
eicosane
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.