Literature DB >> 23126711

Thermal decomposition of CH3CHO studied by matrix infrared spectroscopy and photoionization mass spectroscopy.

AnGayle K Vasiliou1, Krzysztof M Piech, Beth Reed, Xu Zhang, Mark R Nimlos, Musahid Ahmed, Amir Golan, Oleg Kostko, David L Osborn, Donald E David, Kimberly N Urness, John W Daily, John F Stanton, G Barney Ellison.   

Abstract

A heated SiC microtubular reactor has been used to decompose acetaldehyde and its isotopomers (CH(3)CDO, CD(3)CHO, and CD(3)CDO). The pyrolysis experiments are carried out by passing a dilute mixture of acetaldehyde (roughly 0.1%-1%) entrained in a stream of a buffer gas (either He or Ar) through a heated SiC reactor that is 2-3 cm long and 1 mm in diameter. Typical pressures in the reactor are 50-200 Torr with the SiC tube wall temperature in the range 1200-1900 K. Characteristic residence times in the reactor are 50-200 μs after which the gas mixture emerges as a skimmed molecular beam at a pressure of approximately 10 μTorr. The reactor has been modified so that both pulsed and continuous modes can be studied, and results from both flow regimes are presented. Using various detection methods (Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy and both fixed wavelength and tunable synchrotron radiation photoionization mass spectrometry), a number of products formed at early pyrolysis times (roughly 100-200 μs) are identified: H, H(2), CH(3), CO, CH(2)=CHOH, HC≡CH, H(2)O, and CH(2)=C=O; trace quantities of other species are also observed in some of the experiments. Pyrolysis of rare isotopomers of acetaldehyde produces characteristic isotopic signatures in the reaction products, which offers insight into reaction mechanisms that occur in the reactor. In particular, while the principal unimolecular processes appear to be radical decomposition CH(3)CHO (+M) → CH(3) + H + CO and isomerization of acetaldehyde to vinyl alcohol, it appears that the CH(2)CO and HCCH are formed (perhaps exclusively) by bimolecular reactions, especially those involving hydrogen atom attacks.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 23126711     DOI: 10.1063/1.4759050

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Chem Phys        ISSN: 0021-9606            Impact factor:   3.488


  1 in total

1.  Thermal Decomposition Mechanism for Ethanethiol.

Authors:  AnGayle K Vasiliou; Daniel E Anderson; Thomas W Cowell; Jessica Kong; William F Melhado; Margaret D Phillips; Jared C Whitman
Journal:  J Phys Chem A       Date:  2017-06-23       Impact factor: 2.781

  1 in total

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