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Dive into the research topics where J. M. Míguez is active.

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Featured researches published by J. M. Míguez.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2011

Simultaneous Application of the Gradient Theory and Monte Carlo Molecular Simulation for the Investigation of Methane/Water Interfacial Properties

Christelle Miqueu; J. M. Míguez; Manuel M. Piñeiro; Thomas Lafitte; Bruno Mendiboure

This work is dedicated to the simultaneous application of the gradient theory of fluid interfaces and Monte Carlo molecular simulations for the description of the interfacial behavior of the methane/water mixture. Macroscopic (interfacial tension, adsorption) and microscopic (density profiles, interfacial thickness) properties are investigated. The gradient theory is coupled in this work with the SAFT-VR Mie equation of state. The results obtained are compared with Monte Carlo simulations, where the fluid interface is explicitly considered in biphasic simulation boxes at both constant pressure and volume (NPT and NVT ensembles), using reliable united atom molecular models. On one hand, both methods provide very good estimations of the interfacial tension of this mixture over a broad range of thermodynamic conditions. On the other hand, microscopic properties computed with both gradient theory and MC simulations are in very good agreement with each other, which confirms the consistency of both approaches. Interfacial tension minima at high pressure and prewetting transitions in the vicinity of saturation conditions are also investigated.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2015

Molecular dynamics simulation of CO2 hydrates: Prediction of three phase coexistence line

J. M. Míguez; M. M. Conde; J.-P. Torré; Felipe J. Blas; Manuel M. Piñeiro; Carlos Vega

The three phase equilibrium line (hydrate-liquid water-liquid carbon dioxide) has been estimated for the water + carbon dioxide binary mixture using molecular dynamics simulation and the direct coexistence technique. Both molecules have been represented using rigid nonpolarizable models. TIP4P/2005 and TIP4P/Ice were used for the case of water, while carbon dioxide was considered as a three center linear molecule with the parameterizations of MSM, EPM2, TraPPE, and ZD. The influence of the initial guest occupancy fraction on the hydrate stability has been analyzed first in order to determine the optimal starting configuration for the simulations, paying attention to the influence of the two different cells existing in the sI hydrate structure. The three phase coexistence temperature was then determined for a pressure range from 2 to 500 MPa. The qualitative shape of the equilibrium curve estimated is correct, including the high pressure temperature maximum that determines the hydrate re-entrant behaviour. However, in order to obtain quantitative agreement with experimental results, a positive deviation from the classical Lorentz-Berthelot combining rules must be considered.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2012

Vapor-liquid interfacial properties of rigid-linear Lennard-Jones chains

Felipe J. Blas; A. Ignacio Moreno-Ventas Bravo; J. M. Míguez; Manuel M. Piñeiro; Luis G. MacDowell

We have obtained the interfacial properties of short rigid-linear chains formed from tangentially bonded Lennard-Jones monomeric units from direct simulation of the vapour-liquid interface. The full long-range tails of the potential are accounted for by means of an improved version of the inhomogeneous long-range corrections of Janeček [J. Phys. Chem. B 110, 6264-6269 (2006)] proposed recently by MacDowell and Blas [J. Chem. Phys. 131, 074705 (2009)] valid for spherical as well as for rigid and flexible molecular systems. Three different model systems comprising of 3, 4, and 5 monomers per molecule are considered. The simulations are performed in the canonical ensemble, and the vapor-liquid interfacial tension is evaluated using the test-area method. In addition to the surface tension, we also obtain density profiles, coexistence densities, critical temperature and density, and interfacial thickness as functions of temperature, paying particular attention to the effect of the chain length and rigidity on these properties. According to our results, the main effect of increasing the chain length (at fixed temperature) is to sharpen the vapor-liquid interface and to increase the width of the biphasic coexistence region. As a result, the interfacial thickness decreases and the surface tension increases as the molecular chains get longer. The surface tension has been scaled by critical properties and represented as a function of the difference between coexistence densities relative to the critical density.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2012

On interfacial tension calculation from the test-area methodology in the grand canonical ensemble

J. M. Míguez; Manuel M. Piñeiro; A. I. Moreno-Ventas Bravo; Felipe J. Blas

We propose the extension of the test-area methodology, originally proposed to evaluate the surface tension of planar fluid-fluid interfaces along a computer simulation in the canonical ensemble, to deal with the solid-fluid interfacial tension of systems adsorbed on slitlike pores using the grand canonical ensemble. In order to check the adequacy of the proposed extension, we apply the method for determining the density profiles and interfacial tension of spherical molecules adsorbed in slitlike pore with different pore sizes and solid-fluid dispersive energy parameters along the same simulation. We also calculate the solid-fluid interfacial tension using the original test-area method in the canonical ensemble. Agreement between the results obtained from both methods indicate that both methods are fully equivalent. The advantage of the new methodology is that allows to calculate simultaneously the density profiles and the amount of molecules adsorbed onto a slitlike pore, as well as the solid-fluid interfacial tension. This ensures that the chemical potential at which all properties are evaluated during the simulation is exactly the same since simulations can be performed in the grand canonical ensemble, mimicking the conditions at which the adsorption experiments are most usually carried out in the laboratory.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2015

