This comment refers to the recent article of this title by S. W. Benson [ll, in which he returns to an H-atom chain mechanism for the low-temperature acetylene pyrolysis. That article contains a fairly complete chain mechanism and a critique of the alternative molecular (vinylidene) scheme proposed
Radical sensitization of acetylene pyrolysis
✍ Scribed by R. P. Durán; V. T. Amorebieta; A. J. Colussi
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1989
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 505 KB
- Volume
- 21
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0538-8066
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
The kinetics of acetylene polymerization initiated by neopentane (Np) or acetone (Ac) decompositions has been investigated in a static reactor dynamically coupled to a modulated beam mass spectrometer between 850-950 K. Overall rates follow the expres- LC2H,12 (I), where X represents Np or Ac and k,, K , the rate constants of the sensitized and unsensitized reactions, respectively.
The rate law of the sensitized reaction clearly suggests a chain polymerization mechanism with k , = k,(k,/k,)"* (i, t , and p stand for initiation, termination, and propagation, respectively). Remarkably, the derived values of kp are nearly independent of the sensitizer, although Ac acts as a source of methyl radicals whereas Np also produces hydrogen atoms, and fall in the expected range for the addition of vinylic radicals to acetylene. It is shown that a chain transfer process involving the fast [1,51 intramolecular hydrogen atom shift in 4-methyl-buta-1,3-dien-l-yl radicals (CH3-CH=CH-CH= CH) followed by further addition to CzH2 and aromatization, transforms methyl radicals into hydrogen atoms and is able to account for the presence of toluene among the products of the sensitized reactions. Based on current thermochemical data for the but-l-en-3-yn-2-yl radical (CH,= C -C r C H ) and present rates of propagation it is argued that if the unsensitized polymerization of acetylene also proceeded by a vinyl radical chain, then even the most favorable self-initiation reaction: 2C,H2 = C,H3 + H (a), would be far too slow. Finally, present results also show that acetone at impurity levels ( 5 0.1%) can not provide fast enough spurious initiation rates in chain mechanisms for the "unsensitized" acetylene pyrolysis at pressures above 10 torr.
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## Abstract The polymerization of acetylene below 550° has been examined in a static system. For unpacked vessels it was found possible to obtain reproducible results, from which second‐order rate constants, and an activation energy of 46·7 | 2 kcal., have been obtained. The effect of a large numbe
The thermal decomposition of acetylene has been studied in the temperature and pressure regimes of 1900-2500 K and 0.3-0.55 atm using a shock tube coupled to a time-of-flight mass spectrometer. A series of mixtures varying from 1.0-6.2% CzHz diluted in a Ne-Ar mixture yielded a carbon atom density r
Second order rate constants for C2H2 or C2D2 polymerizations into vinylacetylene and higher C,H, products have been measured in a static reactor by dynamic mass spectrometry between"770-980 K. They are nearly identical within experimental error (-+50%). It is shown that these results are consistent