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Liquid-liquid equilibria of quaternary system
with two partially miscible solvent pairs: water + methanol + 1,1-dimethylethyl methyl
ether + benzene
Chen Yao, Cao Chenyu, Fu Min, Chen
Enping, Zhang Yansong
(Department of Chemistry, Jinan University, Guangzhou, 510632)
Supported by Foundation of
Ministry of Education (No.2002247), Foundation of Guangdong province (No.2003C33101) and
Foundation of Jinan University (No.640071).
Abstract The experimental
liquid-liquid equilibria data of quaternary mixtures of (water + methanol +
1,1-dimethylethyl methyl ether + benzene) were measured at 298.15 K and ambient pressure.
The extended UNIQUAC model including binary and multibody interaction parameters is used
to correlate the quaternary experimental results. The calculated results are further
compared with those correlated by modified UNIQUAC model.
Keywords Liquid-liquid
equilibria, Oxygenate additive, Quaternary mixtures, Extended and modified UNIQUAC models
1. INTRODUCTION
1,1-Dimethylethyl methyl ether(MTBE),
1,1-dimethylpropyl methyl ether(TAME), and diisopropyl ether(DIPE) are commonly added into
gasoline to improve the octane rating and reduce the air-pollution. In the recent years,
studies of phase equilibria of multicomponent systems consisting of oxygenated compounds,
such as MTBE, TAME and DIPE, have gained interest as can be seen in literatures [1-5].
The thermodynamic behavior of these components in liquid mixtures is also of interest not
only in its application for reformulated gasoline but also in extraction or separation
operations with other components.
In this work, we report experimental liquid-liquid equilibrium(LLE)
data for quaternary mixtures of (water + methanol + MTBE + benzene), and relevant ternary
mixtures of (water + MTBE + benzene) at 25°C. The experimental results were correlated by
means of the extended and modified UNIQUAC models [6,7] including both ternary
and quaternary parameters coming from multicomponent intermolecular interactions, in
addition to binary parameters. The binary vapour-liquid equilibria(VLE), mutual solubility
and ternary LLE relevant to the quaternaries have been available from the literatures:
(methanol + benzene) [8], (methanol + MTBE) [9], (methanol + water) [10],
(MTBE + benzene) [11], (water + benzene) [12], (water + MTBE) [13],
(water + methanol + benzene) [14], (water + methanol + MTBE) [15],
and (water + MTBE + benzene) measured in this work.
2. EXPERIMENTS
2.1 Materials
MTBE was supplied by Tedia Company, Inc. with minimum mass fraction purity of 0.998.
Methanol and benzene were provided from Guangzhou Chemical Reagent Factory, with mass
fraction purities of 0.995 and 0.997, respectively. Water provided from Jinan University
was distilled twice and had a mass fraction purity of 0.999. The g.c. analysis gave mass
fractions purities of 0.997 for MTBE, 0.995 for benzene, and 0.998 for methanol. All
chemicals were used directly in this work.
2.2 Apparatus and Procedures
Ternary and quaternary LLE
measurements were carried out at the temperature (298.15 ± 0.01) K. The experimental
apparatus was the same that reported in detail previously [4]. The quaternary
mixtures whose volume is about 80 cm3 were loaded in the equilibrium glass cell
placed in a thermostated water bath. The mixture was then stirred vigorously by magnetic
stirrer for 3 h and allowed to settle 3 h, which was sufficient for separation into two
phases. Dry nitrogen gas was used to prevent contamination with moisture in the headspace
of the equilibrium cell. The liquid samples about 5 cm3, withdrawn from both
upper and lower phases in the cell by using a milliliter syringe without changing the
phase equilibria between two layers, were analyzed by a gas chromatograph (Shimadzu,
GC-14C) equipped with a thermal conductivity detector. Each component of the ternary and
quaternary mixtures was separated clearly using a stainless steel column (2 m long, 3 mm
i.d.) packed with Porapak SQ. The temperatures of the injection and detector were set at
483.15 K. The initial temperature and final temperature of the oven were kept at 453.15 K.
The hydrogen flow rates for both the separation and reference columns were set at 1.0 cm3· s―1.
