The air pressure effect on the homogeneous nucleation of carbon dioxide by molecular simulation
Martin Horsch, Zengyong Lin, Thorsten Windmann, Hans Hasse, and Jadran Vrabec

TL;DR
This study uses molecular simulation to investigate how air as a carrier gas affects the homogeneous nucleation rate of carbon dioxide, revealing discrepancies with classical nucleation theory predictions.
Contribution
It provides detailed molecular simulation data on the influence of inert gases on CO2 nucleation, challenging existing classical theory predictions.
Findings
Air slightly decreases CO2 nucleation rate, less than CNT predicts.
CNT underestimates nucleation rates by one to three orders of magnitude.
Molecular simulation shows no temperature dependence near the spinodal limit.
Abstract
Vapour-liquid equilibria (VLE) and the influence of an inert carrier gas on homogeneous vapour to liquid nucleation are investigated by molecular simulation for quaternary mixtures of carbon dioxide, nitrogen, oxygen, and argon. Canonical ensemble molecular dynamics simulation using the Yasuoka-Matsumoto method is applied to nucleation in supersaturated vapours that contain more carbon dioxide than in the saturated state at the dew line. Established molecular models are employed that are known to accurately reproduce the VLE of the pure fluids as well as their binary and ternary mixtures. On the basis of these models, also the quaternary VLE properties of the bulk fluid are determined with the Grand Equilibrium method. Simulation results for the carrier gas influence on the nucleation rate are compared with the classical nucleation theory (CNT) considering the "pressure effect" [Phys.…
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