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1.
Sci Adv ; 9(46): eadj2832, 2023 Nov 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37976350

RESUMO

Organic aerosol (OA) is an air pollutant ubiquitous in urban atmospheres. Urban OA is usually apportioned into primary OA (POA), mostly emitted by mobile sources, and secondary OA (SOA), which forms in the atmosphere due to oxidation of gas-phase precursors from anthropogenic and biogenic sources. By performing coordinated measurements in the particle phase and the gas phase, we show that the alkylperoxy radical chemistry that is responsible for low-temperature ignition also leads to the formation of oxygenated POA (OxyPOA). OxyPOA is distinct from POA emitted during high-temperature ignition and is chemically similar to SOA. We present evidence for the prevalence of OxyPOA in emissions of a spark-ignition engine and a next-generation advanced compression-ignition engine, highlighting the importance of understanding OxyPOA for predicting urban air pollution patterns in current and future atmospheres.

2.
J Phys Chem A ; 127(32): 6816-6829, 2023 Aug 17.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37535464

RESUMO

Alkyl-substituted cyclic ethers are intermediates formed in abundance during the low-temperature oxidation of hydrocarbons and biofuels via a chain-propagating step with ȮH. Subsequent reactions of cyclic ether radicals involve a competition between ring opening and reaction with O2, the latter of which enables pathways mediated by hydroperoxy-substituted carbon-centered radicals (Q̇OOH). Due to the resultant implications of competing unimolecular and bimolecular reactions on overall populations of ȮH, detailed insight into the chemical kinetics of cyclic ethers remains critical to high-fidelity numerical modeling of combustion. Cl-initiated oxidation experiments were conducted on 2-methyloxetane (an intermediate of n-butane oxidation) using multiplexed photoionization mass spectrometry (MPIMS), in tandem with calculations of stationary point energies on potential energy surfaces for unimolecular reactions of 2-methyloxetanyl and 2-methyloxetanylperoxy isomers. The potential energy surfaces were computed using the KinBot algorithm with stationary points calculated at the CCSD(T)-F12/cc-pVDZ-F12 level of theory. The experiments were conducted at 6 Torr and two temperatures (650 K and 800 K) under pseudo-first-order conditions to facilitate R + O2 reactions. Photoionization spectra were measured from 8.5 eV to 11.0 eV in 50-meV steps, and relative yields were quantified for species consistent with R → products and Q̇OOH → products. Species detected in the MPIMS experiments are linked to specific radicals of 2-methyloxetane. Species from R → products include methyl, ethene, formaldehyde, propene, ketene, 1,3-butadiene, and acrolein. Ion signals consistent with products from alkyl radical oxidation were detected, including for Q̇OOH-mediated species, which are also low-lying channels on their respective potential energy surfaces. In addition to species common to alkyl oxidation pathways, ring-opening reactions of Q̇OOH radicals derived from 2-methyloxetane produced ketohydroperoxide species (performic acid and 2-hydroperoxyacetaldehyde), which may impart additional chain-branching potential, and dicarbonyl species (3-oxobutanal and 2-methylpropanedial), which often serve as proxies for modeling reaction rates of ketohydroperoxides. The experimental and computational results underscore that reactions of cyclic ethers are inherently more complex than currently prescribed in chemical kinetic models utilized for combustion.

