31 research outputs found
The Heat Capacity of Cyanogen Gas
We have determined the heat capacity of cyanogen gas using the adiabatic expansion method of Lummer and Pringsheim. Pure nitrogen was used as the standard comparison gas, its heat capacity being calculated from spectroscopic data. Two different samples of cyanogen were used, each of which was prepared from copper sulphate and potassium cyanide. Care was taken to free the gas from hydrogen cyanide, water, and carbon dioxide. In Table I the experimental molal heat capacities at constant pressure, obtained at three different temperatures, are given. The values of CP0 are those for the gas at infinite attenuation
The Vibrational Energy Levels and Specific Heat of Ethylene
In a recent review of the experimental infra-red and Raman spectra of ethylene and tetradeuteroethylene [1], Conn and Sutherland have succeeded in giving very reasonable estimates of the positions of the four fundamental lelvels associated with the "rocking frequencies" of the methylene groups in C2H4. They have at the same time revised the previous estimate of the position of the "torisional" lelvel [2] to 700 cm^-1, for reasons which are in our opinion inadequate, and with results which prove to be unsatisfactory. In particular, as they themselves remark, the calculated heat capacities then become too large. We wish to point out that a return to the Bonner assignment of this level not only yields a more reasonable explanation of the weak combination and harmonic lines in the Raman spectra, but also leads to a theoretical heat capacity which is in good agreement with the existing measured values [3] and with new experimental values recently obtained in these Laboratories