Mass Transfer Through Vapor-Liquid Interfaces From Hydrodynamic Density Functional Theory
B. Bursik, F. Bender, R. Stierle, G. Bauer, J. Gross

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that hydrodynamic density functional theory can accurately predict mass transfer and microscopic phenomena at vapor-liquid interfaces in molecular mixtures, bridging molecular models and continuum fluid dynamics.
Contribution
It introduces a hydrodynamic DFT framework that effectively models mass transfer across vapor-liquid interfaces, incorporating molecular interactions and microscopic effects.
Findings
Hydrodynamic DFT accurately predicts mass transfer dynamics.
The model captures microscopic phenomena like component enrichment and repulsion.
Good agreement with molecular dynamics simulations.
Abstract
We assess the capabilities of hydrodynamic density functional theory (DFT) to predict mass transfer across vapor-liquid interfaces by studying the response of an initially equilibrated pure component vapor-liquid system to the localized insertion of a second component. Hydrodynamic DFT captures the effect of interfaces on the dynamics by modeling the chemical potential gradients of an inhomogeneous system based on classical DFT. Hydrodynamic DFT effectively connects molecular models with continuum fluid dynamics. Away from interfaces the framework simplifies to the isothermal Navier-Stokes equations. We employ Maxwell-Stefan diffusion with a generalized driving force to model diffusive molecular transport in inhomogeneous systems. For the considered Lennard--Jones truncated and shifted (LJTS) fluid, we utilize a non-local Helmholtz energy functional based on the perturbed truncated and…
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