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Measured saturation vapour pressures of phenolic and nitro-aromatic compounds Thomas J Bannan, Alastair Murray Booth, Benjamin T Jones, Simon O'Meara, Mark Howard Barley, Ilona Riipinen, Carl John Percival, and David O. Topping Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.6b06364 • Publication Date (Web): 06 Mar 2017 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on March 7, 2017
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Measured saturation vapour pressures of
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phenolic and nitro-aromatic compounds
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Thomas J Bannan, 1A Murray Booth, 1Benjamin T Jones, 1Simon O’Meara, 1Mark H Barley, 3Ilona
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Riipinen, 1Carl J. Percival, 1,2David Topping.
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1
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UK
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National Centre for Atmospheric Science, University of Manchester, Manchester, UK.
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Department of Environmental Science and Analytical Chemistry (ACES), Stockholm University,
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Stockholm, Sweden.
School of Earth, Environmental and Atmospheric Science, University of Manchester, Manchester,
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*Corresponding author: Thomas J. Bannan. 4.30 Simon Building, University of Manchester, Oxford
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Road, Manchester, M13 9PL, Phone: 0161 306 6587, Fax: 0161 306 3951, Email:
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[email protected] 13
TOC Art
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Abstract
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Phenolic and nitro-aromatic compounds are extremely toxic components of atmospheric aerosol
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that are currently not well understood. In this paper, solid and sub-cooled liquid state saturation
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vapour pressures of phenolic and nitro-aromatic compounds are measured using Knudsen Effusion
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Mass Spectrometry (KEMS) over a range of temperatures (298–318 K). Vapour pressure estimation
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methods, assessed in this study, do not replicate the observed dependency on the relative positions
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of functional groups. With a few exceptions, the estimates are biased towards predicting saturation
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vapour pressures that are too high, by 5 to 6 orders of magnitude in some cases. Basic partitioning
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theory comparisons indicate that overestimation of vapour pressures in such cases would cause us
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to expect these compounds to be present in the gas state, whereas measurements in this study
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suggest these phenolic and nitro-aromatic will partition into the condensed state for a wide range of
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ambient conditions if absorptive partitioning plays a dominant role. Whilst these techniques might
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have both structural and parametric uncertainties, the new data presented here should support
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studies trying to ascertain the role of nitrogen containing organics on aerosol growth and human
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health impacts.
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Introduction
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Aerosol particles are an important component of the Earth’s atmosphere, affecting visibility, human
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health and climate on regional and global scales (Bilde et al., 2015). Mechanistic models attempt to
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predict the evolving composition and microphysics of aerosol populations through the use of
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fundamental properties of pure components and mixtures. A critical parameter in this regard is the
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pure component equilibrium vapour pressure (here referred to as saturation vapour pressure) of the
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constituent molecules. Given the chemical complexity of the organic fraction of atmospheric aerosol,
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with potentially many hundreds of thousands of individual species (Jenkin et al., 2003, Aumont et al.,
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2005) and the scarcity of existing experimental data, the saturation vapour pressure of a large
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fraction of atmospherically relevant compounds must be estimated rather than comprehensively
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measured. There are a number of estimation methods available (e.g. Joback et al., 1987; Stein and
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Brown 1994; Myrdal and Yalkowsky, 1997), but these suffer from inherent bias due to the lack of
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data for heavily oxygenated, low volatility multifunctional compounds in the fitting dataset, which
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are the sort of molecules expected to be present in atmospheric aerosols (Bilde et al., 2015). This
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has been recognised as a problem in predicting total mass and speciation (Barley and McFiggans,
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2010, Booth et al., 2010, O’Meara et al., 2014) and there have been efforts to develop improved
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estimation methods more suited to atmospherically relevant compounds (e.g. EVAPORATION
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(Compernolle et al., 2011)). However, such methods still remain largely invalidated across broad
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ranges in absolute saturation vapour pressure and functionality. The most recent comparison
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between methods was carried out by O’Meara et al (2014), using a database of 90 compounds
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covering a vapour pressure range of 60 Pa to 1.34x10-5 Pa at 298 K. Whilst a first order problem
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might be the propagated uncertainty in total particulate mass, it is important to evaluate any
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heterogeneity in predicting the concentration of certain chemical classes. Developing accurate
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predictive methods is challenging due to the influence of additional groups not necessarily being
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linear (intramolecular bonding, shielding or steric hindrance), and the spread between data from
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different instruments (Bilde et al., 2015).
