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CapMachine/CapMachine.Wpf/PPCalculation/REFPROP/FLUIDS/COS.FLD

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Carbonyl sulfide !Short name
463-58-1 !CAS number
Carbon oxide sulfide !Full name
COS !Chemical formula {COS}
Carbon oxysulfide !Synonym
60.0751 !Molar mass [g/mol]
134.3 !Triple point temperature [K]
222.99 !Normal boiling point [K]
378.77 !Critical temperature [K]
6370.0 !Critical pressure [kPa]
7.41 !Critical density [mol/L]
0.0978 !Acentric factor
0.7152 !Dipole moment [Debye]; J.S. Muenter, J. Chem. Phys., 48, 4544 (1968)
NBP !Default reference state
10.0 !Version number
2204 !UN Number :UN:
other !Family :Family:
548.23 !Heating value (upper) [kJ/mol] :Heat:
1S/COS/c2-1-3 !Standard InChI String :InChi:
JJWKPURADFRFRB-UHFFFAOYSA-N !Standard InChI Key :InChiKey:
7b3b4080 (butane) !Alternative fluid for mixing rules :AltID:
e7f902e0 !Hash number from InChI Key :Hash:
!The fluid files contain general information about the fluid in the first 15 to 20 lines, followed by sections for the
! equations of state, transport equations, and auxiliary equations. Equations of state are listed first. The NIST recommended
! equations begin with a hash mark (#). The secondary equations begin with the @ symbol. These symbols can be swapped to
! select a secondary equation as primary and the primary as secondary. The equation of state section also contains auxiliary
! equations for the ideal gas heat capacity or ideal gas Helmholtz energy. Below the equations of state (both primary and
! secondary) are the transport equations, first viscosity and then thermal conductivity. These are then followed by the
! secondary equations if available. The transport section also contains auxiliary equations required to calculate either the
! dilute gas state or the critical enhancement. At the end of the file are additional but not necessary auxiliary equations,
! including simple equations for the vapor pressure, saturated liquid and vapor densities, melting line (for some fluids), and
! sublimation line (for even fewer fluids). This section also contains the equations for dielectric constant and surface
! tension if available. The sections are divided by different symbols (these being _-+=^*~) to aid the eye in locating a
! particular section. Secondary equations are indented 10 spaces to avoid confusion with the NIST recommended equations. The
! end of the fluid file is marked with @END. Anything below that is ignored.
! compiled by E.W. Lemmon, NIST Physical and Chemical Properties Division, Boulder, Colorado
! 08-22-01 EWL, Original version.
! 10-24-02 EWL, Add surface tension fit.
! 01-15-04 EWL, Update equation of state.
! 06-17-10 CKL, Add ancillary equations.
! 12-06-12 EWL, Add surface tension coefficients of Mulero et al. (2012).
! 04-19-16 MLH, Add predictive transport.
! 02-09-17 MLH, Revise transport.
! 02-19-18 MLH, Fixed typo in TK3 block
________________________________________________________________________________
#EOS !---Equation of state---
FEQ !Helmholtz equation of state for carbonyl sulfide of Lemmon and Span (2006).
:TRUECRITICALPOINT: 378.77 7.41 !True EOS critical point [K, mol/L] (where dP/dD=0 and d^2P/dD^2=0 at constant T)
:DOI: 10.1021/je050186n
?
?```````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````
?Lemmon, E.W. and Span, R.,
? "Short Fundamental Equations of State for 20 Industrial Fluids,"
? J. Chem. Eng. Data, 51(3):785-850, 2006. doi: 10.1021/je050186n
?
?The uncertainties in the equation of state are 0.1% in density in the liquid phase
? below 450 K, 1% in density at temperatures between 450 and 500 K, 3% in
? density at temperatures above 500 K, 1% in density in the vapor phase and
? at supercritical conditions below 10 MPa and 450 K, 0.5% in vapor pressure,
? and 2% in isobaric heat capacity. There are no speed of sound data to
? ascertain its uncertainty.
?
!```````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````
134.3 !Lower temperature limit [K]
650.0 !Upper temperature limit [K]
50000.0 !Upper pressure limit [kPa]
22.52 !Maximum density [mol/L]
CPP !Pointer to Cp0 model
60.0751 !Molar mass [g/mol]
134.3 !Triple point temperature [K]
0.06443 !Pressure at triple point [kPa]
22.5 !Density at triple point [mol/L]
222.99 !Normal boiling point temperature [K]
0.0978 !Acentric factor
378.77 6370.0 7.41 !Tc [K], pc [kPa], rhoc [mol/L]
378.77 7.41 !Reducing parameters [K, mol/L]
8.314472 !Gas constant [J/mol-K]
12 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 !# terms and # coefs/term for normal terms, Gaussian terms, and Gao terms
0.94374 0.25 1. 0. !a(i),t(i),d(i),l(i)
-2.5348 1.125 1. 0.
