Dippr 801 ((exclusive)) -

The result is the , a critically evaluated collection of over 2,000 pure compounds, ranging from common solvents and hydrocarbons to specialty refrigerants and monomers. For each compound, the database provides temperature-dependent prediction equations for 36 distinct properties.

Imagine designing a heat exchanger for a new refrigerant. The heat transfer coefficient depends on liquid thermal conductivity and viscosity. Using a generic estimation method (like a group contribution model) might give errors of 10-20% in these properties. That error compounds into undersized or oversized equipment. dippr 801

DIPPR 801: The Gold Standard Database for Physical Properties in Process Engineering The result is the , a critically evaluated

With DIPPR 801, you have equations fitted to the best experimental data available—often with uncertainties under 1-2%. The result is a design that works the first time, saving millions in rework and downtime. The heat transfer coefficient depends on liquid thermal

For decades, engineers have sought a single, reliable source for these critical properties. Enter —the industry’s gold standard database for thermophysical properties of pure compounds. If you simulate a distillation column, size a pump, or design a reactor, chances are high that your work relies on DIPPR data.

DIPPR stands for the , a membership consortium within the American Institute of Chemical Engineers (AIChE). The "801" refers to the specific project number that began in 1980: a sponsored effort to compile, evaluate, and recommend the most reliable thermophysical properties for industrially important chemicals.