Abstract

A recently developed Knudsen effusion apparatus was improved and used for measurements of vapour pressures of selected organic compounds. Calorimetric studies were conducted using a Calvet-type calorimeter, complementing the information obtained for the vapour pressures and facilitating the modelling and analysis of the data.Vapour pressures of benzoic acid, a reference substance, were determined at temperatures between 269K and 317K, corresponding to a pressure range from 2mPa to 1Pa, extending the range of results available in the literature to lower pressures. Benzanthrone was studied between temperatures 360K and 410K (5mPa–1Pa) in order to test the apparatus at higher temperatures.Values presented in the literature for the vapour pressure of solid n-octadecane, one of the most promising compounds to be used as “phase change material” for textile applications, were found inconsistent with the triple point of the substance. Sublimation pressures were measured for this compound between T=286K and 298K (2–20mPa) allowing the correction of the existing values. Finally, vapour pressures of diphenyl carbonate, a compound of high industrial relevance for its use in the production of polycarbonates, were determined from T=302K to 332K (0.02–1Pa).

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