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Unconventional peroxy chemistry in alcohol oxidation: The water elimination pathway

Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters

Welz, Oliver W.; Klippenstein, Stephen J.; Harding, Lawrence B.; Taatjes, Craig A.; Zador, Judit

Predictive simulation for designing efficient engines requires detailed modeling of combustion chemistry, for which the possibility of unknown pathways is a continual concern. Here, we characterize a low-lying water elimination pathway from key hydroperoxyalkyl (QOOH) radicals derived from alcohols. The corresponding saddle-point structure involves the interaction of radical and zwitterionic electronic states. This interaction presents extreme difficulties for electronic structure characterizations, but we demonstrate that these properties of this saddle point can be well captured by M06-2X and CCSD(T) methods. Experimental evidence for the existence and relevance of this pathway is shown in recently reported data on the low-temperature oxidation of isopentanol and isobutanol. In these systems, water elimination is a major pathway, and is likely ubiquitous in low-temperature alcohol oxidation. These findings will substantially alter current alcohol oxidation mechanisms. Moreover, the methods described will be useful for the more general phenomenon of interacting radical and zwitterionic states. © 2013 American Chemical Society.

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Unimolecular dissociation of hydroxypropyl and propoxy radicals

Proceedings of the Combustion Institute

Zador, Judit; Miller, James A.

Unimolecular pressure- and temperature-dependent decomposition rate coefficients of radicals derived from n- and i-propanol by H-atom abstraction are calculated using a time-dependent master equation in the 300-2000 K temperature range. The calculations are based on a C3H7O potential energy surface, which was previously tested successfully for the propene + OH reaction. All rate coefficients are obtained with internal consistency with particular attention paid to shallow wells. After minor adjustments very good agreement with the few available experimental results is obtained. Several interesting pathways are uncovered, such as the catalytic dehydration, well-skipping reactions and reactions forming enols. The results of the calculations can be readily used in CHEMKIN simulations or to assess important channels for higher alcohols. © 2012 The Combustion Institute. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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Uncertainty quantification in the ab initio rate-coefficient calculation for the CH3CH(OH)CH3 + OH → CH3C (OH)CH3 + H2O reaction

Proceedings of the Combustion Institute

Prager, Jens; Najm, Habib N.; Zador, Judit

Theoretical methods to obtain rate coefficients are essential to fundamental combustion chemistry research, yet the associated uncertainties are largely unexplored in a systematic manner. In this paper we focus on the study of parametric uncertainties for a hydrogen-atom-abstraction reaction, CH 3CH(OH)CH3 + OH → CH3C (OH)CH3 + H2O, which bears significant importance in low-temperature alcohol combustion and especially in autoignition models. After identifying the parameters causing significant uncertainty in the rate-coefficient calculations, Bayesian inference is employed to determine the joint probability density function (PDF) thereof using the experimental data of Dunlop and Tully (1993) [6] on isopropanol + OH. The inferred PDFs are compared to the various parameter values obtained from high-level electronic-structure calculations in order to assess the limitations of current methodologies. To gain insight on modeling the kinetic isotope effect (KIE), the reaction of the hydroxyl radical with deuterated isopropanol is also investigated. © 2012 The Combustion Institute. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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KinBot 1.0: A code for automatic PES exploration

8th US National Combustion Meeting 2013

Zador, Judit; Najm, Habib N.

Optimization of new transportation fuels and engine technologies requires the characterization of the combustion chemistry of a wide range of fuel classes. Theoretical studies of elementary reactions - the building blocks of complex reaction mechanisms - are essential to accurately predict important combustion processes such as autoignition of biofuels. The current bottleneck for these calculations is a user-intensive exploration of the underlying potential energy surface (PES), which relies on the "chemical intuition" of the scientist to propose initial guesses for the relevant chemical configurations. For newly emerging fuels, this approach cripples the rate of progress because of the system size and complexity. The KinBot program package aims to accelerate the detailed chemical kinetic description of combustion, and enables large-scale systematic studies on the sub-mechanism level.

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Automated exploration of the mechanism of elementary reactions

Najm, Habib N.; Zador, Judit

Optimization of new transportation fuels and engine technologies requires the characterization of the combustion chemistry of a wide range of fuel classes. Theoretical studies of elementary reactions — the building blocks of complex reaction mechanisms — are essential to accurately predict important combustion processes such as autoignition of biofuels. The current bottleneck for these calculations is a user-intensive exploration of the underlying potential energy surface (PES), which relies on the “chemical intuition” of the scientist to propose initial guesses for the relevant chemical configurations. For newly emerging fuels, this approach cripples the rate of progress because of the system size and complexity. The KinBot program package aims to accelerate the detailed chemical kinetic description of combustion, and enables large-scale systematic studies on the sub-mechanism level.

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Competing channels in the propene+OH reaction: Experiment and validated modeling over a broad temperature and pressure range

Zeitschrift fur Physikalische Chemie

Kappler, Claudia; Zador, Judit; Welz, Oliver W.; Fernandes, Ravi X.; Olzmann, Matthias; Taatjes, Craig A.

