Technical Papers
Feb 14, 2018

Predicting the Partitioning of Organic Compounds through Polymer Materials: Quantum Mechanical Applications

Publication: Journal of Environmental Engineering
Volume 144, Issue 4

Abstract

Hazardous organic compounds can permeate gas pipelines and geomembranes made of organic polymer materials in landfills and leak into the surrounding environment, contaminating groundwater. The permeation of organic compounds in various organic polymer materials is explained by the molecular partition and the diffusion of organic compounds into polymer materials. The partition coefficient has two contributions resulting from size-based exclusion and molecular interaction. In this study, the authors use ab initio quantum mechanical calculations to investigate the molecular interaction between organic polymers and various organic compounds and seek the correlation with experimentally obtained partition coefficients reported in the literature. The authors examine 24 organic compounds and 4 polymer materials, including high-density polyethylene (HDPE) and polyvinyl chloride (PVC) geomembranes and casting, polybutylene (PB) pipes, and styrene-butadiene rubber (SBR) gaskets. The authors find a linear correlation between the theoretically calculated aqueous-phase free energies of interaction and experimentally obtained partition coefficients reported in the literature for HDPE, PB, and SBR. The study highlights the usefulness of free energy of interaction to predict the partition coefficients of organic compounds and provides mechanistic insight into the interaction between organic compounds and polymer materials.

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Acknowledgments

The authors acknowledge the high-performance computing (HPC) cluster ‘Superior’ from Michigan Tech IT.

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Go to Journal of Environmental Engineering
Journal of Environmental Engineering
Volume 144Issue 4April 2018

History

Received: Jul 27, 2017
Accepted: Oct 20, 2017
Published online: Feb 14, 2018
Published in print: Apr 1, 2018
Discussion open until: Jul 14, 2018

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Authors

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Muxue Zhang [email protected]
Graduate Student, Dept. of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Michigan Technological Univ., 1400 Townsend Dr., Houghton, MI 49931. E-mail: [email protected]
Kerry J. Howe [email protected]
Professor, Dept. of Civil Engineering, Univ. of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM 87131. E-mail: [email protected]
Daisuke Minakata [email protected]
Assistant Professor, Dept. of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Michigan Technological Univ., 1400 Townsend Dr., Houghton, MI 49931 (corresponding author). E-mail: [email protected]

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