A large number of data points for the vibrational relaxation time (pτv in atm sec) of simple systems have been logarithmically plotted vs (T°K)—⅓. It appears that each system is well represented by a straight line, and that most of these straight lines when extended to higher temperatures intersect near the point [pτv=10—8 atm sec, (T°K)—⅓=0.03]. Systems with a small reduced mass μ are exceptions to such a simple convergence, and in an improved scheme, the location of the convergence point is dependent on the reduced mass. Such a presentation has lead to an empirical equation correlating available measurements of vibrational relaxation times: log10(pτv)=(5.0×10−4)μ12θ43[T−13−0.015μ14]−8.00, where θ is the characteristic temperature of the oscillator in K deg. This equation reproduces the measured times within 50% for systems as diverse as N2, I2, and O2–H2. In the worst case thus far, O2–Ar near 1000°K, it is off by a factor of 5.
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