3.
J Phys Chem A ; 127(17): 3743-3756, 2023 May 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37097841

RESUMO

Vacuum UV absorption spectroscopy is regularly used to provide unambiguous identification of a target species, insight into the electronic structure of molecules, and quantitative species concentrations. As molecules of interest have become more complex, theoretical spectra have been used in tandem with laboratory spectroscopic analysis or as a replacement when experimental data is unavailable. However, it is difficult to determine which theoretical methodologies can best simulate experiment. This study examined the performance of EOM-CCSD and 10 TD-DFT functionals (B3LYP, BH&HLYP, BMK, CAM-B3LYP, HSE, M06-2X, M11, PBE0, ωB97X-D, and X3LYP) to produce reliable vacuum UV absorption spectra for 19 small oxygenates and hydrocarbons using vertical excitation energies. The simulated spectra were analyzed against experiment using both a qualitative analysis and quantitative metrics, including cosine similarity, relative integral change, mean signed error, and mean absolute error. Based on our ranking system, it was determined that M06-2X was consistently the top performing TD-DFT method with BMK, CAM-B3LYP, and ωB97X-D also producing reliable spectra for these small combustion species.

4.
J Phys Chem A ; 127(11): 2591-2600, 2023 Mar 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36898134

RESUMO

Alkyl-substituted oxetanes are cyclic ethers formed via unimolecular reactions of QOOH radicals produced via a six-membered transition state in the preceding isomerization step of organic peroxy radicals, ROO. Owing to radical isomer-specific formation pathways, cyclic ethers are unambiguous proxies for inferring QOOH reaction rates. Therefore, accounting for subsequent oxidation of cyclic ethers is important in order to accurately determine rates for QOOH → products. Cyclic ethers can react via unimolecular reaction (ring-opening) or via bimolecular reaction with O2 to form cyclic ether-peroxy adducts. The computations herein provide reaction mechanisms and theoretical rate coefficients for the former type in order to determine competing pathways for the cyclic ether radicals. Rate coefficients of unimolecular reactions of 2,4-dimethyloxetanyl radicals were computed using master equation modeling from 0.01 to 100 atm and from 300 to 1000 K. Coupled-cluster methods were utilized for stationary-point energy calculations, and uncertainties in the computed rate coefficients were accounted for using variation in barrier heights and in well depths. The potential energy surfaces reveal accessible channels to several species via crossover reactions, such as 2-methyltetrahydrofuran-5-yl and pentanonyl isomers. For the range of temperature over which 2,4-dimethyloxetane forms during n-pentane oxidation, the following are the major channels: 2,4-dimethyloxetan-1-yl → acetaldehyde + allyl, 2,4-dimethyloxetan-2-yl → propene + acetyl, and 2,4-dimethyloxetan-3-yl → 3-butenal + methyl, or, 1-penten-3-yl-4-ol. Well-skipping reactions were significant in a number of channels and also exhibited a markedly different pressure dependence. The calculations show that rate coefficients for ring-opening are approximately an order of magnitude lower for the tertiary 2,4-dimethyloxetanyl radicals than for the primary and secondary 2,4-dimethyloxetanyl radicals. Unlike for reactions of the corresponding ROO radicals, however, unimolecular rate coefficients are independent of the stereochemistry. Moreover, rate coefficients of cyclic ether radical ring-opening are of the same order of magnitude as O2 addition, underscoring the point that a competing network of reactions is necessary to include for accurate chemical kinetics modeling of species profiles for cyclic ethers.

