Asymptotic line wing theory allows one to construct the line shape describing the frequency and temperature dependence of the self-broadened H2O continuum in the 3–5 μm spectral region obtained experimentally by CAVIAR and NIST. The H2O transmission functions are adequately described as well, using this line shape up to temperatures of ∼675 K and pressures of ∼10 atm.
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About 200 pure water-vapor spectra covering the region from 800 to 3500 cm−1 were recorded with resolution of 0.1 cm−1 at temperatures 311, 318, 325, 339, 352, and 363 K using a 2 m base White cell coupled to the BOMEM DA3.002 FTIR spectrometer. The water-vapor pressure varied from 28 to 151 mbar (21–113 Torr). Under these conditions, the continuum absorbance is quite measurable with the available path lengths up to 116 m. A program was developed for spectral processing that calculates, fits, and removes ro-vibrational structure from the spectrum. The spectra obtained were used to retrieve averaged and smoothed binary absorption coefficients over the region from 800 to 1250 cm−1. Our continuum data extrapolated to room temperature are in reasonable agreement with the MT_CKD continuum model. But at higher temperatures the MT_CKD model provides very low values, which are up to 50% less than those experimentally measured.