Originally posted by moonbusHere's some data from Wikipedia: at 25 Celcius water has a viscosity of 0.8937 mPa·s, ethanol 1.074 mPa s at 25 °C, and isopropanol 1.96 mPa s. Wikipedia doesn't give the viscosity of liquid butane, but both my intuition and experience of shaking the lighter gas tin causes me to think it's lower than water. I think you're right about the reason for the lack of effect with isopropanol being viscosity related.
Perhaps isopropanol is not volatile enough to be measurable in this set up.
Originally posted by DeepThoughtThat is new for me, learn something new everyday, I say.
Here's some data from Wikipedia: at 25 Celcius water has a viscosity of 0.8937 mPa·s, ethanol 1.074 mPa s at 25 °C, and isopropanol 1.96 mPa s. Wikipedia doesn't give the viscosity of liquid butane, but both my intuition and experience of shaking the lighter gas tin causes me to think it's lower than water. I think you're right about the reason for the lack of effect with isopropanol being viscosity related.
Didn't know volatility and viscosity were related. Makes sense when you think about it though. I would imagine honey as not being terribly volatile🙂