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Features of low-temperature oxidation of isobutane in water vapor and carbon dioxide with increased density of reagents. / Vostrikov, A. A.; Fedyaeva, O. N.; Shishkin, A. V. et al.

In: Journal of Engineering Thermophysics, Vol. 26, No. 4, 01.10.2017, p. 466-475.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Harvard

Vostrikov, AA, Fedyaeva, ON, Shishkin, AV, Artamonov, DO & Sokol, MY 2017, 'Features of low-temperature oxidation of isobutane in water vapor and carbon dioxide with increased density of reagents', Journal of Engineering Thermophysics, vol. 26, no. 4, pp. 466-475. https://doi.org/10.1134/S1810232817040038

APA

Vostrikov, A. A., Fedyaeva, O. N., Shishkin, A. V., Artamonov, D. O., & Sokol, M. Y. (2017). Features of low-temperature oxidation of isobutane in water vapor and carbon dioxide with increased density of reagents. Journal of Engineering Thermophysics, 26(4), 466-475. https://doi.org/10.1134/S1810232817040038

Vancouver

Vostrikov AA, Fedyaeva ON, Shishkin AV, Artamonov DO, Sokol MY. Features of low-temperature oxidation of isobutane in water vapor and carbon dioxide with increased density of reagents. Journal of Engineering Thermophysics. 2017 Oct 1;26(4):466-475. doi: 10.1134/S1810232817040038

Author

Vostrikov, A. A. ; Fedyaeva, O. N. ; Shishkin, A. V. et al. / Features of low-temperature oxidation of isobutane in water vapor and carbon dioxide with increased density of reagents. In: Journal of Engineering Thermophysics. 2017 ; Vol. 26, No. 4. pp. 466-475.

BibTeX

@article{fd00afd3f0294da8badd0f2bcd63bfa6,
title = "Features of low-temperature oxidation of isobutane in water vapor and carbon dioxide with increased density of reagents",
abstract = "The oxidation of isobutane at high density of reagents in a mixture of i-C4H10/O2/H2O and i-C4H10/O2/CO2 with oxygen deficiency (a molar ratio [O2]0/[i-C4H10]0 = 3.5–5.8) has been studied for the first time. The experiments were carried out in a tubular reactor under uniform heating (1 K/min) to 590 K. Data on the kinetics, auto-ignition temperature, and the products of isobutane conversion have been obtained. The auto-ignition was found to be a two-stage process and begin at a temperature of 510–522 K. The heat capacity of the reaction mixture suppressed the autoacceleration of the oxidation. Mass spectrometric analysis of the reactants revealed a difference in the mechanisms of isobutane conversion in water vapor and carbon dioxide. In water vapor, the oxidation is dominant and is realized with the participation of vibrationally excited O*2 molecules, which appear mainly from resonant exchange with H2O* molecules. In the CO2 medium, the oxidation proceeds against the background of intense isobutane dissociation, initiated by the vibrational pumping of i-C4H10 molecules in their resonant excitation by CO*2 molecules.",
author = "Vostrikov, {A. A.} and Fedyaeva, {O. N.} and Shishkin, {A. V.} and Artamonov, {D. O.} and Sokol, {M. Ya}",
year = "2017",
month = oct,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1134/S1810232817040038",
language = "English",
volume = "26",
pages = "466--475",
journal = "Journal of Engineering Thermophysics",
issn = "1810-2328",
publisher = "Maik Nauka-Interperiodica Publishing",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Features of low-temperature oxidation of isobutane in water vapor and carbon dioxide with increased density of reagents

AU - Vostrikov, A. A.

AU - Fedyaeva, O. N.

AU - Shishkin, A. V.

AU - Artamonov, D. O.

AU - Sokol, M. Ya

PY - 2017/10/1

Y1 - 2017/10/1

N2 - The oxidation of isobutane at high density of reagents in a mixture of i-C4H10/O2/H2O and i-C4H10/O2/CO2 with oxygen deficiency (a molar ratio [O2]0/[i-C4H10]0 = 3.5–5.8) has been studied for the first time. The experiments were carried out in a tubular reactor under uniform heating (1 K/min) to 590 K. Data on the kinetics, auto-ignition temperature, and the products of isobutane conversion have been obtained. The auto-ignition was found to be a two-stage process and begin at a temperature of 510–522 K. The heat capacity of the reaction mixture suppressed the autoacceleration of the oxidation. Mass spectrometric analysis of the reactants revealed a difference in the mechanisms of isobutane conversion in water vapor and carbon dioxide. In water vapor, the oxidation is dominant and is realized with the participation of vibrationally excited O*2 molecules, which appear mainly from resonant exchange with H2O* molecules. In the CO2 medium, the oxidation proceeds against the background of intense isobutane dissociation, initiated by the vibrational pumping of i-C4H10 molecules in their resonant excitation by CO*2 molecules.

AB - The oxidation of isobutane at high density of reagents in a mixture of i-C4H10/O2/H2O and i-C4H10/O2/CO2 with oxygen deficiency (a molar ratio [O2]0/[i-C4H10]0 = 3.5–5.8) has been studied for the first time. The experiments were carried out in a tubular reactor under uniform heating (1 K/min) to 590 K. Data on the kinetics, auto-ignition temperature, and the products of isobutane conversion have been obtained. The auto-ignition was found to be a two-stage process and begin at a temperature of 510–522 K. The heat capacity of the reaction mixture suppressed the autoacceleration of the oxidation. Mass spectrometric analysis of the reactants revealed a difference in the mechanisms of isobutane conversion in water vapor and carbon dioxide. In water vapor, the oxidation is dominant and is realized with the participation of vibrationally excited O*2 molecules, which appear mainly from resonant exchange with H2O* molecules. In the CO2 medium, the oxidation proceeds against the background of intense isobutane dissociation, initiated by the vibrational pumping of i-C4H10 molecules in their resonant excitation by CO*2 molecules.

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85034986497&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1134/S1810232817040038

DO - 10.1134/S1810232817040038

M3 - Article

AN - SCOPUS:85034986497

VL - 26

SP - 466

EP - 475

JO - Journal of Engineering Thermophysics

JF - Journal of Engineering Thermophysics

SN - 1810-2328

IS - 4

ER -

ID: 9672942