1996
DOI: 10.1021/je950266z
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Density, Viscosity, and Surface Tension of Liquid Quinoline, Naphthalene, Biphenyl, Decafluorobiphenyl, and 1,2-Diphenylbenzene from 300 to 400 °C

Abstract: The liquid density, liquid viscosity, and surface tension of quinoline, naphthalene, biphenyl, decafluorobiphenyl, and 1,2-diphenylbenzene were measured at saturation between 300 and 400°C. The results were fit to temperature-dependent correlations. The critical temperature of decafluorobiphenyl was also determined.

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Cited by 31 publications
(11 citation statements)
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References 8 publications
(11 reference statements)
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“…Interpolation of experimental data 60 suggests a viscosity of 0.92 cP at 358.15 K. Our simulation estimates show remarkable agreement: lower by 1% −3%. Analogous interpolation of other experimental data 59 suggests a viscosity of 0.62 cP at 400 K; our simulation estimates are lower by 6% −10%. Extrapolation suggests an experimental viscosity at 458.15 K of 0.36 cP; the simulation prediction is about 11% smaller.…”
Section: Relaxation Time Diffusion and Viscosity For Naphthalenesupporting
confidence: 86%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Interpolation of experimental data 60 suggests a viscosity of 0.92 cP at 358.15 K. Our simulation estimates show remarkable agreement: lower by 1% −3%. Analogous interpolation of other experimental data 59 suggests a viscosity of 0.62 cP at 400 K; our simulation estimates are lower by 6% −10%. Extrapolation suggests an experimental viscosity at 458.15 K of 0.36 cP; the simulation prediction is about 11% smaller.…”
Section: Relaxation Time Diffusion and Viscosity For Naphthalenesupporting
confidence: 86%
“…7. Experimental data [58][59][60][61] have two selfconsistent Arrhenius-like temperature dependences. Differences between simulation results from the Green-Kubo and Einstein methods are shown as error bars.…”
Section: Relaxation Time Diffusion and Viscosity For Naphthalenementioning
confidence: 99%
“…A ≈ 6/( a ρ), where a is grain size and ρ is the crystal density. Taking γ = 0.050 N/m, , a = 500 nm, and ρ = 1.2 g/cm 3 , we obtain Δ G ex = 0.5 J/g. )…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 91%
“…Gryzll and co-workers (Gryzll, 1991;Grzyll, Back, Ramos, and Samad, 1994;Grzyll, Back, Ramos, and Samad, 1995) conducted life tests on a series of organic fluids. In addition, they measured the density, viscosity, and surface tension of some of the potential working fluids (Grzyll, Ramos, and Back, 1996). Gryzyll (1991) conducted short term (~50 hour) corrosion tests with water and diphenyl and the following coupons: 316 SS, 6061-T6 Al, Monel 400, Nickel 200, and titanium.…”
Section: Organic Fluidsmentioning
confidence: 99%