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1.
The shear viscosity formula derived by the density fluctuation theory in previous papers is computed for argon, krypton, and methane by using the self-diffusion coefficients derived in the modified free volume theory with the help of the generic van der Waals equation of state. In the temperature regime near or above the critical temperature, the density dependence of the shear viscosity can be accounted for by ab initio calculations with the self-diffusion coefficients provided by the modified free volume theory if the minimum (critical) free volume is set equal to the molecular volume and the volume overlap parameter (alpha) is taken about unity in the expression for the self-diffusion coefficient. In the subcritical temperature regime, if the density fluctuation range parameter is chosen appropriately at a temperature, then the resulting expression for the shear viscosity can well account for its density and temperature dependence over the ranges of density and temperature experimentally studied. In the sense that once the density fluctuation range is fixed at a temperature, the theory can account for the experimental data at other subcritical temperatures on the basis of the intermolecular force only; the theory is predictive even in the subcritical regime of temperature. Theory is successfully tested in comparison with experimental data for self-diffusion coefficients and shear viscosity for argon, krypton, and methane.  相似文献   

2.
An extensive computer simulation study is presented for the self-diffusion coefficient, the shear viscosity, and the thermal conductivity of Mie(14,7) fluids. The time-correlation function formalism of Green-Kubo is utilized in conjunction with molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. In addition to molecular simulations, the results of a recent study [A. Eskandari Nasrabad, J. Chem. Phys. 128, 154514 (2008)] for the mean free volume are applied to calculate the self-diffusion coefficients within a free volume theory framework. A detailed comparison between the MD simulation and free volume theory results for the diffusion coefficient is given. The density fluctuation theory of shear viscosity is used to compute the shear viscosity and the results are compared to those from MD simulations. The density and temperature dependences of different time-correlation functions and transport coefficients are studied and discussed.  相似文献   

3.
The generalized Boltzmann equation for simple dense fluids gives rise to the stress tensor evolution equation as a constitutive equation of generalized hydrodynamics for fluids far removed from equilibrium. It is possible to derive a formula for the non-Newtonian shear viscosity of the simple fluid from the stress tensor evolution equation in a suitable flow configuration. The non-Newtonian viscosity formula derived is applied to calculate the non-Newtonian viscosity as a function of the shear rate by means of statistical mechanics in the case of the Lennard-Jones fluid. For that purpose we have used the density-fluctuation theory for the Newtonian viscosity, the modified free volume theory for the self-diffusion coefficient, and the generic van der Waals equation of state to compute the mean free volume appearing in the modified free volume theory. Monte Carlo simulations are used to calculate the pair-correlation function appearing in the generic van der Waals equation of state and shear viscosity formula. To validate the Newtonian viscosity formula obtained we first have examined the density and temperature dependences of the shear viscosity in both subcritical and supercritical regions and compared them with molecular-dynamic simulation results. With the Newtonian shear viscosity and thermodynamic quantities so computed we then have calculated the shear rate dependence of the non-Newtonian shear viscosity and compared it with molecular-dynamics simulation results. The non-Newtonian viscosity formula is a universal function of the product of reduced shear rate (gamma*) times reduced relaxation time (taue*) that is independent of the material parameters, suggesting a possibility of the existence of rheological corresponding states of reduced density, temperature, and shear rate. When the simulation data are reduced appropriately and plotted against taue*gamma* they are found clustered around the reduced (universal) non-Newtonian viscosity formula. Thus we now have a molecular theory of non-Newtonian shear viscosity for the Lennard-Jones fluid, which can be implemented with a Monte Carlo simulation method for the pair-correlation function.  相似文献   

4.
Nonequilibrium statistical mechanics via density fluctuation theory predicts relations between the bulk and shear viscosity, thermal conductivity, and self-diffusion coefficient of a fluid. In this Feature Article, we discuss such relations holding for fluids over wide ranges of density and temperature experimentally studied in the laboratory. It is discussed how such relations can be used to successfully compute the density and temperature dependence on the basis of intermolecular interaction potential models with the help of the modified free volume theory and the generic van der Waals equation of state once the parameters in them are determined at a low density or at a subcritical temperature. Although some approximations have been made to derive them, they represent a reliable molecular theory of transport coefficients over the entire density and temperature ranges of fluids--namely, gases and liquids--a theory hitherto unavailable in the kinetic theory of liquids and dense gases.  相似文献   

