The macroscopic viscosity approximation: A first-principle relationship between molecular diffusion and viscosity

In this article, a new relationship between viscosity and molecular diffusion at infinite dilution is proposed for better rationalization and prediction of these properties, based on a “macroscopic viscosity approximation” (MVA), i.e., by assuming viscosity around a solute as equal to the macroscopi...

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Main Authors: Théophile Gaudin, Haibo Ma
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AIP Publishing LLC 2020-03-01
Series:AIP Advances
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.5131234
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spelling doaj-a2c46b2b701e4c9cbc81f3c6045369a72020-11-25T01:58:17ZengAIP Publishing LLCAIP Advances2158-32262020-03-01103035321035321-1610.1063/1.5131234The macroscopic viscosity approximation: A first-principle relationship between molecular diffusion and viscosityThéophile Gaudin0Haibo Ma1Key Laboratory of Mesoscopic Chemistry of MOE, School of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Nanjing University, Nanjing 210023, ChinaKey Laboratory of Mesoscopic Chemistry of MOE, School of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Nanjing University, Nanjing 210023, ChinaIn this article, a new relationship between viscosity and molecular diffusion at infinite dilution is proposed for better rationalization and prediction of these properties, based on a “macroscopic viscosity approximation” (MVA), i.e., by assuming viscosity around a solute as equal to the macroscopic, measurable viscosity of the solvent. This implies that activation energies of the viscous flow and diffusion process are equal. The hypothesis is validated by our correlation analysis (mean difference of 0.10 kcal/mol, R2 = 0.96). The new approach, named “Modified Stokes–Einstein” (MSE), achieves better performance than the widely used Wilke–Chang (WC) correlation both in organic solvents [mean relative error (MRE) of 15% vs 24%, respectively] and in water (MRE of 13% vs 21%, respectively). Contrary to the popular WC correlation as well as all other available approaches in the literature, the MSE approach can be used consistently for water, without requiring any ad hoc association parameter, and is not fitted on diffusion and/or viscosity data, making all of its underlying hypotheses explicit. Based on the MVA and the MSE, a simple atomic count estimation method for the activation energy of the flow allows us to simultaneously predict viscosity and diffusion coefficients with an MRE of 21%–22%, again slightly better than the WC correlation, but not requiring any experimental data as the input. This work provides rationalized and efficient means for prediction of diffusion coefficients at infinite dilution and pure liquid viscosities wherever such properties are required, for example, as inputs for mixing rules to predict flow and transport behavior of complex systems.http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.5131234
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Théophile Gaudin
Haibo Ma
spellingShingle Théophile Gaudin
Haibo Ma
The macroscopic viscosity approximation: A first-principle relationship between molecular diffusion and viscosity
AIP Advances
author_facet Théophile Gaudin
Haibo Ma
author_sort Théophile Gaudin
title The macroscopic viscosity approximation: A first-principle relationship between molecular diffusion and viscosity
title_short The macroscopic viscosity approximation: A first-principle relationship between molecular diffusion and viscosity
title_full The macroscopic viscosity approximation: A first-principle relationship between molecular diffusion and viscosity
title_fullStr The macroscopic viscosity approximation: A first-principle relationship between molecular diffusion and viscosity
title_full_unstemmed The macroscopic viscosity approximation: A first-principle relationship between molecular diffusion and viscosity
title_sort macroscopic viscosity approximation: a first-principle relationship between molecular diffusion and viscosity
publisher AIP Publishing LLC
series AIP Advances
issn 2158-3226
publishDate 2020-03-01
description In this article, a new relationship between viscosity and molecular diffusion at infinite dilution is proposed for better rationalization and prediction of these properties, based on a “macroscopic viscosity approximation” (MVA), i.e., by assuming viscosity around a solute as equal to the macroscopic, measurable viscosity of the solvent. This implies that activation energies of the viscous flow and diffusion process are equal. The hypothesis is validated by our correlation analysis (mean difference of 0.10 kcal/mol, R2 = 0.96). The new approach, named “Modified Stokes–Einstein” (MSE), achieves better performance than the widely used Wilke–Chang (WC) correlation both in organic solvents [mean relative error (MRE) of 15% vs 24%, respectively] and in water (MRE of 13% vs 21%, respectively). Contrary to the popular WC correlation as well as all other available approaches in the literature, the MSE approach can be used consistently for water, without requiring any ad hoc association parameter, and is not fitted on diffusion and/or viscosity data, making all of its underlying hypotheses explicit. Based on the MVA and the MSE, a simple atomic count estimation method for the activation energy of the flow allows us to simultaneously predict viscosity and diffusion coefficients with an MRE of 21%–22%, again slightly better than the WC correlation, but not requiring any experimental data as the input. This work provides rationalized and efficient means for prediction of diffusion coefficients at infinite dilution and pure liquid viscosities wherever such properties are required, for example, as inputs for mixing rules to predict flow and transport behavior of complex systems.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.5131234
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