Ionic Mechanisms of Soot Formation

Author(s):  
H. F. Calcote
1986 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. F. Calcote ◽  
D. G. Keil

2006 ◽  
Vol 78 (6) ◽  
pp. 1127-1145 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Hassouni ◽  
F. Mohasseb ◽  
F. Bénédic ◽  
G. Lombardi ◽  
A. Gicquel

Homogenous mechanism of soot formation in moderate-pressure Ar/CH4/H2 microwave discharges was analyzed with the help of kinetics modeling of the thermally nonequilibrium plasmas. Two main reaction mechanisms based on either neutral molecular growth and condensation reaction nucleation process were considered. These mechanisms were incorporated in a numerical model that solves for the plasma species and energy equations under a quasi-uniform plasma assumption. This enabled us to estimate the plasma species density and temperature along with the nucleation rate at different discharge conditions. The results showed that soot particles might form at significant density values by both neutral and ionic mechanisms. Their formation mainly takes place at the discharge edges where the temperature level favors the development of large molecular edifices. Simulations showed that the formation of soot is unlikely to happen in the bulk of the discharge where the gas temperature is high and the large molecular hydrocarbon (HC) cannot form at significant concentrations.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Josh MacMillan ◽  
Katherine Marczenko ◽  
Erin Johnson ◽  
Saurabh Chitnis

The addition of Sb-H bonds to alkynes was reported recently as a new hydroelementation reaction that exclusively yields anti-Markovnikov <i>Z</i>-olefins from terminal acetylenes. We examine four possible mechanisms that are consistent with the observed stereochemical and regiochemical outcomes. A comprehensive analysis of solvent, substituent, isotope, additive, and temperature effects on hydrostibination reaction rates definitively refutes three ionic mechanisms involving closed-shell charged intermediates. Instead the data support a fourth pathway featuring neutral radical Sb<sup>II</sup> and Sb<sup>III</sup> intermediates. Density Functional Theory (DFT) calculations are consistent this model, predicting an activation barrier that is within 1 kcal mol<sup>-1</sup> of the experimental value (Eyring analysis) and a rate limiting step that is congruent with experimental kinetic isotope effect. We therefore conclude that hydrostibination of arylacetylenes is initiated by the generation of stibinyl radicals, which then participate in a cycle featuring Sb<sup>II</sup> and Sb<sup>III</sup> intermediates to yield the observed <i>Z</i>-olefins as products. This mechanistic understanding will enable rational evolution of hydrostibination as a methodology for accessing challenging products such as <i>E</i>-olefins.


Author(s):  
Luís Gustavo Pires Rodrigues ◽  
Francis França ◽  
Fernando Pereira ◽  
PAULO PAGOT

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