5.
In this paper, we apply the Matteoli-Mansoori empirical formula for the pair correlation function of simple fluids obeying the Lennard-Jones potential to calculate reduced self-diffusion coefficients on the basis of the modified free volume theory. The self-diffusion coefficient thus computed as functions of temperature and density is compared with the molecular dynamics simulation data and the self-diffusion coefficient obtained by the modified free volume theory implemented with the Monte Carlo simulation method for the pair correlation function. We show that the Matteoli-Mansoori empirical formula yields sufficiently accurate self-diffusion coefficients in the supercritical regime, provided that the minimum free volume activating diffusion is estimated with the classical turning point of binary collision at the mean relative kinetic energy 3k(B)T/2, where k(B) is the Boltzmann constant and T is the temperature. In the subcritical regime, the empirical formula yields qualitatively correct, but lower values for the self-diffusion coefficients compared with computer simulation values and those from the modified free volume theory implemented with the Monte Carlo simulations for the pair correlation function. However, with a slightly modified critical free volume, the results can be made quite acceptable.  相似文献   

6.
A newly proposed theory [R. Laghaei et al., J. Chem. Phys. 124, 154502 (2006)] was extended to polyatomics and applied to compute the density and temperature dependence of the effective site diameters of carbon disulfide fluids. The generic van der Waals (GvdW) theory was also extended to polyatomics in order to calculate the GvdW parameters and the molecular free volume using the effective site diameters as the repulsion-attraction separation distance. A three-site Lennard-Jones potential available in the literature was slightly modified and used in Monte Carlo simulations to obtain the functions appearing in the effective site diameter and GvdW expressions. The interaction potential was examined to reproduce the fluid phase thermodynamic properties using Gibbs ensemble Monte Carlo simulations and also the equation of state in the liquid phase using NVT Monte Carlo (NVT-MC) simulations. Comparison between the simulation results and experimental data shows excellent agreement for the densities of the coexisting phases, the vapor pressure, properties of the predicted critical point, and the equation of state. NVT-MC simulations were performed over a wide range of densities and temperatures in sub- and supercritical regions to compute the effective site diameters, the GvdW parameters, and the molecular free volume. The molecular structure in terms of the site-site pair correlation functions, the density dependence of the effective site diameters, and the density and temperature dependence of the GvdW parameters and molecular free volume were studied and discussed. The GvdW parameters were fitted to empirical expressions as a function of density and temperature. The computed molecular free volume will be used in future investigations to study the transport properties of carbon disulfide.  相似文献   

7.
In this Perspective, we discuss the role of voids in transport processes in liquids and the manner in which the concept of voids enters the generic van der Waals equation of state and the modified free volume theory. The density fluctuation theory is then discussed and we show how the density fluctuation theory can be made a molecular theory with the help of the modified free volume theory and the generic van der Waals equation of state. The confluence of the aforementioned three theories makes it possible to calculate the transport coefficients of liquids by using the information on the equilibrium pair correlation function, which can be calculated either by an integral equation theory or Monte Carlo simulations. A number of relations between transport coefficients are also presented, which are derived on the basis of the density fluctuation theory. Since they can be used to obtain one transport coefficient from another they can be very useful in handling experimental and theoretical data. An application of the modified free volume theory to polymer melts is discussed as an example for a theory of transport properties of complex liquids.  相似文献   

8.
A quantum mechanical derived ab initio interaction potential for the argon dimer was tested in molecular simulations to reproduce the thermophysical properties of the vapor-liquid phase equilibria using the Gibbs ensemble Monte Carlo simulations as well as the liquid and supercritical equation of state using the NVT Monte Carlo simulations. The ab initio interaction potential was taken from the literature. A recently developed theory [R. Laghaei et al., J. Chem. Phys. 124, 154502 (2006)] was used to compute the effective diameters of argon in fluid phases and the results were subsequently applied in the generic van der Waals theory to compute the free volume of argon. The calculated densities of the coexisting phases, the vapor pressure, and the equation of state show excellent agreement with experimental values. The effective diameters and free volumes of argon are given over a wide range of densities and temperatures. An empirical formula was used to fit the effective diameters as a function of density and temperature. The computed free volume will be used in future investigations to calculate the transport properties of argon.  相似文献   

9.
We present a theoretical study of transport properties of a liquid comprised of particles interacting via isotropic core-softened potential. Shear viscosity and self-diffusion coefficient are computed on the basis of the mode-coupling theory, with required structural input obtained from thermodynamically self-consistent integral equation theory. Both self-diffusion coefficient and viscosity display waterlike anomalous density dependence, with diffusivity increasing and viscosity decreasing with density within a particular density range along several isotherms below a certain temperature. Our theoretical results for both transport coefficients are in good agreement with the simulation data.  相似文献   