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With this in mind, this paper adds to the existing body of work in which we measure the saturated
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vapour pressure of two related classes: naphthalene phenolic and nitro-aromatic compounds.
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Oxygenated aromatics (acids and phenols) have been measured in atmospheric aerosols (Hemming
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and Seinfeld 2001; Kawamura and Kaplan 1987; Yassineet al., 2009). Phenolic compounds are useful
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tracers for anthropogenic emissions as they are produced from a variety of anthropogenic volatile
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organic compound (VOC) precursors such as benzene, toluene and xylene (Tremp et al., 1993;
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Berndt and Böge, 2006) and a major component of biomass burning (Yee et al., 2013). For resolving
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discrepancies between instruments and models they are also useful for probing intramolecular
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effects due to the relative ease of obtaining samples with phenol groups in different configurations.
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Nitro-aromatic compounds have proved to be useful tracers for anthropogenic emissions (Grosjean,
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1992) and biomass burning (Yee et al., 2013), whilst studies quantifying the overall role of nitrogen-
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containing organic compounds on aerosol growth could benefit from more refined pure component
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vapour pressures (Smith et al 2008; Duporte et al 2016). With regards to potential impacts, many of
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these compounds are noted to be highly toxic (Kovacic and Somanathan, 2014). Relating
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toxicological response to certain classes is not the focus of this study, yet growing evidence suggests
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specific particle components might be more important for certain diseases (Cassee et al., 2013,
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Atkinson et al., 2010) whilst the majority of correlating studies rely on existing epidemiological
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techniques (Stanek et al., 2011). Even if mechanistic models struggle to predict adequate mass due
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to missing process phenomena (e.g.McVay et al., 2016), resolving expected partitioning in measured
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samples is important. More generally the data presented should lead to a more thorough evaluation,
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and potentially improvement, of vapour pressure predictive techniques as there is a significant lack
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of data for functionalised nitrogen containing organic compounds in the datasets used for fitting
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model parameters (e.g. Nannoolal et al., 2008).
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In the following text we first briefly present the experimental and modelling methodology before
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discussing measured vapour pressure from a Knudsen Effusion Mass Spectrometer (KEMS) (Booth et
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al., 2012) and comparisons with a range of estimation methods. We then discuss the need for
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measurements from complimentary techniques to improve datasets used for refitting estimation
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methods.
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2.Experimental
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The following compounds were purchased from Sigma-Aldrich and used with no further preparation:
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1-Naphthol,
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dihydroxynaphthalene, 2,7-dihydroxynaphthalene, 1,5-dihydroxynaphthalene, 1-nitronaphthalene,
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1,3-dinitronaphthalene, 2-methyl-1-nitronaphthalene, ortho-amino-benzoic acid, meta-amino-
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Naphthol,
1,3-dihydroxynaphthalene,
2,3-dihydroxynaphthalene,
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benzoic acid, para-amino-benzoic acid, meta-nitrophenol, para-nitrophenol, ortho-nitroaniline,
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meta-nitroaniline, para-nitroaniline and Glutarimide, all of which are solid at room temperature.
