Abstract

In the present work the reversed-flow gas chromatographic technique was applied for the study of flux of gases across the air–water interface. The model system was vinyl chloride–water, which is of great significance in food and environmental chemistry. Using suitable mathematical analysis, equations were derived by means of which the following physicochemical quantities were calculated: diffusion coefficient of vinyl chloride (VC) into water, partition coefficient of VC between the water (at the interface and the bulk) and the carrier gas nitrogen, overall mass transfer coefficients of VC in the gas (nitrogen) and the liquid (water), gas and liquid film transfer coefficients of VC, gas and liquid phase resistances for the transfer of VC into the water, and finally the thickness of the stagnant film in the liquid phase, according to the two-film theory of Whitman. From the variation of the above parameters with temperature, as well as the volume and the free surface area of the water, useful conclusions concerning the mechanism for the transfer of VC into water were extracted. These are discussed in comparison with the same parameters calculated from empirical equations or determined experimentally by other techniques.

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