This vignette, produced on 2019-02-09, documents the sources of thermodynamic data in CHNOSZ version 1.2.0. Running data(thermo)
creates the default database (thermo$obigt
) in the R session.
The sections below correspond to CSV data files that are stored in the extdata/OBIGT
package directory and read by data(thermo)
(except for Optional Data). In each section, the primary references (ref1
in thermo$obigt
) are listed in chronological order. Any secondary references (ref2
) are listed with bullet points. Each reference is followed by the number of species, and a note (from thermo$refs
). Symbols show whether the data were present in the earliest of the sprons92.dat (ø), slop98.dat (*), slop07.dat (†), or slop15.dat (‡) datafiles for the SUPCRT92 package.
Any additional comments are placed at the beginning of the sections. Abbreviations used below are: Cp (heat capacity), GHS (standard Gibbs energy, enthalpy, entropy), HKF (Helgeson-Kirkham-Flowers equations), V (volume), T (temperature), P (pressure).
Data from SUPCRT92 which have been superseded by the Berman data are listed under Optional Data / SUPCRT92.
Superseded data from SLOP98 (aqueous SiO2 and Al, As, and Au species) are listed under Optional Data / SLOP98.
Use the tabs below to select a section for viewing. Select “All at once” to show all sections.
H2O
(3)This file contains H2O, e-, and H+. The properties of H2O are listed as NA; CHNOSZ calculates its properties using a Fortran subroutine taken from SUPRCT92 (Johnson et al., 1992) (default) or using the IAPWS-95 equations (Wagner and Pruß, 2002) or the Deep Earth Water (DEW) model (Sverjensky et al., 2014).
By convention, the standard Gibbs energy of formation, entropy, and heat capacity of the aqueous proton (H+) are 0 at all T and P (e.g. Cox et al., 1989). The formation reaction of the proton can be expressed as ½H2,(g) + Z = H+, where Z is the “element” of positive charge. Because the conventional standard Gibbs energy of this reaction is 0 at all T, the standard entropy of the reaction is also constrained to be zero (cf. Puigdomenech et al., 1997). Therefore, the “element” of positive charge (Z) has zero thermodynamic properties except for an entropy, S°Tr, that is negative one-half that of H2,(g). The standard entropy of the aqueous electron, which is a solely a pseudospecies defined by e- = -Z, is opposite that of Z.**
Despite these considerations, the final column of the thermodynamic database (thermo$obigt
) lists a charge of “0” for both the aqueous proton and electron. Data in this this column are used in CHNOSZ only to specify the charge that is input to the “g-function” (Tanger and Helgeson, 1988; Shock and Helgeson, 1988). Setting it to zero prevents activation of the g-function, which would result in non-zero contributions to thermodynamic properties, conflicting with the conventions mentioned above. All other calculations in CHNOSZ obtain the elemental makeup, including the correct charge for the species, by parsing the chemical formulas stored in the database.^^
**Likewise, GEM-Selektor defines “independent components” to be stoichiometric units usually consisting of elements and charge; the latter, which is named Zz and has a standard molal entropy of -65.34 J/mol/K and heat capacity of -14.418 J/mol/K (negative one-half those of gaseous hydrogen), is negated in the formula of the fictive “aqueous electron” (Kulik, 2006).
^^ Relatedly, charged amino acid sidechain groups have a charge that is tabulated as zero, because other values would be incompatible with group additivity of cations and anions (which have derivatives of the omega parameter (ω) in the revised HKF equations of state that are not opposites of each other) to give a neutral species (for which the derivatives of ω are taken to be zero) (cf. Dick et al., 2006).
Inorganic
(922)Shock and Helgeson (1988) – 58 ionic species (ø)
Shock et al. (1989) – 13 inorganic neutral species (ø)
Haas et al. (1995) – 249 complexes of rare earth elements (*)
McCollom and Shock (1997) – 3 MgSO4, NaSO4-, and HCl (*)
Everett L. Shock, Sassani, and Betz (1997) – 15 uranium species (*)
Sverjensky et al. (1997) – 103 metal complexes (*)
slop15.dat – 1 Zn(Ac)3-: “Enthalpy changed to be compatible with the equation ΔH=ΔG+TΔS for the formation reaction from elements. See footnote h in table 2 of Sverjensky et al. (1997).” (‡)
CHNOSZ – 1 HSiO3-: GHS recalculated by adding difference from SiO2 (Sverjensky et al., 1997) to updated values for SiO2 (Apps and Spycher, 2004)
Everett L. Shock, Sassani, Willis, et al. (1997) – 239 inorganic ions and hydroxide complexes (*)
Shock and Helgeson (1988) – 26 values of GHS
Sassani and Shock (1998) – 1 Rh+3 (*)
Sassani and Shock (1998) – 61 platinum-group ions and complexes (*)