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2.1 The Knudsen Effusion Mass Spectrometry (KEMS)
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The KEMS system is identical to that used in previous studies (e.g. Booth et al., 2009) and an
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overview of the measurement procedure is repeated here: to calibrate, a sample of known vapour
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pressure is placed in the temperature controlled Knudsen cell, in this case para-anisic acid (VP at
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298k = 5.24x10-4 Pa, (Colomina et al., 1978; Booth et al., 2012). The linearity of the one calibration
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point for calibrating measurements over a wide range of vapour pressures has been tested
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exhaustively for measurements at close to limits of detection of the instrument (1 × 10-8 Pa) and for
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higher vapour measurements such as benzophenone. This was most recently validated through
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comparison with other instruments, in work that will be presented at a later date, which presents
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measurements agreeing well across techniques over a vapour pressure range of 1x10-2-1x10-7 (Pa).
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The cell has a chamfered effusing orifice with a size ≤1/10 the mean free path of the gas molecules
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in the cell. This ensures the orifice does not significantly disturb the thermodynamic equilibrium of
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the samples in the cell (Hilpert, 2001). The resulting molecular beam is ionised by 70 eV electron
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impact, then sampled by the mass spectrometer. After correcting for the ionization cross section of
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the calibration compound, this produces a signal proportional to the vapour pressure.
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After this calibration a sample of unknown vapour pressure can be measured. During sample
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change, the first chamber with the Knudsen cell is isolated via the gate valve and vented to air
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allowing the ioniser filament and secondary electron multiplier to be left on. The unknown vapour
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pressures can be determined from the intensity of the mass spectrometer signal of the compound in
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question. If the Knudsen number, the ratio of the mean free path of molecules to the size of the
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effusion orifice, is high enough, then effusing gas does not significantly disturb the equilibrium in the
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cell (Booth et al., 2009, Hilpert 1991; 2001). This allows the steady state vapour pressure, as
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measured by the KEMS, to be as close as possible to the equilibrium vapour pressure.
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Once the solid state vapour pressure, P (Pa), has been determined at a number of different
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temperatures, the Clausius-Clapeyeron equation is used to derive enthalpies and entropies of
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sublimation as described in Booth et al., (2009);
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ln ܲ =
௱ுೞೠ್ ோ்
+
௱ௌೞೠ್ ோ
(1)
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where T is the temperature (K), R is the ideal gas constant (J mol−1 K−1) and ΔHsub (J mol-1) and ΔSsub (J
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mol-1 K-1) are the enthalpies and entropies of sublimation respectively. P (Pa) was obtained over a
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range of 20 K in this work, starting at 298 K. The reported solid state vapour pressures at 298.5K
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(P298) are calculated from the linear fit of ln P vs. 1/T used in the Clausius-Clapeyon equation.
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2.2 Differential Scanning Calorimetry (DSC)
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As noted in the proceeding section, since we measure the saturation vapour pressure above the
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solid state, we need to convert this to sub-cooled reference state for comparison with predictive
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techniques and use within dynamic aerosol models. Following previous studies (e.g. Booth et al.,
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2010), the information needed to perform this conversion, melting points (Tm) and Enthalpies of
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Fusion (ΔHfus), were measured using a TA instruments Q200 Differential Scanning Calorimeter (DSC).
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The procedure is repeated here: heat flow and temperature were calibrated using an indium
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reference, and heat capacity using sapphire reference. A heating rate of 10 K min-1 was used. 5 – 10
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mg of sample was measured using a microbalance, then pressed into a hermetically sealed
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aluminium DSC pan. A purge gas of N2 was used with a flow rate of 30 ml min-1. The reference was
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an empty sealed pan of the same type. Data processing was performed using the `Universal Analysis'
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software supplied with the instrument. Δcp,sl was estimated using Δcp,sl = ΔSfus (Mauger et al., 1972;
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Grant et al., 1984).
