Studies of the reactions of ethynyl radicals with hydrocarbons

It has been shown that ethynyl radicals may be satisfactorily generated by the photolysis, at 253.7 nm, of bromoacetylene in the presence of nitric oxide. Acetylene and butadiyne are primary products, being formed exclusively by the reactions C 2 H . + C 2 HBr→C 2 H 2 + C 2 Br . , C 2 H . + C 2 HBr→C 4 H 2 + Br . . Nitric oxide decreases the rates of formation of both products, indicating the effective scavenging of ethynyl radicals by this compound. Addition of an inert gas (nitrogen or carbon dioxide) increases the ratio [C 4 H 2 ]/[C 2 H 2 ] from 3.5 (no inert gas) to 7 (total pressure 80 kPa (1 Pa = 1 N m -2 )), the ratio thereafter remaining constant. The most obvious explanation for this behaviour is that, during photolysis, ethynyl radicals produced in the absence of inert gas have excess translational energy and, probably, enhanced reactivity. With increasing inert gas pressure, fewer ‘hot’ radicals react and the change in the ratio [C 4 H 2 ]/[C 2 H 2 ] reflects the change in selectivity of ‘thermalized’ ethynyl radicals. On account of this, investigations of the reactions of C 2 H . with added hydrocarbons were carried out with a standard 1:1:100 bromoacetylene-nitric oxide-nitrogen mixture. Results obtained with added alkanes (methane, ethane, 2,2 dimethylpropane) showed that ethynyl radicals abstract hydrogen atoms to form acetylene: C 2 H . + RH→C 2 H 2 + R . , The relative importance of reactions (1) and (2) has been estimated and values for k 1 / k 2 of 0.016 ± 0.005, 0.54 ± 0.04 and 0 .91 ± 0.04 have been obtained for methane, and ethane 2,2-dimethylpropane respectively. The ratio k 1 / k 2 did not vary over the temperature range 298 to 478 K in the case of 2,2-dimethylpropane but with methane, values for E 1 — E 2 and A 2 / A 1 of 12.54 ± 1.27 kJ mol -1 and 0.54 ± 0.25, respectively, were obtained. Studies of the reactions of ethynyl radicals with alkynes (acetylene, butadiyne and propyne) have shown that the radicals abstract hydrogen atoms (to form acetylene), displace hydrogen atoms (to form a di- or triyne) and, in the case of propyne, displace a methyl radical. For propyne, the relevant reactions are C 2 H . + C 3 H 4 →C 2 H 2 + C 3 H 3 . , C 2 H . + C 3 H 4 →C 4 H 2 + CH 3 . , C 2 H . + C 3 H 4 →C 5 H 4 + H . , and Values of 25 ± 3, 5 ± 2, 9.9 ± 1 and 23 ± 3 at 298 K have been obtained for k 7 / k 9 , k 4 / k 9 , k 8 / k 9 and k 2 / k 9 respectively. In the presence of butadiyne, acetylene and hexatriyne are formed as primary products. Acetylene is formed by reactions (4) and (13), C 2 H . +C 4 H 2 → C 2 H 2 + C 4 H . , whilst hexatriyne is formed by the displacement reaction (14) C 2 H . + C 4 H 2 →C 6 H 2 +H . . Kinetic measurements have shown that at 298 K k 4 / k 14 =0.6 ± 0.1 and k 13 / k 14 = 1.1 ± 0.2. Addition of acetylene-d 2 to bromoacetylene-nitrogen mixtures yields acetylene-d 1 and butadiyne-d 1 C 2 H . + C 2 D 2 → C 2 HD +C 2 D . , C 2 H . + C 2 D 2 → C 4 HD + D . . The rate-constant ratios k 12 / k 11 and k 2 / k 12 are 2 .8 ± 2.5 and 1.5 ± 0.3 respectively. This work thus indicates that ethynyl radical addition-elimination reactions, leading to polyalkynes, occur to a comparable extent to hydrogen-abstraction reactions in acetylene-containing systems. These results are shown to be of significance in regard to the formation and subsequent reactions of polyalkynes in both the pyrolysis and flames of acetylene and other hydrocarbons.

