Abstract
DURING determinations of the solubility of azo-benzene, in which a photometric method of analysis was used, an apparent lack of reproducibility was traced to an increase both in the light absorption of standard solutions and in the concentration of saturated solutions, on exposure to light. The increases reached steady values after several days' exposure in a thermostat tank in a north-lit room. The increase of adsorption was shown to be nearly independent of light intensity, solvent and concentration, but was reached much more rapidly in bright sunlight—a few minutes sufficing for a M/2000 solution in a glass bottle. The phenomenon, persisting after repeated recrystallization of the azo-benzene, seemed consistent only with a reversible formation of a polymer or isomer, both forward and backward reactions being activated by light and the thermal reaction being very slow at ordinary temperatures.
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HARTLEY, G. The Cis-form of Azobenzene. Nature 140, 281 (1937). https://doi.org/10.1038/140281a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/140281a0
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