Abstract
Accurate solubility prediction of hydrogen sulfide in aqueous electrolyte solutions is critical for gas exploitation and geological storage. However, there is a lack of electrolyte Equation of State model that can accurately calculate the solubilities of hydrogen sulfide in aqueous electrolyte solutions over wide ranges of temperature, pressure, and salt molality. This work presents a modeling study on the solubilities of hydrogen sulfide in pure water and several aqueous sodium salt solutions. The thermodynamic framework used in this work is an electrolyte version of Cubic-Plus-Association Equation of State. The model’s temperature-dependent ion-gas binary interaction parameters are obtained by regressing the experimental solubilities in the aqueous electrolyte solutions. The modeling results show that the electrolyte Cubic-Plus-Association Equation of State can satisfactorily correlate the solubilities of hydrogen sulfide in aqueous electrolyte solutions over wide ranges of temperature, pressure, and salt molality. For the typical water–sodium chloride–hydrogen sulfide system, the model can satisfactorily correlate the gas solubilities with the mean relative deviation being 6.2%, with the temperature up to 593.95 K, pressure up to 32.30 MPa, and salt molality up to 6.0 mol⋅kg−1 water. Moreover, the salting-out effects and model adaptability are analyzed and discussed.
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