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1.
The reflected shock tube technique with multipass absorption spectrometric detection of OH‐radicals at 308 nm, corresponding to a total path length of 1.749 m, has been used to study the reaction H2O + M → H + OH + M between 2196 and 2792 K using 0.3, 0.5, and 1% H2O, diluted in Kr. As a result of the increased sensitivity for OH‐radical detection, the existing database for this reaction could be extended downward by ~500 K. Combining the present work with that of Homer and Hurle, the composite rate expression for water dissociation in either Ar or Kr bath gas is k1,Ar(or Kr) = (2.43 ± 0.57) × 10?10 exp(?47117 ± 633 K/T) cm3 molecule?1 s?1 over the T‐range of 2196–3290 K. Applying the Troe factorization method to data for both forward and reverse reactions, the rate behavior could be expressed to within <±18% over the T‐range, 300–3400 K, by the three‐parameter expression k1,Ar = 1.007 × 104 T?3.322 exp(?60782 K/T) cm3 molecule?1 s?1 A large enhancement due to H2O with H2O collisional activation has been noted previously, and both absolute and relative data have been considered allowing us to suggest k1, H2 O = 1.671 × 102 T?2.440 exp(?60475 K/T) cm3 molecule?1 s?1 for the rate constants with H2O bath gas over the T‐range, 300–3400 K. © 2006 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Int J Chem Kinet 38: 211–219, 2006  相似文献   

2.
The gas‐phase reactions of the NO3 radical with 2‐methylthiophene, 3‐methylthiophene, and 2,5‐dimethylthiophene have been studied, using relative and absolute methods at 298 K. Determination of relative rate was performed using Teflon collapsible bag as the reaction chamber and gas chromatography as the analytical tool. For the absolute method, experiments were carried out using fast‐flow‐discharge technique with detection of NO3 by laser‐induced fluorescence. The temperature dependence was studied by the absolute technique for the reactions of NO3 with 2‐methylthiophene and 3‐methylthiophene in the range 263–335 K. The proposed Arrhenius expressions for the reaction of the nitrate radical with 2‐methylthiophene and 3‐methylthiophene are k = (4 ± 2) × 10?16 exp[?(2200 ± 100)/T]] cm3 molecule?1 s?1 and k = (3 ± 2) × 10?15 exp[?(1700 ± 200)/T]] cm3 molecule?1 s?1, respectively. © 2003 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Int J Chem Kinet 35: 286–293, 2003  相似文献   

3.
Recent experimental results on the thermal decomposition of N2O5 in N2 are evaluated in terms of unimolecular rate theory. A theoretically consistent set of fall-off curves is constructed which allows to identify experimental errors or misinterpretations. Limiting rate constants k0 = [N2] 2.2 × 10?3 (T/300)?4.4 exp(?11,080/T) cm3/molec·s over the range of 220–300 K, k = 9.7 × 1014 (T/300)+0.1 exp(?11,080/T) s?1 over the range of 220–300 K, and broadening factors of the fall-off curve Fcent = exp(-T/250) + exp(?1050/T) over the range of 220–520 K have been derived. NO2 + NO3 recombination rate constants over the range of 200–300 K are krec,0 = [N2] 3.7 × 10?30 (T/300)?4.1 cm6/molec2·s and krec,∞ = 1.6 × 10?12 (T/300)+0.2 cm3/molec·s.  相似文献   

4.
A novel-pulsed electrolyte cathode atmospheric pressure discharge (pulsed-ECAD) plasma source driven by an alternating current (AC) power supply coupled with a high-voltage diode was generated under normal atmospheric pressure between a metal electrode and a small-sized flowing liquid cathode. The spatial distributions of the excitation, vibrational, and rotational plasma temperatures of the pulsed-ECAD were investigated. The electron excitation temperature of H Texc(H), vibrational temperature of N2 Tvib(N2), and rotational temperature of OH Trot(OH) were from 4900?±?36 to 6800?±?108 K, from 4600?±?86 to 5800?±?100 K, and from 1050?±?20 to 1140?±?10 K, respectively. The temperature characteristics of the dc solution cathode glow discharge (dc-SCGD) were also studied for the comparison with the pulsed-ECAD. The effects of operating parameters, including the discharge voltage and discharge frequency, on the plasma temperatures were investigated. The electron number densities determined in the discharge system and dc-SCGD were 3.8–18.9?×?1014?cm–3 and 2.6?×?1014 to 17.2?×?1014?cm–3, respectively.  相似文献   

