4.7 Article

Technical note: Estimating aqueous solubilities and activity coefficients of mono- and α,ω-dicarboxylic acids using COSMOtherm

Journal

ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS
Volume 20, Issue 21, Pages 13131-13143

Publisher

COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH
DOI: 10.5194/acp-20-13131-2020

Keywords

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Funding

  1. European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation program, project SURFACE [717022]
  2. Academy of Finland [308238, 314175, 315600, 335649]
  3. Swedish Research Council Formas [2018-01745-COBACCA]
  4. Independent Research Fund Denmark [9064-00001B]
  5. Academy of Finland (AKA) [315600, 315600, 335649] Funding Source: Academy of Finland (AKA)

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We have used the COSMOtherm program to estimate activity coefficients and solubilities of mono- and alpha, omega-dicarboxylic acids and water in binary acid-water systems. The deviation from ideality was found to be larger in the systems containing larger acids than in the systems containing smaller acids. COnductor-like Screening MOdel for Real Solvents (COSMO-RS) underestimates experimental monocarboxylic acid activity coefficients by less than a factor of 2, but experimental water activity coefficients are underestimated more especially at high acid mole fractions. We found a better agreement between COSMOtherm-estimated and experimental activity coefficients of monocarboxylic acids when the water clustering with a carboxylic acid and itself was taken into account using the dimerization, aggregation, and reaction extension (COSMO-RS-DARE) of COSMOtherm. COSMO-RS-DARE is not fully predictive, but fit parameters found here for water-water and acid-water clustering interactions can be used to estimate thermodynamic properties of monocarboxylic acids in other aqueous solvents, such as salt solutions. For the dicarboxylic acids, COSMO-RS is sufficient for predicting aqueous solubility and activity coefficients, and no fitting to experimental values is needed. This is highly beneficial for applications to atmospheric systems, as these data are typically not available for a wide range of mixing states realized in the atmosphere, due to a lack of either feasibility of the experiments or sample availability. Based on effective equilibrium constants of different clustering reactions in the binary solutions, acid dimer formation is more dominant in systems containing larger dicarboxylic acids (C-5-C-8), while for monocarboxylic acids (C-1-C-6) and smaller dicarboxylic acids (C-2-C-4), hydrate formation is more favorable, especially in dilute solutions.

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