The dissociation of NzO/Ar mixtures, with and without added CO, has been studied by monitoring both infrared and ultraviolet emissions behind reflected shock waves. Initial temperatures ranged from 1850 to 2535"K, and the total concentrations were 1.94-2.40 X 10'8 molecule/cm3. The infrared emission
Chemical kinetic simulations behind reflected shock waves
β Scribed by Weiyong Tang; Kenneth Brezinsky
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2005
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 359 KB
- Volume
- 38
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0538-8066
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β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
Chemical kinetic simulations that more accurately consider reaction conditions behind reflected shock waves in a high pressure shock tube have been conducted by accounting for (1) timeβdependent temperature and pressure variations in contrast to assuming constant temperature and pressure, (2) the inclusion of reactions during quenching by cooling in contrast to the assumption of zero kinetic contributions, and (3) real gas behaviors in contrast to assuming ideal gas conditions. The primary objective of the current work is to assess the degree of uncertainty associated with assuming constant temperature and pressure and that no reactions occur during the finite time of quenching and prefect gas behavior. The assessment of the subsequent effect of the uncertainty on chemical kinetic modeling is evaluated by conducting extensive comparative studies. In order to achieve this purpose, available CHEMKIN II and CHEMKIN Real Gas codes were utilized and modified to adopt the proposed approaches. From our computational experiments, it is found: (1) For shock tube experiment with less than a 15% endwall pressure increase, the conventional assumptions lead to reasonable accuracy in predicting stable species; (2) during reaction quenching, the consumption of radical species occurs efficiently and is nearly complete once the pressure drops to 50% of its highest value, but concentrations of stable species are insignificantly perturbed by reactions occurring during quenching; and (3) at elevated pressures, the real gas effects, which are a combination of nonideal PβVβT (state variables), thermodynamic, and kinetic behaviors, affect kinetics by speeding the reaction progress up slightly and do not significantly influence the development or validation of a detailed kinetic model from shock tube data that are obtained in a wide temperature range. Β© 2005 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Int J Chem Kinet 38: 75β97, 2006
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
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The pyrolysis of benzene was studied in the temperature and pressure range of 1400-2200K and 0.25-0.81 arm using a shock tube coupled to a time-of-flight mass spectrometer. The mixtures employed were 2.1 and 5% benzene diluted with neon, which yielded a carbon atom density range of (1.6-7.9) x 1017
## Abstract The homogeneous thermal isomerization of cyclopropane to propene was studied in the presence of large excesses (99.6%β99.8%) of argon or helium diluent. Reaction temperatures ranged from 1038Β°β1208Β°K, and total gas pressures were varied from 533 to 5097 torr. The comparativeβrate single
Self-ignition of stoichiometric airlike argon mixtures of monocyclic and bicyclic small-ring hydrocarbons was investigated behind reflected shock waves at 1200-1600 K and 0.6 + 0.1 MPa. The reactivity of small-ring hydrocarbons has been found to be determined by the properties of their thermal decom
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