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3. Theory
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3.1 Sub-cooled correction
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The sub-cooled vapour pressure is derived from the value measured above the solid state using the
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Prausnitz equation (Prausnitz et al., 1986):
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ln
Pl ∆H fus Tm ∆c p , sl Tm ∆c p , sl Tm = ln − 1 − − 1 + Ps RTm T R T R T
(2)
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where: P is the saturation vapour pressure (Pa) with the subscript ‘s’ referring to the solid and ‘l’ to
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the sub-cooled liquid phase, ΔHfus is the enthalpy of fusion (J mol-1), Δcp,sl denotes the best estimate
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of the underlying change in heat capacity between the liquid and solid state at the melting point (J
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mol-1 K-1), T is the temperature (K), Tm is the melting point (K) (which is commonly used instead of
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the triple point,(Tt) (Prausnitz et al., 1986).
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3.2 Vapour pressure predictive techniques
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The predictive techniques used here are the same as those in a recent evaluation paper by O’Meara
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et al., (2014) with the exception of the EVAPORATION method which is currently only applicable to
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aliphatic compounds. These methods are all based on group contributions where each group has a
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set of values associated with it for calculating the appropriate property obtained by fitting to data.
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The accuracy of a given method is therefore very sensitive to the choice of data used to fit it. This is
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especially true for groups where data is limited, for which this study is relevant.
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Nine methods are evaluated in total. Four of the group contribution vapour pressure methods
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extrapolate from a boiling point down to the temperature of interest. These four methods are;
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Nannoolal et al (2008), Moller et al (2008), Myrdal and Yalkowsky (1997) and Lee-Kesler (Reid et al.,
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1987). The two boiling point estimation methods that are then used are Nannoolal et al., (2004) and
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Stein and Brown (1994), for a total of 8 methods. The method of Joback (1987) is excluded due to its
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known biases (Barley and McFiggans, 2010). The ninth method is SIMPOL (Pankow and Asher, 2008)
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that directly estimates the vapour pressure without requiring a boiling point value.
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4. Results
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4.1 Solid state vapour pressures
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Solid state vapour pressures directly measured in the KEMS are reported in Table 1. Measurements
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were made from 298 to 318 +/- 274 K and the Clausius-Clayperon equation was used to derive
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enthalpies and entropies of sublimation, as noted in section 1. 1,3 and 2,3 dihydroxnapthalene
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were measured up to 333 K to produce enough vapour, thus signal, to detect with the KEMS, and the
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P298 was extrapolated from these measurements. However, 1,7/2,7/1,5-dihydroxynaphthalene could
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not be detected even at elevated temperatures, from which we infer that the vapour pressure is less
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than the current reported minimum detectable pressure in the KEMS which corresponds to 1 × 10-8
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Pa as determined by Booth et al., (2009). Some general observations regarding functional group
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positioning on the solid-state vapour pressure can be inferred from table 1. 1,3-
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dihydroxynaphthalene is within the current reported detectable limit (P298 of 9 × 10-6 Pa) whilst 2,3-
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dihydroxynaphthalene has a volatility two orders of magnitude higher than the compound with the
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functional group at the 1,3 position. One possible explanation for this is intramolecular bonding,
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where adjacent groups on a molecule can hydrogen bond with each other thus lowering the
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apparent polarity of the molecule and raising the apparent volatility relative to a molecule with non-
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adjacent groups. There is no discernable pattern for the positional effects (ortho-meta-para
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isomerism) in the amino-benzoic acids, nitrophenols and nitroanilines. Previous work on different
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ortho-meta-para substitutions of benzoic acid showed that in molecules with different functional
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groups the isomer effects were the result of a complex interplay of steric, resonance effect and
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polarity (Booth et al., 2012). As noted in Bilde et al (2015), measurements between different
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instruments can often diverge; resolving the true effect of functional group positioning is still not
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clear and might benefit from quantum scale modelling (Schroeder et al., 2016, Kurten et al., 2016).
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Table 1. Solid state vapour pressure at 298 K, enthalpies and entropies of sublimation. Estimated
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errors on the vapour pressures are