Murphy and Shock (1999) – 38 actinides (†)
Akinfiev and Zotov (2001) – 1 AuCl2-
Stefánsson (2001) – 1 aqueous H4SiO4
Schulte et al. (2001) – 10 AsH3, CF4, CH3F, Cl2, ClO2, N2O, NF3, NO, PH3, and SF6
Tagirov and Schott (2001) – 17 aqueous Al species
Nordstrom and Archer (2003) – 10 aqueous As oxides and sulfides
Apps and Spycher (2004) – 1 aqueous SiO2
Marini and Accornero (2007) – 52 metal-arsenate and metal-arsenite complexes
Accornero et al. (2010) – 45 metal-chromate complexes
Akinfiev and Zotov (2010) – 2 AuHS and Au(HS)2-
Pokrovski et al. (2014) – 4 Au+, Au(OH)2-, AuCl, and AuOH
Organic
(687)Shock and Helgeson (1990) – 47 organic species (ø)
Shock (1993) – 2 ethylacetate and acetamide (*)
Shock and Koretsky (1993) – 108 metal-acetate complexes (*)
Shock and McKinnon (1993) – 3 CO, HCN, urea (*)
Schulte and Shock (1993) – 10 aldehydes (*)
Shock and Koretsky (1995) – 226 metal-organic acid complexes (*)
slop98.dat – 6 “These data were used in Shock and Koretsky (1995), but were not tabulated in the paper.” (*)
slop15.dat – 55 “Enthalpy corrected to be compatible with the equation ΔG=ΔH-TΔS for the formation reaction from elements.” (‡)
Shock (1995) – 77 carboxylic acids (*)
slop15.dat – 2 adipic acid and n-dodecanoate: “Gibbs free energy corrected to be compatible with the equation ΔG=ΔH-TΔS for the formation reaction from elements. See footnote y in table 4 of Shock (1995).” (‡)
slop15.dat – 1 n-octanoate: “Enthalpy corrected to be compatible with the equation ΔG=ΔH-TΔS for the formation reaction from elements. See footnote ab in table 4 of Shock (1995).” (‡)
Dale et al. (1997) – 10 alkylphenols (*)
Haas and Shock (1999) – 6 chloroethylene species (†)
Prapaipong et al. (1999) – 160 metal-dicarboxylate complexes (†)
slop07.dat – 1 corrected charge of Pu(Oxal)+2 (†)
CHNOSZ – 4 charge of NpO2(Oxal), La(Succ)+, NH4(Succ)-, and NpO2(Succ) as listed by Prapaipong et al. (1999)
Plyasunov and Shock (2001) – 11 aqueous nonelectrolytes (†)
Schulte and Rogers (2004) – 12 alkane thiols (†)
Hawrylak et al. (2006) – 2 methyldiethanolamine and methyldiethanolammonium chloride HKF parameters
Schulte (2010) – 7 organic sulfides
Dick et al. (2013) – 6 phenanthrene and methylphenanthrene isomers
Biotic
(329)Amend and Helgeson (1997) – 27 amino acids GHS (†)
Amend and Plyasunov (2001) – 10 carbohydrates (†)
LaRowe and Harold C. Helgeson (2006a) – 138 nucleic-acid bases, nucleosides, and nucleotides (†)
LaRowe and Harold C. Helgeson (2006a) – 4 citric acid and citrate
LaRowe and Harold C. Helgeson (2006b) – 32 Mg-complexed adenosine nucleotides (ATP), NAD, and NADP (†)
Dick et al. (2006) – 38 amino acid, protein, and organic groups (‡)
LaRowe and Dick (2012) – 1 methionine sidechain GHS
CHNOSZ – 1 Incorrect values of HKF a1–a4 parameters for [-CH2NH2] were printed in Table 6 of Dick et al. (2006); corrected values are used here. (‡)
Dick et al. (2006) – 19 Gly-X-Gly tripeptides Cp, V, and HKF c1, c2, ω parameters
Dick (2007) – 4 glutathione, cystine, and cystine sidechain
LaRowe and Dick (2012) – 1 methionine GHS (‡)
Kitadai (2014) – 12 glycine, diglycine, and triglycine (zwitterions and ions); diketopiperazine, [Gly] and [UPBB] groups
Shock (1992) – 1 diketopiperazine GHS
Goldberg et al. (2002) – 6 glycine, diglycine, and triglycine (+1 and -1 ions) GHS
Dick et al. (2006) – 3 glycine, [Gly], and [UPBB] HKF parameters
Dick et al. (2006) – 1 triglycine Cp, V, and HKF c1, c2, ω parameters
Canovas and Shock (2016) – 22 citric acid cycle metabolites
Azadi et al. (2019) – 22 metal-glycinate complexes
CHNOSZ – 20 recalculated values of Cp (those in Azadi et al. (2019) appear to be calculated using wrong sign on ω) and enthalpy (using ΔG=ΔH-TΔS and the entropies of the elements)
CHNOSZ – 2 Tl(Gly) and Tl(Gly)2-: change Ti to Tl
Inorganic
(129)Chamosite,7A and witherite were present in sprons92.dat but not in slop98.dat or later files, and are not included in CHNOSZ.
The source of parameters used here for goethite is different from that in the slop files (Shock, 2009).Helgeson et al. (1978) – 51 data for minerals and phase transitions (ø)
Pankratz and King (1970) – 2 bornite and chalcopyrite (ø)
Wagman et al. (1982) – 1 manganosite (ø)
Helgeson (1985) – 1 ferrosilite and siderite (ø)
CHNOSZ – 14 GHS (Tr) of the phase that is stable at 298.15 K was combined with Htr and the Cp coefficients to calculate the metastable GHS (Tr) of the phases that are stable at higher temperatures.
Robie et al. (1978) – 1 chlorargyrite (ø)
Robie et al. (1978) – 4 iron (ø)
Kelley (1960) – 1 iron Cp (ø)
CHNOSZ – 3 GHS (Tr) of the phase that is stable at 298.15 K was combined with Htr and the Cp coefficients to calculate the metastable GHS (Tr) of the phases that are stable at higher temperatures.