10.
In this paper the thermal conductivity of the Lennard-Jones fluid is calculated by applying the combination of the density-fluctuation theory, the modified free volume theory of diffusion, and the generic van der Waals equation of state. A Monte Carlo simulation method is used to compute the equilibrium pair-correlation function necessary for computing the mean free volume and the coefficient in the potential-energy and virial contributions to the thermal conductivity. The theoretical results are compared with our own molecular dynamics simulation results and with those reported in the literature. They agree in good accuracy over wide ranges of density and temperature examined in molecular dynamics simulations. Thus the combined theory represents a molecular theory of thermal conductivity of the Lennard-Jones fluid and by extension simple fluids, which enables us to compute the nonequilibrium quantity by means of the Monte Carlo simulations for the equilibrium pair-correlation function.  相似文献   

11.
12.
Abstract

Equilibrium molecular dynamics computer simulations have been used to determine the transport coefficients of model Ar—Kr mixtures, which are represented by Lennard-Jones pair potentials with Lorentz—Berthelot rules for the cross-species interactions. The component self-diffusion and mutual-diffusion coefficients are calculated from time correlation functions and mean square displacements. Time correlation functions are used to evaluate the shear and bulk viscosity, thermal conductivity and the thermal diffusion coefficient (Soret/Dufour coefficient). In the case of the thermal transport coefficients, the partial enthalpy of the two species is required at each state point to define the heat flux rigorously. We obtain this and the partial volume (and species resolved chemical potential) using particle-exchange (and particle insertion) techniques implemented in separate [NPT] simulations at the same state point.

The viscoelasticity of the fluids is characterised by the relaxation times for bulk and shear stress relaxation. The results are for dense liquids close to the triple point temperature and density. Agreement with experiment and previous simulation is particularly good for the density of the mixtures, the shear modulus, shear viscosity, shear stress relaxation time and thermal conductivity. As for the single component noble gas fluids (simulated and experiment) there is a significant qualitative difference in the temperature and, for mixtures, composition dependence of the bulk viscosity.  相似文献   

13.
The self-diffusion coefficients of toluene in polyisobutylene (PIB) solutions were determined using the pulsed field gradient nuclear magnetic resonance technique. The volume fraction of toluene in the polymer was varied from 0.045 up to 0.712 and the temperature was varied from 225 K up to 368 K. The concentration dependence of the data was interpreted using the Fujita free volume theory and the temperature dependence was interpreted with the WLF equation. These models describe separately the concentration and temperature dependencies of the toluene self-diffusion coefficients very well and the resulting free volume parameters are in good agreement with the ones extracted from the analysis of viscosity data on the same system. ©1995 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

14.
The vapor-liquid phase envelope of Mie(14,7) fluids is determined by the Gibbs ensemble Monte Carlo (MC) simulation technique. The NVT-MC simulation method is then utilized to compute the equation of state and the pair correlation function over a wide range of densities and temperatures. The effective diameters are calculated via the virial minimization method and the results are applied as the repulsion-attraction splitting distance within the generic van der Waals (GvdW) theory to compute the mean free volume. The density and temperature dependence of these parameters are studied and discussed. The results for the effective diameter, and the GvdW parameters are fitted to analytical functions of density and temperature. An examination of the results for the fluid phase equilibria of argon shows excellent agreement with empirical data for the densities of the coexisting phases, the vapor pressure, and the critical point. The computed free volumes are used to compute the diffusion coefficient of argon and the results are compared with experimental data.  相似文献   

15.
Viscosity curves were measured for polydimethyl siloxane (PDMS) melts swollen with dissolved carbon dioxide at 50 and 80°C for shear rates ranging from 40 to 2300 s−1, and for carbon dioxide contents ranging from 0 to 21 wt %. The measurements were performed with a capillary extrusion rheometer modified for sealed, high-pressure operation to prevent degassing of the melt during extrusion. The concentration-dependent viscosity curves for these systems are self-similar in shape, exhibiting low-shear rate Newtonian plateau regions followed by shear-thinning “power-law” regions. Considerable reduction of viscosity is observed as the carbon dioxide content is increased. Classical viscoelastic scaling methods, employing a composition-dependent shift factor to scale both viscosity and shear rate, were used to reduce the viscosity data to a master curve at each temperature. The dependence of the shift factors on polymer chain density and free volume were investigated by comparing the shift factors for PDMS-CO2 systems to those obtained by iso-free volume dilutions of high molecular weight PDMS. This comparison suggests that the free volume added to PDMS upon swelling with dissolved carbon dioxide is the predominant mechanism for viscosity reduction in those systems. © 1997 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Polym Sci B: Polym Phys, 35: 523–534, 1997  相似文献   

