Provides to scientific, engineering, and environmental professionals, and students, who seek information on how chemicals behave at different temperatures and under different conditions. This handbook helps obtain critical values for temperature and pressure for design or operation of compressors an[...]
Written by one of the most well-respected chemical engineers in the industry, this follow-up to his important work, "Yaws Handbook of Physical Properties for Hydrocarbons and Chemicals", covers the thermodynamic properties of hydrocarbons and chemicals. It also includes topics such as the heat capac[...]
Covers the properties of over 8,200 compounds. This book contains the properties of Antoine coefficients which are useful to calculate: Bubble point temperatures or pressures, Dew point temperatures or pressures, Vapour-liquid equilibrium, and other processes, for distillation columns, phase separat[...]
From a leading authority on chemical compounds in the chemical engineering field comes this new book that is essential for any chemist or chemical engineer's library. Yaws presents critical properties data on more than 7,800 organic and inorganic chemicals, and hydrocarbons.[...]
Features over 7,800 organic and inorganic chemicals, and hydrocarbons. Spanning gases, liquids and solids, this work covers various critical properties (including viscosity, thermal conductivity, and diffusion coefficient).[...]
Part of a four-volume series of titles on vapour pressure, this third book looks at organic compounds C8 to C28. It covers 363 compounds, including - benzoic acid, terephthalic acid, styrene, acetophenone, xylenes, glycols, octanol, quinoline, naphthalene, cymenes, camphene, stearic acid and more.[...]
This is the fourth in a series which provides engineers with liquid and gas viscosities for major organic compounds, including hydrocarbones, oxygenates, halogenates and nitrogenates. The data are presented in graphs to enable engineers to determine values quickly at the temperatures of interest.[...]
This volume includes inorganic compounds and other elements, in addition to organic compounds covered in the first three volumes of the series. The data are presented in graphs for thermal conductivity and viscosity as functions of temperature for quick reference.[...]