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Ahmadreza Rahbari

Researcher at Delft University of Technology

Publications -  19
Citations -  344

Ahmadreza Rahbari is an academic researcher from Delft University of Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Monte Carlo method & Chemistry. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 16 publications receiving 213 citations. Previous affiliations of Ahmadreza Rahbari include United States Department of Energy.

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Combined Steam Reforming of Methane and Formic Acid To Produce Syngas with an Adjustable H2:CO Ratio

TL;DR: The results show that cofeeding formic acid into the SRM process can adjust the H2:CO molar ratio in a single step, and can potentially be an alternative to the WGS process.
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Solubility of water in hydrogen at high pressures : A molecular simulation study

TL;DR: In this article, the phase coexistence of H2O-H2 mixtures with high pressure was studied using force-field-based molecular simulation and thermodynamic modeling, and it was shown that the solubility of water in compressed hydrogen is adequately predicted using force field-based simulations.
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Computation of partial molar properties using continuous fractional component Monte Carlo

TL;DR: In this paper, an alternative method for calculating partial molar excess enthalpies in Monte Carlo (MC) simulations was proposed. But this method combines the original idea of...
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Efficient Application of Continuous Fractional Component Monte Carlo in the Reaction Ensemble.

TL;DR: A new formulation of the Reaction Ensemble Monte Carlo technique (RxMC) combined with the Continuous Fractional Component Monte Carlo method is presented, denoted by serial Rx/CFC, which has the following advantages compared to other approaches.
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Recent advances in the continuous fractional component Monte Carlo methodology

TL;DR: The main features of the CFCMC method are increased molecule exchange efficiency between different phases in single and multicomponent (reactive) systems, which improves the efficiency and accuracy of phase equilibria simulations at high densities.