Robie et al. (1978) – 1 gibbsite GHS
Wagman et al. (1982) – 1 MgSO4
Jackson and Helgeson (1985) – 5 Sn minerals (ø)
Reardon and Armstrong (1987) – 1 celestite GHS
Ball and Nordstrom (1991) – 1 arsenopyrite: G
Hemingway et al. (1991) – 1 bohemite
Parker and Khodakovskii (1995) – 1 melanterite
Robie and Hemingway (1995) – 1 gypsum GHS
McCollom and Shock (1997) – 3 sulfur (*)
Everett L. Shock, Sassani, and Betz (1997) – 1 uraninite (*)
Everett L. Shock, Sassani, Willis, et al. (1997) – 2 zincite and litharge (*)
Helgeson et al. (1978) – 1 litharge S, V, and Cp parameters (ø)
slop98.dat – 1 zincite and litharge; “These data were used in Everett L. Shock, Sassani, Willis, et al. (1997), but were not tabulated in the paper.” (*)
Sassani and Shock (1998) – 15 platinum-group solids (*)
Stoffregen et al. (2000) – 3 jarosite, natroalunite, and natrojarosite
Wood and Samson (2000) – 2 scheelite and ferberite; adopted values include Cp parameters for scheelite from Barin and Knacke (1973) and GHS and Cp parameters for ferberite from Polya (1990)
Robie et al. (1978) – 1 scheelite GHS and V
Robie et al. (1978) – 1 ferberite V
Amend and Shock (2001) – 3 selenium and molybdenite (†)
Mercury et al. (2001) – 8 polymorphs of ice
Juraj Majzlan, Grevel, et al. (2003) – 3 goethite, lepidocrocite, and maghemite GHS
Nordstrom and Archer (2003) – 8 As oxide and sulfide minerals
Majzlan et al. (2004) – 1 hydronium jarosite
Zhu et al. (2005) – 2 barium arsenate and barium hydrogen arsenate: G
Langmuir et al. (2006) – 2 scorodite and amorphous ferric arsenate: G
Majzlan et al. (2006) – 3 coquimbite, ferricopiapite, and rhomboclase
Grevel and Majzlan (2009) – 4 kieserite, starkeyite, hexahydrite, and epsomite
Zimmer et al. (2016) – 1 dawsonite GHS
Organic
(479)Tardy et al. (1997) – 5 humic acid, microflora, and plants
Helgeson et al. (1998) – 59 organic molecules and groups
Helgeson et al. (1998) – 20 amino acids (‡)
Richard and Helgeson (1998) – 311 organic molecules and groups
Richard (2001) – 8 organic sulfur compounds
LaRowe and Harold C. Helgeson (2006a) – 19 nucleic-acid bases, nucleosides, and nucleotides
LaRowe and Harold C. Helgeson (2006b) – 9 Mg-complexed adenosine nucleotides (ATP), NAD, and NADP
Helgeson et al. (2009) – 5 kerogens
Richard and Gaona (2011) – 13 organic iodine compounds
LaRowe and Dick (2012) – 30 4-hydroxyproline, 5-hydroxylysine, 4 dipeptides, and sidechain and backbone groups in proteins (‡)
Berman
(86)This file gives the identifiying information for minerals whose properties are calculated using the formulation of Berman (1988). Note that thermodynamic properties for these minerals are listed as NA in thermo$obigt
; the actual data are stored separately, as CSV files in extdata/Berman/*.csv
.
Berman (1988) – 67 minerals
Berman (1990) – 2 almandine and ilmenite: modified H and/or S
Sverjensky et al. (1991) – 9 G and H revisions for K- and Al-bearing silicates
Sverjensky et al. (1991) – 1 phlogopite: H and S modified by Berman (1990), followed by G and H revision for K-bearing silicates (after Sverjensky et al., 1991)
berman.dat (2017) – 1 antigorite: “Oct. 21, 2016: Revised volume coefficients consistent with Hilairet et al. (2006) and Yang et al. (2014)”
Berman (1990) – 1 annite
Evans (1990) – 2 glaucophane and pumpellyite
JUN92.bs
data fileZhu and Sverjensky (1992) – 10 F,Cl,OH biotite and apatite endmembers. GHS and V were taken from Table 6 of Zhu and Sverjensky (1992); heat capacity and volume parameters from berman.dat
.
Delgado Martín and Soler i Gil (2010) – 5 hedenbergite, andradite, ferro-actinolite, grunerite, and ilvaite
Facq et al. (2014) – 1 aragonite; source of data: berman.dat
Organic
(532)Helgeson et al. (1998) – 186 organic molecules and groups
Richard and Helgeson (1998) – 231 organic molecules and groups
Richard (2001) – 67 organic sulfur compounds
LaRowe and Harold C. Helgeson (2006b) – 2 pyridine and piperidine
Richard (2008) – 17 alkenes
Richard and Gaona (2011) – 29 organic iodine compounds
Inorganic
(17)Wagman et al. (1982) – 2 gases GHS (†)
Wagman et al. (1982) – 15 gases GHS (ø)
Organic
(266)Shock (1993) – 2 carbon monoxide and ethylene (*)
Dale et al. (1997) – 4 phenol, and cresol isomers (*)
Dale et al. (1997) – 6 dimethylphenol isomers
Helgeson et al. (1998) – 153 organic molecules and groups
Richard (2001) – 62 organic sulfur compounds
Richard and Gaona (2011) – 39 organic iodine compounds
DEW
(199)The Deep Earth Water (DEW) model extends the applicability of the revised HKF equations of state to 60 kbar. Accuracy of the thermodynamic calculations at these conditions is improved by revised correlations for the a1 HKF parameter, as described by Sverjensky et al., 2014. The data here were taken from the May 2017 version of the DEW spreadsheet (Dew Model, 2017). The following species are present in the spreadsheet, but are not listed in DEW_aq.csv
because the parameters are unchanged from the default database in CHNOSZ: B(OH)3, Br-, Ca+2, Cl-, Cs+, F-, H+, H2, He, I-, K+, Kr, Li+, Mg+2, Na+, Ne, O2, Rb+, Rn.
add.obigt('DEW')
to load these data, you should also run water('DEW')
to activate the DEW equations in CHNOSZ. See demo(DEW)
for some examples.
