How Entrainers Enhance Solubility in Supercritical Carbon Dioxide
Author(s) -
Seishi Shimizu,
Steven Abbott
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
the journal of physical chemistry b
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.864
H-Index - 392
eISSN - 1520-6106
pISSN - 1520-5207
DOI - 10.1021/acs.jpcb.6b01380
Subject(s) - supercritical fluid , solubility , supercritical carbon dioxide , chemistry , carbon dioxide , solvent , thermodynamics , density functional theory , computational chemistry , organic chemistry , physics
Supercritical carbon dioxide (scCO2) on its own can be a relatively poor solvent. However, the addition at relatively modest concentration of "entrainers", simple solvent molecules such as ethanol or acetone, can provide a significant boost in solubility, thereby enabling its industrial use. However, how entrainers work is still under debate; without an unambiguous explanation, it is hard to optimize entrainers for any specific solute. This paper demonstrates that a fundamental, assumption-free statistical thermodynamic theory, the Kirkwood-Buff (KB) theory, can provide an unambiguous explanation of the entrainer effect through an analysis of published experimental data. The KB theory shows that a strong solute-entrainer interaction accounts for the solubility enhancement, while CO2 density increase and/or CO2-entrainer interactions, which have been assumed widely in the literature, do not account for solubilization. This conclusion, despite the limited completeness of available data, is demonstrably robust; this can be shown by an order-of-magnitude analysis based upon the theory, and can be demonstrated directly through a public-domain "app", which has been developed to implement the theory.
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