5.
The rate coefficient for the gas‐phase reaction of chlorine atoms with acetone was determined as a function of temperature (273–363 K) and pressure (0.002–700 Torr) using complementary absolute and relative rate methods. Absolute rate measurements were performed at the low‐pressure regime (~2 mTorr), employing the very low pressure reactor coupled with quadrupole mass spectrometry (VLPR/QMS) technique. The absolute rate coefficient was given by the Arrhenius expression k(T) = (1.68 ± 0.27) × 10?11 exp[?(608 ± 16)/T] cm3 molecule?1 s?1 and k(298 K) = (2.17 ± 0.19) × 10?12 cm3 molecule?1 s?1. The quoted uncertainties are the 2σ (95% level of confidence), including estimated systematic uncertainties. The hydrogen abstraction pathway leading to HCl was the predominant pathway, whereas the reaction channel of acetyl chloride formation (CH3C(O)Cl) was determined to be less than 0.1%. In addition, relative rate measurements were performed by employing a static thermostated photochemical reactor coupled with FTIR spectroscopy (TPCR/FTIR) technique. The reactions of Cl atoms with CHF2CH2OH (3) and ClCH2CH2Cl (4) were used as reference reactions with k3(T) = (2.61 ± 0.49) × 10?11 exp[?(662 ± 60)/T] and k4(T) = (4.93 ± 0.96) × 10?11 exp[?(1087 ± 68)/T] cm3 molecule?1 s?1, respectively. The relative rate coefficients were independent of pressure over the range 30–700 Torr, and the temperature dependence was given by the expression k(T) = (3.43 ± 0.75) × 10?11 exp[?(830 ± 68)/T] cm3 molecule?1 s?1 and k(298 K) = (2.18 ± 0.03) × 10?12 cm3 molecule?1 s?1. The quoted errors limits (2σ) are at the 95% level of confidence and do not include systematic uncertainties. © 2010 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Int J Chem Kinet 42: 724–734, 2010  相似文献   

6.
The kinetics and mechanism for the reaction of NH2 with HONO2 have been investigated by ab initio calculations with rate constant prediction. The potential energy surface of this reaction has been computed by single‐point calculations at the CCSD(T)/6‐311+G(3df, 2p) level based on geometries optimized at the B3LYP/6‐311+G(3df, 2p) level. The reaction producing the primary products, NH3 + NO3, takes place via a precursor complex, H2N…HONO2 with an 8.4‐kcal/mol binding energy. The rate constants for major product channels in the temperature range 200–3000 K are predicted by variational transition state or variational Rice–Ramsperger–Kassel–Marcus theory. The results show that the reaction has a noticeable pressure dependence at T < 900 K. The total rate constants at 760 Torr Ar‐pressure can be represented by ktotal = 1.71 × 10?3 × T?3.85 exp(?96/T) cm3 molecule?1 s?1 at T = 200–550 K, 5.11 × 10?23 × T+3.22 exp(70/T) cm3 molecule?1 s?1 at T = 550–3000 K. The branching ratios of primary channels at 760 Torr Ar‐pressure are predicted: k1 producing NH3 + NO3 accounts for 1.00–0.99 in the temperature range of 200–3000 K and k2 + k3 producing H2NO + HONO accounts for less than 0.01 when temperature is more than 2600 K. The reverse reaction, NH3 + NO3 → NH2 + HONO2 shows relatively weak pressure dependence at P < 100 Torr and T < 600 K due to its precursor complex, NH3…O3N with a lower binding energy of 1.8 kcal/mol. The predicted rate constants can be represented by k?1 = 6.70 × 10?24 × T+3.58 exp(?850/T) cm3 molecule?1 s?1 at T = 200–3000 K and 760 Torr N2 pressure, where the predicted rate at T = 298 K, 2.8 × 10?16 cm3 molecule?1 s?1 is in good agreement with the experimental data. The NH3 + NO3 formation rate constant was found to be a factor of 4 smaller than that of the reaction OH + HONO2 producing the H2O + NO3 because of the lower barrier for the transition state for the OH + HONO2. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Int J Chem Kinet 42: 69–78, 2010  相似文献   