Shock and Helgeson (1988) – 2 ionic species
Shock and Helgeson (1990) – 3 formic acid, formate, and propanoate
DEW model (2017) – 1 revised with new predicted a1 for ions
DEW model (2017) – 1 revised with new predicted a1 for complex species
DEW model (2017) – 1 propanoate: Revised a1 from new delVn correlation for -1 ions
Pokrovskii and Helgeson (1995) – 2 aluminum species
Ho and Palmer (1997) – 1 KOH
Plyasunov and Shock (2001) – 2 acetic acid, propanoic acid, and methane
Facq et al. (2014) – 3 CO2, CO3-2, and HCO3-
Sverjensky et al. (2014) – 2 SiO2 and Si2O4
DEW model (2017) – 184 other data from Aqueous Species Table in spreadsheet (see detailed references there)
DEW model (2017) – 1 acetate: revised January 26th, 2016; new a1 value from complexes and organics correlation.
DEW model (2017) – 1 MgCl+: revised volume increased in order that a1 of the complex is the sum of the a1 values of the ions
DEW model (2017) – 1 NaCl: revised with new predicted a1 for complex species
SUPCRT92
(185)These minerals, taken from the SUPCRT92 database, were present in earlier versions of CHNOSZ but have since been superseded by the Berman dataset. They are kept as optional data for testing and comparison purposes. The minerals here include all of the silicates and Al-bearing minerals from Helgeson et al., 1978, as well as calcite, dolomite, hematite, and magnetite. Use add.obigt("SUPCRT92")
to load the data. Note that other minerals from SUPCRT92, including native elements, sulfides, halides, sulfates, and selected carbonates and oxides that do not duplicate those in the Berman dataset, are still present in the default database (inorganic_cr.csv).
Helgeson et al. (1978) – 183 data for minerals and phase transitions (ø)
Kelley (1960) – 1 larnite Cp (ø)
Robie et al. (1978) – 4 dickite, fluorphlogopite, halloysite, and pyrope (ø)
Plummer and Busenberg (1982) – 2 aragonite and calcite (ø)
Helgeson (1985) – 1 ferrosilite and siderite (ø)
sprons92.dat – 24 Ca-bearing minerals; “Gibbs free energies and enthalpies were corrected to be consistent with updated values of Gibbs free energies of Ca2+ and CO32- (Shock and Helgeson, 1988) together with the solubilities of calcite and aragonite reported by Plummer and Busenberg (1982)” (ø)
slop98.dat – 1 daphnite; “Gf and Hf from Saccocia and Seyfried (1993) TMM” (*)
CHNOSZ – 54 GHS (Tr) of the phase that is stable at 298.15 K was combined with Htr and the Cp coefficients to calculate the metastable GHS (Tr) of the phases that are stable at higher temperatures.
Robie et al. (1978) – 2 rutile and titanite (ø)
Bowers and Helgeson (1983) – 1 rutile (ø)
sprons92.dat – 1 titanite: Bowers and Helgeson (1983) + “Gibbs free energies and enthalpies were corrected to be consistent with updated values of Gibbs free energies of Ca2+ and CO32- (Shock and Helgeson, 1988) together with the solubilities of calcite and aragonite reported by Plummer and Busenberg (1982)” (ø)
SLOP98
(28)These species, taken from the slop98 data file, were present in earlier versions of CHNOSZ but have been replaced by or are incompatible with later updates. The data are kept here for comparative purposes. Use add.obigt("SLOP98")
to load the data.
Shock and Helgeson (1988) – 1 H2AsO3- (ø)
Shock et al. (1989) – 1 aqueous SiO2 (ø)
Shock and Koretsky (1993) – 2 Au-acetate complexes (*)
Shock and Koretsky (1993) – 3 Al-acetate complexes (*)
Sverjensky et al. (1997) – 1 metal complexes (*)
Sverjensky et al. (1997) – 5 Au(HS)2- and Au-chloride complexes (*)
Everett L. Shock, Sassani, Willis, et al. (1997) – 2 Au+ and Au+3 (*)
Everett L. Shock, Sassani, Willis, et al. (1997) – 6 arsenate and arsenite species (*)
Everett L. Shock, Sassani, Willis, et al. (1997) – 5 aqueous Al species (*)
Prapaipong et al. (1999) – 2 Al(Mal)+ and Al(Oxal)+ (†)
OldAA
(64)Data for these amino acids and related species were present in earlier versions of CHNOSZ but have been replaced by or are incompatible with later updates (LaRowe and Dick, 2012; Kitadai, 2014; Azadi et al., 2019). The data are kept here to reproduce published calculations and for comparison with newer data. Use add.obigt("OldAA")
to load the data.
Shock (1992) – 4 diglycine, alanylglycine, leucylglycine, and diketopiperazine; not present in slop files after slop98.dat (*)
Shock and Koretsky (1995) – 54 alanate, glycinate and their complexes with metals. Values are taken from slop98.dat, which notes corrected values for some species. (*)
Amend and Helgeson (1997) – 2 alanate and glycinate GHS
CHNOSZ – 52 metal-amino acid complexes: GHS were recalculated by adding the differences between values from Shock and Koretsky (1995) and Amend and Helgeson (1997) for alanate or glycinate to the properties of the complexes reported by Shock and Koretsky (1995).
Amend and Helgeson (1997) – 3 glycine, glycinium, and methionine GHS
Dick et al. (2006) – 3 [Gly], [Met], and [UPBB]
H2O
(3)This file contains H2O, e-, and H+. The properties of H2O are listed as NA; CHNOSZ calculates its properties using a Fortran subroutine taken from SUPRCT92 (Johnson et al., 1992) (default) or using the IAPWS-95 equations (Wagner and Pruß, 2002) or the Deep Earth Water (DEW) model (Sverjensky et al., 2014).
