Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Thermodynamic modeling of aqueous

To calculate gas solubility in natural geochemical systems, basic thermodynamic properties such as the Henry s law constant and, in the case of weak electrolytes the dissociation constant, must be combined with a thermodynamic model of aqueous solution behavior. An analogous approach has been used to predict mineral solubilities in concentrated brines (1). Such systems are also relevant to the atmosphere where very concentrated solutions occur as micrometer sized aerosol particles and droplets, which contain very small amounts of water relative to the surrounding gas phase. The ambient relative humidity (RH) controls solute concentrations in the droplets, which will be very dilute near 1(X)% RH, but become supersaturated with respect to soluble constituents (such as NaCl) below about 75% RH. The chemistry of the aerosol is complicated by the non-ideality inherent in concentrated electrolyte solutions. [Pg.58]

Clegg SL, Seinfeld JH, Brimblecombe P (2001) Thermodynamic modelling of aqueous aerosols containing electrolytes and dissolved organic compounds. J Aerosol Sci 32(6) 713-738... [Pg.135]


See other pages where Thermodynamic modeling of aqueous is mentioned: [Pg.16]    [Pg.94]   


SEARCH



Thermodynamic model

Thermodynamic modelings

Thermodynamics modeling

© 2024 chempedia.info