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1.
J Phys Chem A ; 127(4): 1036-1045, 2023 Feb 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36683280

RESUMO

Methyl formate (MF) is the smallest carboxylic ester and currently considered a promising alternative fuel. It can also serve as a model compound to study the combustion chemistry of the ester group, which is a typical structural feature in many biodiesel components. In the present work, the pyrolysis of MF was investigated behind reflected shock waves at temperatures between 1430 and 2070 K at a nominal pressure of 1.1 bar. Both time-resolved hydrogen atom resonance absorption spectroscopy (H-ARAS) and time-resolved time-of-flight mass spectrometry (TOF-MS) were used for species detection. Additionally, the reaction of MF and perdeuterated MF-d4 with H atoms was investigated at temperatures between 1000 and 1300 K at nominal pressures of 0.4 and 1.1 bar with H-ARAS. In the latter experiments, ethyl iodide served as precursor for H atoms. Rate coefficients of seven parallel unimolecular decomposition channels of MF and five parallel reaction channels of the MF + H reaction were calculated from statistical rate theory on the basis of molecular and transition state data from quantum chemical calculations. These calculated rate coefficients were implemented into an MF pyrolysis/oxidation mechanism from the literature, and the experimental concentration-time profiles of H (from ARAS) as well as MF, CH3OH, HCHO, and CO (from TOF-MS) were modeled. It turned out that the literature mechanism, which was originally validated against flow-reactor experiments, ignition delay times, and laminar burning velocities, was generally able to fit also the concentration-time profiles from the shock tube experiments reasonably well. The agreement could still be improved by substituting the original rate coefficients, which were estimated from structure-reactivity relationships, by the values calculated from statistical rate theory in the present work. Details of the channel branching are discussed, and the updated mechanism is given, also in machine-readable form.

2.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 22(10): 5523-5530, 2020 Mar 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32104877

RESUMO

Oxymethylene ethers are often considered as promising fuel additives to reduce the emissions of soot and NOx from diesel engines. Dimethoxymethane (DMM) is the smallest member of this class of compounds and therefore particularly suitable to study the reactivity of the characteristic methylenedioxy group (O-CH2-O). In this context, we investigated the pyrolysis of DMM behind reflected shock waves at temperatures between 1100 and 1600 K and nominal pressures of 0.4 and 4.7 bar by monitoring the formation of H atoms with time-resolved atom resonance absorption spectroscopy. Rate coefficients for the C-O bond fission reactions of DMM were inferred from the recorded [H](t) profiles, and a pronounced temperature and pressure dependence of the rate coefficients was found. To rationalize this finding, we characterized the relevant parts of the potential energy surface of DMM by performing quantum chemical calculations at the CCSD(F12*)(T*)/cc-pVQZ-F12//B2PLYP-D3/def2-TZVPP level of theory. On the basis of the results, a two-channel master equation accounting for the two different C-O bond-fission reactions of DMM was set up and solved. Specific rate coefficients were calculated from the simplified Statistical Adiabatic Channel Model. The branching between the two reaction channels was modeled, and the CH3OCH2O + CH3 product channel was found to be clearly dominating. A Troe parameterization for the pressure dependence of this channel was derived. To enable implementation of both channels into kinetic mechanisms for combustion modeling, 'log p' parameterizations of the rate coefficients for both reaction channels are also given and were implemented into a literature mechanism for DMM oxidation. With this slightly modified mechanism, the results of our experiments could be adequately modeled. The role of competing molecular (i.e. nonradical) decomposition channels of DMM was also quantum-chemically checked, but no indications for such channels could be found.

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