Wednesday, November 7, 2007 - 4:45 PM
469f

Repulsive Term In The Lennard-Jones Potential And Phase Behavior Of Organic Compounds

Damien Bernard-Brunel, Department of Chemical Engineering, Wayne State University, 5050 Anthony Wayne Dr, Detroit, MI 48202 and Jeffrey Potoff, Department of Chemical Engineering, Wayne State University, 5050 Anthony Wayne Dr, Detroit, MI 48202.

The Lennard-Jones 12-6 potential is widely used to model the dispersive interactions between atoms in molecular simulations. While generally successful in reproducing the thermophysical properties for a wide range of fluids, some deviations between experiment and simulation have been observed. For example, recent work in force field development has shown that typical united-atom force fields for alkanes, using the standard LJ 12-6 potential, can be parameterized to reproduce either the saturated liquid densities, or the vapor pressure to within 1% of experimental values, but not both at the same time [1, 2]. In this work, the effect of the repulsive exponent on the predicted saturated densities, vapor pressures and accentric factors is determined for LJ n-6 spheres and diatomics using histogram-reweighting Monte Carlo simulations in the grand canonical ensemble. The results show that the acentric factor is a strong function of the repulsive exponent. New n-6 potential parameters are optimized for n-alkanes, perfluorocarbons and alcohols that show an improved reproduction of the vapor pressure over existing united-atom force fields, with no loss in accuracy in the prediction of saturated liquid densities.

References: [1] M. G. Martin, J. I. Siepmann; J. Phys. Chem. B 102 (1998) 2569-2577 [2] S. K. Nath, F. A. Escobedo, J. J. de Pablo; J. Chem. Phys. 108 (1998) 9905-9911