ThermoMLAn XML-Based Approach for Storage and Exchange of Experimental and Critically Evaluated Thermophysical and Thermochemical Property Data. 1. Experimental Data

Michael Frenkel,* Robert D. Chirico, Vladimir V. Diky, and Qian Dong
Thermodynamics Research Center (TRC), Physical and Chemical Properties Division, National Institute of Standards and Technology, 325 Broadway, Boulder, Colorado 80305-3328
Svetlana Frenkel and Paul R. Franchois
Information Technology Laboratory, National Institute of Standards and Technology, 325 Broadway, Boulder, Colorado 80305-3337
Dale L. Embry
ConocoPhillips, 850-16 Street, P.O. Box 1267, Ponca City, Oklahoma 74602-1267
Thomas L. Teague
ePlantData, Inc., 9955 South Post Oak Road, Suite 300, Houston, Texas 77096
Kenneth N. Marsh
Department of Chemical and Process Engineering, University of Canterbury, Private Bag 4800, Christchurch, New Zealand
Randolph C. Wilhoit
Texas Experimental Engineering Station, Texas A&M University System, College Station, Texas 77843
J. Chem. Eng. Data, 2003, 48 (1), pp 2–13
DOI: 10.1021/je025645o
Publication Date (Web): December 17, 2002
Copyright © 2003 American Chemical Society
*

 Corresponding author. Phone:  (303)-497-3952. Fax:  (303)-497-5044. E-mail:  frenkel@boulder.nist.gov.

Abstract

ThermoML is an XML-based approach for storage and exchange of experimental and critically evaluated thermophysical and thermochemical property data. The basic principles, scope, and description of all structural elements of ThermoML are discussed. ThermoML covers essentially all experimentally determined thermodynamic and transport property data (more than 120 properties) for pure compounds, multicomponent mixtures, and chemical reactions (including change-of-state and equilibrium). The primary focus at present is molecular compounds. Although the focus of ThermoML is properties determined by direct experimental measurement, ThermoML does cover key derived property data such as azeotropic properties, Henry's Law constants, virial coefficients (for pure compounds and mixtures), activities and activity coefficients, fugacities and fugacity coefficients, and standard properties derived from high-precision adiabatic heat-capacity calorimetry. The role of ThermoML in global data submission and dissemination is discussed with particular emphasis on the new cooperation in data processing between the Journal of Chemical and Engineering Data and the Thermodynamics Research Center (TRC) at the National Institute of Standards and Technology. The text of several data files illustrating the ThermoML format for pure compounds, mixtures, and chemical reactions, as well as the complete ThermoML schema text, is provided as Supporting Information. Some important issues related to characterization of thermodynamic data are beyond the scope of this paper (uncertainty specification) or are considered in generic terms only (critically evaluated data). These issues will be considered in subsequent papers in this series.

Tools

SciFinder Links

SciFinder subscribers:  Click to sign in | Not a SciFinder subscriber? Learn more at www.cas.org

History

  • Published In Issue January 09, 2003
  • Received for review November 19, 2002. Accepted November 20, 2002.

Recommend & Share

Related Content

Other ACS content by these authors: