Thermodynamics and transport in molten chloride salts and their mixtures
Cillian Cockrell, Margaret-Ann Withington, Harvey L. Devereux, Alin M., Elena, Ilian T. Todorov, Zi-Kui Liu, Shun-Li Shang, James S. McCloy, Paul A., Bingham, Kostya Trachenko

TL;DR
This study uses molecular dynamics simulations to analyze the thermodynamic and transport properties of molten chloride salts, revealing their collective atomistic dynamics and how these properties relate to phonons, with implications for energy applications.
Contribution
It applies recent liquid physics theories to molten salts, elucidating the relationship between phonons and thermophysical properties in complex ionic liquids.
Findings
Properties explained by collective atomistic dynamics
Heat capacity linked to phonon mean free path
Viscosity and thermal conductivity obey fundamental bounds
Abstract
Molten salts are important in a number of energy applications, but the fundamental mechanisms operating in ionic liquids are poorly understood, particularly at higher temperatures. This is despite their candidacy for deployment in solar cells, next-generation nuclear reactors, and nuclear pyroprocessing. We perform extensive molecular dynamics simulations over a variety of molten chloride salt compositions at varying temperature and pressures to calculate the thermodynamic and transport properties of these liquids. Using recent developments in the theory of liquid thermophysical properties, we interpret our results on the basis of collective atomistic dynamics (phonons). We find that the properties of ionic liquids well explained by their collective dynamics, as in simple liquids. In particular, we relate the decrease of heat capacity, viscosity, and thermal conductivity to the loss of…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
