A liquid jet of 90 ~tm diameter and variable length has been utilized to determine absorption rates and, hence, mass accommodation coefficients y, of atmospheric trace gases. The compounds investigated are HC1 (~,~>0.01), HNO 3 (y~>0.01), N205 (~,>~0.005), peroxyacetyl nitrate (y > 0.001), and HONO (~, >/0.005). It is concluded that the absorption of these trace gases by liquid atmospheric water is not significantly retarded by interfacial mass transport. The strengths and limitations of the liquid jet technique for measuring mass accommodation coefficients are explored.
Polymeric diisopropyltin sulfide (1), a new stable modification of such compounds made up of long planar chains (X‐ray structure analysis), is formed from iPr2SnCl2 and Na2S in DMF. Hitherto only puckered six‐ and planar four‐membered rings were known in this class of compounds.
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