Fluid Phase Equilibria, Vol.267, No.2, 172-180, 2008
Viscometric and volumetric behaviour of binary mixtures of sulfolane and N-methylpyrrolidone with monoethanolamine and diethanolamine in the range 303-373 K
Capillary viscometry was used to determine the kinematic viscosity of the binary systems composed of N-methylpyrrolidone+monoethanolamine and N-methylpyrrolidone+diethanolamine throughout the concentration range, at eight different temperatures in the range 303.15-373.15 K. Pure component values of viscosity were also determined in the temperature range 303.15-423.15 K. Using a rolling ball viscometer the absolute viscosity was obtained for the binary systems composed of tetramethylene sulfone (sulfolane)+monoethanolamine and tetramethylene sulfone+diethanolamine, throughout the concentration range, at three different temperatures in the range 303.15-373.15 K. Density results were obtained using a vibrating-tube densimeter for the four pure components and the four binary systems studied, in the same temperature range and the whole concentration range for the binary systems as the viscosity measurements. The experimental viscosity results for the four pure solvents cover a broader temperature range than previously reported by other workers. The experimental results of viscosity for both pure and binary systems show a decrease with increasing temperature as expected. In the case of the binary systems the change of viscosity with concentration for the two sets of mixtures with N-methylpyrrolidone is very large in the range of 303.15-353.15 K, whereas it is small in the range 363.15-373.15 K. The observed behaviour of the change of viscosity with concentration for sulfolane with monoethanolamine is different from that shown by sulfolane with diethanolamine, at 303.15 and 323.15 K; the first system shows a minimum viscosity point in the sulfolane-rich region whereas at 373.15 K it shows values of viscosity greater than that of the pure components in the whole range of concentration; and the second system shows large variations of viscosity at low sulfolane concentration, at 303.15 and 323.15 K; whereas at 373.15 K the viscosity values change smoothly between those for the two pure components. From the density results, molar excess volumes were derived, which were correlated using the Redlich-Kister equation; the final expression includes the functionality with both concentration and temperature. (C) 2008 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Keywords:binary systems;density;diethanolamine;excess volume;monoethanolamine;N-methylpyrrolidone;sulfolane;viscosity