Journal of Physical Chemistry B, Vol.110, No.3, 1350-1362, 2006
Global fluid phase equilibria and critical phenomena of selected mixtures using the crossover soft-SAFT equation
We present here the extension of the crossover soft-statistical associating fluid theory (soft-SAFT) equation of state to mixtures, as well as some illustrative applications of the methodology to mixtures of particular scientific and technological interest. The procedure is based on White's work (White, J. A. Fluid Phase Equilib. 1992, 75, 53) from the renormalization group theory, as for the pure fluids, with the isomorphism assumption applied to the mixtures. The equation is applied to three groups of mixtures: selected mixtures of n-alkanes, the CO2/n-alkane homologous series, and the CO2/1-alkanol homologous series. The crossover equation is first applied to the pure components of the mixtures, CO2 and the I-alkanol family, while an available correlation is used for the molecular parameters of the n-alkane series (Llovell et al. J. Chem. Phys 2004, 121, 10715). A set of transferable molecular parameters is provided for the 1-alkanols series; these are accurate for the whole range of thermodynamic conditions. The crossover soft-SAFT equation is able to accurately describe these compounds near to and far from the critical point. The theory is then used to represent the phase behavior and the critical phenomena of the selected mixtures. We use binary interaction parameters xi and eta for dissimilar mixtures. These parameters are fitted at some particular conditions (one subcritical temperature or binary critical data) and used to predict the behavior of the mixture at different conditions (other subcritical conditions and/or critical conditions). The equation is able to capture the continuous change in the critical behavior of the CO2/n-alkane and the CO2/1-alkanol homologous series as the chain length of the second compound increases. Excellent agreement with experimental data is obtained, even in the most nonideal cases. The new equation is proved to be a powerful tool to study the global phase behavior of complex systems, as well as other thermodynamic properties of very challenging mixtures.