The peak areas of the components, detected with a chromatopac (Zhejiang, N2000), were
calibrated by gravimetrically weighted mixtures. The mass of each component of the mixture
was determined from the calibration and converted to mole fraction. Three analyses at
least for each sample were made to obtain a mean value. The accuracy of the experimental
measurements was estimated to be within ±0.001.
The quaternary mixtures for (water + methanol + MTBE + benzene) were
prepared by mixing binary mixtures of (MTBE + benzene) whose compositions are M1, M2, and
M3 with water then methanol stepwise to cover the two-phase region shown in Figure 1.
Figure 1 shows schematically a tetrahedron to depict three planes of the quaternary
mixtures of (water + methanol + MTBE + benzene). The values of M1, M2, and M3 are
approximate 0.25, 0.50, and 0.75, respectively, indicating the mole fraction of MTBE in
(MTBE + benzene).
2.3 Experimental results
Tables 1 and 2 show experimental LLE data for the (water + MTBE + benzene) and (water +
methanol + MTBE + benzene) mixtures.
Table 1 Equilibrium phase compositions in mole
fraction (x) for the ternary of (water + MTBE + benzene) at 25 ℃
organic phase |
 aqueous phase
|
x1 |
x2 |
1-x1-x2 |
x1 |
x2 |
1-x1-x2 |
0.0379 |
0.6955 |
0.2666 |
0.9944 |
0.0056 |
0.0000 |
0.0298 |
0.5712 |
0.3990 |
0.9955 |
0.0045 |
0.0000 |
0.0250 |
0.4834 |
0.4916 |
0.9959 |
0.0039 |
0.0002 |
0.0215 |
0.4228 |
0.5557 |
0.9965 |
0.0032 |
0.0003 |
0.0213 |
0.3675 |
0.6112 |
0.9966 |
0.0030 |
0.0004 |
0.0176 |
0.3333 |
0.6491 |
0.9971 |
0.0026 |
0.0003 |
0.0152 |
0.2919 |
0.6929 |
0.9975 |
0.0022 |
0.0003 |
0.0202 |
0.2359 |
0.7439 |
0.9979 |
0.0021 |
0.0000 |
0.0412 |
0.7819 |
0.1769 |
0.9936 |
0.0064 |
0.0000 |
0.0410 |
0.6248 |
0.3342 |
0.9953 |
0.0047 |
0.0000 |
0.0267 |
0.5198 |
0.4535 |
0.9963 |
0.0037 |
0.0000 |
Table 2 Equilibrium phase compositions
in mole fraction for the quaternary
mixtures of (water + methanol + MTBE + benzene) at 25 ℃
organic phase |
 aqueous phase
|
x1 |
x2 |
x3 |
x1 |
x2 |
x3 |
{ x1water +x2methanol + x3MTBE+(1-x1-x2-x3)benzene} |
M1= 0.25 |
0.0213 |
0.0222 |
0.2932 |
0.9042 |
0.0924 |
0.0034 |
0.0271 |
0.0476 |
0.2686 |
0.8267 |
0.1694 |
0.0039 |
0.0400 |
0.0777 |
0.2490 |
0.7508 |
0.2434 |
0.0058 |
0.0418 |
0.0835 |
0.2024 |
0.7105 |
0.2808 |
0.0067 |
0.0463 |
0.1012 |
0.1939 |
0.6717 |
0.3173 |
0.0081 |
0.0471 |
0.1301 |
0.1881 |
0.6109 |
0.3735 |
0.0111 |
0.0500 |
0.1420 |
0.1554 |
0.5552 |
0.4210 |
0.0132 |
0.0456 |
0.1516 |
0.1453 |
0.5429 |
0.4326 |
0.0131 |
0.0457 |
0.1674 |
