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Henry's Law Constants

www.henrys-law.org

Rolf Sander

Atmospheric Chemistry Division

Max-Planck Institute for Chemistry
Mainz, Germany


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Henry's Law Constants

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When referring to the compilation of Henry's Law Constants, please cite this publication:

R. Sander: Compilation of Henry's law constants (version 5.0.0) for water as solvent, Atmos. Chem. Phys., 23, 10901-12440 (2023), doi:10.5194/acp-23-10901-2023

The publication from 2023 replaces that from 2015, which is now obsolete. Please do not cite the old paper anymore.


Henry's Law ConstantsOrganic species with chlorine (Cl)Oxygenated chlorocarbons (C, H, O, Cl) → 2,4,6-trichlorophenol

FORMULA:C6H3Cl3O
CAS RN:88-06-2
STRUCTURE
(FROM NIST):
InChIKey:LINPIYWFGCPVIE-UHFFFAOYSA-N

Hscp d ln Hs cp / d (1/T) References Type Notes
[mol/(m3Pa)] [K]
1.9×101 Chao et al. (2017) M
2.0 Yoshida et al. (1987) M 12) 732)
3.8 Duchowicz et al. (2020) V 187)
3.8 HSDB (2015) V
1.8 Mackay et al. (2006c) V
1.6×102 Lide and Frederikse (1995) V
1.8 Mackay et al. (1995) V
7.6 Leuenberger et al. (1985) V 418)
1.4 5000 Goldstein (1982) X 299)
1.6×101 Howard (1989) X 420)
2.4 Ryan et al. (1988) C
2.5 Duchowicz et al. (2020) Q
4.3×101 Zhang et al. (2010) Q 288) 289)
2.8×10−2 Zhang et al. (2010) Q 288) 290)
8.8×10−1 Zhang et al. (2010) Q 288) 291)
9.7×10−1 Zhang et al. (2010) Q 288) 292)
2.2 Hilal et al. (2008) Q
3.3 Modarresi et al. (2007) Q 68)
6400 Kühne et al. (2005) Q
3.8 Yaffe et al. (2003) Q 249) 250)
1.8×101 Katritzky et al. (1998) Q
6500 Kühne et al. (2005) ?

Data

The first column contains Henry's law solubility constant Hscp at the reference temperature of 298.15 K.
The second column contains the temperature dependence d ln Hs cp / d (1/T), also at the reference temperature.

