4.7 Article

Experiment and theory on methylformate and methylacetate kinetics at high temperatures: Rate constants for H-atom abstraction and thermal decomposition

Journal

COMBUSTION AND FLAME
Volume 159, Issue 7, Pages 2312-2323

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.combustflame.2012.03.007

Keywords

Shock tube; H-ARAS; Ab initio calculations; Transition state theory; Master equation modeling; Absorption cross sections

Funding

  1. US Department of Energy, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, Division of Chemical Sciences, Geosciences, and Biosciences [DE-AC02-06CH11357]

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The shock tube technique was used to study the high temperature thermal decomposition of methylformate (MF) and methylacetate (MA). The formation of H-atoms was measured behind reflected shock waves by using atomic resonance absorption spectrometry (ARAS). The experiments span a T-range of 1194-1371 K at pressures similar to 0.5 atm. The H-atom profiles were simulated using a detailed chemical kinetic mechanism for MF and MA thermal decomposition. The simulations were used to derive rate constants for sensitive decomposition and H-abstraction reactions in MF and MA. In methylformate, the most sensitive reactions that determine H-atom profiles are: CH3OC(O)H -> HCO2 + CH3 (A) CH3OC(O)H + H -> CH3OCO + H-2 (B) where H is formed from HCO2 -> H + CO2. In methylacetate the most sensitive reactions affecting H-atom formation are: CH3OC(O)CH3 -> CH3 + OC(O)CH3 (C) CH3OC(O)CH3 + H -> CH2OC(O)CH3 + H-2 (D) Minor sensitivity was observed for the energetically higher lying bond fission, CH3OC(O)CH3 -> CH3 + CH3OCO (E) and H-atom abstraction from MA by CH3 through, CH3OC(O)CH3 + CH3 -> CH2OC(O)CH3 + CH4 (F) CH3OC(O)CH3 + CH3 -> CH3OC(O)CH2 + CH4 (G) Unlike MF, where H-atoms are formed instantaneously at high-temperatures from (A), in MA, H-atoms form from the CH3 radicals (through CH3 + CH3 -> C2H4 + 2H) generated primarily through the C-O bond fission channel (C) with minor contributions from (E). A master equation analysis was performed using CCSD(T)/cc-pv infinity z//B3LYP/6-311++G(d,p) energetics and molecular properties for all thermal decomposition processes in MF and MA. The theoretical predictions were found to be in good agreement with the present experimentally derived rate constants for the bond fissions. TST calculations employing CCSD(T)/cc-pv infinity z//MP2/aug-cc-pvtz energies and molecular properties for reactions (B) and (D) (the only sensitive abstraction processes in MF and MA) are in good agreement with the experimental rate constants. The theoretically derived rate constants for these processes can be represented by modified Arrhenius expressions for the bond fissions at 0.5 atm over the T-range 1000-2000 K and for the bimolecular abstractions over the 500-2000 K regime. k(A)(T) = 9.79 x 10(68)T(-15.95)exp(-57, 434 K/T) s(-1) k(B)(T) = 5.67 x 10(-19)T(2.50)exp(-3188 K/T) cm(3) molecule(-1) s(-1) k(C)(T) = 1.42 x 10(84)T(-19.60)exp(-63, 608 K/T) s(-1) k(D)(T) = 1.18 x 10(-18)T(2.58)exp(-3714 K/T) cm(3) molecule(-1) s(-1) k(E)(T) = 1.90 x 10(82)T(-193)exp(-64, 724 K/T) s(-1) Our theoretical predictions for MA + CH3 give over the T-range 500-2000 K, k(F)(T) = 2.12 x 10(-25)T(3.93)exp(-4440 K/T) cm(3) molecule(-1) s(-1) k(G)(T) = 3.40 x 10(-25)T(3.88)exp(-4149 K/T) cm(3) molecule(-1) s(-1) To our knowledge this is the first study providing experimentally derived rate constant values for the primary bond fission and abstraction reactions in MF and MA. (C) 2012 The Combustion Institute. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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