Following a personal message from pnacze199204, here's an attempted estimation of carbon's vapour pressure at room temperature.
From Wiki's
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vapor_pressures_of_the_elements_(data_page)
Press Temp Activation
100kPa 3908K
95663K
10kPa 3572K
95588K
1kPa 3289K
95781K
100Pa 3048K
95334K
10Pa 2839KMuch can go horribly wrong:
- Data is for graphite. But diamond is only 1.9kJ/mol away, or 0.8×298K. Less than one magnitude error, my least concern here. It could even be computed away.
- Huge extrapolations use to fail the big way.
- Wiki doesn't tell if the vapour is C1, C2, C3 or C4. This open question changes completely the activation energy.
What encourages me to go on:
- The activation energy isn't constant in Wiki's data, which could be experimental hence.
- The activation energy (793kJ at 10Pa-100Pa) resembles the vaporisation enthalpy Hv (717kJ/mol for C1 at RT according to the CRC Hdbk of Chem&Phys)
So let's imagine that C
1 evaporates at RT and that 95334K activation energy applies. For C
1 it can't be
very different from H
v anyway, but that difference makes magnitudes on the pressure. An improvement would take the experimental heat capacity of graphite or diamond, the theoretical heat capacity of C
1, and correct the heat of vaporisation over the temperature range - feel free to do it, I won't.
Then the extrapolated graphite vapour C
1 pressure at 298K is, tadaa,
10-124×10Pawhich is sub-nothing.
The rate of evaporation isn't measurable at 298K. Take 10
3J/mol mean kinetic energy perpendicular to a diamond surface, then 10
-2kg C have mean 10
3m/s and 10
-23kg×m/s momentum per vapour molecule, so 10
-124Pa suggest 10
-101 shocks×m
-2×s
-1. This model is knowingly wrong by 0 to 2 magnitudes.
Even if some means measures individual gaseous carbon atoms, it
won't see any single gas atom in years. But it would be a funny experiment at temperatures less cold, perhaps by ionisation and mass spectroscopy.
And if a diamond is 10
-3m=10
27 atoms×m
-2 thick, evaporation in all directions takes
10
127s =
10120yrI'm confident that a decent
cosmic ray rips one carbon atom off. That's hugely faster than 10
-101 atom×m
-2×s
-1 evaporation. Ozone and nitrogen oxides are faster too, as we see at rubber.