The formation of small polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) and their precursors can be strongly affected by reactions of C5 species. For improving existing combustion mechanisms for small PAH formation, it is therefore valuable to understand the fuel-specific chemistry of C5 fuels. To this end, we provide quantitative isomer-resolved species profiles measured in a laminar premixed (ϕ = 1.8) low-pressure (4 kPa) flame of 1-pentene with photoionization molecular-beam mass spectrometry (PI-MBMS) using tunable synchrotron vacuum-ultraviolet (VUV) radiation. These experimental results are accompanied with numerical simulations, starting from models from the literature by Wang et al. [JetSurF version 2.0 (2010)] and Healy et al. [Energy Fuels 24 (2010) 1521–1528] that were developed for different fuels, but which include 1-pentene as an intermediate, and by Narayanaswamy et al. [Combust. Flame 157 (2010) 1879–1898] focusing on the small PAH chemistry. Taking observed discrepancies between experimental results and simulations into consideration, a mechanism for C5 chemistry was newly developed including PAH formation pathways, and its performance analyzed in detail. Special emphasis was placed on the initial fuel consumption of 1-pentene as well as on formation pathways of small aromatics. The mechanisms show differences regarding fuel decomposition and hydrocarbon growth reactions. These contribute to noticeable differences between the simulations with different models on one hand, and deviations between model predictions and experimental results on the other. While the new model presents overall satisfactory capabilities to predict the mole fraction profiles of common combustion intermediates, the predictive capability of the literature models was not fully satisfying for some intermediate species, including C4H6, C7H8, and C10H8. The results indicate that the fuel-specific C5 reaction routes as well as the mechanism for small PAH formation need further investigation.
Wang, Zhandong; Herbinet, Olivier; Hansen, Nils H.; Battin-Leclerc, Frédérique
The aim of this paper is to review recent progress in detection and quantification of hydroperoxides, and to understand their reaction kinetics in combustion environments. Hydroperoxides, characterized by an –OOH group, are ubiquitous in the atmospheric oxidation of volatile organic compounds (∼300 K), and in the liquid and gas phase oxidation of fuel components at elevated temperatures (∼400–1000 K). They are responsible for two-stage fuel ignition in internal combustion engines and they play an important role in the formation and evolution of secondary organic aerosols in the atmosphere. The introduction outlines the importance of hydroperoxide chemistry in combustion reaction processes. In addition to this main topic, the role of hydroperoxides in atmospheric and liquid phase oxidation chemistry is also introduced, for a more general perspective. The second part of this paper briefly reviews the mechanistic insights of hydroperoxide chemistry in combustion systems, including experimental detection of these reactive species before 2010. Since that time significant progress has been made by advanced diagnostic techniques like tunable synchrotron vacuum ultraviolet photoionization mass spectrometry and infrared cavity ring-down spectroscopy. The third chapter of this work summarizes progress in gas phase oxidation experiments to measure hydrogen peroxide, alkyl hydroperoxides, olefinic hydroperoxides, ketohydroperoxides, and more complex hydroperoxides that include as many as five oxygen atoms. The fourth section details recent advances in understanding the combustion chemistry of hydroperoxides, involving the formation of carboxylic acids and diones, as well as the development of oxidation models that include a third O2 addition reaction mechanism. Finally, challenges are discussed, and perspectives are offered regarding the future of accurately measuring molecule-specific hydroperoxide concentrations and understanding their respective reaction kinetics.
Baroncelli, Martina; Felsmann, Daniel; Hansen, Nils H.; Pitsch, Heinz
Given the multi-physical nature of coal combustion, the development and validation of detailed chemical models reproducing coal volatiles combustion under oxy-fuel conditions is a crucial step towards the advancement of predictive full-scale simulations. During the devolatilization process, a large variety of gases is released and undergoes secondary pyrolysis and oxidation reactions. Therefore, the ability to capture their interactions is a prerequisite for each chemical model used in its detailed or reduced form to simulate these processes. In this work, a high-resolution time-of-flight molecular-beam mass spectrometer was employed to enable fast and simultaneous detection of stable and unstable species in counterflow flames of typical light volatiles. Following an approach of increasing complexity, carbon dioxide and methane were progressively added to an argon diluted acetylene base flame. For the three flames investigated here, results showed a significant increase in the concentration of C2 and C3 hydrocarbons and oxygenated compounds caused by methane addition to the acetylene flame. By hindering the production of the butadienyl radical, the addition of methane induces the reduction of benzene which triggers the decrease of aromatic species. Conversely, CO2 addition did not have significant effects on intermediates. To guide and interpret the measurements, numerical simulations with two existing chemical models were performed and the results were found to be consistent with the experimental data for small hydrocarbons. Some discrepancies were found between the two model predictions and between simulations and experiments for C4 and C5 species. Additionally, numerical simulations were found to overestimate the role of the methyl radical in aromatics formation.