16.
This study explores the effects of interaction softness on the transport properties of simple fluids. The transport coefficients of soft-sphere fluids in which the particles interact via the potential, phi(r)=epsilon(rsigma)(-n), with n in the range from 6 to 1152, have been calculated by molecular-dynamics computer simulation. The self-diffusion coefficient D shear viscosity eta(s), bulk viscosity eta(b), and thermal conductivity lambda were computed over a wide packing fraction range. It was found that the Batschinski-Hildebrand expressions, in which D, eta(s) (-1), eta(b) (-1), and lambda(-1) are assumed to have a linear dependence on the molar volume, represent the data quite well for all n, although least well for the thermal conductivity. The density for which, on extrapolation, each of these quantities is zero, increases with the softness of the interaction (or approximately n(-1)), suggesting that the effective hard-sphere diameter decreases with increasing softness in the small n limit. This treatment leads to simple empirical formulas for the effect of density and n on the effective hard-sphere diameter and packing fraction (in an intermediate range) and the four transport coefficients of these fluids.  相似文献   

17.
Carbon-dioxide-expanded liquids, which are mixtures of organic liquids and compressed CO2, are novel media used in chemical processing. The authors present a molecular simulation study of the transport properties of liquid mixtures formed by acetonitrile and carbon dioxide, in which the CO2 mole fraction is adjusted by changing the pressure, at a constant temperature of 298 K. They report values of translational diffusion coefficients, rotational correlation times, and shear viscosities of the liquids as function of CO2 mole fraction. The simulation results are in good agreement with the available experimental data for the pure components and provide interesting insights into the largely unknown properties of the mixtures, which are being recognized as important novel materials in chemical operations. We find that the calculated quantities exhibit smooth variation with composition that may be represented by simple model equations. The translational and rotational diffusion rates increase with CO2 mole fraction for both the acetonitrile and carbon dioxide components. The shear viscosity decreases with increasing amount of CO2, varying smoothly between the values of pure acetonitrile and pure carbon dioxide. Our results show that adjusting the amount of CO2 in the mixture allows the variation of transport rates by a factor of 3-4 and liquid viscosity by a factor of 8. Thus, the physical properties of the mixture may be tailored to the desired range by changes in the operating conditions of temperature and pressure.  相似文献   

18.
The gas concentration and pressure effects on the shear viscosity of molten polymers were modeled by using a unified approach based on a free volume theory. A concentration and pressure dependent “shift factor,” which accounts for free volume changes associated with polymer‐gas mixing and with variation of absolute pressure as well as for dilution effects, has been herein used to scale the pure polymer viscosity, as evaluated at the same temperature and atmospheric pressure. The expression of the free volume of the polymer/gas mixture was obtained by using the Simha and Somcynsky equation of state for multicomponent fluids. Experimental shear viscosity data, obtained for poly(ε‐caprolactone) with nitrogen and carbon dioxide were successfully predicted by using this approach. Good agreement with predictions was also found in the case of viscosity data reported in the literature for polystyrene and poly(dimethylsiloxane) with carbon dioxide. Free volume arguments have also been used to predict the Tg depression for polystyrene/carbon dioxide and for poly(methyl methacrylate)/carbon dioxide mixtures, based on calculations performed, again, with the Simha and Somcynsky theory. © 2006 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Polym Sci Part B: Polym Phys 44: 1863–1873, 2006  相似文献   

19.
We present a theoretical study of the structural, thermodynamic, and transport properties of a supercritical fluid comprising particles interacting via isotropic attractive core-softened potential. The shear viscosity and self-diffusion coefficient are computed on the basis of the mode-coupling theory, with required structural input obtained from the thermodynamically self-consistent integral equation theory. We also consider dilute solutes in a core-softened fluid and use the anisotropic integral equation theory to obtain the solute-solute potential of mean force, which yields the second virial coefficient. We analyze its dependence on the solvent density and solute-solvent interaction strength.  相似文献   

20.
We apply mode-coupling theory to study shear viscosity and self-diffusion coefficient of the Lennard-Jones fluid throughout the entire fluid region of the phase diagram. Theoretical results are compared with the extensive simulation data and good agreement is found. In addition, theory is compared to the experimental data on the transport coefficients of inert gas fluids.  相似文献   

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