Literature DB >> 16375402

Transferable potentials for phase equilibria. 8. United-atom description for thiols, sulfides, disulfides, and thiophene.

Nusrat Lubna1, Ganesh Kamath, Jeffrey J Potoff, Neeraj Rai, J Ilja Siepmann.   

Abstract

An extension of the transferable potentials for phase equilibria united-atom (TraPPE-UA) force field to thiol, sulfide, and disulfide functionalities and thiophene is presented. In the TraPPE-UA force field, nonbonded interactions are governed by a Lennard-Jones plus fixed point charge functional form. Partial charges are determined through a CHELPG analysis of electrostatic potential energy surfaces derived from ab initio calculations at the HF/6-31g+(d,p) level. The Lennard-Jones well depth and size parameters for four new interaction sites, S (thiols), S(sulfides), S(disulfides), and S(thiophene), were determined by fitting simulation data to pure-component vapor-equilibrium data for methanethiol, dimethyl sulfide, dimethyl disulfide, and thiophene, respectively. Configurational-bias Monte Carlo simulations in the grand canonical ensemble combined with histogram-reweighting methods were used to calculate the vapor-liquid coexistence curves for methanethiol, ethanethiol, 2-methyl-1-propanethiol, 2-methyl-2-propanethiol, 2-butanethiol, pentanethiol, octanethiol, dimethyl sulfide, diethyl sulfide, ethylmethyl sulfide, dimethyl disulfide, diethyl disulfide, and thiophene. Excellent agreement with experiment is achieved, with unsigned errors of less than 1% for saturated liquid densities and less than 3% for critical temperatures. The normal boiling points were predicted to within 1% of experiment in most cases, although for certain molecules (pentanethiol) deviations as large as 5% were found. Additional calculations were performed to determine the pressure-composition behavior of ethanethiol+n-butane at 373.15 K and the temperature-composition behavior of 1-propanethiol+n-hexane at 1.01 bar. In each case, a good reproduction of experimental vapor-liquid equilibrium separation factors is achieved; both of the coexistence curves are somewhat shifted because of overprediction of the pure-component vapor pressures.

Entities:  

Year:  2005        PMID: 16375402     DOI: 10.1021/jp0549125

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Phys Chem B        ISSN: 1520-5207            Impact factor:   2.991


  4 in total

1.  Properties of water along the liquid-vapor coexistence curve via molecular dynamics simulations using the polarizable TIP4P-QDP-LJ water model.

Authors:  Brad A Bauer; Sandeep Patel
Journal:  J Chem Phys       Date:  2009-08-28       Impact factor: 3.488

2.  Gibbs ensemble Monte Carlo simulation using an optimized potential model: pure acetic acid and a mixture of it with ethylene.

Authors:  Minhua Zhang; Lihang Chen; Huaming Yang; Xijiang Sha; Jing Ma
Journal:  J Mol Model       Date:  2016-06-21       Impact factor: 1.810

3.  A Kirkwood-Buff derived force field for thiols, sulfides, and disulfides.

Authors:  Nikolaos Bentenitis; Nicholas R Cox; Paul E Smith
Journal:  J Phys Chem B       Date:  2009-09-10       Impact factor: 2.991

4.  Molecular recognition effects in atomistic models of imprinted polymers.

Authors:  Eduardo M A Dourado; Carmelo Herdes; Paul R van Tassel; Lev Sarkisov
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2011-07-28       Impact factor: 5.923

  4 in total

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