0.59058 1.5 1. 0.
-0.021488 1.375 2. 0.
0.082083 0.25 3. 0.
0.00024689 0.875 7. 0.
0.21226 0.625 2. 1.
-0.041251 1.75 5. 1.
-0.22333 3.625 1. 2.
-0.050828 3.625 4. 2.
-0.028333 14.5 3. 3.
0.016983 12.0 4. 3.
#AUX !---Auxiliary function for Cp0
CPP !Ideal gas heat capacity function for carbonyl sulfide of Lemmon and Span (2006).
?
?```````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````
?Lemmon, E.W. and Span, R., 2006.
?
!```````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````
0. !
10000. !
0. !
0. !
1.0 8.314472 !Reducing parameters for T, Cp0
1 4 0 0 0 0 0 !Nterms: polynomial, exponential, cosh, sinh
3.5 0.0
2.1651 768.0
0.93456 1363.0
1.0623 3175.0
0.34269 12829.0
#AUX !---Auxiliary function for PX0
PX0 !Helmholtz energy ideal-gas function for carbonyl sulfide of Lemmon and Span (2006).
?
?```````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````
?Lemmon, E.W. and Span, R., 2006.
?
!```````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````
1 2 4 0 0 0 0 0 !Nterms: ai*log(tau**ti); ai*tau**ti; ai*log(1-exp(bi*tau))
2.5 1.0 !ai, ti for [ai*log(tau**ti)] terms
-3.6587437697006173 0.0 !aj, ti for [ai*tau**ti] terms
3.734923786344587 1.0 !aj, ti for [ai*tau**ti] terms
2.1651 768.0 !aj, ti for [ai*log(1-exp(-ti/T)] terms
0.93456 1363.0
1.0623 3175.0
0.34269 12829.0
#AUX !---Auxiliary function for PH0
PH0 !Ideal gas Helmholtz form for carbonyl sulfide.
?
?```````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````
?Lemmon, E.W. and Span, R., 2006.
?
!```````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````
0. !
10000. !
0. !
0. !
1 2 4 0 0 0 0 0 !Nterms: ai*log(tau**ti); ai*tau**ti; ai*log(1-exp(bi*tau)); cosh; sinh
2.5 1.0 !ai, ti for [ai*log(tau**ti)] terms
-3.6587449805 0.0 !aj, ti for [ai*tau**ti] terms
3.7349245016 1.0
2.1651 -2.0276157035 !aj, ti for [ai*log(1-exp(ti*tau)] terms
0.93456 -3.5984898487
1.0623 -8.3823956491
0.34269 -33.8701586715
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
#TRN !---ECS Transport---
ECS !Extended Corresponding States model (Propane reference) fit to extremely limited or predicted data for carbonyl sulfide.
:DOI: 10.6028/NIST.IR.8209
?
?```````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````
?*** ESTIMATION METHOD *** NOT STANDARD REFERENCE QUALITY ***
?Huber, M.L., "Models for the Viscosity, Thermal Conductivity, and Surface Tension
? of Selected Pure Fluids as Implemented in REFPROP v10.0," NISTIR 8209, 2018.
? doi: 10.6028/NIST.IR.8209
?
?VISCOSITY
?Estimated uncertainty in the gas phase is <10%, based on comparisons with the data of
? Smith, C.J., "On the Viscosity and Molecular Dimentions of Gaseous Carbon Oxysulfide," Philos. Mag., 44, 389-292, 1922. Estimated uncertainty in the liquid phase is <50%, no data are available for comparison, totally predictive values.
?
?THERMAL CONDUCTIVITY
?Estimated uncertainty in the gas phase is difficult to assess due to lack of
? experimental data, estimated to be 25%; predictive values. Estimated uncertainty
? in the liquid phase is difficult to assess due to lack of experimental data,
? estimated to be <50%, predictive values.
?
?The Lennard-Jones parameters were taken from Hirschfelder, J.O., Curtiss, C.F., and Bird, R.B., "Molecular Theory of Gases and Liquids," John Wiley and Sons, Inc., New York, 1245 pp, 1954. doi: 10.1002/pol.1955.120178311
?
