Isobaric Critical Exponents: Test of Analyticity against NIST Reference Data
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Finite systems may undergo first or second order phase transitions under not isovolumetric but isobaric condition. The `analyticity' of a finite-system partition function has been argued to imply universal values for isobaric critical exponents, $\alpha_{{\scriptscriptstyle{P}}}$, $\beta_{{\scriptscriptstyle{P}}}$ and $\gamma_{{\scriptscriptstyle{P}}}$. Here we test this prediction by analyzing NIST REFPROP data for twenty major molecules, including $\mathrm{H_{2}O, CO_{2}, O_{2}}$, etc. We report they are consistent with the prediction for temperature range, $10^{-5} <|T/T_{c}-1|<10^{-3}$. For each molecule, there appears to exist a characteristic natural number, $n=2,3,4,5,6$, which determines all the critical exponents for $T<T_{c}$ as $\alpha_{{\scriptscriptstyle{P}}}=\gamma_{{\scriptscriptstyle{P}}}=\frac{n}{n+1}$ and $\beta_{{\scriptscriptstyle{P}}}=\delta^{-1}=\frac{1}{n+1}$. For the opposite $T>T_{c}$, all the fluids seem to indicate the universal value of ${n=2}$.
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