7.
The rate coefficient for NH2 + CH4 → NH3 + CH3 (R1) has been measured in a shock tube in the temperature range 1591–2084 K using FM spectroscopy to monitor NH2 radicals. The measurements are combined with a calculation of the potential energy surface and canonical transition state theory with WKB tunneling to obtain an expression for k1 = 1.47 × 103 T 3.01 e?5001/T(K) cm3 mol?1 s?1 that describes available data in the temperature range 300 –2100 K. © 2003 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Int J Chem Kinet 35: 304–309, 2003  相似文献   

8.
The rate constants of the reaction between OH and H2S in He, N2, and O2 over the temperature range 245–450 K have been determined using the discharge flow-resonance fluorescence technique. At 299 K, k1 = (4.4 ± 0.7) × 10?12 cm3 molecule?1 s?1. The temperature dependence of the rate constant can be fitted either by k1 = 5.6 × 10?12 exp(?57/T) or by k1 = (3.8 × 10?19)T2.43 exp(732/T) to within 8 and 9%, respectively. However, the non-Arrhenius behavior can be confidently confirmed. The absence of the pressure dependence and the third-body effect at low temperature suggest that the complex formation mechanism is not important over the temperature range of our study.  相似文献   

9.
Atomic resonance absorption spectroscopy has been used to investigate the thermal decomposition of N2O by monitoring the formation of O atoms behind reflected shock waves in the temperature range 1490–2490 K and at total pressures from 58 to 347 kPa, by using the mixtures of N2O highly diluted in Ar. For the chosen experimental conditions, the rate coefficient k1,0 for the reaction N2O + Ar → N2 + O + Ar had the greatest effect on the O atom concentration increase, so this reaction rate constant could be deduced by comparison between experiment and computed simulation. In the actual temperature range, we found k1,0 (cm3 mol?1s?1) = 7.2 × 1014 exp(?28878/T(K)), with an overall uncertainty evaluated to be less than 20%, by considering all the parameters, which contributed to uncertainties in the rate constant determination. The possible absorption at the O triplet emission line of N2O has been investigated. The absorption cross section of N2O at the O line has been estimated and taken into account for the determination of k1,0 at high concentrations of N2O and at temperatures lower than 1850 K. The effect of the presence of impurities like H2O on rate constant determination has been examined and was found to be negligible. The choice of the rate coefficient for the consumption of O atoms by reaction with N2O and that of the high‐pressure limiting rate coefficients k1,∞ were also discussed. The rate constant reported in the present study was compared with the literature values and was found to be overall higher than those determined experimentally by other teams in the last decade. Finally, the effect of the modified constant value on reaction rate of diluted Ar–N2O mixtures and H2–N2O–Ar systems was investigated. In the temperature range 1500–2500 K, the use of the rate constant deduced from this study has led to a better prediction of N2O decomposition and N2O reduction by H2 than with lower rate constants proposed in the literature. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Int J Chem Kinet 41: 357–375, 2009  相似文献   

10.
The temperature dependence of the rate coefficients for the OH radical reactions with toluene, benzene, o-cresol, m-cresol, p-cresol, phenol, and benzaldehyde were measured by the competitive technique under simulated atmospheric conditions over the temperature range 258–373 K. The relative rate coefficients obtained were placed on an absolute basis using evaluated rate coefficients for the corresponding reference compounds. Based on the rate coefficient k(OH + 2,3-dimethylbutane) = 6.2 × 10?12 cm3 molecule?1s?1, independent of temperature, the rate coefficient for toluene kOH = 0.79 × 10?12 exp[(614 ± 114)/T] cm3 molecule?1 s?1 over the temperature range 284–363 K was determined. The following rate coefficients in units of cm3 molecule?1 s?1 were determined relative to the rate coefficient k(OH + 1,3-butadiene) = 1.48 × 10?11 exp(448/T) cm3 molecule?1 s?1: o-cresol; kOH = 9.8 × 10?13 exp[(1166 ± 248)/T]; 301–373 K; p-cresol; kOH = 2.21 × 10?12 exp[(943 ± 449)/T]; 301–373 K; and phenol, kOH = 3.7 × 10?13 exp[(1267 ± 233)/T]; 301–373 K. The rate coefficient for benzaldehyde kOH = 5.32 × 10?12 exp[(243 ± 85)/T], 294–343 K was determined relative to the rate coefficient k(OH + diethyl ether) = 7.3 × 10?12 exp(158/T) cm3 molecule?1 s?1. The data have been compared to the available literature data and where possible evaluated rate coefficients have been deduced or updated. Using the evaluated rate coefficient k(OH + toluene) = 1.59 × 10?12 exp[(396 ± 105)/T] cm3 molecule?1 s?1, 213–363 K, the following rate coefficient for benzene has been determined kOH = 2.58 × 10?12 exp[(?231 ± 84)/T] cm3 molecule?1 s?1 over the temperature range 274–363 K and the rate coefficent for m-cresol, kOH = 5.17 × 10?12 exp[(686 ± 231)/T] cm3 molecule?1 s?1, 299–373 K was determined relative to the evaluated rate coefficient k(OH + o-cresol) = 2.1 × 10?12 exp[(881 ± 356)/T] cm3 molecule?1 s?1. The tropospheric lifetimes of the aromatic compounds studied were calculated relative to that for 1,1,1-triclorethane = 6.3 years at 277 K. The lifetimes range from 6 h for m-cresol to 15.5 days for benzene. © 1995 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

