Gas densities and optical properties

For an ideal gas, properties such as density and refractive index scale as p/T. This approximation is valid if atomic spacing is large compared with atomic size and the gas temperature is far above its boiling point.
This may not be the case, for example, for CO2 or acetylene at room temperature.
Tables of gas properties must be used with caution, since they vary in reference temperature and pressure: In these pages, we follow the early density-effect papers of Sternheimer, Barger, and Seltzer, who tabulate the gas density at NTP, (20°, 1 atm). Note that the Handbook of Chemistry and Physics reference conditions are 25°, 1 atm.

Many of the indices of refraction were taken from the now-defunct www.kayelaby.npl.co.uk/general_physics/2_5/2_5_7.html where they were given for dry gases at 0° and 1 atm, evaluated at the mean of the Na D doublet, 589.3 nm.

The refractive index and dispersion for some gases and solids over a range of wavelengths can be found at refractiveindex.info

Tables of n and k for a wide variety of solids can be found at filmetrics.com

A calculator for the index of air can be found at emtoolbox.nist.gov/Wavelength/Documentation.asp, where the wavelength, temperature, pressure, humidity, and CO2 content can also be varied.

Revised 06 September 2021