“…Such transfer processes form the basis of chemical separations involving gas-liquid chromatography, absorption of gases onto solid-phase microextraction absorbents, atmospheric transport and redistribution of volatile organic pollutants in the environment, and chemical purifications involving gas stripping methods. To date, we have developed Abraham model correlations for describing the logarithm of the gas-to-organic solvent partition coefficients, log K, [1][2][3][4][5][6][7] log K = c + e·E + s·S + a·A + b·B + l·L (1) of organic vapors and gases into more than 70 different organic solvents of varying polarity and Δ Solv H o = c + e·E + s·S + a·A + b·B + v·V (3) of organic vapors and gases into water [8], and into four alkanes (hexane [9], heptane [10], hexadecane [10] and cyclohexane [10]), into two aromatic hydrocarbons (benzene [10] and toluene [11]), into five alcohols (methanol [12], ethanol [12], 1-butanol [12], 1-octanol [8] and tert-butanol [13]), into three chloroalkanes (chloroform [14], carbon tetrachloride [11] and 1,2-dichloroethane [14]), and into seven other organic solvents (dibutyl ether [15], ethyl acetate [15], acetone [16], dimethyl sulfoxide [17], acetonitrile [16], propylene carbonate [17] and N,Ndimethylformamide [13] …”