External electric field and plasma assisted combustion show great potential for combustion enhancement, e.g., emission and ignition control. To understand soot suppression by external electric fields and flame ignition in spark ignition engines, flame ion chemistry needs to be investigated and developed. In this work, comprehensive and systematic investigations of neutral and ion chemistry are conducted in premixed rich methane flames. Cations are measured by quadrupole molecular beam mass spectrometry (MBMS), and neutrals are measured by synchrotron vacuum ultra violet photoionization time of flight MBMS (SVUV-PI-TOF-MBMS). The molecular formula and dominant isomers of various measured cations are identified based on literature survey and quantum chemistry calculations. Experimentally, we found that H3O+ is the dominant cation in slightly rich flame (ϕ=1.5), but C3H3+ is the most significant in very rich flames (ϕ=1.8 and 2.0). An updated ion chemistry model is proposed and used to explain the effects of changing equivalence ratio. To further verify key ion-neutral reaction pathways, measured neutral profiles are compared with cation profiles experimentally. Detailed cation and neutral measurements and numerical simulations by this work help to understand and develop ion chemistry models. Deficiencies in our current understanding of ion chemistry are also highlighted to motivate further research.
The reaction network of the simplest Criegee intermediate (CI) CH2OO has been studied experimentally during the ozonolysis of ethylene. The results provide valuable information about plasma- and ozone-assisted combustion processes and atmospheric aerosol formation. A network of CI reactions was identified, which can be described best by the sequential addition of CI with ethylene, water, formic acid, and other molecules containing hydroxy, aldehyde, and hydroperoxy functional groups. Species resulting from as many as four sequential CI addition reactions were observed, and these species are highly oxygenated oligomers that are known components of secondary organic aerosols in the atmosphere. Insights into these reaction pathways were obtained from a near-atmospheric pressure jet-stirred reactor coupled to a high-resolution molecular-beam mass spectrometer. The mass spectrometer employs single-photon ionization with synchrotron-generated, tunable vacuum-ultraviolet radiation to minimize fragmentation via near-threshold ionization and to observe mass-selected photoionization efficiency (PIE) curves. Species identification is supported by comparison of the mass-selected, experimentally observed photo-ionization thresholds with theoretical calculations for the ionization energies. A variety of multi-functional peroxide species are identified, including hydroxymethyl hydroperoxide (HOCH2OOH), hydroperoxymethyl formate (HOOCH2OCHO), methoxymethyl hydroperoxide (CH3OCH2OOH), ethoxymethyl hydroperoxide (C2H5OCH2OOH), 2-hydroxyethyl hydroperoxide (HOC2H4OOH), dihydroperoxy methane (HOOCH2OOH), and 1-hydroperoxypropan-2-one [CH3C(O)CH2OOH]. A semi-quantitative analysis of the signal intensities as a function of successive CI additions and temperature provides mechanistic insights and valuable information for future modeling work of the associated energy conversion processes and atmospheric chemistry. This work provides further evidence that the CI is a key intermediate in the formation of oligomeric species via the formation of hydroperoxides.
