4.7 Article

Atomistic simulation framework for molten salt vapor-liquid equilibrium prediction and its application to NaCl

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 156, Issue 14, Pages -

Publisher

AIP Publishing
DOI: 10.1063/5.0089455

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Natural Science and Engineering Council of Canada (NSERC)
  2. Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR) [NSERC STPGP 479466-15, ANR-12-IS09-0001-01]

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Knowledge of the vapor-liquid equilibrium properties of molten salts is important but challenging to determine experimentally. This study presents a thermodynamic-based atomistic simulation framework for predicting these properties and applies it to NaCl. The framework can predict vapor pressure, phase densities, composition, and vaporization enthalpy, and can even estimate concentrations of minor vapor phase species. It is verified using experimental data and can be extended to molten salt mixtures and ionic liquids.
Knowledge of the vapor-liquid equilibrium (VLE) properties of molten salts is important in the design of thermal energy storage systems for solar power and nuclear energy production applications. The high temperatures involved make their experimental determination problematic, and the development of both macroscopic thermodynamic correlations and predictive molecular-based methodologies are complicated by the requirement to appropriately incorporate the chemically reacting vapor-phase species. We derive a general thermodynamic-based atomistic simulation framework for molten salt VLE prediction and show its application to NaCl. Its input quantities are temperature-dependent ideal-gas free energy data for the vapor phase reactions and density and residual chemical potential data for the liquid. If these are not available experimentally, the former may be predicted using standard electronic structure software, and the latter may be predicted by means of classical atomistic simulation methodology. The framework predicts the temperature dependence of vapor pressure, coexisting phase densities, vapor phase composition, and vaporization enthalpy. It also predicts the concentrations of vapor phase species present in minor amounts (such as the free ions), quantities that are extremely difficult to measure experimentally. We furthermore use the results to obtain an approximation to the complete VLE binodal dome and the critical properties. We verify the framework for molten NaCl, for which experimentally based density and chemical potential data are available in the literature. We then apply it to the analysis of NaCl simulation data for two commonly used atomistic force fields. The framework can be readily extended to molten salt mixtures and to ionic liquids. Published under an exclusive license by AIP Publishing.

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