Ultrasonic Determination of Rotational Collision Numbers and Vibrational Relaxation Times of Polyatomic Gases at High Temperatures
- 15 October 1967
- journal article
- Published by AIP Publishing in The Journal of Chemical Physics
- Vol. 47 (8), 2829-2835
- https://doi.org/10.1063/1.1712305
Abstract
An ultrasonic method has been used in experimentally determining the rotational collision numbers, and vibrational relaxation times of polyatomic gases at high temperatures. An ultrasonic (∼1–3 MHz) pulse method has been used to measure both sound velocity and sound absorption in nitrogen, oxygen, and carbon dioxide in the temperature range of 300°—1300°K. All of the measurements were obtained at a pressure of one atmosphere. Vibrational relaxation times of carbon dioxide have been determined from the sound absorption measurements from 300° to 1300°K. Rotational collision numbers have been obtained as a function of temperature in oxygen and nitrogen and are in reasonable agreement with the theoretical values given by Parker. This agreement has established that the transport properties of nondissociated diatomic molecules (homonuclear) can also be determined from ultrasonic measurements.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Ultrasonic Determination of Transport Properties of Monatomic Gases at High TemperaturesThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1967
- Rotational Relaxation of Homonuclear Diatomic MoleculesThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1967
- Thermal Transpiration. Rotational Relaxation Numbers for Nitrogen and Carbon DioxideThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1966
- Heat Conductivity of Polyatomic and Polar Gases and Gas MixturesThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1965
- Small Periodic Disturbances in Polyatomic GasesPhysics of Fluids, 1964
- Combined viscothermal and thermal relaxation in polyatomic gasesTransactions of the Faraday Society, 1964
- Formal Kinetic Theory of Transport Phenomena in Polyatomic Gas MixturesThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1963
- Heat Conductivity of Polyatomic and Polar GasesThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1962
- Rotational and Vibrational Relaxation in Diatomic GasesPhysics of Fluids, 1959