Quantum Chemical Study of CH3 + O2 Combustion Reaction System: Catalytic Effects of Additional CO2 Molecule
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The supercritical carbon dioxide
diluent is used to control the
temperature and to increase the efficiency in oxycombustion fossil
fuel energy technology. It may affect the rates of combustion by altering
mechanisms of chemical reactions, compared to the ones at low CO2 concentrations. Here, we investigate potential energy surfaces
of the four elementary reactions in the CH3 + O2 reactive system in the presence of one CO2 molecule.
In the case of reaction CH3 + O2 → CH2O + OH (R1 channel), van der Waals (vdW) complex
formation stabilizes the transition state and reduces the activation
barrier by ∼2.2 kcal/mol. Alternatively, covalently bonded
CO2 may form a six-membered ring transition state and reduce
the activation barrier by ∼0.6 kcal/mol. In case of reaction
CH3 + O2 → CH3O + O (R2 channel), covalent participation of CO2 lowers
the barrier for the rate limiting step by 3.9 kcal/mol. This is expected
to accelerate the R2 process, important for the branching
step of the radical chain reaction mechanism. For the reaction CH3 + O2 → CHO + H2O (R3 channel) with covalent participation of CO2, the activation
barrier is lowered by 0.5 kcal/mol. The reaction CH2O +
OH → CHO + H2O (R4 channel) involves
hydrogen abstraction from formaldehyde by OH radical. Its barrier
is reduced from 7.1 to 0.8 kcal/mol by formation of vdW complex with
spectator CO2. These new findings are expected to improve
the kinetic reaction mechanism describing combustion processes in
supercritical CO2 medium.
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Masunov, Artëm E.; Wait, Elizabeth; Vasu, Subith S. (2017). Quantum Chemical Study of CH3 + O2 Combustion Reaction System: Catalytic Effects of Additional CO2 Molecule. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpca.7b04897