By convention, the standard Gibbs energy of formation, entropy, and heat capacity of the aqueous proton (H+) are 0 at all T and P (e.g. Cox et al., 1989). The formation reaction of the proton can be expressed as ½H2,(g) + Z = H+, where Z is the “element” of positive charge. Because the conventional standard Gibbs energy of this reaction is 0 at all T, the standard entropy of the reaction is also constrained to be zero (cf. Puigdomenech et al., 1997). Therefore, the “element” of positive charge (Z) has zero thermodynamic properties except for an entropy, S°Tr, that is negative one-half that of H2,(g). The standard entropy of the aqueous electron, which is a solely a pseudospecies defined by e- = -Z, is opposite that of Z.**
Despite these considerations, the final column of the thermodynamic database (thermo$obigt
) lists a charge of “0” for both the aqueous proton and electron. Data in this this column are used in CHNOSZ only to specify the charge that is input to the “g-function” (Tanger and Helgeson, 1988; Shock and Helgeson, 1988). Setting it to zero prevents activation of the g-function, which would result in non-zero contributions to thermodynamic properties, conflicting with the conventions mentioned above. All other calculations in CHNOSZ obtain the elemental makeup, including the correct charge for the species, by parsing the chemical formulas stored in the database.^^
**Likewise, GEM-Selektor defines “independent components” to be stoichiometric units usually consisting of elements and charge; the latter, which is named Zz and has a standard molal entropy of -65.34 J/mol/K and heat capacity of -14.418 J/mol/K (negative one-half those of gaseous hydrogen), is negated in the formula of the fictive “aqueous electron” (Kulik, 2006).
^^ Relatedly, charged amino acid sidechain groups have a charge that is tabulated as zero, because other values would be incompatible with group additivity of cations and anions (which have derivatives of the omega parameter (ω) in the revised HKF equations of state that are not opposites of each other) to give a neutral species (for which the derivatives of ω are taken to be zero) (cf. Dick et al., 2006).
Inorganic
(922)Shock and Helgeson (1988) – 58 ionic species (ø)
Shock et al. (1989) – 13 inorganic neutral species (ø)
Haas et al. (1995) – 249 complexes of rare earth elements (*)
McCollom and Shock (1997) – 3 MgSO4, NaSO4-, and HCl (*)
Everett L. Shock, Sassani, and Betz (1997) – 15 uranium species (*)
Sverjensky et al. (1997) – 103 metal complexes (*)
slop15.dat – 1 Zn(Ac)3-: “Enthalpy changed to be compatible with the equation ΔH=ΔG+TΔS for the formation reaction from elements. See footnote h in table 2 of Sverjensky et al. (1997).” (‡)
CHNOSZ – 1 HSiO3-: GHS recalculated by adding difference from SiO2 (Sverjensky et al., 1997) to updated values for SiO2 (Apps and Spycher, 2004)
Everett L. Shock, Sassani, Willis, et al. (1997) – 239 inorganic ions and hydroxide complexes (*)
Shock and Helgeson (1988) – 26 values of GHS
Sassani and Shock (1998) – 1 Rh+3 (*)
Sassani and Shock (1998) – 61 platinum-group ions and complexes (*)
Murphy and Shock (1999) – 38 actinides (†)
Akinfiev and Zotov (2001) – 1 AuCl2-
Stefánsson (2001) – 1 aqueous H4SiO4
Schulte et al. (2001) – 10 AsH3, CF4, CH3F, Cl2, ClO2, N2O, NF3, NO, PH3, and SF6
Tagirov and Schott (2001) – 17 aqueous Al species
Nordstrom and Archer (2003) – 10 aqueous As oxides and sulfides
Apps and Spycher (2004) – 1 aqueous SiO2
Marini and Accornero (2007) – 52 metal-arsenate and metal-arsenite complexes
Accornero et al. (2010) – 45 metal-chromate complexes
Akinfiev and Zotov (2010) – 2 AuHS and Au(HS)2-
Pokrovski et al. (2014) – 4 Au+, Au(OH)2-, AuCl, and AuOH
Organic
(687)Shock and Helgeson (1990) – 47 organic species (ø)
Shock (1993) – 2 ethylacetate and acetamide (*)
Shock and Koretsky (1993) – 108 metal-acetate complexes (*)
Shock and McKinnon (1993) – 3 CO, HCN, urea (*)
Schulte and Shock (1993) – 10 aldehydes (*)
Shock and Koretsky (1995) – 226 metal-organic acid complexes (*)
slop98.dat – 6 “These data were used in Shock and Koretsky (1995), but were not tabulated in the paper.” (*)
slop15.dat – 55 “Enthalpy corrected to be compatible with the equation ΔG=ΔH-TΔS for the formation reaction from elements.” (‡)
Shock (1995) – 77 carboxylic acids (*)
slop15.dat – 2 adipic acid and n-dodecanoate: “Gibbs free energy corrected to be compatible with the equation ΔG=ΔH-TΔS for the formation reaction from elements. See footnote y in table 4 of Shock (1995).” (‡)
slop15.dat – 1 n-octanoate: “Enthalpy corrected to be compatible with the equation ΔG=ΔH-TΔS for the formation reaction from elements. See footnote ab in table 4 of Shock (1995).” (‡)
Dale et al. (1997) – 10 alkylphenols (*)
Haas and Shock (1999) – 6 chloroethylene species (†)
Prapaipong et al. (1999) – 160 metal-dicarboxylate complexes (†)
slop07.dat – 1 corrected charge of Pu(Oxal)+2 (†)
CHNOSZ – 4 charge of NpO2(Oxal), La(Succ)+, NH4(Succ)-, and NpO2(Succ) as listed by Prapaipong et al. (1999)
Plyasunov and Shock (2001) – 11 aqueous nonelectrolytes (†)
Schulte and Rogers (2004) – 12 alkane thiols (†)
Hawrylak et al. (2006) – 2 methyldiethanolamine and methyldiethanolammonium chloride HKF parameters
Schulte (2010) – 7 organic sulfides
