화학공학소재연구정보센터
Fluid Phase Equilibria, Vol.344, 45-58, 2013
Modeling CO2 and H2S solubilities in aqueous alkanolamine solutions via an extension of the Cubic-Two-State equation of state
An extension of the Cubic-Two-State (CTS) equation of state was employed to evaluate the fugacities of ionic species in solution. The equation contains three terms relating to the various intermolecular interactions occurring in electrolyte solutions: a short range non-specific term represented by the Soave-Redlich-Kwong equation of state, a specific association term described by the two-state association model and a Debye-Huckel primitive model term for long range ion-ion interactions. The resulting equation, named eCTS, has six adjustable parameters: three for the non-specific part, two for the association term and one for the ionic term. Then, the eCTS EoS was used to describe both chemical and phase equilibria for systems including acid gases (H2S and CO2), alkanolamines (monoethanolamine, diethanolamine and methyldiethanolamine) and water. Measured saturation pressures, liquid densities and binary and ternary vapor-liquid equilibria data were used to estimate the model's pure and binary parameters. Low deviations from experimental data were observed for pure, binary and ternary systems. Finally, the eCTS was employed to predict the behavior of quaternary VLE with mixtures containing CO2-H2S and alkanolamine blends. Except for the prediction of CO2 partial pressures over aqueous alkanolamine blends, the eCTS gave good predictions of experimental quaternary data over a broad range of temperatures and alkanolamine concentrations. (C) 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.