2004 ◽  
Vol 6 (16) ◽  
pp. 4111 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hue Minh Thi Nguyen ◽  
Shaun Avondale Carl ◽  
Jozef Peeters ◽  
Minh Tho Nguyen

2017 ◽  
Vol 95 (8) ◽  
pp. 824-829 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xuyao Qi ◽  
Haibo Xue ◽  
Haihui Xin ◽  
Ziming Bai

During coal self-heating, reactions of carboxyl groups feature in the evolution of the spontaneous combustion of coal. However, their elementary reaction pathways during this process still have not been revealed. This paper selected the Ar–CH2–COOH as a typical carboxyl group containing structure for the analysis of the reaction pathways and enhancement effect on the coal self-heating process by quantum chemistry calculations. The results indicate that the hydrogen atoms in carboxyl groups are the active sites, which undergo the oxidation process and self-reaction process during coal self-heating. They both have two elementary reactions, namely (i) the hydrogen abstraction of –COOH by oxygen and the decarboxylation of the –COO· free radical and (ii) the hydrogen abstraction of –COOH and its pyrolysis. The total enthalpy change and activation energy of the oxidation process are 76.93 kJ/mol and 127.85 kJ/mol, respectively, which indicate that this process is endothermic and will occur at medium temperatures. For the hydrogen abstraction of –COOH by hydrocarbon free radicals, the thermal parameters are 53.53 kJ/mol and 56.13 kJ/mol, respectively, which has the same thermodynamic properties as the oxidation process. However, for the pyrolysis, the thermal parameters are –42.53 kJ/mol and 493.68 kJ/mol, respectively, and is thus exothermic and would not occur until the coal reaches high temperatures. They affect heat accumulation greatly, generate carbon dioxide, and provide new active centers for enhancing the coal self-heating process. The results would be helpful for further understanding of the coal self-heating mechanism.


1964 ◽  
Vol 17 (12) ◽  
pp. 1329 ◽  
Author(s):  
MFR Mulcahy ◽  
DJ Williams ◽  
JR Wilmshurst

The kinetics of abstraction of hydrogen atoms from the methyl group of the toluene molecule by methyl radicals at 430-540�K have been determined. The methyl radicals were produced by pyrolysis of di-t-butyl peroxide in a stirred-flow system. The kinetics ,agree substantially with those obtained by previous authors using photolytic methods for generating the methyl radicals. At toluene and methyl-radical concentrations of about 5 x 10-7 and 10-11 mole cm-3 respectively the benzyl radicals resulting from the abstraction disappear almost entirely by combination with methyl radicals at the methylenic position. In this respect the benzyl radical behaves differently from the iso-electronic phenoxy radical, which previous work has shown to combine with a methyl radical mainly at ring positions. The investigation illustrates the application of stirred-flow technique to the study of the kinetics of free-radical reactions.


2019 ◽  
Vol 19 (4) ◽  
pp. 2433-2440 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hoi Ki Lam ◽  
Kai Chung Kwong ◽  
Hon Yin Poon ◽  
James F. Davies ◽  
Zhenfa Zhang ◽  
...  

