Mohammad Arshad , Tausif Altamash , Anastasiia Keba , Mohd Sajid Ali , Johan Jacquemin , José M.S.S. Esperança , Mohammad Tariq
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The Clausius-Clapeyron (CC) equation is generally preferred to obtain dissociation enthalpies (ΔH) of hydrate-forming systems due to its ease of use. The application of other direct and indirect methods becomes more problematic if complex additives such as ionic liquids (ILs) are also present in the system. In this work, around 400 equilibrium data points for methane hydrates in the presence of over 80 ILs were collected from the literature in the temperature and pressure ranges of (272.10 – 306.07) K and (2.48 – 100.34) MPa, respectively. The ΔH of methane hydrates in the absence and presence of ionic liquids (ILs) have been calculated using the CC equation. The compressibility factor (z), required to calculate ΔH at each phase equilibrium condition has been obtained from three different approaches viz., Peng-Robinson (PR) equation of state, Soave-Redlich-Kwong (SRK) equation of state and Pitzer (Pz) correlation. The results were compared to the experimentally reported dissociation enthalpy (54.5 ± 1.5 kJ.mol−1) of methane hydrates. The role of the compressibility factor along with the slope of the equilibrium data set and the temperature/pressure range in determining the outcome of the CC equation has been discussed. The effect of molar mass, molar volume, and hydrate suppression temperature of the ILs on the ΔH of methane hydrates has been explored. The tested ILs do not show a systematic and significant influence on enthalpies, rather they show a large scattering in the ΔH values, which might mask any existing subtle effect of the ILs on the dissociation enthalpies. Therefore, this approach should be dealt with care to obtain molecular-level insights.
期刊介绍:
Fluid Phase Equilibria publishes high-quality papers dealing with experimental, theoretical, and applied research related to equilibrium and transport properties of fluids, solids, and interfaces. Subjects of interest include physical/phase and chemical equilibria; equilibrium and nonequilibrium thermophysical properties; fundamental thermodynamic relations; and stability. The systems central to the journal include pure substances and mixtures of organic and inorganic materials, including polymers, biochemicals, and surfactants with sufficient characterization of composition and purity for the results to be reproduced. Alloys are of interest only when thermodynamic studies are included, purely material studies will not be considered. In all cases, authors are expected to provide physical or chemical interpretations of the results.
Experimental research can include measurements under all conditions of temperature, pressure, and composition, including critical and supercritical. Measurements are to be associated with systems and conditions of fundamental or applied interest, and may not be only a collection of routine data, such as physical property or solubility measurements at limited pressures and temperatures close to ambient, or surfactant studies focussed strictly on micellisation or micelle structure. Papers reporting common data must be accompanied by new physical insights and/or contemporary or new theory or techniques.