The Thermodynamic Hydrate Difference Rule (HDR) Applied to Salts of Carbon-Containing Oxyacid Salts and Their Hydrates: Materials at the Inorganic-Organic Interface

The thermodynamic hydrate difference rule (HDR) has previously been explored largely within the compass of inorganic solids. In this paper we extend its range by studying its application to carbon-containing oxyacid salts, which may be regarded as borderline hydrate-forming inorganic or organic mate...

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Main Authors: Jenkins, H., Glasser, Leslie, Liebman, J.
Format: Journal Article
Published: American Chemical Society 2010
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/20031
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author Jenkins, H.
Glasser, Leslie
Liebman, J.
author_facet Jenkins, H.
Glasser, Leslie
Liebman, J.
author_sort Jenkins, H.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description The thermodynamic hydrate difference rule (HDR) has previously been explored largely within the compass of inorganic solids. In this paper we extend its range by studying its application to carbon-containing oxyacid salts, which may be regarded as borderline hydrate-forming inorganic or organic material. We study in detail standard thermodynamic data as it appears in the National Bureau of Standards (NBS) tabulation for formate, carbonate, acetate, glycolate, and oxalate salt hydrates, finding the HDR to apply equally as well to these materials as it does to salts with solely inorganic parents. We use the resulting constants to predict thermodynamic quantities for some parent salts.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-200312017-09-13T15:58:24Z The Thermodynamic Hydrate Difference Rule (HDR) Applied to Salts of Carbon-Containing Oxyacid Salts and Their Hydrates: Materials at the Inorganic-Organic Interface Jenkins, H. Glasser, Leslie Liebman, J. The thermodynamic hydrate difference rule (HDR) has previously been explored largely within the compass of inorganic solids. In this paper we extend its range by studying its application to carbon-containing oxyacid salts, which may be regarded as borderline hydrate-forming inorganic or organic material. We study in detail standard thermodynamic data as it appears in the National Bureau of Standards (NBS) tabulation for formate, carbonate, acetate, glycolate, and oxalate salt hydrates, finding the HDR to apply equally as well to these materials as it does to salts with solely inorganic parents. We use the resulting constants to predict thermodynamic quantities for some parent salts. 2010 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/20031 10.1021/je100543c American Chemical Society restricted
spellingShingle Jenkins, H.
Glasser, Leslie
Liebman, J.
The Thermodynamic Hydrate Difference Rule (HDR) Applied to Salts of Carbon-Containing Oxyacid Salts and Their Hydrates: Materials at the Inorganic-Organic Interface
title The Thermodynamic Hydrate Difference Rule (HDR) Applied to Salts of Carbon-Containing Oxyacid Salts and Their Hydrates: Materials at the Inorganic-Organic Interface
title_full The Thermodynamic Hydrate Difference Rule (HDR) Applied to Salts of Carbon-Containing Oxyacid Salts and Their Hydrates: Materials at the Inorganic-Organic Interface
title_fullStr The Thermodynamic Hydrate Difference Rule (HDR) Applied to Salts of Carbon-Containing Oxyacid Salts and Their Hydrates: Materials at the Inorganic-Organic Interface
title_full_unstemmed The Thermodynamic Hydrate Difference Rule (HDR) Applied to Salts of Carbon-Containing Oxyacid Salts and Their Hydrates: Materials at the Inorganic-Organic Interface
title_short The Thermodynamic Hydrate Difference Rule (HDR) Applied to Salts of Carbon-Containing Oxyacid Salts and Their Hydrates: Materials at the Inorganic-Organic Interface
title_sort thermodynamic hydrate difference rule (hdr) applied to salts of carbon-containing oxyacid salts and their hydrates: materials at the inorganic-organic interface
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/20031