4.7 Article

Reaction Mechanism and Thermodynamic Properties of Aliphatic Hydrocarbon Groups during Coal Self-Heating

Journal

ENERGY & FUELS
Volume 32, Issue 10, Pages 10469-10477

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.energyfuels.8b02165

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Natural Science Foundation of Jiangsu Province [BK20161183]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51774275]

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To further understand the development of coal self-heating, the reaction sequences and thermal properties of aliphatic hydrocarbon groups during coal self-heating were analyzed. The structural parameters, frontier orbital characteristics, molecular orbital, and perturbation energy of aliphatic hydrocarbons and oxygen were analyzed by the quantum chemistry method. Then, the reaction pathways of aliphatic hydrocarbon groups and the corresponding reaction model were proposed. The results indicate that the reactions of aliphatic hydrocarbon groups include three kinds, i.e., the hydrogen capture by oxygen, reaction between aliphatic hydrocarbon radicals and the hydroxyl radical, and reaction between aliphatic hydrocarbon radicals and oxygen. The main reactions include the reaction between carbon free radicals and oxygen (El), the reaction between aliphatic hydrocarbon and the hydroxyl radical (E2), the reaction between methyne and oxygen (E3), and other spontaneous reactions caused by El and E3 (E2). There is only one reaction procedure for the carbon free radical (R-center dot) to turn into peroxide (R-O-O-center dot) and cause more heat release. Reaction E3 generates less heat compared to reaction El, but it can form hydroxyl radicals, which then result in other spontaneous reaction sequences (E2) to generate R-center dot, which will easily start reaction El. Therefore, reaction sequence E3 includes two aspects of influence during coal reaction with oxygen, i.e., heat supply and the trigger of other further reactions. It shows that the reaction sequence of aliphatic hydrocarbon groups releases more heat than other reaction sequences and plays more important roles in the temperature rise process of coal self-heating. The results are useful for further exploring the reaction mechanism of spontaneous combustion of coal.

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