Abstract

Recent developments in dispersion corrected and nonlocal density functionals are aimed at accurately capturing dispersion interactions, a key shortcoming of local and semilocal approximations of density functional theory. These functionals have shown significant promise for dimers and small clusters of molecules as well as crystalline materials. However, their efficacy for predicting vapor liquid equilibria is largely unexplored. In this work, we examine the accuracy of dispersion-corrected and nonlocal van der Waals functionals by computing the vapor liquid coexistence curves (VLCCs) of hydrofluoromethanes. Our results indicate that the PBE-D3 functional performs significantly better in predicting saturated liquid densities than the rVV10 functional. With the PBE-D3 functional, we also find that as the number of fluorine atoms increase in the molecule, the accuracy of saturated liquid density prediction improves as well. All the functionals significantly underpredict the saturated vapor densities, which also result in an underprediction of saturated vapor pressure of all compounds. Despite the differences in the bulk liquid densities, the local microstructures of the liquid CFH3 and CF2H2 are relatively insensitive to the density functional employed. For CF3H, however, rVV10 predicts slightly more structured liquid than the PBE-D3 functional.

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