posted on 2020-05-18, 20:31authored byHyunguk Kwon, Brian D. Etz, Matthew J. Montgomery, Richard Messerly, Sharmin Shabnam, Shubham Vyas, Adri C. T. van Duin, Charles S. McEnally, Lisa D. Pfefferle, Seonah Kim, Yuan Xuan
Sooting
tendencies of a series of nitrogen-containing hydrocarbons
(NHCs) have been recently characterized experimentally using the yield
sooting index (YSI) methodology. This work aims to identify soot-relevant
reaction pathways for three selected C6H15N
amines, namely, dipropylamine (DPA), diisopropylamine (DIPA), and
3,3-dimethylbutylamine (DMBA) using ReaxFF molecular dynamics (MD)
simulations and quantum mechanical (QM) calculations and to interpret
the experimentally observed trends. ReaxFF MD simulations are performed
to determine the important intermediate species and radicals involved
in the fuel decomposition and soot formation processes. QM calculations
are employed to extensively search for chemical reactions involving
these species and radicals based on the ReaxFF MD results and also
to quantitatively characterize the potential energy surfaces. Specifically,
ReaxFF simulations are carried out in the NVT ensemble
at 1400, 1600, and 1800 K, where soot has been identified to form
in the YSI experiment. These simulations account for the interactions
among test fuel molecules and pre-existing radicals and intermediate
species generated from rich methane combustion, using a recently proposed
simulation framework. ReaxFF simulations predict that the reactivity
of the amines decrease in the order DIPA > DPA > DMBA, independent
of temperature. Both QM calculations and ReaxFF simulations predict
that C2H4, C3H6, and C4H8 are the main nonaromatic soot precursors formed
during the decomposition of DPA, DIPA, and DMBA, respectively, and
the associated reaction pathways are identified for each amine. Both
theoretical methods predict that sooting tendency increases in the
order DPA, DIPA, and DMBA, consistent with the experimentally measured
trend in YSI. This work demonstrates that sooting tendencies and soot-relevant
reaction pathways of fuels with unknown chemical kinetics can be identified
efficiently through combined ReaxFF and QM simulations. Overall, predictions
from ReaxFF simulations and QM calculations are consistent, in terms
of fuel reactivity, major intermediates, and major nonaromatic soot
precursors.