Abstract

In light of the available experimental data and of our current understanding of liquid–vapor critical phenomena, we examine the values of the parachors and of the parachor exponent, which are commonly used to estimate surface tension from the density difference between coexisting liquid and vapor phases. This is a controversial issue, as values for the parachor exponent ranging from 3.5 to 4 have been proposed in the literature. The parachor exponent and parachors can be viewed as a critical exponent and critical amplitudes, respectively. The Ising value, equal to 3.88, should be observed for the exponent “close enough” to the liquid/vapor critical point, i.e., for “low enough” tensions and densities. However, a review of experimental data for several fluids suggests an effective value in the range of 3.6, in line with the effective values observed for the exponents that describe the vanishing of the density difference and capillary length with the distance to the critical temperature. In fact, the asymptotic Ising regime is not reached experimentally, as confirmed by an estimation of the parachors very near the critical point. Those (Ising) parachors can be inferred from other critical amplitudes corresponding to bulk properties by using two-scale factor universality. Their values exceed those deduced from off-critical tension and density data by more than 10%, corresponding to surface tension differences larger than 50%. We argue that effective parachors (i.e., corresponding to an exponent in the range of 3.6) can be utilized in combination with two-scale-factor universality for determining the critical behavior of fluid systems in an extended range around their liquid/vapor critical point.

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