Continue to Site

Eng-Tips is the largest engineering community on the Internet

Intelligent Work Forums for Engineering Professionals

  • Congratulations waross on being selected by the Eng-Tips community for having the most helpful posts in the forums last week. Way to Go!

Electrical Conductivity of Fluids

Status
Not open for further replies.

mcesm2

Chemical
Oct 23, 2003
5
Hello,

I am after the electrical conductivities of a number of reasonably common fluids. I've looked in a number of literature sources but these properties have been, so far, fairly elusive. Does anyone know of any literature sources that have any data on electrical conductivity?

The fluids I'm after are:

Toluene
Xylene
Butyl acetate
Ethyl methacrylate


Thanks,
Shaun
 
Replies continue below

Recommended for you

Perhaps the dielectric constants might be helpful. I have tables for selecting ultrasonic level instruments.

Toluene dielectric constant is 2.4
Xylene dielectric constant is 2.3
Butyl acetate dielectric constant is 5.1
Ethyl methacrylate dielectric constant is 5.7

The dielectric constand pertains to the ability to conduct alternating current. The dielectric constant of a vaccum is one. Distilled water is 34. The dielectric constants are published for specific temperatures.
 
JLSeagull,

Thanks for the response it is much appreciated. I have heard dielectric constants mentioned along these lines but could not find any data on the above fluids.

Regards,
Shaun.
 
I just looked in my old CRC handbook because we are ordering a level controller. Methane, ethane, propane all run in the 1.7 area.
 

Googling for static charge relaxation (aka decay) times I found the following values for conductivities in mho/cm at 25 Celsius:

Toluene: 5[×]10[sup]-14[/sup]
m-Xylene: 9[×]10[sup]-14[/sup]
Butyl acetate: 2[×]10[sup]-8[/sup]

I didn't find anything on ethyl methacrylate.

 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Part and Inventory Search

Sponsor