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Thermochemical data 1 inorganic compounds

References D. D. Wagman, et ah, The NBS Tables of Chemical Thermodynamic Properties, in J. Phys. Chem. Ref. Data, 11 2,1982 M. W. Chase, et ah, JANAF Thermochemical Tables, 3rd ed., American Chemical Society and the American Institute of Physics, 1986 (supplements to JANAF appear in J. Phys. Chem. Ref. Data) Thermodynamic Research Center, TRC Thermodynamic Tables, Texas A M University, College Station, Texas I. Barin and O. Knacke, Thermochemical Properties of Inorganic Substances, Springer-Verlag, Berlin, 1973 J. B. Pedley, R. D. Naylor, and S. P. Kirby, Thermochemical Data of Organic Compounds, 2nd ed.. Chapman and Hall, London, 1986 V. Majer and V. Svoboda, Enthalpies of Vaporization of Organic Compounds, International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry, Chemical Data Series No. 32, Blackwell, Oxford, 1985. [Pg.533]

NIST Chemistry WebBook (http //webbook.nist.gov/), contains thermochemical data for over 7000 organic and small inorganic compounds, reaction thermochemistry data, MS, IR, UV-Vis spectra, gas chromatography data, and more. [Pg.343]

This book contains a small database for organic and inorganic compounds. Its main value, however, is that it describes a group additivity scheme to estimate thermochemical data. An updated and extended list of group parameters is given in NIST Therm [28]. The first edition of this classic work is from 1968. [Pg.280]

Barin and Knacke (41) Thermochemical data for inorganic compounds. [Pg.635]

Robie and Waldbaum (43) Thermochemical data for minerals and inorganic compounds. [Pg.635]

Naumov, Ryzhenko and Khodakovsky (17) Thermochemical data for inorganic compounds Henry s constants dissociation constants ionic and neutral species in aqueous solution. [Pg.635]

Appendix 1 presents numerous reference tables containing most important data on the solubility of inorganic compounds in water, the density, dissociation constants, solubility products, ionization potentials of various atoms, etc., as well as thermochemical constants because many laws of inorganic chemistry cannot be explained without these quantities. [Pg.6]

NIST also maintains a website called the NIST Chemistry WebBook (http //webbook. nist.gov), which provides access to a broad array of data compiled under the Standard Reference Data Program. This site allows a search for thermochemical data for more than 7000 organic and small inorganic compounds, reaction thermochemistry data for over 8000 reactions, IR spectra for over 16,000 compounds, mass spectra for over 15,000 compounds, UV/VIS spectra for over 1600 compounds, electronic and vibrational spectra for over 5000 compounds, spectroscopic constants of over 600 diatomic molecules, ion energetics data for over 16,000 compounds, and thermophysical properties data for 74 selected fluids. The site allows general searches by formula, name, CAS registry number, author, and stracture and also a few specialized searches by properties like molar mass and vibrational energies. [Pg.704]

Thermochemical data for organic compounds are usually listed as heats of combustion, whereas thermochemical data for inorganic compounds are usually listed as heat of formation. [Pg.127]

Metallurgical, materials, ceramic and chemical engineers worldwide will welcome this new compilation of thermochemical data by Professor Barin. Here they will find the most comprehensive tables yet available for the thermodynamic properties of pure substances as a function of temperature at 100° intervals. Almost twenty-four hundred substances are included - the elements, and compounds of two, three, and four elements. The vast majority of substances are inorganic, but Dr. Barin has included a generous selection of the more common hydrocarbons, carbohydrates, and a few chlorinated hydrocarbons. The format of the tables conforms to that of the JANAF tables, and SI units are employed. [Pg.1893]

Chase, M. W. Jr. NIST-JANAF Thermochemical Tables (4th ed.) /. Phys. Chem. Ref. Data 1998, Monograph No. 9. This is one of the most widely used thermochemical databases for inorganic compounds. The 1st and 2nd editions oIJANAF (Joint Army, Navy and Air Force) Tables date from 1964 and 1971, respectively. Supplements of the latter were released in 1974, 1975, 1978, and 1982. The 3rd edition was published in 1985. [Pg.632]

The first place that one should generally look for thermochemical data is in the NIST Chemistry Web Book [24], available at http // webbook.nist.gov. This database contains thermochemical properties for more than 7000 small organic and inorganic compounds, and includes the entire contents of several other databases. Table 5 shows the enthalpies of formation and standard entropies of the species from the reaction mechanism in Table 4 that are available in the NIST WebBook. These properties were available for 10 of the 15 species. The source cited in the NIST WebBook for all these species was the NIST-JANAF Themochemical Tables [25], which have long been the first choice for finding thermochemical data for inorganic and very small organic... [Pg.199]

Thermochemical and Physical Properties is a database containing (crystal) structural, physical, and thermodynamic properties of 28000 pure compounds. Properties for 130(X) solid substances are tabulated transformation temperature, crystal structure, density, thermal conductivity and expansion, and elastic modulus. The liquid and gas database contains data on critical properties, density, viscosities, surface energies, and thermal conductivities. Vapor pressure and thermodynamic data for 10000 substances are mentioned. Furthermore 2000 solid and liquid solutions and 2000 inorganic phase diagrams are available. V... [Pg.321]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.6 ]




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