Measurements and modelling of interfacial tension for water plus carbon dioxide systems at elevated pressures

被引:123
|
作者
Kvamme, Bjorn
Kuznetsova, Tatyana
Hebach, Andreas
Oberhof, Alexander
Lunde, Eivind
机构
[1] Univ Bergen, Dept Phys, N-5007 Bergen, Norway
[2] Forschungszentrum Karlsruhe GmbH, Inst Tech Chem, CPV, D-76021 Karlsruhe, Germany
关键词
carbon dioxide; water; interfacial tension; pendant drop; molecular modeling; high pressure;
D O I
10.1016/j.commatsci.2006.01.020
中图分类号
T [工业技术];
学科分类号
08 ;
摘要
A novel apparatus, PeDro, was used to measure interfacial tension in a two-component system made of water and compressed carbon dioxide at temperatures ranging 278-335 K and pressures 0.1-20 MPa. Our optimized experimental setup utilized the quasi-static pendant drop method and ensured experimental errors below 2%. The interfacial tension showed a pronounced dependence on pressure and temperature. A regression function was derived that allows to interpolate between the experimental data with high precision. Molecular dynamics simulations were performed for liquid-liquid and liquid-vapor interfaces between water and carbon dioxide at elevated pressures. The interfacial tension was obtained from long constant-volume production runs as the difference between normal and tangential pressure components. The results showed a good agreement with experimental data, with our model system reproducing faithfully the pressure-temperature dependence of the interfacial tension. (c) 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:506 / 513
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] DIFFUSION IN CARBON DIOXIDE AT ELEVATED PRESSURES
    OHERN, HA
    MARTIN, JJ
    INDUSTRIAL AND ENGINEERING CHEMISTRY, 1955, 47 (10): : 2081 - 2087
  • [22] Interfacial tensions of systems comprising water, carbon dioxide and diluent gases at high pressures: Experimental measurements and modelling with SAFT-VR Mie and square-gradient theory
    Chow, Y. T. Florence
    Eriksen, Daniel K.
    Galindo, Amparo
    Haslam, Andrew J.
    Jackson, George
    Maitland, Geoffrey C.
    Trusler, J. P. Martin
    FLUID PHASE EQUILIBRIA, 2016, 407 : 159 - 176
  • [23] Dew points of binary carbon dioxide plus water and ternary carbon dioxide plus water plus methanol mixtures -: Measurement and modelling
    Jarne, C
    Blanco, ST
    Artal, M
    Rauzy, E
    Otín, S
    Velasco, I
    FLUID PHASE EQUILIBRIA, 2004, 216 (01) : 85 - 93
  • [24] On the phase behaviour of the (carbon dioxide plus water) systems at low temperatures: Experimental and modelling
    Chapoy, Antonin
    Haghighi, Hooman
    Burgass, Rod
    Tohidi, Bahman
    JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL THERMODYNAMICS, 2012, 47 : 6 - 12
  • [25] Phase behavior of carbon dioxide plus methyl acrylate and carbon dioxide plus ethyl acrylate systems at high pressures
    Byun, HS
    JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL AND ENGINEERING DATA, 2002, 47 (02): : 359 - 362
  • [26] Phase behaviour measurements for the system (carbon dioxide plus biodiesel plus ethanol) at high pressures
    Araujo, Odilon A. S.
    Silva, Fabiano R.
    Ramos, Luiz P.
    Lenzi, Marcelo K.
    Ndiaye, Papa M.
    Corazza, Marcos L.
    JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL THERMODYNAMICS, 2012, 47 : 412 - 419
  • [27] Vapor-liquid equilibria for the carbon dioxide plus carvacrol system at elevated pressures
    Leeke, GA
    Santos, R
    King, MB
    JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL AND ENGINEERING DATA, 2001, 46 (03): : 541 - 545
  • [28] Phase equilibria of carbon dioxide plus poly ethylene glycol plus water mixtures at high pressure: Measurements and modelling
    Martin, Angel
    Pham, Huu Minh
    Kilzer, Andreas
    Kareth, Sabine
    Weidner, Eckhard
    FLUID PHASE EQUILIBRIA, 2009, 286 (02) : 162 - 169
  • [29] Phase equilibria of (Methylbenzene plus Carbon dioxide plus Methane) at elevated pressure: Experiment and modelling
    Al Ghafri, Saif Z. S.
    Trusler, J. P. Martin
    JOURNAL OF SUPERCRITICAL FLUIDS, 2019, 145 : 1 - 9
  • [30] INTERFACIAL TENSION AT ELEVATED PRESSURE AND TEMPERATURE .2. INTERFACIAL PROPERTIES OF HYDROCARBON WATER SYSTEMS
    MICHAELS, AS
    HAUSER, EA
    JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL AND COLLOID CHEMISTRY, 1951, 55 (03): : 408 - 421