Dick et al. (2013) – 6 phenanthrene and methylphenanthrene isomers
Biotic
(329)Amend and Helgeson (1997) – 27 amino acids GHS (†)
Amend and Plyasunov (2001) – 10 carbohydrates (†)
LaRowe and Harold C. Helgeson (2006a) – 138 nucleic-acid bases, nucleosides, and nucleotides (†)
LaRowe and Harold C. Helgeson (2006a) – 4 citric acid and citrate
LaRowe and Harold C. Helgeson (2006b) – 32 Mg-complexed adenosine nucleotides (ATP), NAD, and NADP (†)
Dick et al. (2006) – 38 amino acid, protein, and organic groups (‡)
LaRowe and Dick (2012) – 1 methionine sidechain GHS
CHNOSZ – 1 Incorrect values of HKF a1–a4 parameters for [-CH2NH2] were printed in Table 6 of Dick et al. (2006); corrected values are used here. (‡)
Dick et al. (2006) – 19 Gly-X-Gly tripeptides Cp, V, and HKF c1, c2, ω parameters
Dick (2007) – 4 glutathione, cystine, and cystine sidechain
LaRowe and Dick (2012) – 1 methionine GHS (‡)
Kitadai (2014) – 12 glycine, diglycine, and triglycine (zwitterions and ions); diketopiperazine, [Gly] and [UPBB] groups
Shock (1992) – 1 diketopiperazine GHS
Goldberg et al. (2002) – 6 glycine, diglycine, and triglycine (+1 and -1 ions) GHS
Dick et al. (2006) – 3 glycine, [Gly], and [UPBB] HKF parameters
Dick et al. (2006) – 1 triglycine Cp, V, and HKF c1, c2, ω parameters
Canovas and Shock (2016) – 22 citric acid cycle metabolites
Azadi et al. (2019) – 22 metal-glycinate complexes
CHNOSZ – 20 recalculated values of Cp (those in Azadi et al. (2019) appear to be calculated using wrong sign on ω) and enthalpy (using ΔG=ΔH-TΔS and the entropies of the elements)
CHNOSZ – 2 Tl(Gly) and Tl(Gly)2-: change Ti to Tl
Inorganic
(129)Chamosite,7A and witherite were present in sprons92.dat but not in slop98.dat or later files, and are not included in CHNOSZ.
The source of parameters used here for goethite is different from that in the slop files (Shock, 2009).Helgeson et al. (1978) – 51 data for minerals and phase transitions (ø)
Pankratz and King (1970) – 2 bornite and chalcopyrite (ø)
Wagman et al. (1982) – 1 manganosite (ø)
Helgeson (1985) – 1 ferrosilite and siderite (ø)
CHNOSZ – 14 GHS (Tr) of the phase that is stable at 298.15 K was combined with Htr and the Cp coefficients to calculate the metastable GHS (Tr) of the phases that are stable at higher temperatures.
Robie et al. (1978) – 1 chlorargyrite (ø)
Robie et al. (1978) – 4 iron (ø)
Kelley (1960) – 1 iron Cp (ø)
CHNOSZ – 3 GHS (Tr) of the phase that is stable at 298.15 K was combined with Htr and the Cp coefficients to calculate the metastable GHS (Tr) of the phases that are stable at higher temperatures.
Robie et al. (1978) – 1 gibbsite GHS
Wagman et al. (1982) – 1 MgSO4
Jackson and Helgeson (1985) – 5 Sn minerals (ø)
Reardon and Armstrong (1987) – 1 celestite GHS
Ball and Nordstrom (1991) – 1 arsenopyrite: G
Hemingway et al. (1991) – 1 bohemite
Parker and Khodakovskii (1995) – 1 melanterite
Robie and Hemingway (1995) – 1 gypsum GHS
McCollom and Shock (1997) – 3 sulfur (*)
Everett L. Shock, Sassani, and Betz (1997) – 1 uraninite (*)
Everett L. Shock, Sassani, Willis, et al. (1997) – 2 zincite and litharge (*)
Helgeson et al. (1978) – 1 litharge S, V, and Cp parameters (ø)
slop98.dat – 1 zincite and litharge; “These data were used in Everett L. Shock, Sassani, Willis, et al. (1997), but were not tabulated in the paper.” (*)
Sassani and Shock (1998) – 15 platinum-group solids (*)
Stoffregen et al. (2000) – 3 jarosite, natroalunite, and natrojarosite
Wood and Samson (2000) – 2 scheelite and ferberite; adopted values include Cp parameters for scheelite from Barin and Knacke (1973) and GHS and Cp parameters for ferberite from Polya (1990)
Robie et al. (1978) – 1 scheelite GHS and V
Robie et al. (1978) – 1 ferberite V
Amend and Shock (2001) – 3 selenium and molybdenite (†)
Mercury et al. (2001) – 8 polymorphs of ice
Juraj Majzlan, Grevel, et al. (2003) – 3 goethite, lepidocrocite, and maghemite GHS
Nordstrom and Archer (2003) – 8 As oxide and sulfide minerals
Majzlan et al. (2004) – 1 hydronium jarosite
Zhu et al. (2005) – 2 barium arsenate and barium hydrogen arsenate: G
Langmuir et al. (2006) – 2 scorodite and amorphous ferric arsenate: G
Majzlan et al. (2006) – 3 coquimbite, ferricopiapite, and rhomboclase
Grevel and Majzlan (2009) – 4 kieserite, starkeyite, hexahydrite, and epsomite
Zimmer et al. (2016) – 1 dawsonite GHS
Organic
(479)Tardy et al. (1997) – 5 humic acid, microflora, and plants
Helgeson et al. (1998) – 59 organic molecules and groups
Helgeson et al. (1998) – 20 amino acids (‡)
Richard and Helgeson (1998) – 311 organic molecules and groups
Richard (2001) – 8 organic sulfur compounds
LaRowe and Harold C. Helgeson (2006a) – 19 nucleic-acid bases, nucleosides, and nucleotides
LaRowe and Harold C. Helgeson (2006b) – 9 Mg-complexed adenosine nucleotides (ATP), NAD, and NADP
Helgeson et al. (2009) – 5 kerogens
Richard and Gaona (2011) – 13 organic iodine compounds
LaRowe and Dick (2012) – 30 4-hydroxyproline, 5-hydroxylysine, 4 dipeptides, and sidechain and backbone groups in proteins (‡)
Berman
(86)This file gives the identifiying information for minerals whose properties are calculated using the formulation of Berman (1988). Note that thermodynamic properties for these minerals are listed as NA in thermo$obigt
; the actual data are stored separately, as CSV files in extdata/Berman/*.csv
.