References

  • Chao, H.-P., Lee, J.-F., & Chiou, C. T.: Determination of the Henry’s law constants of low-volatility compounds via the measured air-phase transfer coefficients, Wat. Res., 120, 238–244, doi:10.1016/J.WATRES.2017.04.074 (2017).
  • Duchowicz, P. R., Aranda, J. F., Bacelo, D. E., & Fioressi, S. E.: QSPR study of the Henry’s law constant for heterogeneous compounds, Chem. Eng. Res. Des., 154, 115–121, doi:10.1016/J.CHERD.2019.12.009 (2020).
  • Goldstein, D. J.: Air and steam stripping of toxic pollutants, Appendix 3: Henry’s law constants, Tech. Rep. EPA-68-03-002, Industrial Environmental Research Laboratory, Cincinnati, OH, USA (1982).
  • Hilal, S. H., Ayyampalayam, S. N., & Carreira, L. A.: Air-liquid partition coefficient for a diverse set of organic compounds: Henry’s law constant in water and hexadecane, Environ. Sci. Technol., 42, 9231–9236, doi:10.1021/ES8005783 (2008).
  • Howard, P. H.: Handbook of Environmental fate and exposure data for organic chemicals. Vol. I: Large production and priority pollutants, Lewis Publishers Inc. Chelsea, Michigan, ISBN 0873711513 (1989).
  • HSDB: Hazardous Substances Data Bank, TOXicology data NETwork (TOXNET), National Library of Medicine (US), URL https://www.nlm.nih.gov/toxnet/Accessing_HSDB_Content_from_PubChem.html (2015).
  • Katritzky, A. R., Wang, Y., Sild, S., Tamm, T., & Karelson, M.: QSPR studies on vapor pressure, aqueous solubility, and the prediction of water-air partition coefficients, J. Chem. Inf. Comput. Sci., 38, 720–725, doi:10.1021/CI980022T (1998).
  • Kühne, R., Ebert, R.-U., & Schüürmann, G.: Prediction of the temperature dependency of Henry’s law constant from chemical structure, Environ. Sci. Technol., 39, 6705–6711, doi:10.1021/ES050527H (2005).
  • Leuenberger, C., Ligocki, M. P., & Pankow, J. F.: Trace organic compounds in rain: 4. Identities, concentrations, and scavenging mechanisms for phenols in urban air and rain, Environ. Sci. Technol., 19, 1053–1058, doi:10.1021/ES00141A005 (1985).
  • Lide, D. R. & Frederikse, H. P. R.: CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics, 76th Edition, CRC Press, Inc., Boca Raton, FL, ISBN 0849304768 (1995).
  • Mackay, D., Shiu, W. Y., & Ma, K. C.: Illustrated Handbook of Physical-Chemical Properties and Environmental Fate for Organic Chemicals, vol. IV of Oxygen, Nitrogen, and Sulfur Containing Compounds, Lewis Publishers, Boca Raton, ISBN 1566700353 (1995).
  • Mackay, D., Shiu, W. Y., Ma, K. C., & Lee, S. C.: Handbook of Physical-Chemical Properties and Environmental Fate for Organic Chemicals, vol. III of Oxygen Containing Compounds, CRC/Taylor & Francis Group, doi:10.1201/9781420044393 (2006c).
  • Modarresi, H., Modarress, H., & Dearden, J. C.: QSPR model of Henry’s law constant for a diverse set of organic chemicals based on genetic algorithm-radial basis function network approach, Chemosphere, 66, 2067–2076, doi:10.1016/J.CHEMOSPHERE.2006.09.049 (2007).
  • Ryan, J. A., Bell, R. M., Davidson, J. M., & O’Connor, G. A.: Plant uptake of non-ionic organic chemicals from soils, Chemosphere, 17, 2299–2323, doi:10.1016/0045-6535(88)90142-7 (1988).
  • Yaffe, D., Cohen, Y., Espinosa, G., Arenas, A., & Giralt, F.: A fuzzy ARTMAP-based quantitative structure-property relationship (QSPR) for the Henry’s law constant of organic compounds, J. Chem. Inf. Comput. Sci., 43, 85–112, doi:10.1021/CI025561J (2003).
  • Yoshida, K., Shigeoka, T., & Yamauchi, F.: Evaluation of aquatic environmental fate of 2,4,6-trichlorophenol with a mathematical model, Chemosphere, 16, 2531–2544, doi:10.1016/0045-6535(87)90311-0 (1987).
  • Zhang, X., Brown, T. N., Wania, F., Heimstad, E. S., & Goss, K.-U.: Assessment of chemical screening outcomes based on different partitioning property estimation methods, Environ. Int., 36, 514–520, doi:10.1016/J.ENVINT.2010.03.010 (2010).

Type

Table entries are sorted according to reliability of the data, listing the most reliable type first: L) literature review, M) measured, V) VP/AS = vapor pressure/aqueous solubility, R) recalculation, T) thermodynamical calculation, X) original paper not available, C) citation, Q) QSPR, E) estimate, ?) unknown, W) wrong. See Section 3.1 of Sander (2023) for further details.

Notes

12) Value at T = 293 K.
68) Modarresi et al. (2007) use different descriptors for their calculations. They conclude that a genetic algorithm/radial basis function network (GA/RBFN) is the best QSPR model. Only these results are shown here.
187) Estimation based on the quotient between vapor pressure and water solubility, extracted from HENRYWIN.
249) Yaffe et al. (2003) present QSPR results calculated with the fuzzy ARTMAP (FAM) and with the back-propagation (BK-Pr) method. They conclude that FAM is better. Only the FAM results are shown here.
250) Value from the training set.
288) Data taken from the supplement.
289) Calculated using the EPI Suite (v4.0) method.
290) Calculated using the SPARC (v4.2) method.
291) Calculated using the COSMOtherm (v2.1) method.
292) Calculated using the ABSOLV (ADMEBoxes v4.1) method.
299) Value given here as quoted by Staudinger and Roberts (1996).
418) Value at T = 281 K.
420) Value given here as quoted by Shiu et al. (1994).
732) Value at pH = 4.

The numbers of the notes are the same as in Sander (2023). References cited in the notes can be found here.

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