23 research outputs found

    Revisiting the initial reaction rates for TMS combustion and a new evidence for metastable silica nanoparticles in the gas-phase synthesis

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    Nanomaterials from gas-phase synthesis are tapping into new fields of application in research and industry due to their unique size-dependent properties. To produce tailored nanoparticles, the synthesis starting from the precursor decomposition to the particle formation must be fully understood. Tetramethylsilane is used as a precursor for the synthesis of silica nanomaterials in flames. The precursor starts to decompose by H-abstraction. Reaction rates for H-abstraction of tetramethylsilane (TMS) by +O/+H/+OH radicals are determined by means of quantum chemical calculations. The rate expressions are obtained in the temperature range from 300 to 1400 K: kH =  6,025,735 (T/K)2.1731exp(-(+2613.840 K)/T) cm3mol−1s−1 for the total bimolecular reaction coefficient of TMS with hydrogen atoms, kOH =  10,179,818 (T/K)1.7790 exp(-(+152.739 K)/T) cm3mol−1s−1 for TMS with OH radicals, and kO =  93,100 (T/K)2.4797 exp(-(+889.166 K)/T) cm3mol−1s−1 for TMS with O(3P) radicals, respectively. The reaction rates are implemented into the TMS reaction mechanism of Janbazi et al. [1], and a better agreement of the TMS reactivity in the flame is achieved. Experiments are conducted to obtain the mass deposition rates with a Quartz-Crystal-Microbalance (QCM) in a wide range of different equivalence ratios. The equivalence ratio is varied between ϕ = 0.6–1.2, and precursor amounts of 400, 600 and 800 ppm are used. These QCM-experiments are complementary to the MBMS-studies from Karakaya et al. [1–3] but use the same flame conditions to extend the data set. The results reveal that metastable particles exist in the reaction zone of the flame. Depending on flame conditions, their concentration decreases towards the end of the reaction zone, but particles subsequently grow again in the recombination zone of the flame. The mechanisms, which describe the reactivity of the metastable nanoparticles, are tentatively proposed. The understanding of the mechanisms can open up the way for tailored nanoparticles with different structures and stoichiometries

    Chemical mechanism development : laboratory studies and model application

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    Within the German Tropospheric Research Programme (TFS) numerous kinetic and mechanistic studies on the tropospheric reaction/degradation of the following reactants were carried out:oxygenated VOC,aromatic VOC,biogenic VOC,short-lived intermediates, such as alkoxy and alkylperoxy radicals.At the conception of the projects these selected groups were classes of VOC or intermediates for which the atmospheric oxidation mechanisms were either poorly characterised or totally unknown. The motivation for these studies was the attainment of significant improvements in our understanding of the atmospheric chemical oxidation processes of these compounds, particularly with respect to their involvement in photooxidant formation in the troposphere.In the present paper the types of experimental investigations performed and the results obtained within the various projects are briefly summarised. The major achievements are highlighted and discussed in terms of their contribution to improving our understanding of the chemical processes controlling photosmog formation in the troposphere
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