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Measurement and Correlation of the Thermal Conductivity of Butane From 135 K to 600 K at Pressures to 70 MPa

Published

Author(s)

Richard A. Perkins, M L. Ramires, Carlos A. Nieto de Castro, L -. Cusco

Abstract

New experimental data on the thermal conductivity of butane are reported that allow improved correlations to be developed. Previous correlations have beenlimited by a lack of thermal conductivity data for the vapor and compressed liquid at temperatures below 300 K and near the critical point. In additionsignificant discrepancies were noted in the high-temperature dilute-gas thermal conductivity. These new experimental data covering a temperature rangefrom the triple point at 135.86 K to 600 K and a pressure range of 0. I to 70 MPa, are used together with the previously available data to develop improvedcorrelations for the thermal conductivity of butane. The quality of the new data is such that the thermal-conductivity correlation for butane is estimated to havean uncertainty of about 3 % at a 95 % confidence level, with the exception of state points near the critical point and the dilute gas, where the uncertainty of thecorrelation increases to 5%.
Citation
Journal of Chemical and Engineering Data
Volume
47
Issue
No. 5

Keywords

butane, correlation, critical enhancement, thermal conductivity, transport properties

Citation

Perkins, R. , Ramires, M. , Nieto, C. and Cusco, L. (2002), Measurement and Correlation of the Thermal Conductivity of Butane From 135 K to 600 K at Pressures to 70 MPa, Journal of Chemical and Engineering Data, [online], https://tsapps.nist.gov/publication/get_pdf.cfm?pub_id=831807 (Accessed April 30, 2024)
Created October 1, 2002, Updated February 17, 2017