Ruwe, Lena; Moshammer, Kai; Hansen, Nils H.; Kohse-Höinghaus, Katharina
In this study, we experimentally investigate the high-temperature oxidation kinetics of n-pentane, 1-pentene and 2-methyl-2-butene (2M2B) in a combustion environment using flame-sampling molecular beam mass spectrometry. The selected C5 fuels are prototypes for linear and branched, saturated and unsaturated fuel components, featuring different C-C and C-H bond structures. It is shown that the formation tendency of species, such as polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), yielded through mass growth reactions increases drastically in the sequence n-pentane < 1-pentene < 2M2B. This comparative study enables valuable insights into fuel-dependent reaction sequences of the gas-phase combustion mechanism that provide explanations for the observed difference in the PAH formation tendency. First, we investigate the fuel-structure-dependent formation of small hydrocarbon species that are yielded as intermediate species during the fuel decomposition, because these species are at the origin of the subsequent mass growth reaction pathways. Second, we review typical PAH formation reactions inspecting repetitive growth sequences in dependence of the molecular fuel structure. Third, we discuss how differences in the intermediate species pool influence the formation reactions of key aromatic ring species that are important for the PAH growth process underlying soot formation. As a main result it was found that for the fuels featuring a CC double bond, the chemistry of their allylic fuel radicals and their decomposition products strongly influences the combination reactions to the initially formed aromatic ring species and as a consequence, the PAH formation tendency.
In-cylinder reforming of injected fuel during a negative valve overlap (NVO) recompression period can be used to optimize main-cycle combustion phasing for low-load low-temperature gasoline combustion (LTGC). The objective of this work is to examine the effects of reformate composition on main-cycle engine performance. An alternate-fire sequence was used to generate a common exhaust temperature and composition boundary condition for a cycle-of-interest, with performance metrics measured for these custom cycles. NVO reformate was also separately collected using a dump-valve apparatus and characterized by both gas chromatography (GC) and photoionization mass spectroscopy (PIMS). To facilitate gas sample analysis, sampling experiments were conducted using a five-component gasoline surrogate (iso-octane, n-heptane, ethanol, 1-hexene, and toluene) that matched the molecular composition, 50% boiling point, and ignition characteristics of the research gasoline. For the gasoline, it was found that an advance of the NVO start-of-injection (SOI) led to a corresponding advance in main-period combustion phasing as the combination of longer residence times and lower amounts of liquid spray piston impingement led to a greater degree of fuel decomposition. The effect was more pronounced as the fraction of total fuel injected in the NVO period increased. Main-period combustion phasing was also found to advance as the main-period fueling decreased. Slower kinetics for leaner mixtures were offset by a combination of increased bulk-gas temperature from higher charge specific heat ratios and increased fuel reactivity due to higher charge reformate fractions.
This work identifies classes of cool flame intermediates from nheptane low-temperature oxidation (e.g., < 750 K) in a jet-stirred reactor (JSR) and a cooperative fuel research (CFR) engine. The sampled species from the JSR were analyzed using a synchrotron vacuum ultraviolet radiation photoionization time-of-flight molecular-beam mass spectrometer and an atmospheric pressure chemical ionization orbitrap mass spectrometer; the latter was also used to analyze the sampled species from the CFR engine. The products can be classified by species with molecular formulas of C7H14Ox (x=0-5), C7H12Ox (x=0-4), C7H10Ox (x=0-4), CnH2n (n=2-6), CnH2n-2 (n=4-6), CnH2n+2O (n=1-4, 6), CnH2nO (n=1-6), CnH2n-2O (n=2-6), CnH2n-4O (n=4-6), CnH2n+2O2 (n=0-4, 7), CnH2nO2 (n=1-6), CnH2n-2O2 (n=2-6), CnH2n-4O2 (n=4-7), and CnH2nO3 (n=3-6). The identified intermediate species include mainly alkene, dienes, aldehyde/keto compounds, olefinic aldehyde/keto compounds, diones, cyclic ethers, peroxides, acids, and alcohols/ethers. Reaction pathways forming intermediates with the same carbon number as n-heptane are proposed and discussed. These experimental results should be helpful in the development of kinetic models for n-heptane and longer-chain alkanes.