Understanding the Phase Behavior of Tetrahydrofuran + Carbon Dioxide, + Methane, and + Water Binary Mixtures from the SAFT-VR Approach

J. M. Míguez; Manuel M. Piñeiro; J. Algaba; Bruno Mendiboure; J. P. Torré; Felipe J. Blas

The high-pressure phase diagrams of the tetrahydrofuran(1) + carbon dioxide(2), + methane(2), and + water(2) mixtures are examined using the SAFT-VR approach. Carbon dioxide molecule is modeled as two spherical segments tangentially bonded, water is modeled as a spherical segment with four associating sites to represent the hydrogen bonding, methane is represented as an isolated sphere, and tetrahydrofuran is represented as a chain of m tangentially bonded spherical segments. Dispersive interactions are modeled using the square-well intermolecular potential. In addition, two different molecular model mixtures are developed to take into account the subtle balance between water-tetrahydrofuran hydrogen-bonding interactions. The polar and quadrupolar interactions present in water, tetrahydrofuran, and carbon dioxide are treated in an effective way via square-well potentials of variable range. The optimized intermolecular parameters are taken from the works of Giner et al. (Fluid Phase Equil. 2007, 255, 200), Galindo and Blas (J. Phys. Chem. B 2002, 106, 4503), Patel et al. (Ind. Eng. Chem. Res. 2003, 42, 3809), and Clark et al. (Mol. Phys. 2006, 104, 3561) for tetrahydrofuran, carbon dioxide, methane, and water, respectively. The phase diagrams of the binary mixtures exhibit different types of phase behavior according to the classification of van Konynenburg and Scott, ranging from types I, III, and VI phase behavior for the tetrahydrofuran(1) + carbon dioxide(2), + methane(2), and + water(2) binary mixtures, respectively. This last type is characterized by the presence of a Bancroft point, positive azeotropy, and the so-called closed-loop curves that represent regions of liquid-liquid immiscibility in the phase diagram. The system exhibits lower critical solution temperatures (LCSTs), which denote the lower limit of immiscibility together with upper critical solution temperatures (UCSTs). This behavior is explained in terms of competition between the incompatibility with the alkyl parts of the tetrahydrofuran ring chain and the hydrogen bonding between water and the ether group. A minimum number of unlike interaction parameters are fitted to give the optimal representation of the most representative features of the binary phase diagrams. In the particular case of tetrahydrofuran(1) + water(2), two sets of intermolecular potential model parameters are proposed to describe accurately either the hypercritical point associated with the closed-loop liquid-liquid immiscibility region or the location of the mixture lower- and upper-critical end-points. The theory is not only able to predict the type of phase behavior of each mixture, but also provides a reasonably good description of the global phase behavior whenever experimental data are available.


Molecular Physics | 2018

Adsorption and interfacial phenomena of a Lennard-Jones fluid adsorbed in slit pores: DFT and GCMC simulations

J. M. Míguez; P. Gómez-Álvarez; Manuel M. Piñeiro; B. Mendiboure; Felipe J. Blas

ABSTRACT Confinement of fluids in porous media leads to the presence of solid–fluid (SF) interfaces that play a key role in many different fields. The experimental characterisation of SF interfacial properties, in particular the surface tension, is challenging or not accessible. In this work, we apply mean-field density functional theory (DFT) to determine the surface tension and also density profile of a Lennard-Jones fluid in slit-shaped pores for realistic amounts of adsorbed molecules. We consider the pore walls to interact with fluid molecules through the well-known 10-4-3 Steele potential. The results are compared with those obtained from Monte Carlo simulations in the Grand Canonical Ensemble (GCMC) using the test-area method. We analyse the effect on the adsorption and interfacial phenomena of volume and energy factors, in particular, the pore diameter and the ratio between SF and fluid–fluid dispersive energy parameters, respectively. Results from DFT and GCMC simulations were found to be comparable, which points to their reliability. GRAPHICAL ABSTRACT


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2014

Comprehensive Characterization of Interfacial Behavior for the Mixture CO2 + H2O + CH4: Comparison between Atomistic and Coarse Grained Molecular Simulation Models and Density Gradient Theory

J. M. Míguez; José Matías Garrido; Felipe J. Blas; Hugo Segura; Andrés Mejía; Manuel M. Piñeiro


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2017

Computational study of the interplay between intermolecular interactions and CO2 orientations in type I hydrates

Martín Pérez-Rodríguez; A. Vidal-Vidal; J. M. Míguez; Felipe J. Blas; J.-P. Torré; Manuel M. Piñeiro


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2017

Vapour–liquid interfacial properties of square-well chains from density functional theory and Monte Carlo simulation

Francisco José Martínez-Ruiz; Felipe J. Blas; A. Ignacio Moreno-Ventas Bravo; J. M. Míguez; Luis G. MacDowell


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2018

Interfacial Properties of Tetrahydrofuran and Carbon Dioxide Mixture from Computer Simulation

Jesús Algaba; José Matías Garrido; J. M. Míguez; Andrés Mejía; A. Ignacio Moreno-Ventas Bravo; Felipe J. Blas

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Bruno Mendiboure

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Christelle Miqueu

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Luis G. MacDowell

Complutense University of Madrid

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David Bessières

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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