0.1331 |
0.4837 |
0.4770 |
0.0172 |
0.0503 |
0.1826 |
0.1225 |
0.4489 |
0.5037 |
0.0197 |
0.0297 |
0.0600 |
0.1992 |
0.7623 |
0.2330 |
0.0047 |
0.0408 |
0.1045 |
0.1739 |
0.6411 |
0.3453 |
0.0090 |
M2= 0.50 |
0.0600 |
0.1067 |
0.3906 |
0.7631 |
0.2275 |
0.0094 |
0.0959 |
0.1788 |
0.3570 |
0.6799 |
0.2996 |
0.0177 |
0.1117 |
0.2295 |
0.3147 |
0.6126 |
0.3561 |
0.0257 |
0.1249 |
0.2561 |
0.2946 |
0.5814 |
0.3793 |
0.0311 |
0.1179 |
0.2451 |
0.2904 |
0.5882 |
0.3764 |
0.0281 |
0.0561 |
0.0925 |
0.4655 |
0.8046 |
0.1864 |
0.0090 |
0.0321 |
0.0184 |
0.4929 |
0.9388 |
0.0563 |
0.0049 |
0.0464 |
0.0590 |
0.4535 |
0.8620 |
0.1315 |
0.0065 |
0.0884 |
0.1548 |
0.3633 |
0.6997 |
0.2831 |
0.0152 |
0.1005 |
0.2001 |
0.3270 |
0.6399 |
0.3334 |
0.0219 |
M3= 0.75 |
0.0768 |
0.0516 |
0.6489 |
0.8898 |
0.1017 |
0.0085 |
0.0982 |
0.1013 |
0.5893 |
0.8232 |
0.1655 |
0.0113 |
0.1424 |
0.1781 |
0.4972 |
0.7360 |
0.2439 |
0.0201 |
0.1605 |
0.2131 |
0.4549 |
0.7074 |
0.2680 |
0.0231 |
0.1820 |
0.2488 |
0.4090 |
0.6699 |
0.2949 |
0.0323 |
0.2387 |
0.3046 |
0.3210 |
0.5996 |
0.3421 |
0.0507 |
0.2126 |
0.2884 |
0.3436 |
0.6056 |
0.3396 |
0.0473 |
0.2126 |
0.2995 |
0.3254 |
0.5975 |
0.3449 |
0.0485 |
0.0730 |
0.0421 |
0.6569 |
0.9036 |
0.0887 |
0.0077 |
0.0931 |
0.0866 |
0.6051 |
0.8384 |
0.1515 |
0.0101 |
0.1129 |
0.1434 |
0.5468 |
0.7798 |
0.2053 |
0.0149 |
0.1909 |
0.2586 |
0.3911 |
0.6487 |
0.3101 |
0.0372 |
3. CALCULATION PROCEDURE AND RESULTS
3.1 Calculation procedure
The extended UNIQUAC [6] and modified UNIQUAC [7] models including binary and multibody interaction
parameters were used to correlate the experimental LLE data.
The binary parameter defined by
the binary energy parameter aji is expressed as
(1)
The binary energy parameters for the miscible mixtures were obtained
from the VLE data reduction using the following thermodynamic equations [16]:
(2)
(3)
where P, x, y, and γ are the total pressure, the liquid-phase mole fraction,
the vapor-phase mole fraction, and the activity coefficient, respectively. The pure
component vapor pressure, , was calculated
by using the Antoine equation with coefficients taken from the literatures [17,18].
The liquid molar volume, , was obtained by a
modified Rackett equation [19]. The fugacity coefficient, Φ, was calculated by the eqn.(3). The pure and cross second
virial coefficients, B, were estimated by the method of Hayden and O'Connell [20].
The binary energy parameters for the partially miscible mixtures were obtained by solving
the following thermodynamic equations simultaneously.