This work provides new temperature-dependent mole fractions of elusive intermediates relevant to the low-temperature oxidation of dimethyl ether (DME). It extends the previous study of Moshammer et al. [J. Phys. Chem. A 2015, 119, 7361-7374 ] in which a combination of a jet-stirred reactor and molecular beam mass spectrometry with single-photon ionization via tunable synchrotron-generated vacuum-ultraviolet radiation was used to identify (but not quantify) several highly oxygenated species. Here, temperature-dependent concentration profiles of 17 components were determined in the range of 450-1000 K and compared to up-to-date kinetic modeling results. Special emphasis is paid toward the validation and application of a theoretical method for predicting photoionization cross sections that are hard to obtain experimentally but essential to turn mass spectral data into mole fraction profiles. The presented approach enabled the quantification of the hydroperoxymethyl formate (HOOCH2OCH2O), which is a key intermediate in the low-temperature oxidation of DME. The quantification of this keto-hydroperoxide together with the temperature-dependent concentration profiles of other intermediates including H2O2, HCOOH, CH3OCHO, and CH3OOH reveals new opportunities for the development of a next-generation DME combustion chemistry mechanism.
Wang, Zhandong; Zhang, Lidong; Moshammer, Kai F.; Popolan-Vaida, Denisia M.; Shankar, Vijai S.; Lucassen, Arnas; Hemken, Christian; Taatjes, Craig A.; Leone, Stephen R.; Kohse-Höinghaus, Katharina; Hansen, Nils H.; Dagaut, Philippe; Sarathy, S.M.
Chain-branching reactions represent a general motif in chemistry, encountered in atmospheric chemistry, combustion, polymerization, and photochemistry; the nature and amount of radicals generated by chain-branching are decisive for the reaction progress, its energy signature, and the time towards its completion. In this study, experimental evidence for two new types of chain-branching reactions is presented, based upon detection of highly oxidized multifunctional molecules (HOM) formed during the gas-phase low-temperature oxidation of a branched alkane under conditions relevant to combustion. The oxidation of 2,5-dimethylhexane (DMH) in a jet-stirred reactor (JSR) was studied using synchrotron vacuum ultra-violet photoionization molecular beam mass spectrometry (SVUV-PI-MBMS). Specifically, species with four and five oxygen atoms were probed, having molecular formulas of C8H14O4 (e.g., diketo-hydroperoxide/keto-hydroperoxy cyclic ether) and C8H16O5 (e.g., keto-dihydroperoxide/dihydroperoxy cyclic ether), respectively. The formation of C8H16O5 species involves alternative isomerization of OOQOOH radicals via intramolecular H-atom migration, followed by third O2 addition, intramolecular isomerization, and OH release; C8H14O4 species are proposed to result from subsequent reactions of C8H16O5 species. The mechanistic pathways involving these species are related to those proposed as a source of low-volatility highly oxygenated species in Earth's troposphere. At the higher temperatures relevant to auto-ignition, they can result in a net increase of hydroxyl radical production, so these are additional radical chain-branching pathways for ignition. The results presented herein extend the conceptual basis of reaction mechanisms used to predict the reaction behavior of ignition, and have implications on atmospheric gas-phase chemistry and the oxidative stability of organic substances.
For next-generation engines that operate using low-temperature gasoline combustion (LTGC) modes, a major issue remains poor combustion stability at low-loads. Negative valve overlap (NVO) enables enhanced main combustion control through modified valve timings to retain combustion residuals along with a small fuel injection that partially reacts during the recompression. While the thermal effects of NVO fueling on main combustion are well understood, the chemical effects of NVO reactions are less certain, especially oxygen-deficient reactions where fuel pyrolysis dominates. To better understand NVO period chemistry details, comprehensive speciation of engine samples collected at the end of the NVO cycle was performed by photoionization mass spectroscopy (PIMS) using synchrotron generated vacuum-ultraviolet light. Two operating conditions were explored: 1) a fuel lean condition with a short NVO fuel injection and a relatively high amount of excess oxygen in the NVO cycle (7%), and 2) a fuel-rich condition with a longer NVO fuel injection and low amount of NVO-cycle excess oxygen (4%). Samples were collected by a custom dump-valve apparatus from a direct injection, single-cylinder, automotive research engine operating under low-load LTGC and fueled by either isooctane or an 88-octane research certification gasoline. Samples were stored in heated stainless steel cylinders and transported to the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory Advanced Light Source for analysis using a Sandia National Laboratories flame sampling apparatus. For all isooctane fueled conditions, NVO cycle sample speciation from the PIMS measurements agreed well with previously reported GC sample measurements if the sum total of all isomer constituents from the PIMS measurements were considered. PIMS data, however, provides richer speciation information that is useful for validation of computational modeling approaches. The PIMS data also revealed that certain species for the GC diagnostic were either misidentified during the calibration process or not identified at all. Examples of unidentified species include several classes of oxygenates (e.g., ketenes, aldehydes, and simple alcohols) and simple aromatics (e.g., benzene and toluene). For the gasoline fueled NVO cycles, performance characteristics were well matched to corresponding isooctane fueled NVO cycles. However, significant PIMS cross-talk from a wide range of gasoline components restricted the sampling analysis to a handful of species. Nonetheless, it was confirmed that for fuel-lean NVO operation there was a comparable increase in acetylene with NVO injection timing retard that is attributed to the prevalence of locally-rich, piston-surface pool fires caused by fuel spray impingement.