Berman (1988) – 67 minerals
Berman (1990) – 2 almandine and ilmenite: modified H and/or S
Sverjensky et al. (1991) – 9 G and H revisions for K- and Al-bearing silicates
Sverjensky et al. (1991) – 1 phlogopite: H and S modified by Berman (1990), followed by G and H revision for K-bearing silicates (after Sverjensky et al., 1991)
berman.dat (2017) – 1 antigorite: “Oct. 21, 2016: Revised volume coefficients consistent with Hilairet et al. (2006) and Yang et al. (2014)”
Berman (1990) – 1 annite
Evans (1990) – 2 glaucophane and pumpellyite
JUN92.bs
data fileZhu and Sverjensky (1992) – 10 F,Cl,OH biotite and apatite endmembers. GHS and V were taken from Table 6 of Zhu and Sverjensky (1992); heat capacity and volume parameters from berman.dat
.
Delgado Martín and Soler i Gil (2010) – 5 hedenbergite, andradite, ferro-actinolite, grunerite, and ilvaite
Facq et al. (2014) – 1 aragonite; source of data: berman.dat
Organic
(532)Helgeson et al. (1998) – 186 organic molecules and groups
Richard and Helgeson (1998) – 231 organic molecules and groups
Richard (2001) – 67 organic sulfur compounds
LaRowe and Harold C. Helgeson (2006b) – 2 pyridine and piperidine
Richard (2008) – 17 alkenes
Richard and Gaona (2011) – 29 organic iodine compounds
Inorganic
(17)Wagman et al. (1982) – 2 gases GHS (†)
Wagman et al. (1982) – 15 gases GHS (ø)
Organic
(266)Shock (1993) – 2 carbon monoxide and ethylene (*)
Dale et al. (1997) – 4 phenol, and cresol isomers (*)
Dale et al. (1997) – 6 dimethylphenol isomers
Helgeson et al. (1998) – 153 organic molecules and groups
Richard (2001) – 62 organic sulfur compounds
Richard and Gaona (2011) – 39 organic iodine compounds
DEW
(199)The Deep Earth Water (DEW) model extends the applicability of the revised HKF equations of state to 60 kbar. Accuracy of the thermodynamic calculations at these conditions is improved by revised correlations for the a1 HKF parameter, as described by Sverjensky et al., 2014. The data here were taken from the May 2017 version of the DEW spreadsheet (Dew Model, 2017). The following species are present in the spreadsheet, but are not listed in DEW_aq.csv
because the parameters are unchanged from the default database in CHNOSZ: B(OH)3, Br-, Ca+2, Cl-, Cs+, F-, H+, H2, He, I-, K+, Kr, Li+, Mg+2, Na+, Ne, O2, Rb+, Rn.
add.obigt('DEW')
to load these data, you should also run water('DEW')
to activate the DEW equations in CHNOSZ. See demo(DEW)
for some examples.
Shock and Helgeson (1988) – 2 ionic species
Shock and Helgeson (1990) – 3 formic acid, formate, and propanoate
DEW model (2017) – 1 revised with new predicted a1 for ions
DEW model (2017) – 1 revised with new predicted a1 for complex species
DEW model (2017) – 1 propanoate: Revised a1 from new delVn correlation for -1 ions
Pokrovskii and Helgeson (1995) – 2 aluminum species
Ho and Palmer (1997) – 1 KOH
Plyasunov and Shock (2001) – 2 acetic acid, propanoic acid, and methane
Facq et al. (2014) – 3 CO2, CO3-2, and HCO3-
Sverjensky et al. (2014) – 2 SiO2 and Si2O4
DEW model (2017) – 184 other data from Aqueous Species Table in spreadsheet (see detailed references there)
DEW model (2017) – 1 acetate: revised January 26th, 2016; new a1 value from complexes and organics correlation.
DEW model (2017) – 1 MgCl+: revised volume increased in order that a1 of the complex is the sum of the a1 values of the ions
DEW model (2017) – 1 NaCl: revised with new predicted a1 for complex species
OldAA
(64)Data for these amino acids and related species were present in earlier versions of CHNOSZ but have been replaced by or are incompatible with later updates (LaRowe and Dick, 2012; Kitadai, 2014; Azadi et al., 2019). The data are kept here to reproduce published calculations and for comparison with newer data. Use add.obigt("OldAA")
to load the data.
Shock (1992) – 4 diglycine, alanylglycine, leucylglycine, and diketopiperazine; not present in slop files after slop98.dat (*)
Shock and Koretsky (1995) – 54 alanate, glycinate and their complexes with metals. Values are taken from slop98.dat, which notes corrected values for some species. (*)
Amend and Helgeson (1997) – 2 alanate and glycinate GHS
CHNOSZ – 52 metal-amino acid complexes: GHS were recalculated by adding the differences between values from Shock and Koretsky (1995) and Amend and Helgeson (1997) for alanate or glycinate to the properties of the complexes reported by Shock and Koretsky (1995).
