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The effects of small quantities of hydrogen, deuterium and helium on vibrational relaxation of carbon dioxide
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 March 2006
Abstract
The vibrational relaxation frequency measurements were made on mixtures of carbon dioxide and the light gases using a shock tube and a Mach-Zehnder interferometer. The temperature range covered was 350–1200 °K. It was discovered that in the case of helium the effectiveness of the carbon dioxide-helium collision increases with increasing temperature while in the case of hydrogen and deuterium the collision number displays an anomalous temperature behaviour. At about 1000 °K all the three light gases are almost equally efficient in exciting the vibrational modes of carbon dioxide.
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- © 1969 Cambridge University Press
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