11.
Relative rate techniques were used to study the title reactions in 930–1200 mbar of N2 diluent. The reaction rate coefficients measured in the present work are summarized by the expressions k(Cl + CH2F2) = 1.19 × 10?17 T2 exp(?1023/T) cm3 molecule?1 s?1 (253–553 K), k(Cl + CH3CCl3) = 2.41 × 10?12 exp(?1630/T) cm3 molecule?1 s?1 (253–313 K), and k(Cl + CF3CFH2) = 1.27 × 10?12 exp(?2019/T) cm3 molecule?1 s?1 (253–313 K). Results are discussed with respect to the literature data. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Int J Chem Kinet 41: 401–406, 2009  相似文献   

12.
We have developed a technique for generating high concentrations of gaseous OH radicals in a reaction chamber. The technique, which involves the UV photolysis of O3 in the presence of water vapor, was used in combination with the relative rate method to obtain rate constants for reactions of OH radicals with selected species. A key improvement of the technique is that an O3/O2 (3%) gas mixture is continuously introduced into the reaction chamber, during the UV irradiation period. An important feature is that a high concentration of OH radicals [(0.53–1.2) × 1011 radicals cm?3] can be produced during the irradiation in continuous, steady‐state experiment. Using the new technique in conjunction with the relative rate method, we obtained the rate constant for the reaction of CHF3 (HFC‐23) with OH radicals, k1. We obtained k1(298 K) = (3.32 ± 0.20) × 10?16 and determined the temperature dependence of k1 to be (0.48 ± 0.13) × 10?12 exp[?(2180 ± 100)/T] cm3 molecule?1 s?1 at 253–328 K using CHF2CF3 (HFC‐125) and CHF2Cl (HCFC‐22) as reference compounds in CHF3–reference–H2O gas mixtures. The value of k1 obtained in this study is in agreement with previous measurements of k1. This result confirms that our technique for generating OH radicals is suitable for obtaining OH radical reaction rate constants of ~10?16 cm3 molecule?1 s?1, provided the rate constants do not depend on pressure. In addition, it also needed to examine whether the reactions of sample and reference compound with O3 interfere the measurement when selecting this technique. © 2003 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Int J Chem Kinet 35: 317–325, 2003  相似文献   

13.
The kinetics and mechanism for the reaction of NH2 with HNO have been investigated by ab initio calculations with rate constant prediction. The potential energy surface of this reaction has been computed by single‐point calculations at the CCSD(T)/6‐311+G(3df, 2p) level based on geometries optimized at the CCSD/6‐311++G(d, p) level. The major products of this reaction were found to be NH3 + NO formed by H‐abstraction via a long‐lived H2N???HNO complex and the H2NN(H)O radical intermediate formed by association with 26.9 kcal/mol binding energy. The rate constants for formation of primary products in the temperature range of 300–3000 K were predicted by variational transition state or RRKM theories. The predicted total rate constants at the 760 Torr Ar pressure can be represented by ktotal = 3.83 × 10?20 × T+2.47exp(1450/T) at T = 300–600 K; 2.58 × 10?22 × T+3.15 exp(1831/T) cm3 molecule?1 s?1 at T = 600?3000 K. The branching ratios of major channels at 760 Torr Ar pressure are predicted: k1 + k3 + k4 producing NH3 + NO accounts for 0.59–0.90 at T = 300–3000 K peaking around 1000 K, k2 accounts for 0.41–0.03 at T = 300–600 K decreasing with temperature, and k5 accounts for 0.07–0.27 at T > 600 K increasing gradually with temperature. The NH3 + NO formation rate constant was found to be a factor of 3–10 smaller than that of the isoelectronic reaction CH3 + HNO producing CH4 + NO, which has been shown to take place by barrierless H‐abstraction without involving a hydrogen‐bonding complex as in the NH2 case. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Int J Chem Kinet 41: 677–677, 2009  相似文献   