5.
Faraday Discuss ; 238(0): 295-319, 2022 Oct 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35833637

RESUMO

2,4,dimethyloxetane is an important cyclic ether intermediate that is produced from hydroperoxyalkyl (QOOH) radicals in the low-temperature combustion of n-pentane. However, the reaction mechanisms and rates of consumption pathways remain unclear. In the present work, the pressure- and temperature-dependent kinetics of seven cyclic ether peroxy radicals, which stem from 2,4,dimethyloxetane via H-abstraction and O2 addition, were determined. The automated kinetic workflow code, KinBot, was used to model the complexity of the chemistry in a stereochemically resolved manner and solve the resulting master equations from 300-1000 K and from 0.01-100 atm. The main conclusions from the calculations include (i) diastereomeric cyclic ether peroxy radicals show significantly different reactivities, (ii) the stereochemistry of the peroxy radical determines which QOOH isomerization steps are possible, (iii) conventional QOOH decomposition pathways, such as cyclic ether formation and HO2 elimination, compete with ring-opening reactions, which primarily produce OH radicals, the outcome of which is sensitive to stereochemistry. Ring-opening reactions lead to unique products, such as unsaturated, acyclic peroxy radicals, that form direct connections with species present in other chemical kinetics mechanisms through "cross-over" reactions that may complicate the interpretation of experimental results from combustion of n-pentane and, by extension, other alkanes. For example, one cross-over reaction involving 1-hydroperoxy-4-pentanone-2-yl produces 2-(hydroperoxymethyl)-3-butanone-1-yl, which is an iso-pentane-derived ketohydroperoxide (KHP). At atmospheric pressure, the rate of chemical reactions of all seven peroxy radicals compete with that of collisional stabilization, resulting in well-skipping reactions. However, at 100 atm, only one out of seven peroxy radicals undergoes significant well-skipping reactions. The rates produced from the master equation calculations provide the first foundation for the development of detailed sub-mechanisms for cyclic ether intermediates. In addition, analysis of the complex reaction mechanisms of 2,4-dimethyloxetane-derived peroxy radicals provides insights into the effects of stereoisomers on reaction pathways and product yields.

6.
J Phys Chem A ; 123(17): 3634-3646, 2019 May 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30865470

RESUMO

Photolytically initiated oxidation experiments were conducted on cyclohexane and tetrahydropyran using multiplexed photoionization mass spectrometry to assess the impact of the ether functional group in the latter species on reaction mechanisms relevant to autoignition. Pseudo-first-order conditions, with [O2]0:[R•]0 > 2000, were used to ensure that R• + O2 → products were the dominant reactions. Quasi-continuous, tunable vacuum ultraviolet light from a synchrotron was employed over the range 8.0-11.0 eV to measure photoionization spectra of the products at two pressures (10 and 1520 Torr) and three temperatures (500, 600, and 700 K). Photoionization spectra of ketohydroperoxides were measured in both species and were qualitatively identical, within the limit of experimental noise, to those of analogous species formed in n-butane oxidation. However, differences were noted in the temperature dependence of ketohydroperoxide formation between the two species. Whereas the yield from cyclohexane is evident up to 700 K, ketohydroperoxides in tetrahydropyran were not detected above 650 K. The difference indicates that reaction mechanisms change due to the ether group, likely affecting the requisite •QOOH + O2 addition step. Branching fractions of nine species from tetrahydropyran were quantified with the objective of determining the role of ring-opening reactions in diminishing ketohydroperoxide. The results indicate that products formed from unimolecular decomposition of R• and •QOOH radicals via concerted C-C and C-O ß-scission are pronounced in tetrahydropyran and are insignificant in cyclohexane oxidation. The main conclusion drawn is that, under the conditions herein, ring-opening pathways reduce the already low steady-state concentration of •QOOH, which in the case of tetrahydropyran prevents •QOOH + O2 reactions necessary for ketohydroperoxide formation. Carbon balance calculations reveal that products from ring opening of both R• and •QOOH, at 700 K, account for >70% at 10 Torr and >55% at 1520 Torr. Three pathways are confirmed to contribute to the depletion of •QOOH in tetrahydropyran including (i) γ-•QOOH → pentanedial + •OH, (ii) γ-•QOOH → vinyl formate + ethene + •OH, and (iii) γ-•QOOH → 3-butenal + formaldehyde + •OH. Analogous mechanisms in cyclohexane oxidation leading to similar intermediates are compared and, on the basis of mass spectral results, confirm that no such ring-opening reactions occur. The implication from the comparison to cyclohexane is that the ether group in tetrahydropyran increases the propensity for ring-opening reactions and inhibits the formation of ketohydroperoxide isomers that precede chain-branching. On the contrary, the absence of such reactions in cyclohexane enables ketohydroperoxide formation up to 700 K and perhaps higher temperature.

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