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Diffusion in Gases, Liquids and Electrolytes

Nonelectrolyte Liquids and Liquid Mixtures - Part 1: Pure Liquids and Solute in Solvent Systems

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  • Standard reference book with selected and easily retrievable data from the fields of physics and chemistry collected by acknowledged international scientists Also available online on www.

Part of the book series: Landolt-Börnstein: Numerical Data and Functional Relationships in Science and Technology - New Series (LANDOLT 3, volume 15B1)

Part of the book sub series: Physical Chemistry (LANDOLT 4)

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Table of contents (1391 chapters)

  1. Front Matter

    Pages i-xlvii
  2. 1 Introduction

    • Jochen Winkelmann
    Pages 1-10
  3. 2 Measurement Methods

    • Jochen Winkelmann
    Pages 10-23
  4. Self-diffusion coefficient of aluminium

    • Jochen Winkelmann
    Pages 24-24
  5. Self-diffusion coefficient of argon

    • Jochen Winkelmann
    Pages 25-26
  6. Self-diffusion coefficient of methan-d-ol

    • Jochen Winkelmann
    Pages 37-37
  7. Self-diffusion coefficient of methan-d2-ol

    • Jochen Winkelmann
    Pages 38-38
  8. Self-diffusion coefficient of methan-d2-ol-d

    • Jochen Winkelmann
    Pages 39-39
  9. Self-diffusion coefficient of methan-d3-ol

    • Jochen Winkelmann
    Pages 40-40
  10. Self-diffusion coefficient of methanol-d4

    • Jochen Winkelmann
    Pages 41-41
  11. Self-diffusion coefficient of tribromo-methane

    • Jochen Winkelmann
    Pages 48-48

About this book

This volume contains data on diffusion in pure liquids and solute in solvent systems. Diffusion processes are widespread phenomena in nature, of which mass diffusion is the most important one, in particular in liquids. The corresponding diffusion coefficients strongly depend on concentration, temperature, pressure and density. Contrary to the measurement of viscosity or heat transfer, where a few well developed experimental methods exist, we find a wide spectrum of different methods for measuring mass diffusion coefficients ranging from NMR spectroscopy, scattering, holography, interferometry, chromatography, diffusion through diaphragm and in capillary systems, and electroanalytical methods.After an introduction about the selection and normalization of data, in its first part this volume presents the most important measurement methods, followed by a second part on diffusion coefficient data depending on the various parameters.

Authors, Editors and Affiliations

  • University of Osnabrück, Institute of Physical Chemistry, Osnabrück, Germany

    M. D. Lechner

  • Universität Halle-Wittenberg, Institut für Physikalische Chemie, Halle/S., Germany

    Jochen Winkelmann

Bibliographic Information

Buy it now

Buying options

Hardcover Book USD 549.99
Price excludes VAT (USA)
  • Durable hardcover edition
  • Dispatched in 3 to 5 business days
  • Free shipping worldwide - see info

Tax calculation will be finalised at checkout

Other ways to access