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Understanding the liquid–liquid (water–hexane)...
Journal article

Understanding the liquid–liquid (water–hexane) interface

Abstract

Nonequilibrium molecular dynamics simulations are employed to investigate the interfacial thermal resistance of nanoscale hexane-water interfaces subject to an applied heat flux. Our studies show that these liquid-liquid interfaces exhibit behavior significantly dissimilar to that of solid-liquid and solid-vapor interfaces. Notably, the thermal resistance of a hexane-water interface is contingent on the interfacial temperature gradient alone with negligible dependence on the mean interfacial temperature, while the solid-liquid dependent strongly on the interfacial temperature. Application of a heat flux also increases the interface thickness significantly as compared to an equilibrium isothermal interface. Since liquid-liquid interfaces have been proposed for diverse applications, e.g., sensors for wastewater treatment and for extraction of toxic ions from water, they can be designed to be wider by applying a heat flux. This may allow the interface to be used for other applications not possible currently because of the very limited thickness of the interface in isothermal systems.

Authors

Murad S; Puri IK

Journal

Chemical Physics Letters, Vol. 685, , pp. 422–426

Publisher

Elsevier

Publication Date

October 1, 2017

DOI

10.1016/j.cplett.2017.08.013

ISSN

0009-2614

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