In the present study, a Raman line-imaging setup was employed to monitor in situ the CO2 sorption at,elevated pressures (from 042 to 7.10 MPa) in molten PCL. The method allowed the quantitative measurement of gas concentration in both the time -resolved and the space -resolved modes. The combined experimental and theoretical approach allowed a molecular level characterization of the system. The dissolved CO2 was found to occupy, a volume essentially coincident with its van der Waals volume and the estimated partial molar volume of the probe did not change with pressure. Lewis acid Lewis base interactions with the PCL Carbonyls was confirmed to be the main interaction mechanism. The geometry of the suptamolecular complex and the preferential interaction.site were controlled more by,steric than electronic effects. On the basis ofthe indications emerging from-Raman spectroscopy, an equation of state thermodynamic model for the PCL-CO2 system, based upon a compressible lattice fluid theory endowed with-specific interactions, has been tailored to account for the interaction types.detected spectroscopically. The predictions of the thermodynamic model in terms of molar volume of solution have been compared with available volumetric measurements while predictions for CO2 partial molar volume have been compared with the values estimated- on the basis of Raman spectroscopy.

Raman Line Imaging of Poly(ε-caprolactone)/Carbon Dioxide Solutions at High Pressures: A Combined Experimental and Computational Study for Interpreting Intermolecular Interactions and Free-Volume Effects / PASTORE CARBONE, MARIA GIOVANNA; Musto, Pellegrino; Pannico, Marianna; Braeuer, A.; Scherillo, Giuseppe; Mensitieri, Giuseppe; DI MAIO, Ernesto. - In: THE JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY. B. - ISSN 1520-5207. - 120:34(2016), pp. 9115-9131. [10.1021/acs.jpcb.6b02438]

Raman Line Imaging of Poly(ε-caprolactone)/Carbon Dioxide Solutions at High Pressures: A Combined Experimental and Computational Study for Interpreting Intermolecular Interactions and Free-Volume Effects

PASTORE CARBONE, MARIA GIOVANNA;MUSTO, PELLEGRINO
;
PANNICO, Marianna;SCHERILLO, GIUSEPPE;MENSITIERI, GIUSEPPE;DI MAIO, ERNESTO
2016

Abstract

In the present study, a Raman line-imaging setup was employed to monitor in situ the CO2 sorption at,elevated pressures (from 042 to 7.10 MPa) in molten PCL. The method allowed the quantitative measurement of gas concentration in both the time -resolved and the space -resolved modes. The combined experimental and theoretical approach allowed a molecular level characterization of the system. The dissolved CO2 was found to occupy, a volume essentially coincident with its van der Waals volume and the estimated partial molar volume of the probe did not change with pressure. Lewis acid Lewis base interactions with the PCL Carbonyls was confirmed to be the main interaction mechanism. The geometry of the suptamolecular complex and the preferential interaction.site were controlled more by,steric than electronic effects. On the basis ofthe indications emerging from-Raman spectroscopy, an equation of state thermodynamic model for the PCL-CO2 system, based upon a compressible lattice fluid theory endowed with-specific interactions, has been tailored to account for the interaction types.detected spectroscopically. The predictions of the thermodynamic model in terms of molar volume of solution have been compared with available volumetric measurements while predictions for CO2 partial molar volume have been compared with the values estimated- on the basis of Raman spectroscopy.
2016
Raman Line Imaging of Poly(ε-caprolactone)/Carbon Dioxide Solutions at High Pressures: A Combined Experimental and Computational Study for Interpreting Intermolecular Interactions and Free-Volume Effects / PASTORE CARBONE, MARIA GIOVANNA; Musto, Pellegrino; Pannico, Marianna; Braeuer, A.; Scherillo, Giuseppe; Mensitieri, Giuseppe; DI MAIO, Ernesto. - In: THE JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY. B. - ISSN 1520-5207. - 120:34(2016), pp. 9115-9131. [10.1021/acs.jpcb.6b02438]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11588/660254
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