Although the propene+OH reaction has been in the center of interest of numerous experimental and theoretical studies, rate coefficients have never been determined experimentally between ∼600 and ∼ 750 K, where the reaction is governed by the complex interaction of addition, back-dissociation and abstraction. In this work OH time-profiles are measured in two independent laboratories over a wide temperature region (200-950 K) and are analyzed incorporating recent theoretical results. The datasets are consistent both with each other and with the calculated rate coefficients. We present a simplified set of reactions validated over a broad temperature and pressure range, that can be used in smaller combustion models for propene+OH. In addition, the experimentally observed kinetic isotope effect for the abstraction is rationalized using ab initio calculations and variational transition-state theory. We recommend the following approximate description of the OH+C 3H6 reaction: C3H6+OH⇄C 3H6OH (R1a,R-1a) C3H6+OH→C 3H5+H2O (R1b) k1a(200K ≤ T ≤ 950 K;1 bar ≤ P) = 1.45×10-11 (T/K)-0.18e 460K/Tcm3 molecule-1s-1 k -1a(200 K ≤ T ≤ 950 K; 1 bar ≤ P) = 5.74×10 12e-12690K/Ts-1 k1b(200 K ≤ T ≤ 950 K) = 1.63×10-18 (T/K)2.36e -725K/T cm3 molecule-1s-1. © by Oldenbourg Wissenschaftsverlag, München.

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Advanced fuel chemistry for advanced engines

Taatjes, Craig A.; Miller, James A.; Fernandes, Ravi X.; Zador, Judit; Jusinski, Leonard E.

Autoignition chemistry is central to predictive modeling of many advanced engine designs that combine high efficiency and low inherent pollutant emissions. This chemistry, and especially its pressure dependence, is poorly known for fuels derived from heavy petroleum and for biofuels, both of which are becoming increasingly prominent in the nation's fuel stream. We have investigated the pressure dependence of key ignition reactions for a series of molecules representative of non-traditional and alternative fuels. These investigations combined experimental characterization of hydroxyl radical production in well-controlled photolytically initiated oxidation and a hybrid modeling strategy that linked detailed quantum chemistry and computational kinetics of critical reactions with rate-equation models of the global chemical system. Comprehensive mechanisms for autoignition generally ignore the pressure dependence of branching fractions in the important alkyl + O{sub 2} reaction systems; however we have demonstrated that pressure-dependent 'formally direct' pathways persist at in-cylinder pressures.

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Temperature-dependent kinetics of the vinyl radical (C2H3) self-reaction

Proposed for publication in the Journal of Physical Chemistry A.

Taatjes, Craig A.; Zador, Judit; Osborn, David L.; Selby, Talitha S.; Jusinski, Leonard E.

The rate coefficient for the self-reaction of vinyl radicals has been measured by two independent methods. The rate constant as a function of temperature at 20 Torr has been determined by a laser-photolysis/laser absorption technique. Vinyl iodide is photolyzed at 266 nm, and both the vinyl radical and the iodine atom photolysis products are monitored by laser absorption. The vinyl radical concentration is derived from the initial iodine atom concentration, which is determined by using the known absorption cross section of the iodine atomic transition to relate the observed absorption to concentration. The measured rate constant for the self-reaction at room temperature is approximately a factor of 2 lower than literature recommendations. The reaction displays a slightly negative temperature dependence, which can be represented by a negative activation energy, (E{sub a}/R) = -400 K. The laser absorption results are supported by independent experiments at 298 K and 4 Torr using time-resolved synchrotron-photoionization mass-spectrometric detection of the products of divinyl ketone and methyl vinyl ketone photolysis. The photoionization mass spectrometry experiments additionally show that methyl + propargyl are formed in the vinyl radical self-reaction, with an estimated branching fraction of 0.5 at 298 K and 4 Torr.

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Formally direct pathways and low-temperature chain branching in hydrocarbon autoignition : the cyclohexyl + O2 reaction at high pressure

Proposed for publication in Journal of the American Chemical Society.

Taatjes, Craig A.; Miller, James A.; Jusinski, Leonard E.; Fernandes, Ravi X.; Zador, Judit

The OH concentration in the Cl-initiated oxidation of cyclohexane has been measured between 6.5-20.3 bar and in the 586-828 K temperature range by a pulsed-laser photolytic initiation--laser-induced fluorescence method. The experimental OH profiles are modeled by using a master-equation-based kinetic model as well as a comprehensive literature mechanism. Below 700 K OH formation takes place on two distinct time-scales, one on the order of microseconds and the other over milliseconds. Detailed modeling demonstrates that formally direct chemical activation pathways are responsible for the OH formation on short timescales. These results establish that formally direct pathways are surprisingly important even for relatively large molecules at the pressures of practical combustors. It is also shown that remaining discrepancies between model and experiment are attributable to low-temperature chain branching from the addition of the second oxygen to hydroperoxycyclohexyl radicals.

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Results 101–135 of 135
Results 101–135 of 135