!```````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````
134.3 !Lower temperature limit [K]
650.0 !Upper temperature limit [K]
50000.0 !Upper pressure limit [kPa]
22.52 !Maximum density [mol/L]
FEQ PROPANE.FLD
VS1 !Model for reference fluid viscosity
TC1 !Model for reference fluid thermal conductivity
NUL !Large molecule identifier
1 !Lennard-Jones flag (0 or 1) (0 => use estimates)
0.413 !Lennard-Jones coefficient sigma [nm]
335.0 !Lennard-Jones coefficient epsilon/kappa [K]
1 0 0 !Number of terms in f_int term in Eucken correlation, spare1, spare2
0.00125 0. 0. 0. !Coefficient, power of T, spare1, spare2
1 0 0 !Number of terms in psi (visc shape factor): poly,spare1,spare2
1.0 0. 0. 0. !Coefficient, power of Tr, power of Dr, spare
1 0 0 !Number of terms in chi (t.c. shape factor): poly,spare1,spare2
0.95 0. 0. 0. !Coefficient, power of Tr, power of Dr, spare
TK3 !Pointer to critical enhancement auxiliary function
#AUX !---Auxiliary function for the thermal conductivity critical enhancement
TK3 !Simplified thermal conductivity critical enhancement for carbonyl sulfide of Perkins et al. (2013).
?
?```````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````
?Perkins, R.A., Sengers, J.V., Abdulagatov, I.M., and Huber, M.L.,
? "Simplified Model for the Critical Thermal-Conductivity Enhancement in Molecular Fluids,"
? Int. J. Thermophys., 34(2):191-212, 2013. doi: 10.1007/s10765-013-1409-z
?
!```````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````
0. !
10000. !
0. !
0. !
9 0 0 0 !# terms: terms, spare, spare, spare
1.0 1.0 1.0 !Reducing parameters for T, rho, tcx [mW/(m-K)]
0.63 !Nu (universal exponent)
1.239 !Gamma (universal exponent)
1.02 !R0 (universal amplitude)
0.063 !Z (universal exponent--not used for t.c., only viscosity)
1.0 !C (constant in viscosity eqn = 1/[2 - (alpha + gamma)/(2*nu)], but often set to 1)
0.182e-9 !Xi0 (amplitude) [m]
0.056 !Gam0 (amplitude) [-]
0.5e-9 !Qd_inverse (modified effective cutoff parameter) [m]
568.16 !Tref (reference temperature)=1.5*Tc [K]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
#STN !---Surface tension---
ST1 !Surface tension model for carbonyl sulfide of Mulero et al. (2012).
:DOI: 10.1063/1.4768782
?
?```````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````
?Mulero, A., Cachadiña, I., and Parra, M.I.,
? "Recommended Correlations for the Surface Tension of Common Fluids,"
? J. Phys. Chem. Ref. Data, 41(4), 043105, 2012. doi: 10.1063/1.4768782
?
!```````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````
0. !
10000. !
0. !
0. !
1 !Number of terms in surface tension model
378.77 !Critical temperature used in fit (dummy)
0.07246 1.407 !Sigma0 and n
#PS !---Vapor pressure---
PS5 !Vapor pressure equation for carbonyl sulfide of Lemmon (2010).
?
?```````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````
?Lemmon, C.K. and Lemmon, E.W., 2010.
?
?Functional Form: P=Pc*EXP[SUM(Ni*Theta^ti)*Tc/T] where Theta=1-T/Tc, Tc and Pc
? are the reducing parameters below, which are followed by rows containing Ni and ti.
?
!```````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````
0. !
10000. !
0. !
0. !
378.77 6370 !Reducing parameters
4 0 0 0 0 0 !Number of terms in equation
-6.7055 1.0
3.4248 1.5
-2.6677 1.78
-2.4717 4.8
#DL !---Saturated liquid density---
DL1 !Saturated liquid density equation for carbonyl sulfide of Lemmon (2010).
?
?```````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````
?Lemmon, C.K. and Lemmon, E.W., 2010.
?
?Functional Form: D=Dc*[1+SUM(Ni*Theta^ti)] where Theta=1-T/Tc, Tc and Dc are
? the reducing parameters below, which are followed by rows containing Ni and ti.
?
!```````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````
0. !
10000. !
0. !
0. !
378.77 7.41 !Reducing parameters
5 0 0 0 0 0 !Number of terms in equation
7.6592 0.515
-19.226 0.767
27.883 1.034
-23.637 1.4
9.9803 1.7
#DV !---Saturated vapor density---
DV3 !Saturated vapor density equation for carbonyl sulfide of Lemmon (2010).
?
?```````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````
?Lemmon, C.K. and Lemmon, E.W., 2010.
?
?Functional Form: D=Dc*EXP[SUM(Ni*Theta^ti)] where Theta=1-T/Tc, Tc and Dc are
? the reducing parameters below, which are followed by rows containing Ni and ti.
?
!```````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````
0. !
10000. !
0. !
0. !
378.77 7.41 !Reducing parameters
6 0 0 0 0 0 !Number of terms in equation
-3.2494 0.423
-7.1460 1.464
35.026 5.3
-34.039 4.1
-64.206 7.0
-152.25 17.0
@END
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