RESUMEN
The chemical reaction network of low-temperature plasma-assisted oxidation of methane (CH4) and ethylene (C2H4) with nickel oxide (NiO) was investigated in a heated plasma reactor through time-dependent species measurements by electron-ionization molecular beam mass spectrometry (EI-MBMS). Methane (ethylene) oxidation by NiO was explored in temperature ranges from 300-700 °C (300-500 °C) and 300-800 °C (300-600 °C) for the plasma and nonplasma conditions. Significant enhancement of methane oxidation was observed with plasma between 400 and 500 °C, where no oxidation was observed under nonplasma conditions. For the oxidation of methane at higher temperatures, three different oxidation stages were observed: (I) a period of complete oxidation, (II) a period of incomplete CO oxidation, and (III) a period of carbon buildup. For the C2H4 experiments, and unlike the CH4 experiments, the plasma resulted in a significant amount of new intermediate oxygenated species, such as CH2O, CH3OH, C2H4O, and C2H6O. Carbon deposits were observed under both methane and ethylene conditions and verified by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS). ReaxFF (reactive force field) simulations were performed for the oxidation of CH4 and C2H4 in a nonplasma environment. The simulated intermediates and products largely agree with the species measured in the experiments, though the predicted intermediate oxygenated species such as CH2O and C2H6O were not observed in experiments under nonplasma conditions. A reaction pathway analysis for CH4 and C2H4 reacting with NiO was created based on the observed species from the MBMS spectra along with ReaxFF simulations.
RESUMEN
Rapid molecular-weight growth of hydrocarbons occurs in flames, in industrial synthesis, and potentially in cold astrochemical environments. A variety of high- and low-temperature chemical mechanisms have been proposed and confirmed, but more facile pathways may be needed to explain observations. We provide laboratory confirmation in a controlled pyrolysis environment of a recently proposed mechanism, radical-radical chain reactions of resonance-stabilized species. The recombination reaction of phenyl (c-C6 H5 ) and benzyl (c-C6 H5 CH2 ) radicals produces both diphenylmethane and diphenylmethyl radicals, the concentration of the latter increasing with rising temperature. A second phenyl addition to the product radical forms both triphenylmethane and triphenylmethyl radicals, confirming the propagation of radical-radical chain reactions under the experimental conditions of high temperature (1100-1600â K) and low pressure (ca. 3â kPa). Similar chain reactions may contribute to particle growth in flames, the interstellar medium, and industrial reactors.