What does UNIQUAC mean in Chemistry?

This page is about the meanings of the acronym/abbreviation/shorthand UNIQUAC in the Academic & Science field in general and in the Chemistry terminology in particular.

UNIversal QUAsi-Chemical

Academic & Science » Chemistry

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Submitted by itche on November 5, 2008

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Definition

What does UNIQUAC mean?

UNIQUAC
In statistical thermodynamics, UNIQUAC (a portmanteau of universal quasichemical) is an activity coefficient model used in description of phase equilibria. The model is a so-called lattice model and has been derived from a first order approximation of interacting molecule surfaces. The model is, however, not fully thermodynamically consistent due to its two-liquid mixture approach. In this approach the local concentration around one central molecule is assumed to be independent from the local composition around another type of molecule. The UNIQUAC model can be considered a second generation activity coefficient because its expression for the excess Gibbs energy consists of an entropy term in addition to an enthalpy term. Earlier activity coefficient models such as the Wilson equation and the non-random two-liquid model (NRTL model) only consist of enthalpy terms. Today the UNIQUAC model is frequently applied in the description of phase equilibria (i.e. liquid–solid, liquid–liquid or liquid–vapor equilibrium). The UNIQUAC model also serves as the basis of the development of the group contribution method UNIFAC, where molecules are subdivided into functional groups. In fact, UNIQUAC is equal to UNIFAC for mixtures of molecules, which are not subdivided; e.g. the binary systems water-methanol, methanol-acryonitrile and formaldehyde-DMF. A more thermodynamically consistent form of UNIQUAC is given by the more recent COSMOSPACE and the equivalent GEQUAC model.

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"UNIQUAC." Abbreviations.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 26 May 2024. <https://www.abbreviations.com/term/539579>.

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