Volume 66, 1970

Submillimetre- and millimetre-wave absorptions of some polar and non-polar liquids measured by fourier transform spectroscopy

Abstract

An assessment of the Fourier transform spectrometer indicates the advantages to be gained from its application to be the millimetre-wave region (10 to 2 cm–1). The attainable resolving power is adequate for the study of broad absorptions such as occur in liquids below 100 cm–1. With a mercury arc source, appropriate beam dividers, and an indium antimonide detector at 1 K, continuous refraction (n) and absorption (α) spectra have been obtained below 50 cm–1(to 2 cm–1 in some cases) for some typical polar and non-polar liquids.

Results for water, aniline, 1,4-dioxan, cyclohexane, decahydronaphthalene, dimethyl acetylene (2-butyne) and 1-octyne are reported and considered in relation to earlier microwave dielectric data and far infra-red measurements. Water and aniline show strong, almost featureless, absorptions which are probably due to the superposition of three or four processes. The non-polar and weakly-polar liquids show much smaller absorptions : 1.4 dioxan has a profile consistent with a zero permanent electric dipole moment; 2-butyne and 1-octyne show α rising linearly with [small nu, Greek, tilde] over the range 5-50 cm–1. The origin of the absorption in non-polar liquids is different from the dominant mechanism in polar liquids although the peak values for both lie in the submillimetre-wave regions. The non-polar absorption peaks occur at frequencies which correlate with those calculated for molecular collisions in the liquids using the formulations of Mie and Bradley.

Article information

Article type
Paper

Trans. Faraday Soc., 1970,66, 273-292

Submillimetre- and millimetre-wave absorptions of some polar and non-polar liquids measured by fourier transform spectroscopy

M. Davies, G. W. F. Pardoe, J. Chamberlain and H. A. Gebbie, Trans. Faraday Soc., 1970, 66, 273 DOI: 10.1039/TF9706600273

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