siretb:
I believe we were responding to tipu144's use of Excel (and the built-in solver) for regressing the interaction parameters. Nobody will quarrel with use of a modern simulator to perform this calculation easily, provided of course you have access to it. Also, I cannot see how one can avoid the use of such simulators for serious work.
I believe that UNIQUAC, which was developed many years later than NRTL, also has a sounder theoretical basis (recall that both models were developed under the guidance of Professor Prausnitz at UC Berkeley). Also, UNIQUAC needs only two interaction parameters per binary, v/s three per binary for NRTL. This may seem unimportant, except that for a binary liquid-liquid system, it is theoretically impossible to estimate three interaction parameters for an activity coefficient model from LLE data alone. This issue alone is a huge theoretical disadvantage for NRTL compared to UNIQUAC.
Also, there is no evidence that supports any contention that UNIQUAC is not a "good model" or that NRTL is generally more accurate. NRTL is just simpler algebraically. Of course, in a given system, the accuracy of fitted parameters for one model over another is determined only statistically (least squares fit). For accurate data, differences in fitting accuracy are usually minor. Finally, it must be noted that UNIQUAC provides the theoretical framework for the widely used UNIFAC group contribution method.
In my own professional practice for over 25 years, I have done hundreds of side-by-side regression evaluations between UNIQUAC and NRTL for VLE, LLE, and VLLE systems and have never found any basis to support your preference. There is also the extensive DECHEMA compilation of regressed VLE and LLE parameters using van Laar, Wilson, NRTL, and UNIQUAC - for each of several thousand binary systems - that would illustrate this point. Besides, for LLE regression work with a binary system, one is forced to assume the third NRTL parameter, alpha, arbitrarily. To get around this difficulty, Tassios (at NJIT, circa 1980s) found that even a fixed value of -1 provides acceptable numerical results, although others have questioned the theoretical validity of a negative value for alpha.
Therefore, I would state that there is considerable support in the literature for asserting that UNIQUAC should be preferred over NRTL.
tipu144:
I believe you need to access the Aspen Plus Data Regression System (DRS) to find the desired interaction parameters by regression. Also, as noted in my post of 5 January, please use interaction parameters based solely on excess enthalpy of mixing data with great care for anything other than enthalpy calculations. For example, if your components are compounds for which the UNIFAC group contribution method applies, and you are also interested in VLE predictions, you will likely be much better off using infinite dilution activity coefficients (based on UNIFAC for VLE) than using interaction parameters based on excess enthalpy of mixing data. I assume, of course, that measured VLE data are not available; otherwise, you would do a simultaneous regression of VLE and excess enthalpy of mixing data and use a single set of interaction parameters.
(Besides, note that it is possible to use different models for VLE and excess enthalpy in a given simulation in Aspen Plus. In fact, it is possible even to use one set of UNIQUAC model parameters for VLE and another for enthalpy in a given simulation problem. This requires creating a new thermo SYSOP.)
Please keep us posted on your experiences, as this is a very interesting area even today.