Re: Specific Heat Capicity Higher than Water (old thread)

New line of ideas, beside ammonia and hudrojèn and clathrates: How about that one takes methane and squishes it with moderate fields (er, maybe pumped by a He laser*) to get a polar sandwich such as HF·H2CH2·FH or HLi2·H2CH2·Li2H, where Li2H is hòmòmèric to K2 Na. In other words, we'v hudromethonium difluoride or diperlithium hudromethonide.

*news:

-Aut

---------- Forwarded message ---------- From: Dax Haslam Date: 2000/09/17 Subject: Specific Heat Capicity Higher than Water To:

Anyone know of a liquid (easily obtained) that has a higher specific heat capacity than water

hopefully that won't combust as being heated

for a Chem 30 project

Reply to
Autymn D. C.
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