14.
The reaction chemistry of C2N2? Ar and C2N2? NO? Ar mixtures has been investigated behind incident shock waves. Progress of the reaction was monitored by observing the cyano radical (CN) in absorption at 388.3 nm. A quantitative spectroscopic model was used to determine concentration histories of CN. From initial slopes of CN concentration during cyanogen pyrolysis, the rate constant for C2N2 + M → 2CN + M (1) was determined to be k1 = (4.11 ± 1.8) × 1016 exp(?47,070 ± 1400/T) cm3/mol · s. A reaction sequence for the C2N2? NO system was developed, and CN profiles were computed. By comparison with experimental CN profiles the rate constant for the reaction CN + NO → NCO + N (3) was determined to be k3 = 10(14.0 ± 0.3) exp(?21,190 ± 1500/T) cm3/mol · s. In addition, the rate of the four-centered reaction CN + NO → N2 + CO (2) was estimated to be approximately three orders of magnitude below collision frequency.  相似文献   

15.
The primary quantum yield of H-atom production in the pulsed-laser photolysis of hydrazine vapor, N2H4 + hν → H + N2H3, was measured to be (1.01 ± 0.12) at 193 nm relative to HBr photolysis, and (1.06 ± 0.16) at 222 nm relative to 248-nm N2H4 photolysis, in excess He buffer gas at 296 K. The H-atoms were directly monitored in the photolysis by cw-resonance fluorescence detection of H(2S) at 121.6 nm. The high H-atom yield observed in the photolysis is consistent with the continuous ultraviolet absorption spectrum of N2H4 involving unit dissociation of the diamine from repulsive excited singlet state(s). The laser photodissociation of N2H4 was thus used as a ‘clean’ source of H-atoms in excess N2H4 and He buffer gas to study the gas-phase reaction, H + N2H4 → products; (k1), in a thermostated photolysis reactor made of quartz or Pyrex. The pseudo-first-order temporal profiles of [H] decay immediately after photolysis were determined for a range of different hydrazine concentrations employed in the experiments to calculate the absolute second-order reaction rate coefficient, k1. The Arrhenius expression was determined to be k1 = (11.7 ± 0.7) × 10?12 exp[?(1260 ± 20)/T] cm3 molec?1 s?1 in the temperature range 222–657 K. The rate coefficient at room temperature was, within experimental errors, independent of the He buffer gas pressure in the range 24.5–603 torr. The above temperature dependence of k1 is in excellent agreement to that we determine in our discharge flow-tube apparatus in the temperature range 372–252 K and in 9.5 torr of He pressure. The Arrhenius parameters we report are consistent with a metathesis reaction mechanism involving the abstraction of hydrogen from N2H4 by the H-atom. © 1995 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

16.
We have conducted flow reactor experiments for NO formation from N2/O2 mixtures at high temperatures and atmospheric pressure, controlling accurately temperature and reaction time. Under these conditions, atomic oxygen equilibrates rapidly with O2. The experimental results were interpreted by a detailed chemical model to determine the rate constant for the reaction N2 + O ? NO + N (R1). We obtain k1 = 1.4 × 1014 exp(?38,300/T) cm3 mol?1 s?1 at 1700–1800 K, with an error limit of ±30%. This value is 25% below the recommendation of Baulch et al. for k1, while it corresponds to a value k1b of the reverse reaction 25% above the Baulch et al. evaluation. Combination of our results with literature values leads to a recommended rate constant for k1b of 9.4 × 1012 T0.14 cm3 mol?1 s?1 over 250–3000 K. This value, which reconciles the differences between the forward and reverse rate constant, is recommended for use in kinetic modeling.  相似文献   

