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A Comprehensive Modeling Study of iso-Octane Oxidation

TLDR
In this paper, a detailed chemical kinetic mechanism has been developed and used to study the oxidation of iso-octane in a jet-stirred reactor, flow reactors, shock tubes and in a motored engine.
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This article is published in Combustion and Flame.The article was published on 2002-05-01 and is currently open access. It has received 1279 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Combustion & Ignition system.

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Performance of First-Principles-Based Reaction Class Transition State Theory

TL;DR: Performance of the Reaction Class Transition State Theory for prediction of rates constants of elementary reactions is examined using data from its previous applications to a number of different reaction classes to provide a rigorous theoretical framework to obtain rate expression of any reaction within a reaction class in a simple and cost-effective manner.
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Influence of the functional group of fuels on the construction of skeletal chemical mechanisms: A case study of 1-hexane, 1-hexene, and 1-hexanol

TL;DR: In this paper, a skeletal chemical mechanism of surrogate fuels is built by integrating the reaction class-based global sensitivity analysis and the decoupling methodology, and the influence of the functional group was specially considered in the construction of the chemical mechanisms.
Journal ArticleDOI

Autothermal reforming of gasoline using a cool flame vaporizer

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the existence of cool flames running a stationary cool flame reactor under autothermal reforming conditions and characterized the thermal limits of the cool flame reaction at high steam-to-carbon ratios.
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Sparse, iterative simulation methods for one-dimensional laminar flames

TL;DR: The steady-state solver with approximate Jacobian is well suited for computationally efficient laminar flame speed sweeps with large kinetic mechanisms, and two orders of magnitude faster than commonly-used codes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Experimental and kinetic modeling study of laminar flame characteristics of higher mixed alcohols

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors measured laminar flame speeds and Markstein lengths for simplified higher mixed alcohols (blends of methanol and n-hexanol/n-heptanol, n-octanol) with spherically propagating flame at 0.1'1'MPa, elevated temperature of 433'K, and different mixing ratios.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A Comprehensive Modeling Study of n-Heptane Oxidation

TL;DR: In this article, a detailed chemical kinetic mechanism has been developed and used to study the oxidation of n-heptane in flow reactors, shock tubes, and rapid compression machines, where the initial pressure ranged from 1-42 atm, the temperature from 550-1700 K, the equivalence ratio from 0.3-1.5, and nitrogen-argon dilution from 70-99%.
Journal ArticleDOI

Chemical Kinetic Data Base for Combustion Chemistry. Part I. Methane and Related Compounds

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors evaluated data on the kinetics and thermodynamic properties of species that are of importance in methanepyrolysis and combustion, including H, H2, O, O2, OH, HO2, CH2O, CH4, C2H6, HCHO, CO2, CO, HCO, CH3, CH5, CH6, CH7, CH8, CH9, CH10, CH11, CH12, CH13, CH14, CH15, CH16, CH17, CH
Journal ArticleDOI

Evaluated Kinetic, Photochemical and Heterogeneous Data for Atmospheric Chemistry: Supplement V. IUPAC Subcommittee on Gas Kinetic Data Evaluation for Atmospheric Chemistry

TL;DR: In this article, the authors extended previous critical evaluations of the kinetics and photochemistry of gas-phase chemical reactions of neutral species involved in atmospheric chemistry and provided the basic physical chemical data needed as input for calculations which model atmospheric chemistry.
Journal ArticleDOI

Chemical Kinetic Data Base for Combustion Chemistry. Part 3: Propane

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors evaluated and estimated data on the kinetics of reactions involving propane, isopropyl radical, n−propyl radical and various small inorganic and organic species.
Journal ArticleDOI

Self-ignition of S.I. engine model fuels: A shock tube investigation at high pressure ☆

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the self-ignition of several spark-ignitions (SI) engine fuels (iso-octane, methanol, methyl tert-butyl ether and three different mixtures of iso-Octane and n-heptane), mixed with air, under relevant engine conditions by the shock tube technique.
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Frequently Asked Questions (8)
Q1. What are the contributions in "A comprehensive modeling study of iso-octane oxidation" ?

A detailed chemical kinetic mechanism has been developed and used to study the oxidation of iso-octane in a jet-stirred reactor, flow reactors, shock tubes and in a motored engine. This range of physical conditions, together with the measurements of ignition delay time and concentrations, provide a broad-ranging test of the chemical kinetic mechanism. This mechanism was based on their previous modeling of alkane combustion and, in particular, on their study of the oxidation of n-heptane. In addition, a sensitivity analysis was performed for each of the combustion environments in an attempt to identify the most important reactions under the relevant conditions of study. 

Because of recent changes in thermodynamic data, and in an attempt to improve their treatment of some of their estimated rate expressions, some of those expressions published in their n-heptane paper have been changed. 

The major classes of elementary reactions considered in the present mechanism include the following:1. Unimolecular fuel decomposition 2. H atom abstraction from the fuel 3. 

Another reaction type that increases the overall reactivity of the system is the addition of alkyl radicals to molecular oxygen, reaction type 10. 

The rate constant for the addition of an alkyl radical has a lower A-factor and higher activation energy than for the addition of a H atom. 

even though the CCR for iso-octane is well reproduced by the model, it is apparent that, because the concentration of carbon monoxide formed is a direct measure of reactivity, at all compression ratios the model predicts more reactivity than is observed experimentally. 

For 1° and 3° alkyl radical addition the authors use the Lenhardt et al. [61] measured rates of addition for n-butyl and tert-butyl radicals to O2 which are 4.52 10 12 and 1.41 1013 cm3 mol 1 s 1, respectively. 

the self reaction of hydroperoxyl radicals shows a positive sensitivity coefficient as it consumes hydroperoxyl radicals which could otherwise abstract a hydrogen atom from a stable species to ultimately produce two hydroxyl radicals from one hydroperoxyl radical, as depicted in the equation array above.