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Abstract(s)
We review the experimental evidence, from both historic and modern literature of
thermodynamic properties, for the non-existence of a critical-point singularity on Gibbs density
surface, for the existence of a critical density hiatus line between 2-phase coexistence, for a supercritical
mesophase with the colloidal characteristics of a one-component 2-state phase, and for the percolation
loci that bound the existence of gaseous and liquid states. An absence of any critical-point singularity
is supported by an overwhelming body of experimental evidence dating back to the original
pressure-volume-temperature (p-V-T) equation-of-state measurements of CO2 by Andrews in 1863,
and extending to the present NIST-2019 Thermo-physical Properties data bank of more than 200
fluids. Historic heat capacity measurements in the 1960s that gave rise to the concept of “universality”
are revisited. The only experimental evidence cited by the original protagonists of the van der
Waals hypothesis, and universality theorists, is a misinterpretation of the isochoric heat capacity
Cv. We conclude that the body of extensive scientific experimental evidence has never supported
the Andrews–van der Waals theory of continuity of liquid and gas, or the existence of a singular
critical point with universal scaling properties. All available thermodynamic experimental data,
including modern computer experiments, are compatible with a critical divide at Tc, defined by
the intersection of two percolation loci at gaseous and liquid phase bounds, and the existence of a
colloid-like supercritical mesophase comprising both gaseous and liquid states.
Description
Keywords
Gas-liquid Supercritical fluid Critical point Supercriticalmesophase Universality hypothesis
Citation
Publisher
MDPI