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Density and Temperature Effects on the Hydrogen Bond Structure of Liquid Methanol
SL Wallen, BJ Palmer, BC Garrett, and CR Yonker. J. Phys. Chem. 100:3959-3964
(1996).
Abstract: The hydrogen bond structure of liquid methanol was investigated
as a function of pressure and temperature up to 2.8 kbar and from
297 to 413 K. Chemical shifts of the CH3 and
OH groups were monitored throughout this pressure and temperature
regime, and the chemical shift difference between these two groups
was used to describe changes of the hydrogen bond network in methanol.
The hydrogen bond equilibrium was investigated using molecular dynamics
simulations and a phenomenological model describing clustering in
liquid methanol. Results are presented concerning the size and distribution
of hydrogen-bonded clusters in methanol as a function of pressure
and temperature. The results indicate that the extent of hydrogen
bonding decreases upon an increase in temperature. The results for
pressure are equivocal, the phenomenological model suggests that
hydrogen bonding decreases with increasing pressure, which supports
earlier interpretations regarding the measured self-diffusion coefficients
in deuterated methanol as a function of pressure. The molecular
dynamics simulations, however, show an increase in hydrogen bonding
with increasing pressure.
For information about supercritical fluid capabilities at PNNL, please contact Clement Yonker, at (509) 372-4748, clem.yonker@pnl.gov.
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