Abstract

Water solubilities, activity coefficients, and vapor pressures of some terpenes and terpenoids were determined from two sets of experiments. The first involved liquid−liquid contacting until saturation of an aqueous layer, which gave solubility and activity coefficient at infinite dilution γ∞. The second set involved stripping a solute from a nonsaturated aqueous solution by an air stream. This last experiment gave the product γ∞P° from which vapor pressure P° was deduced. Reliability of the results was established from predicted P° values, and data for 12 compounds are now available. Data obtained at 25 °C showed low solubilities (0.037−0.22 mmol/L) and high activity coefficients (105−106) for terpenes, whereas oxygenated monoterpenes exhibited solubilities 20 orders of magnitude higher, in the range of 2−20 mmol/L and 103−104 for activity coefficients. Vapor pressures ranged from 100 to 550 Pa for terpenes and from 1 to 130 Pa for terpenoids. Attempts to estimate water solubility showed that recent equa...

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call