8 research outputs found
Estimation of Environment-Related Properties of Chemicals for Design of Sustainable Processes: Development of Group-Contribution<sup>+</sup> (GC<sup>+</sup>) Property Models and Uncertainty Analysis
The aim of this work is to develop group-contribution<sup>+</sup> (GC<sup>+</sup>) method (combined group-contribution (GC)
method
and atom connectivity index (CI) method) based property models to
provide reliable estimations of environment-related properties of
organic chemicals together with uncertainties of estimated property
values. For this purpose, a systematic methodology for property modeling
and uncertainty analysis is used. The methodology includes a parameter
estimation step to determine parameters of property models and an
uncertainty analysis step to establish statistical information about
the quality of parameter estimation, such as the parameter covariance,
the standard errors in predicted properties, and the confidence intervals.
For parameter estimation, large data sets of experimentally measured
property values of a wide range of chemicals (hydrocarbons, oxygenated
chemicals, nitrogenated chemicals, poly functional chemicals, etc.)
taken from the database of the US Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA) and from the database of USEtox is used. For property modeling
and uncertainty analysis, the Marrero and Gani GC method and atom
connectivity index method have been considered. In total, 22 environment-related
properties, which include the fathead minnow 96-h LC<sub>50</sub>, Daphnia magna 48-h LC<sub>50</sub>, oral rat LD<sub>50</sub>, aqueous solubility, bioconcentration factor, permissible
exposure limit (OSHA-TWA), photochemical oxidation potential, global
warming potential, ozone depletion potential, acidification potential,
emission to urban air (carcinogenic and noncarcinogenic), emission
to continental rural air (carcinogenic and noncarcinogenic), emission
to continental fresh water (carcinogenic and noncarcinogenic), emission
to continental seawater (carcinogenic and noncarcinogenic), emission
to continental natural soil (carcinogenic and noncarcinogenic), and
emission to continental agricultural soil (carcinogenic and noncarcinogenic)
have been modeled and analyzed. The application of the developed property
models for the estimation of environment-related properties and uncertainties
of the estimated property values is highlighted through an illustrative
example. The developed property models provide reliable estimates
of environment-related properties needed to perform process synthesis,
design, and analysis of sustainable chemical processes and allow one
to evaluate the effect of uncertainties of estimated property values
on the calculated performance of processes giving useful insights
into quality and reliability of the design of sustainable processes