Thermodynamic properties of the 3D Lennard-Jones/spline model
Abstract
The Lennard-Jones (LJ) spline potential is a truncated LJ potential such that both the pair potential and the force continuously approach zero at rc ≈ 1.74σ. We present a systematic map of the thermodynamic properties of the LJ spline model from molecular dynamics and Gibbs ensemble Monte Carlo simulations. Results are presented for gas/liquid, liquid/solid and gas/solid coexistence curves, the Joule-Thomson inversion curve, and several other thermodynamic properties. The critical point for the model is estimated to be Tc*=0.885 0.002 and Pc*=0.075 0.001, respectively. The triple point is estimated to be Ttp*=0.547 0.005 and Ptp*=0.0016 0.0002. The coexistence densities, saturation pressure, and supercritical isotherms of the LJ/s model were fairly well represented by the Peng-Robison equation of state. We find that Barker-Henderson perturbation theory works less good for the LJ spline than for the LJ model. The first-order perturbation theory overestimates the critical temperature and pressure by about 10% and 90%, respectively. A second-order perturbation theory is not much better. Our assessment is that mean compressibility approximation gives a poor representation of the second-order perturbation term. Our main conclusion is that we at the moment do not have a theory or model that adequately represents the thermodynamic properties of the LJ spline system.
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