The oxidation of 1,3-butadiene/n-butanol flames was studied in a combined experimental and modeling work. The goal is to provide a detailed combustion chemistry model that allows for identification of the important pathways for butadiene and butanol oxidation as well as the formation of soot precursors and aromatics. Therefore, the chemical composition has been investigated for three low-pressure (20-30 Torr) premixed flames, with different shares of butanol ranging between 25% and 75% compared to butadiene in 50% argon. Mole fraction profiles of reactants, products, and intermediates including C3Hx and C4Hx radicals as well as mono-aromatics such as benzyl radicals, were measured quantitatively as a function of height above burner surface employing flame-sampled molecular-beam mass spectrometry (MBMS) utilizing photoionization with tunable vacuum-ultraviolet synchrotron radiation. The comparison of measured species profiles with modeling results provides a comprehensive view of the reaction model's quality and predictive capability with respect to the combustion chemistry of 1,3-butadiene and n-butanol under the current low-pressure, high-temperature conditions. In general, a good agreement was found between experimental and modeled results. Reaction flux and sensitivity analysis were used to get more insights into the combustion of the fuels.
Nawdiyal, A.; Hansen, Nils H.; Zeuch, T.; Seidel, L.; Mauß, F.
An existing detailed and broadly validated kinetic scheme is augmented to capture the flame chemistry of 1-hexene under stoichiometric and fuel rich conditions including benzene formation pathways. In addition, the speciation in a premixed stoichiometric 1-hexene flame (flat-flame McKenna-type burner) has been studied under a reduced pressure of 20-30 mbar applying flame-sampling molecular-beam time-of-flight mass spectrometry and photoionization by tunable vacuum-ultraviolet synchrotron radiation. Mole fraction profiles of 40 different species have been measured and validated against the new detailed chemical reaction model consisting of 275 species and 3047 reversible elementary reactions. A good agreement of modelling results with the experimentally observed mole fraction profiles has been found under both stoichiometric and fuel rich conditions providing a sound basis for analyzing benzene formation pathways during 1-hexene combustion. The analysis clearly shows that benzene formation via the fulvene intermediate is a very important pathway for 1-hexene.
This paper presents a detailed investigation of 2-methylbutanol combustion chemistry in low-pressure premixed flames. This chemistry is of particular interest to study because this compound is potentially a lignocellulosic-based, next-generation biofuel. The detailed chemical structure of a stoichiometric low-pressure (25 Torr) flame was determined using flame-sampling molecular-beam mass spectrometry. A total of 55 species were identified and subsequently quantitative mole fraction profiles as function of distance from the burner surface were determined. In an independent effort, a detailed flame chemistry model for 2-methylbutanol was assembled based on recent knowledge gained from combustion chemistry studies for butanol isomers ([Sarathy et al. Combust. Flame 159 (6) (2012) 2028-2055]) and iso-pentanol (3-methylbutanol) [Sarathy et al. Combust. Flame 160 (12) (2013) 2712-2728]. Experimentally determined and modeled mole fraction profiles were compared to demonstrate the model's capabilities. Examples of individual mole fraction profiles are discussed together with the most significant fuel consumption pathways to highlight the combustion chemistry of 2-methylbutanol. Discrepancies between experimental and modeling results are used to suggest areas where improvement of the kinetic model would be needed.