DETAILED ISOMER-RESOLVED KINETIC STUDY OF LOW-TEMPERATURE AUTOIGNITION CHEMISTRY OF PROPANE
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Journal of Physical Chemistry A
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Proceedings of the Combustion Institute
Product formation in laser-photolytic Cl-initiated low-temperature (550-700 K) oxidation of isobutane in a slow-flow reactor was investigated by tunable synchrotron photoionization mass spectrometry. These experiments probed the time-resolved formation of products following photolytic initiation of the oxidation, and identify isomeric species by their photoionization spectra. The relative yields of oxygenated product isomers (2,2-dimethyloxirane, methylpropanal, and 3-methyloxetane) are in reasonable concord with measurements from Walker and co-workers (J. Chem. Soc. Faraday Trans. 74 (1) (1978) 2229-2251) at higher temperature. Oxidation of isotopically labeled isobutane, (CH3)3CD, suggests that methylpropanal formation can proceed from both (CH3)2CCH2OOH and CH 3CH(CH2)CH2OOH isomers. Bimodal time behavior is observed for product formation; the initial prompt formation reflects "formally direct" channels, principally chemical activation, and the longer-timescale "delayed" component arises from dissociation of thermalized ROO and QOOH radicals. The proportion of prompt to delayed signal is smaller for the oxygenated products than for the isobutene product. This channel-specific behavior can be qualitatively understood by considering the different energetic distributions of ROO and QOOH in formally direct vs. thermal channels and the fact that the transition states involved in the formation of oxygenated products are "tighter" than that for isobutene formation. © 2012 Published by Elsevier Inc. on behalf of The Combustion Institute.
Science
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Proposed for publication in Angewandte Chemie.
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Proposed for publication in Journal of Physical Chemistry A.
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Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics
The reaction of O(3P) with propene (C3H6) has been examined using tunable vacuum ultraviolet radiation and time-resolved multiplexed photoionization mass spectrometry at 4 Torr and 298 K. The temporal and isomeric resolution of these experiments allow the separation of primary from secondary reaction products and determination of branching ratios of 1.00, 0.91 ± 0.30, and 0.05 ± 0.04 for the primary product channels CH3 + CH2CHO, C2H5 + HCO, and H2 + CH3CHCO, respectively. The H + CH3CHCHO product channel was not observable for technical reasons in these experiments, so literature values for the branching fraction of this channel were used to convert the measured product branching ratios to branching fractions. The results of the present study, in combination with past experimental and theoretical studies of O(3P) + C3H6, identify important pathways leading to products on the C3H6O potential energy surface (PES). The present results suggest that up to 40% of the total product yield may require intersystem crossing from the initial triplet C3H6O PES to the lower-lying singlet PES. © the Owner Societies.
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Journal of Physical Chemistry A
Earlier synchrotron photoionization mass spectrometry experiments suggested a prominent ring-opening channel in the OH-initiated oxidation of cyclohexene, based on comparison of product photoionization spectra with calculated spectra of possible isomers. The present work re-examines the OH + cyclohexene reaction, measuring the isomeric products of OH-initiated oxidation of partially and fully deuterated cyclohexene. In particular, the directly measured photoionization spectrum of 2-cyclohexen-1-ol differs substantially from the previously calculated Franck-Condon envelope, and the product spectrum can be fit with no contribution from ring-opening. Measurements of H 2O 2 photolysis in the presence of C 6D 10 establish that the addition-elimination product incorporates the hydrogen atom from the hydroxyl radical reactant and loses a hydrogen (a D atom in this case) from the ring. Investigation of OH + cyclohexene-4,4,5,5-d 4 confirms this result and allows mass discrimination of different abstraction pathways. Products of 2-hydroxycyclohexyl-d 10 reaction with O 2 are observed upon adding a large excess of O 2 to the OH + C 6D 10 system. © 2012 American Chemical Society.
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Proposed for publication in Nature.
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Proposed for publication in Journal of the American Chemical Society.
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Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics
The branched C 5 alcohol isopentanol (3-methylbutan-1-ol) has shown promise as a potential biofuel both because of new advanced biochemical routes for its production and because of its combustion characteristics, in particular as a fuel for homogeneous-charge compression ignition (HCCI) or related strategies. In the present work, the fundamental autoignition chemistry of isopentanol is investigated by using the technique of pulsed-photolytic Cl-initiated oxidation and by analyzing the reacting mixture by time-resolved tunable synchrotron photoionization mass spectrometry in low-pressure (8 Torr) experiments in the 550-750 K temperature range. The mass-spectrometric experiments reveal a rich chemistry for the initial steps of isopentanol oxidation and give new insight into the low-temperature oxidation mechanism of medium-chain alcohols. Formation of isopentanal (3-methylbutanal) and unsaturated alcohols (including enols) associated with HO 2 production was observed. Cyclic ether channels are not observed, although such channels dominate OH formation in alkane oxidation. Rather, products are observed that correspond to formation of OH via β-C-C bond fission pathways of QOOH species derived from β- and γ-hydroxyisopentylperoxy (RO 2) radicals. In these pathways, internal hydrogen abstraction in the RO 2 QOOH isomerization reaction takes place from either the -OH group or the C-H bond in α-position to the -OH group. These pathways should be broadly characteristic for longer-chain alcohol oxidation. Isomer-resolved branching ratios are deduced, showing evolution of the main products from 550 to 750 K, which can be qualitatively explained by the dominance of RO 2 chemistry at lower temperature and hydroxyisopentyl decomposition at higher temperature. © 2012 The Owner Societies.
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Proposed for publication in Proceedings of the Combustion Institute.
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