17.
Pyrolytic decay of carbon diselenide was monitored by ultraviolet absorption spectroscopy in reflected shock waves in the temperature range of 1600–2600°K. The temperature dependence of the absorption coefficient of CSe2 at 2308 Å was determined and was used to provide kinetic information along with a deconvolution procedure which accounted for and removed systematic distortions of the fast time-resolved absorbance profile. For temperatures of 1600–2600°K and argon densities of 1.5–7.0 × 10?5 mol/cm3 dilute (1.0–9.0 × 10?9 mol/cm3) CSe2 pyrolyzed with measured first-order decay rates in the range of log10 k1 (sec?1) = 3.0?5.7; at midrange (2100°K and 4.3 × 10?5 mol/cm3 in Ar) k1 ≈ 3 × 104 sec?1. The decay probably occurs via a unimolecular low-pressure process, first order in both CSe2 and Ar, for which k2 ± 109 cm3/mol·sec at 2100°K. The deconvoluted data yield Arrhenius activation energies of 53.2 kcal/mol under second-order treatment, but the activation energy is less reliable than the general magnitude of the rate constant. A comparison of CSe2 with other molecules which are isoelectronic in their valence shells (CO2, CS2, OCS, and N2O) is made.  相似文献   

18.
A combination of an error discovered in the Multiwell code and some more recent examinations of the system CH3 + H = CH4 prompted a reexamination of earlier work by this author. Values of the energy transfer parameter, 〈ΔEd〉, are considerably different from the previous study. It is suggested that the Baulch et al. parameters for this system can be improved by replacing the values for krec,0 and krec, with values suggested by Troe and Ushakov. krec,0 = [Ar] 10?26.19 exp[–(T/21.22 K)0.5] cm6 molecule?2 s?1, krec, = 3.34 × 10?10 (T/25200 K)0.186 cm3 molecule?1 s?1 while keeping their value for Fc = 0.63 exp(–T/3315) + 0.37 exp(–T/61).  相似文献   

19.
Rate coefficients of the title reaction R31 (SO2 + O + M → SO3 + M) and R56 (SO2 + HO2→ SO3 + OH), important in the conversion of S(IV) to S(VI), were obtained at T = 970–1150 K and ρave = 16.2 μmol cm?3 behind reflected shock waves by a perturbation method. Shock‐heated H2/O2/Ar mixtures were perturbed by adding small amounts of SO2 (1%, 2%, and 3%) and the OH temporal profiles were then measured using laser absorption spectroscopy. Reaction rate coefficients were elucidated by matching the characteristic reaction times acquired from the individual experimental absorption profiles via simultaneous optimization of k31 and k56 values in the reaction modeling (for satisfactory matches to the observed characteristic times, it was necessary to take into account R56). In the experimental conditions of this study, R31 is in the low‐pressure limit. The rate coefficient expressions fitted using the combined data of this study and the previous experimental results are k31,0/[Ar] = 2.9 × 1035 T?6.0 exp(?4780 K/T) + 6.1 × 1024 T?3.0 exp(?1980 K/T) cm6 mol?2 s?1 at T = 300–2500 K; k56 = 1.36 × 1011 exp(?3420 K/T) cm3 mol?1 s?1 at T = 970–1150 K. Computer simulations of typical aircraft engine environments, using the reaction mechanism with the above k31,0 and k56 expressions, gave the maximum S(IV) to S(VI) conversion yield of ca. 3.5% and 2.5% for the constant density and constant pressure flow condition, respectively. Moreover, maximum conversions occur at rather higher temperatures (~1200 K) than that where the maximum k31,0 value is located (~800 K). This is because the conversion yield is dependent upon not only the k31,0 and k56 values (production flux) but also the availability of H, O, and HO2 in the system (consumption flux). © 2010 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. *
  • 1 This article is a U.S. Government work and, as such, is in the public domain of the United States of America.
  • Int J Chem Kinet 42: 168–180, 2010  相似文献   

    20.
    Relative rate techniques were used to study the kinetics of the reaction of OH radicals with acetylene at 296 K in 25–8000 Torr of air, N2/O2, or O2 diluent. Results obtained at total pressures of 25–750 Torr were in good agreement with the literature data. At pressures >3000 Torr, our results were substantially (~35%) lower than that reported previously. The kinetic data obtained over the pressure range 25–8000 Torr are well described (within 15%) by the Troe expression using ko = (2.92 ± 0.55) × 10?30 cm6 molecule?2 s?1, k = (9.69 ± 0.30) × 10?13 cm3 molecule?1 s?1, and Fc = 0.60. At 760 Torr total pressure, this expression gives k = 8.49 × 10?13 cm molecule?1 s?1. © 2003 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Int J Chem Kinet 35: 191–197, 2003  相似文献   

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