Solvation of nitrogen compounds in Titan’s seas, precipitates, and atmosphere
Authors:
Sevenson et al
Abstract:
Saturn’s moon Titan, dominated by its low, 90–95 K, surface temperature and methane seas, is shaped by physical and chemical processes unparalleled in any environment on Earth. Titan’s upper atmosphere produces a rain of compounds such as acetonitrile, acrylonitrile, and acetylene, more familiar to chemical processing plants than to nature. The interaction of these compounds with Titan’s seas is, to a large extent, unknown. As an important first step towards understanding these interactions, we investigate the solvation properties of many of these compounds in methane using multiple theoretical approaches, including cubic equations of state, Statistical Associating Fluid Theory, the Conductor like Screening Model for Real Solvents, and all-atom Molecular Dynamics.
Tuesday, April 28, 2015
What Nitrogen Compounds may be Dissolved and Precipitated From Titan's Hydrocarbon Seas
Labels:
atmosphere,
planetary science,
saturnian moons,
saturnian system,
Titan,
titanian seas,
titanology
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