(4)
and ( I, II = two liquid phases ) (5)
Ternary parameters τ231, τ312, and τ123 were obtained by fitting the two models to
the ternary LLE data and then the quaternary parameters τ2341, τ1342, τ1243 and τ1234 were determined from the quaternary
experimental LLE data using a simplex method [21] by minimizing the objective
function:
= (6)
where min denotes minimum values, i = 1 to 3 for ternary mixtures or i = 1
to 4 for quaternary mixtures, j = 1, 2 (phases), k = 1, 2, …,M (number of tie
lines), M = 2ni, and x is the liquid-phase mole fraction.
3.2 Calculation results
Table 3 shows the molecular-structural volume and area parameters, r and q,
for MTBE taken from the reference [18], while the others are taken from
Prausnitz et al. [16], together with the interaction correction factor q′, for which the value for self-associating components was taken
from the literature [6,7], while that for nonassociating components was set to q′
= q0.20 in the extended UNIQUAC model and q′
= q0.75 in the modified UNIQUAC model.
Table 4 presents the constituent binary energy parameters of the modified and extended
UNIQUAC models. Table 5 shows the ternary parameters obtained in fitting the modified and
extended UNIQUAC models to the experimental ternary LLE systems, and root-mean-square
deviation of the mole fraction of tie lines between the experimental and calculated
results for the systems. Figure 2 compares the experimental and correlated LLE of the
ternary mixtures making up the quaternary mixtures of (water + methanol + MTBE + benzene)
at 25 ℃. The quaternary
system exhibits type 2 quaternary LLE behavior, which is composed of two ternary LLE for
the (water + methanol + MTBE) and (water + methanol + benzene) are classified as type 1,
and one ternary LLE for the (water + MTBE + benzene) as type 2 are illustrated in Figure
2. Table 6 summarizes the correlated results for the quaternary mixtures obtained in
fitting the extended and modified UNIQUAC models with binary, ternary, and quaternary
parameters to the experimental quaternary LLE data, together with the predicted results by
these models with only binary parameters listed in Table 4. It seems that the extended
UNIQUAC model correlated the quaternary LLEs more successfully than the modified UNIQUAC
model, and both the models can give a much more accurate representation for the quaternary
LLEs by including the ternary and quaternary parameters in addition to the binary ones.
Table 3 Structural parameters for pure
components
Component |
r |
q |
q′a |
q′b |
water |
0.92 |
1.40 |
1.28 |
0.96 |
methanol |
1.43 |
1.43 |
1.48 |
1.00 |
benzene |
3.19 |
2.40 |
q 0.75 |
q 0.20 |
MTBE |
4.07 |
3.63 |
q 0.75 |
q 0.20 |
a Modified UNIQUAC model.
bExtended UNIQUAC model.
Table 4 The results of fitting both
models to the binary phase equilibria data and root-mean-square deviations σP, σT,
σx and σy for binary mixtures
Mixture |
T/K |
Model |
a12/K |
a21/K |
σP/
mmHg |
σT/K |
103σx |
103σy |
methanol
+ benzene |
298.15 |
I
II |
22.70
7.61 |
1026.75
958.54 |
1.0
1.1 |
0.0
0.0 |
0.7
0.8 |
8.0
8.5 |
methanol
+ MTBE |
313.15 |
I
II |
–107.03
–63.71 |
569.52
540.64 |
0.1
0.1 |
0.0
0.0 |
0.1
0.6 |
0.5
4.7 |
methanol
+ water |
298.14 |
I
II |
–160.39
–71.81 |
158.59
70.15 |
0.1
0.1 |
0.0
0.0 |
0.6
0.6 |
4.0
4.1 |
MTBE
+ benzene |
313.15 |
I
II |
–142.60
–108.86 |
199.40
179.99 |
1.9
1.9 |
0.1
0.1 |
0.8
0.8 |
5.0
5.0 |
water
+ benzene |
298.15 |
I
II |
765.18
753.20 |
1663.40
1365.10 |
|
|
|
|
water
+ MTBE |
298.15 |
I
II |
173.24
399.09 |
1196.10
1023.70 |
|
|
|
|
I, modified UNIQUAC model.