Abstract. Acid-catalyzed multiphase chemistry of epoxydiols formed from isoprene oxidation yields the most abundant organosulfates (i.e., methyltetrol sulfates) detected in atmospheric fine aerosols in the boundary layer. This potentially determines the physicochemical properties of fine aerosols in isoprene-rich regions. However, chemical stability of these organosulfates remains unclear. As a result, we investigate the heterogeneous oxidation of aerosols consisting of potassium 3-methyltetrol sulfate ester (C5H11SO7K) by gas-phase hydroxyl (OH) radicals at a relative humidity (RH) of 70.8 %. Real-time molecular composition of the aerosols is obtained by using a Direct Analysis in Real Time (DART) ionization source coupled to a high-resolution mass spectrometer. Aerosol mass spectra reveal that 3-methyltetrol sulfate ester can be detected as its anionic form (C5H11SO7-) via direct ionization in the negative ionization mode. Kinetic measurements reveal that the effective heterogeneous OH rate constant is measured to be 4.74±0.2×10-13 cm3 molecule−1 s−1 with a chemical lifetime against OH oxidation of 16.2±0.3 days, assuming an OH radical concentration of 1.5×106 molecules cm−3. Comparison of this lifetime with those against other aerosol removal processes, such as dry and wet deposition, suggests that 3-methyltetrol sulfate ester is likely to be chemically stable over atmospheric timescales. Aerosol mass spectra only show an increase in the intensity of bisulfate ion (HSO4-) after oxidation, suggesting the importance of fragmentation processes. Overall, potassium 3-methyltetrol sulfate ester likely decomposes to form volatile fragmentation products and aqueous-phase sulfate radial anion (SO4⚫-). SO4⚫- subsequently undergoes intermolecular hydrogen abstraction to form HSO4-. These processes appear to explain the compositional evolution of 3-methyltetrol sulfate ester during heterogeneous OH oxidation.


2016 ◽  
Vol 94 (5) ◽  
pp. 494-500 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xuyao Qi ◽  
Haibo Xue ◽  
Haihui Xin ◽  
Cunxiang Wei

Hydroxyl groups are one of the key factors for the development of coal self-heating, although their detailed reaction pathways are still unclear. This study investigated the reaction pathways in coal self-heating by the method of quantum chemistry calculation. The Ar–CH2–CH(CH3)–OH was selected as a typical structure unit for the calculation. The results indicate that the hydrogen atoms in hydroxyl groups and R3–CH are the active sites. For the hydrogen atoms in hydroxyl groups, they are directly abstracted by oxygen. For hydrogen atoms in R3–CH, they are abstracted by oxygen at first and generate peroxy-hydroxyl free radicals, which abstract the hydrogen atoms in hydroxyl groups later. The reaction of R3–CH contains three elementary reactions, i.e., the hydrogen abstraction of R3–CH by oxygen, the conjugation reaction between the R3C■ and oxygen atom, and the hydrogen abstraction of –OH by hydroxyl free radicals. Then, the microstructure parameters, IRC pathways, and reaction dynamic parameters were respectively analyzed for the four reactions. For the hydrogen abstraction of –OH by oxygen, the enthalpy change and activation energy are 137.63 and 334.44 kJ/mol, respectively, which will occur at medium temperatures and the corresponding heat effect is great. For the reaction of R3–CH, the enthalpy change and the activation energy are −3.45 and 55.79 kJ/mol, respectively, which will occur at low temperatures while the corresponding heat influence is weak. They both affect heat accumulation and provide new active centers for enhancing the coal self-heating process. The results would be helpful for further understanding of the coal self-heating mechanism.


A detailed study has been made of the products from the reaction between hydrogen atoms and ethylene in a discharge-flow system at 290 ± 3 K. Total pressures in the range 8 to 16 Torr (1100 to 2200 Nm -2 ) of argon were used and the hydrogen atom and ethylene flow rates were in the ranges 5 to 10 and 0 to 20 μ mol s -1 , respectively. In agreement with previous work, the main products are methane and ethane ( ~ 95%) together with small amounts of propane and n -butane, measurements of which are reported for the first time. A detailed mechanism leading to formation of all the products is proposed. It is shown that the predominant source of ethane is the recombination of two methyl radicals, the rate of recombination of a hydrogen atom with an ethyl radical being negligible in comparison with the alternative, cracking reaction which produces two methyl radicals. A set of rate constants for the elementary steps in this mechanism has been derived with the aid of computer calculations, which gives an excellent fit with the experimental results. In this set, the values of the rate constant for the addition of a hydrogen atom to ethylene are at the low end of the range of previously measured values but are shown to lead to a more reasonable value for the rate constant of the cracking reaction of a hydrogen atom with an ethyl radical. It is shown that the recombination reaction of a hydrogen atom with a methyl radical, the source of methane, is close to its third-order region.


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