| Literature DB >> 31647657 |
Adriana Caracciolo1, Gianmarco Vanuzzo1, Nadia Balucani1, Domenico Stranges1, Piergiorgio Casavecchia1, Luna Pratali Maffei2, Carlo Cavallotti2.
Abstract
Information on the detailed mechanism and dynamics (primary products, branching fractions (BFs), and channel specific rate constants as a function of temperature) for many important combustion reactions of O(3P) with unsaturated hydrocarbons is still lacking. We report synergistic experimental/theoretical studies on the mechanism and dynamics of the O(3P) + 1-C4H8 (1-butene) reaction by combining crossed molecular beam (CMB) experiments with soft electron ionization mass-spectrometric detection and time-of-flight analysis at 10.5 kcal/mol collision energy (Ec) to high-level ab initio electronic structure calculations of the underlying triplet and singlet potential energy surfaces (PESs) and statistical Rice-Ramsperger-Kassel-Marcus/Master Equation (RRKM/ME) computations of BFs including intersystem crossing (ISC). The reactive interaction of O(3P) with 1-butene is found to mainly break apart the 4-carbon atom chain, leading to the radical product channels ethyl + vinoxy (BF = 0.34 ± 0.11), methyl + C3H5O (BF = 0.28 ± 0.09), formyl + propyl (BF = 0.17 ± 0.05), ethyl + acetyl (BF = 0.014 ± 0.007), and butanal radical (ethylvinoxy) + H (BF = 0.013 ± 0.004), and molecular product channels formaldehyde + propenylidene/propene (BF = 0.15 ± 0.05) and butenone (ethyl ketene) + H2 (BF = 0.037 ± 0.015). As some of these products can only be formed via ISC from triplet to singlet PESs, from BFs an extent of ISC of 50% is inferred. This value is significantly larger than that recently observed for O(3P) + propene (22%) at similar Ec, underlying the question of how important it is to consider nonadiabatic effects for these and similar combustion reactions. Comparison of the derived BFs with those of statistical (RRKM/ME) simulations on the ab initio coupled triplet/singlet PESs shows good agreement, warranting the use of the RRKM/ME approach to provide information on the variation of BFs with temperature and to derive channel specific rate constants as a function of temperature (T) and pressure (p). Notably, ISC is predicted to decrease strongly with increasing temperature (from about 70% at 300 K to 46% at Ec = 10.5 kcal/mol, and about 1% at 2000 K). The present results lead to a detailed understanding of the complex reaction mechanism of O(3P) + 1-butene and, by providing channel specific rate constants as a function of T and p, should facilitate the improvement of current fossil-fuel (1-butene) as well as biofuel (1-butanol) combustion models.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31647657 DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpca.9b07621
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Phys Chem A ISSN: 1089-5639 Impact factor: 2.781