II, extended UNIQUAC model.
Table 5 The results of fitting both
models to the ternary LLE data at 25 ℃
Mixture |
Na |
Ternary parameters |
Deviationsd |
Ib |
IIc |
Ib |
IIc |
water
+ methanol + benzene |
14 |
τ231
= –0.2628
τ132 = –0.0785
τ123 = –0.1311 |
τ231= 0.0022
τ132= –0.6935
τ123 = 0.0539 |
1.61e
1.18f |
3.05
1.31 |
water + methanol + MTBE |
6 |
τ231 = –0.0007
τ132 = –0.0427
τ123 = 0.0330 |
τ231 = 0.1497
τ132 = –0.0411
τ123 = –0.4815 |
0.64
0.59 |
0.83
0.37 |
water
+ MTBE + benzene |
11 |
τ231 = 0.0190
τ132 = 0.1172
τ123 = 0.1215 |
τ231 = –0.0140
τ132 = 1.5224
τ123 = –0.0882 |
0.33
0.16 |
0.34
0.17 |
a N, no. of tie-lines.
b I, modified UNIQUAC model. c
II, extended UNIQUAC model.
d Root-mean-square deviations (mol%). e Predicted
results using binary parameters alone.
f Correlated results using binary and ternary parameters.
Table 6 The results of fitting both
models to the quaternary LLE data at 25 ℃
Mixture |
Na |
Quaternary parameters |
Deviationsd |
Ib |
IIc |
Ib |
IIc |
water + methanol + MTBE + benzene |
34
|
τ2341 =0.1185
τ1342 = –1.9860
τ1243 = 2.7185
τ1234 = 0.0350 |
τ2341 = –0.0542
τ1342 = –0.2141
τ1243 =–11.7981
τ1234 = 5.5108 |
1.89e
0.95f |
3.44
1.04 |
a N, no. of tie-lines.
b I, modified UNIQUAC model. c
II, extended UNIQUAC model.
d Root-mean-square deviations (mol%). e Predicted
results using binary parameters alone.
f Correlated results using binary, ternary and quaternary parameters.

Figure 1 Phase equilibria of (water + methanol + MTBE
+ benzene). M1, M2 and M3 denote quaternary section planes.

Figure 2 Experimental and calculated LLE of
three ternary mixtures making up (water + methanol + MTBE + benzene) at 25 ℃. ●- - -●, experimental tie line; ——, correlated by
the extended UNIQUAC model with binary and ternary parameters taken from tables 4 and 5.
4. CONCLUSION
LLE data were measured for the ternary
mixtures of (water + MTBE + benzene) and quaternary mixtures of (water + methanol + MTBE +
benzene) at 25 ℃. The
experimental ternary and quaternary LLE data were better correlated by using both the
extended and modified UNIQUAC models including binary, ternary and quaternary parameters.
The correlated results obtained by the models are better than the predicted results, and
show a good agreement with the experimental quaternary LLE results.
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含二对部分互溶溶剂的四元体系-水、甲醇、甲基叔丁基醚、苯的液液相平衡
陈瑶,曹晨雨,付敏,陈恩平,张炎松
(暨南大学化学系,广州,510632)
国家教育部留学回国人员科研基金(No.2002247),广东省科技计划基金(No.2003C33101)和广州暨南大学科研基金(No.640071)。
摘要 在298.15K和常压下,测定了四元体系水、甲醇、
甲基叔丁基醚、苯的液液相平衡数据,含二元和多元组分相互作用参数的extended UNIQUAC模型用于关联四元体系的液液相平衡数据,并且extended UNIQUAC模型的计算结果和modified UNIQUAC模型的计算结果进行了比较。
关键词 液液平衡,含氧添加剂,四元混合物,Extended UNIQUAC模型和modified
UNIQUAC模型
|