Amend and Helgeson (1997) – 3 glycine, glycinium, and methionine GHS
Dick et al. (2006) – 3 [Gly], [Met], and [UPBB]
SUPCRT92
(185)These minerals, taken from the SUPCRT92 database, were present in earlier versions of CHNOSZ but have since been superseded by the Berman dataset. They are kept as optional data for testing and comparison purposes. The minerals here include all of the silicates and Al-bearing minerals from Helgeson et al., 1978, as well as calcite, dolomite, hematite, and magnetite. Use add.obigt("SUPCRT92")
to load the data. Note that other minerals from SUPCRT92, including native elements, sulfides, halides, sulfates, and selected carbonates and oxides that do not duplicate those in the Berman dataset, are still present in the default database (inorganic_cr.csv).
Helgeson et al. (1978) – 183 data for minerals and phase transitions (ø)
Kelley (1960) – 1 larnite Cp (ø)
Robie et al. (1978) – 4 dickite, fluorphlogopite, halloysite, and pyrope (ø)
Plummer and Busenberg (1982) – 2 aragonite and calcite (ø)
Helgeson (1985) – 1 ferrosilite and siderite (ø)
sprons92.dat – 24 Ca-bearing minerals; “Gibbs free energies and enthalpies were corrected to be consistent with updated values of Gibbs free energies of Ca2+ and CO32- (Shock and Helgeson, 1988) together with the solubilities of calcite and aragonite reported by Plummer and Busenberg (1982)” (ø)
slop98.dat – 1 daphnite; “Gf and Hf from Saccocia and Seyfried (1993) TMM” (*)
CHNOSZ – 54 GHS (Tr) of the phase that is stable at 298.15 K was combined with Htr and the Cp coefficients to calculate the metastable GHS (Tr) of the phases that are stable at higher temperatures.
Robie et al. (1978) – 2 rutile and titanite (ø)
Bowers and Helgeson (1983) – 1 rutile (ø)
sprons92.dat – 1 titanite: Bowers and Helgeson (1983) + “Gibbs free energies and enthalpies were corrected to be consistent with updated values of Gibbs free energies of Ca2+ and CO32- (Shock and Helgeson, 1988) together with the solubilities of calcite and aragonite reported by Plummer and Busenberg (1982)” (ø)
SLOP98
(28)These species, taken from the slop98 data file, were present in earlier versions of CHNOSZ but have been replaced by or are incompatible with later updates. The data are kept here for comparative purposes. Use add.obigt("SLOP98")
to load the data.
Shock and Helgeson (1988) – 1 H2AsO3- (ø)
Shock et al. (1989) – 1 aqueous SiO2 (ø)
Shock and Koretsky (1993) – 2 Au-acetate complexes (*)
Shock and Koretsky (1993) – 3 Al-acetate complexes (*)
Sverjensky et al. (1997) – 1 metal complexes (*)
Sverjensky et al. (1997) – 5 Au(HS)2- and Au-chloride complexes (*)
Everett L. Shock, Sassani, Willis, et al. (1997) – 2 Au+ and Au+3 (*)
Everett L. Shock, Sassani, Willis, et al. (1997) – 6 arsenate and arsenite species (*)
Everett L. Shock, Sassani, Willis, et al. (1997) – 5 aqueous Al species (*)
Prapaipong et al. (1999) – 2 Al(Mal)+ and Al(Oxal)+ (†)
3450 of 3450 entries in thermo$obigt
and 476 optional data entries are documented here.
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Akinfiev NN, Zotov AV. 2001. Thermodynamic description of chloride, hydrosulfide, and hydroxo complexes of Ag(I), Cu(I), and Au(I) at temperatures of 25-500∘C and pressures of 1-2000 bar. Geochemistry International 39(10): 990–1006. Available at http://www.maik.ru/cgi-perl/search.pl?type=abstract&name=geochem&number=10&year=1&page=990.
Akinfiev NN, Zotov AV. 2010. Thermodynamic description of aqueous species in the system Cu-Ag-Au-S-O-H at temperatures of 0-600A degrees C and pressures of 1-3000 bar. Geochemistry International 48(7): 714–720. doi: 10.1134/S0016702910070074
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Dick JM, Evans KA, Holman AI, Jaraula CMB, Grice K. 2013. Estimation and application of the thermodynamic properties of aqueous phenanthrene and isomers of methylphenanthrene at high temperature. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 122: 247–266. doi: 10.1016/j.gca.2013.08.020
Dick JM, LaRowe DE, Helgeson HC. 2006. Temperature, pressure, and electrochemical constraints on protein speciation: Group additivity calculation of the standard molal thermodynamic properties of ionized unfolded proteins. Biogeosciences 3(3): 311–336. doi: 10.5194/bg-3-311-2006
Evans BW. 1990. Phase relations of epidote-blueschists. Lithos 25(1): 3–23. doi: 10.1016/0024-4937(90)90003-J
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Goldberg RN, Kishore N, Lennen RM. 2002. Thermodynamic quantities for the ionization reactions of buffers. Journal of Physical and Chemical Reference Data 31(2): 231–370. doi: 10.1063/1.1416902
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Haas JR, Shock EL. 1999. Halocarbons in the environment: Estimates of thermodynamic properties for aqueous chloroethylene species and their stabilities in natural settings. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 63(19-20): 3429–3441. doi: 10.1016/S0016-7037(99)00276-8
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LaRowe DE, Helgeson HC. 2006a. Biomolecules in hydrothermal systems: Calculation of the standard molal thermodynamic properties of nucleic-acid bases, nucleosides, and nucleotides at elevated temperatures and pressures. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 70(18): 4680–4724. doi: 10.1016/j.gca.2006.04.010
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